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Tag: harrison ford

  • Actor Awards: Woody Harrelson to Present Life Achievement Nod to Harrison Ford (Exclusive)

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    Woody Harrelson is set to present the Life Achievement Award to Harrison Ford at Sunday’s Actor Awards (formerly the SAG Awards), The Hollywood Reporter can report exclusively.

    In addition, Benicio del Toro, Regina Hall, Allison Janney, Sarah Paulson and Cristoph Waltz also will serve as presenters. Del Toro, who is on the cover of the most recent issue of The Hollywood Reporter, and Waltz are both nominees this year: del Toro for best performance by a male actor in a supporting role for One Battle After Another, which also landed a nom for best performance by a cast in a motion picture, and Waltz for best performance by a cast in a motion picture for Frankenstein.

    Harrelson will take the stage to present SAG-AFTRA’s highest honor to Ford during the 32nd annual awards ceremony, which will stream live on Netflix at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT from the Shrine Auditorium & Expo Hall in Los Angeles. 

    While Ford and Harrelson have not appeared in a movie together, there is an onscreen connection: The latter  co-starred in Solo: A Star Wars Story, a prequel story to Ford’s character, Han Solo.

    Kristen Bell is returning as host of the ceremony.

    One Battle After Another leads this year’s film nominations with seven mentions. Sinners follows with five noms, while Frankenstein, Hamnet and Marty Supreme each have three.

    Prior to Sunday’s awards ceremony, Paige DeSorbo and Scott Evans will host The Actor’s Red Carpet: The 32nd Annual Actor Awards Official Pre-Show, streaming live on Netflix at 7 p.m. ET/4 p.m. PT.

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    Kimberly Nordyke

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  • Michael J. Fox and Harrison Ford on ‘Shrinking,’ Parkinson’s, and Donald Trump

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    Last January, Michael J. Fox received a presidential medal of freedom in recognition of his Parkinson’s advocacy work from outgoing president Joe Biden. In USA Today, he wrote about how the incoming Trump administration could help find a cure for the disease he was diagnosed with in 1991 at age 29. They’d be wise to take the actor turned advocate seriously: His Michael J. Fox Foundation has funded more than $2.5 billion in Parkinson’s research over the last 25 years, raising more than $100 million in research annually. “Our foundation directs more money towards Parkinson’s research than the federal government,” Fox tells Vanity Fair. When asked for an update on working with President Donald Trump a year later, Fox retorts, “He’s busy with Greenland. More pressing concerns, I guess.”

    If all goes to plan, Fox says he’ll soon meet with US Department of Health and Human Services head Robert F. Kennedy Jr. “I’m going to Washington next month and hopefully talk to Kennedy and find out what the government’s game plan is on addressing brain research in general and taking a more serious approach to some of these things that are soluble,” he says. “It’s just a weird disease. We always say genetics loads a gun and environment pulls the trigger. We’re trying to figure out what’s biological and what’s chemical.”

    In season three of Shrinking (which premieres on January 28), coping with a Parkinson’s diagnosis fuels Fox’s storyline opposite Harrison Ford, who plays a therapist living with the degenerative brain disease. At this point in the conversation, a stoic, but engaged, Ford interjects: “Michael raises more money for and has done more Parkinson’s research than almost anybody in the world.

    Ford in season three of Shrinking.Kevin Estrada/Apple TV

    Image may contain Michael J. Fox Face Head Person Photography Portrait Adult Sitting Clothing Pants and Body Part

    Fox in season three of Shrinking.Courtesy of Apple

    “It’s a credit to our great people,” Fox replies. “It’s frustrating to know we’re putting everything we can into it, and it would be nice to have the government behind us, but it seems that they’re involved in other things that have less impact on peoples’ lives.”

