|
|
27, 2009 |
![]() |
|
|
|
26, 2009 |
![]() |
|
|
Well, it looks likes Drew and Justin are off again (darn it!), as Drew was photographed holding hands with an unidentified guy as she left the Staples Center in Los Angeles, CA after the Lakers game on May 19th! Maybe he’s just a friend! I’ve added some photos in the gallery of Drew leaving the game. |
|
|
|
25, 2009 |
![]() |
|
|
|
24, 2009 |
![]() |
|
|
|
20, 2009 |
![]() |
|
|
|
20, 2009 |
![]() |
|
|
According to /Film, Drew Barrymore’s directorial debut, Whip It!, finally has a release date through Fox Searchlight, the same studio that released Diablo Cody’s Juno. The roller-derby themed film is set to release on Oct. 9. Earlier last year, Barrymore snagged Juno’s Ellen Page to co-star along with Juliette Lewis, Jimmy Fallon, and Eve. The film is based on the book Derby Girl by Shauna Cross, where the blue-haired protagonist Bliss, played by Page, finds a way to deal with her frustrations after she joins a roller derby team in a nearby city. |
|
|
|
18, 2009 |
![]() |
|
|
|
13, 2009 |
![]() |
|
|
This biopic of two of Jackie Kennedy’s eccentric relatives is based on the 1975 documentary of the same name by the Maysles brothers. The compelling story of mother and daughter —Edith Bouvier Beale and “Little Edie” — was turned into a musical that contended at the 2007 Tony Awards. For playing the younger version of the mother and the older version of the daughter, Christine Ebersole won the lead actress award while Mary Louise Wilson won featured actress for her work as the older version of the mother. In the HBO movie, two-time Oscar winner Jessica Lange (“Tootsie,” “Blue Sky”) plays the mother at all ages while Drew Barrymore is the madcap daughter through the years. In his rave review, Robert Bianco of USA Today neatly summarized the story. “Using the documentary as both touchstone and home base, writer/director Michael Sucsy tries to fill in the gaps. In between shots of the Beales as the documentary found them, we flash back to the women in their glory: Big Edie (Lange) entertaining at parties to the disapproval of her strait-laced husband (Ken Howard), who thinks she should be finding a rich husband for their daughter (Barrymore). Characters swirl around them: Big Edie’s probably gay pianist (Malcolm Gets); Little Edie’s married boyfriend (Daniel Baldwin); Jackie herself (Jeanne Tripplehorn); and documentarians Albert and David Maysles (Arye Gross and Justin Louis). But in the end, this is a two-character play, and Barrymore and Lange play it to the hilt.” |
|
|
|
11, 2009 |
![]() |
|














Movie: Everybody's Fine
Movie: Whip It
Domain: Drewbarrymorefan.com













“Grey Gardens” premiered on HBO to rave reviews and is certainly the front-runner to take the top TV movie prize at the Emmy Awards. After all, the paycaster has dominated that Emmys race for 14 of the last 16 years, including the last five in a row. HBO has aired 47 of the 80 TV films nominated since 1993. And this latest effort should prove irresistible to Emmy voters.