    In 2004, Fox and Ford were photographed shaking hands at a charity event where Nancy Reagan advocated for stem cell research in finding a cure for illnesses like Alzheimer’s, which afflicted her husband, Ronald. “I’m sure I was very excited to see Harrison,” says Fox, glancing across the Zoom screen at a smiling Ford. “And Nancy Reagan—she was a force.” The former first lady was one of few conservatives at the time to publicly support embryonic stem cell research, which Republican lawmakers are still fighting to restrict at the federal level. Fox supports stem cell research in finding a cure for Parkinson’s disease. “For someone like Mrs. Reagan to step outside of political or ideological groupings and just speak to what she believes…is tremendously valuable,” he told reporters at the 2004 event.

    Image may contain Harrison Ford Accessories Formal Wear Tie Blazer Clothing Coat Jacket Suit and Person

    Fox poses alongside Ford and his wife Calista Flockhart at a 2004 charity event honoring former First Lady Nancy Reagan, who advocated for stem cell research in the study of diseases like Parkinson’s.Vince Bucci/Getty Images

    After playing the conservative son of former-hippie parents on Family Ties, then a know-it-all political strategist on Spin City, Fox returns to his TV roots in Shrinking, which last year earned Ford the first Emmy nomination of his career. Given Fox’s longtime friendship with series creator Bill Lawrence, whom he previously worked with on Spin City, the invite felt overdue. “It was a short and profane conversation,” Fox recalls. “I said, ‘You’re doing a fucking show about Parkinson’s with Harrison fucking Ford, and you don’t call me?’” Ford tilts his head back with a chuckle.

    “Well, I’m calling you now,” Lawrence said, to which Fox replied, “‘No, I’m calling you.” It was a fitting moment, as Lawrence has “a history of pulling me back out of retirement,” Fox says. “I did Scrubs [which Lawrence created] in the early ’00s after I’d retired from Spin City, and so I knew he’d make it happen. He always was a talented kid. Talented kid.” Fox shakes his head, “He’s what, 60 years old?” (Lawrence is 57; Fox is 64.)

    Although nearly two decades younger than a now 83-year-old Ford, both men, and their characters on Shrinking, grapple with their mortality. “We’re on the same shitty train to sucksville,” Fox’s character, Jerry, says to Ford’s character, Paul, as both men await Parkinson’s treatment. Later in the season, the curmudgeonly Paul finds renewed zest for his profession—and strategies for living with his diagnosis—when he provides therapy to other people with Parkinson’s disease, including Gerry. “The thing about therapy is it’s a talking cure, but there’s no talking cure for Parkinson’s, so those two worlds have always had an uneasy relationship,” Fox explains. “I couldn’t have gotten through Parkinson’s without therapy, but you find yourself educating the therapist as much as they’re educating you. You have to paint a picture of the ground you’re living on. And it’s very hard to explain to people.”

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    Savannah Walsh

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  • Eddie Murphy to receive life achievement award from the American Film Institute

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    Eddie Murphy is being celebrated with a life achievement award from the American Film Institute, AFI’s board of trustees said Friday. The award will be handed out at a gala tribute in Los Angeles, at the Dolby Theatre, on April 18.

    “Eddie Murphy is an American icon,” said Kathleen Kennedy, who chairs the institute’s board of trustees. “A trailblazing force in the art forms of film, television and stand-up comedy, his versatility knows no bounds.”

    Murphy, 64, has been a force in entertainment for nearly 50 years, as a teenage stand-up phenomenon, on television as a part of the “Saturday Night Live” cast, and in film where he’s ruled the box office in multiple decades, with hits like “Beverly Hills Cop,” “Coming to America,” “The Nutty Professor” and the “Shrek” movies. In 2007, he was nominated for a best supporting actor Oscar for “Dreamgirls,” which had already earned him a Screen Actors Guild award and a Golden Globe, but he didn’t win the Academy Award.

    In a new documentary about his life and career, “Being Eddie,” which is currently streaming on Netflix, Murphy reflected that he was more annoyed about having to put on a tux and go to the event than he was about losing.

    “It’s always wonderful to win stuff, but if I don’t win, I don’t give a (expletive),” he said. “I’m still Eddie in the morning.”

    In 2023, Murphy got the Cecil B. DeMille Award at the Golden Globes, where he kept his remarks to a speedy two minutes. He told The Associated Press in 2021 that he has a different perspective on things than he did during the height of his fame.

    “You take everything for granted when you’re young, how successful I was,” Murphy said. “Now I take nothing for granted and appreciate everything.”

    AFI’s gala tributes are often starry affairs. Last year at Francis Ford Coppola’s dinner, Steven Spielberg, Robert De Niro and Harrison Ford were among those who turned out to toast Coppola.

    Murphy is the 51st recipient of the AFI life achievement award, which was first handed out in 1973 to John Ford. Other recent honorees include Nicole Kidman, Julie Andrews and Denzel Washington.

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  • The Best Red Carpet Fashion From the 2025 Emmy Awards

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    Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco. Los Angeles Times via Getty Imag

    Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco

    It’s time to celebrate the best and brightest of the small screen. Tonight, the 77th Primetime Emmy Awards commence, honoring the crème de la crème of the television industry. The awards show, presented by the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, is once again taking place at the Peacock Theater in Downtown L.A., and this year, will be hosted by comedian Nate Bargatze for the first time. Along with Bargatze, presenters set to take the stage include Angela Basset, Jason Bateman, Alexis Bledel, Stephen Colbert, Jennifer Coolidge, Eric Dane, Tina Fay, Walton Goggins, Lauren Graham (please, please let there be a Gilmore Girls reunion!), Jude Law, Evan Peters and Sydney Sweeney.

    Apple TV+’s Severance leads the pack with the most overall nominations  at a staggering 27, followed by The Penguin (24) and newcomer The Studio (23). No matter if you agree or disagree with the surprises and snubs for the actor and actress noms, there’s no denying that the major categories feature some major star power, including Ayo Edebiri, Kristen Bell, Adam Brody, Jeremy Allen White, Sterling K. Brown, Pedro Pascal, Colman Domingo, Michelle Williams and Jake Gyllenhaal. And of course, Harrison Ford, whose nod for his role in Shrinking marks his first ever Emmy nomination.

    Before the awards are handed out and the official ceremony begins, however, the attendees walk the red carpet in their most glamorous ensembles. Below, see the best red carpet fashion from the 2025 Emmy Awards.

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    Cate Blanchett. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Cate Blanchett

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    Michelle Williams. Getty Images

    Michelle Williams

    in Chanel

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    Scarlett Johansson and Colin Jost. Getty Images

    Scarlett Johansson and Colin Jost

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    Keri Russell. AFP via Getty Images

    Keri Russell

    in Armani Privé

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    Elizabeth Banks. Getty Images

    Elizabeth Banks

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    Jennie Garth. Getty Images

    Jennie Garth

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    Adam Brody and Leighton Meester. AFP via Getty Images

    Adam Brody and Leighton Meester

    Brody and Meester in Prada

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    Kristen Bell. Getty Images

    Kristen Bell

    in Armani Privé

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    Brittany Snow and Malin Akerman. Getty Images

    Brittany Snow and Malin Akerman

    Akerman in Greta Constantine

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    Leslie Bibb and Sam Rockwell. Getty Images

    Leslie Bibb and Sam Rockwell

    Bibb in Giorgio Armani 

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    Colman Domingo. Getty Images

    Colman Domingo

    in Valentino 

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    Hunter Schafer. AFP via Getty Images

    Hunter Schafer

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    Alexis Bledel. Getty Images

    Alexis Bledel

    in Marmar Halim

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    Lauren Graham. Getty Images

    Lauren Graham

    77th Primetime Emmy Awards - Arrivals77th Primetime Emmy Awards - Arrivals
    Catherine Zeta-Jones. Getty Images

    Catherine Zeta-Jones

    77th Primetime Emmy Awards - Arrivals77th Primetime Emmy Awards - Arrivals
    Halsey. Getty Images

    Halsey

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    Rashida Jones. Getty Images

    Rashida Jones

    in Dior 

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    Mariska Hargitay. Getty Images

    Mariska Hargitay

    in Elie Saab 

    77th Primetime Emmy Awards - Arrivals77th Primetime Emmy Awards - Arrivals
    Harrison Ford and Calista Flockhart. Getty Images

    Harrison Ford and Calista Flockhart

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    Owen Cooper and Erin Doherty. Getty Images

    Owen Cooper and Erin Doherty

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    Hannah Einbinder. Variety via Getty Images

    Hannah Einbinder

    in Louis Vuitton

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    Kathryn Hahn. WireImage

    Kathryn Hahn

    in Valentino 

    US-ENTERTAINMENT-TELEVISION-AWARD-EMMY-RED CARPETUS-ENTERTAINMENT-TELEVISION-AWARD-EMMY-RED CARPET
    Sydney Sweeney. AFP via Getty Images

    Sydney Sweeney

    in Oscar de la Renta 

    77th Primetime Emmy Awards - Arrivals77th Primetime Emmy Awards - Arrivals
    Parker Posey. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Parker Posey

    in Valentino 

    77th Primetime Emmy Awards - Arrivals77th Primetime Emmy Awards - Arrivals
    Selena Gomez. Getty Images

    Selena Gomez

    in Louis Vuitton

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    Angela Bassett. Getty Images

    Angela Bassett

    in Yara Shoemaker

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    Jake Gyllenhaal and Jeanne Cadieu. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Jake Gyllenhaal and Jeanne Cadieu

    Gyllenhaal in Prada, Cadieu in Schiaparelli 

    77th Primetime Emmy Awards - Arrivals77th Primetime Emmy Awards - Arrivals
    Mary Steenburgen and Ted Danson. Getty Images

    Mary Steenburgen and Ted Danson

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    Lainey Wilson. AFP via Getty Images

    Lainey Wilson

    in Zuhair Murad

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    Quinta Brunson. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Quinta Brunson

    in Louis Vuitton

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    Rita Ora. Getty Images

    Rita Ora

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    Catherine O’Hara. Getty Images

    Catherine O’Hara

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    Sarah Paulson. Getty Images

    Sarah Paulson

    in Marc Jacobs 

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    Jenna Ortega. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Jenna Ortega

    in Givenchy 

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    Ruth Negga. Getty Images

    Ruth Negga

    in Prada

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    Adam Scott. Getty Images

    Adam Scott

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    Erin Foster. Getty Images

    Erin Foster

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    Sara Foster. WireImage

    Sara Foster

    in Zuhair Murad

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    Meghann Fahy. Getty Images

    Meghann Fahy

    in Valentino 

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    Kaitlyn Dever. Getty Images

    Kaitlyn Dever

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    Aimee Lou Wood. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Aimee Lou Wood

    in Alexander McQueen 

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    Pedro Pascal. WireImage

    Pedro Pascal

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    Jenny Slate. Getty Images

    Jenny Slate

    in Rosie Assoulin

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    Janelle James. WireImage

    Janelle James

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    Carrie Coon. Getty Images

    Carrie Coon

    in Chanel

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    Chloë Sevigny. Getty Images

    Chloë Sevigny

    in Saint Laurent 

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    Bowen Yang. Getty Images

    Bowen Yang

    in Ami Paris 

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    Jean Smart. Getty Images

    Jean Smart

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    Jason Isaacs. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Jason Isaacs

    77th Primetime Emmy Awards - Arrivals77th Primetime Emmy Awards - Arrivals
    Natasha Rothwell. Getty Images

    Natasha Rothwell

    in Ines Di Santo

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    Gwendoline Christie. AFP via Getty Images

    Gwendoline Christie

    in Tom Ford 

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    Abby Elliott. WireImage

    Abby Elliott

    in Honor 

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    Lukita Maxwell. AFP via Getty Images

    Lukita Maxwell

    US-ENTERTAINMENT-TELEVISION-AWARD-EMMY-RED CARPETUS-ENTERTAINMENT-TELEVISION-AWARD-EMMY-RED CARPET
    Michelle Monaghan. AFP via Getty Images

    Michelle Monaghan

    in Rabanne 

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    Molly Gordon. Getty Images

    Molly Gordon

    in Giorgio Armani 

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    Charlotte Le Bon. WireImage

    Charlotte Le Bon

    in Courrèges

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    Ben Stiller and Christine Taylor. WireImage

    Ben Stiller and Christine Taylor

    77th Primetime Emmy Awards - Arrivals77th Primetime Emmy Awards - Arrivals
    Lisa. Getty Images

    Lisa

    in Lever Couture 

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    Sarah Catherine Hook. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Sarah Catherine Hook

    in Miu Miu

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    Britt Lower. Getty Images

    Britt Lower

    in Calvin Klein 

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    Justine Lupe. Getty Images

    Justine Lupe

    in Carolina Herrera 

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    Jennifer Coolidge. Getty Images

    Jennifer Coolidge

    in Christian Siriano 

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    Chase Sui Wonders. Variety via Getty Images

    Chase Sui Wonders

    in Thom Browne

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    Isa Briones. Getty Images

    Isa Briones

    in Erik Charlotte

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    Sarah Bock. WireImage

    Sarah Bock

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    Krys Marshall. Getty Images

    Krys Marshall

    in Sebastian Gunawan

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    Jackie Tohn. Getty Images

    Jackie Tohn

    in Marmar Halim

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    Sam Nivola. AFP via Getty Images

    Sam Nivola

    in Dior

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    Walton Goggins. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Walton Goggins

    in Louis Vuitton

    77th Primetime Emmy Awards - Arrivals77th Primetime Emmy Awards - Arrivals
    Haley Kalil. Getty Images

    Haley Kalil

    in Marc Bouwer 

    The Best Red Carpet Fashion From the 2025 Emmy Awards

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    Morgan Halberg

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  • One Fine Show: ‘Why Look at Animals?’ at the National Museum of Contemporary Art Athens

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    Lynn Hershman Leeson, The Infinity Engine, 2014. Multimedia installation, dimensions variable. Courtesy of the artist, Altman Siegel, San Francisco and Bridget Donahue, New York. Photo: Paris Tavitian

    Welcome to One Fine Show, where Observer highlights a recently opened exhibition at a museum not in New York City, a place we know and love that already receives plenty of attention.

    You probably don’t remember a minor interaction in Blade Runner (1982) when Harrison Ford admires a snake at the night market, and asks the seller if it’s artificial. She responds, “You think I’d be working in a place like this if I could afford a real snake?” The film is the story of android slaves run amok, but the vogue for artificial animals is given much more attention in the book that inspired it by Philip K. Dick, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep (1968), which opens with Ford’s character getting into a fight with his wife about the need to save up for an authentic lamb.

    The farther we get from animals, the more we want them in our lives. “Why Look at Animals? A Case for the Rights of Non-Human Lives,” a new exhibition at the National Museum of Contemporary Art in Athens, seeks to examine the unique bond that exists between humans, animals and their representations. The show features over 200 works that occupy each floor of the museum, representing over 60 artists from four continents, among them Mark Dion, David Claerbout, Lynn Hershman Leeson, Emma Talbot, Rossella Biscotti and Marcus Coates.

    Claerbout’s video piece is representative. The Pure Necessity (2016) is an hour-long version of Disney’s The Jungle Book (1967) that excises the narrative of the lost boy, the dancing and the animals’ anthropomorphism. It took Claerbout and his team three years to hand draw this new version, a worthy project that forces us to consider the extent to which generations of young impressions about animals have been shaped by an animation studio whose founder admired Leni Riefenstahl.

    Coates is something of a mystic and has thrown himself into the project with vigor, contributing a digital text piece that examines the life of animals around Athens, a sound piece that traces the sonic connections between sounds made by diverse species, and Extinct Animals (2018), a sculpture series featuring plaster casts of the artist’s hands as he made shadow puppets of animals gone forever. It’s disheartening to see how many have gone in my lifetime—I like to hope I did see a Pyrenean ibex at one point. Biscotti’s contribution also abstracts a long-gone animal of consequence. Clara (2016) is named after a famous rhinoceros who toured Europe in the mid-eighteenth century as an oddity, brought to the Netherlands from Bengal by Douwe Jansz Mout van der Meer, a captain with the Dutch East India Company. Biscotti’s installation recreates Clara via handmade bricks and a pile of tobacco, which was said to keep her calm during her travels.

    “The zoo cannot but disappoint,” wrote John Berger in the 1977 essay that gives this exhibition its title. In earlier forms of society, the animal represented not only material needs like warmth and food but also spiritual guidance: “The animal has secrets which, unlike the secrets of caves, mountains, seas, are specifically addressed to man.” Representations of animals are always fraught, as they are laden with baggage about what modernity has both given to us and taken away.

    Why Look at Animals? A Case for the Rights of Non-Human Lives” is on view at the National Museum of Contemporary Art in Athens through February 15, 2026.

    More exhibition reviews

    One Fine Show: ‘Why Look at Animals?’ at the National Museum of Contemporary Art Athens

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    Dan Duray

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  • If You Need a 3-D Printed Toilet Seat, Call Jay Leno

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    Photo-Illustration: Illustration: Vulture. Photos: Getty Images

    Jay Leno is a lover of all things mechanical; his garage is the Chocolate Factory, and he’s Willy Wonka. Harrison Ford is a lover of all things practical; he’s the Grandpa Joe, springing into action when there’s something to do. Put the two together, well, let’s just say a 3-D printer hates to see them coming. In the middle of an NPR interview, Leno calls Ford to talk about… his toilet seat? “Yeah, Jay’s printing a 3-D printed toilet seat for me,” Ford said nonchalantly. But why?! “Because I asked him.” Okay, maybe he’s less of a Grandpa Joe than we thought. “He’s incredibly invested in machinery… and I had this toilet seat from a toilet that’s not in production anymore. And the toilet seat has discolored in a way that’s really unattractive,” he laughed. He then wondered if he could 3-D print the seat and thought of the one man who could do the job: “Ah, Jay Leno!” And Leno was up for the challenge. Ford concluded, “He embraced the project in a way I could’ve never imagined.” Do you think Leno prints pickleball paddles, too?

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    Alejandra Gularte

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  • ‘Still fighting Nazis all these years later’: Harrison Ford shares who he’s voting for in the 2024 election | The Mary Sue

    ‘Still fighting Nazis all these years later’: Harrison Ford shares who he’s voting for in the 2024 election | The Mary Sue

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    It’s not every day that your favorite celebrity talks about politics. And sometimes it can be disappointing. Not for me though, I am thriving as a Harrison Ford fan. The beloved Indiana Jones actor was in a video posted by Kamala Harris’ campaign, sharing his support for the Harris/Walz ticket.

    Celebrity endorsements are not just about knowing that our favorite actors are voting for the right candidate. It is to help inspire people to go out and get to the polls. If your dad was on the fence about who to vote for, maybe an endorsement for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz would help tip him in the right (or in this case, the left) direction. So Harrison Ford sharing his support for Harris and Walz is exciting.

    More than that, I just love when Ford does use his platform for something and seeing him share a message for the Harris/Walz ticket just makes me happy. “When dozens of former members of the Trump administration are sounding alarms saying ‘For God’s sake, don’t do this again,’ you have to pay attention,” Ford says in the video. “They’re telling us something important. I’ve got one vote, same as anyone else, and I’m going to use it to move forward. I’m going to vote for Kamala Harris.”

    As one fan pointed out, he really is embodying the energy of Indiana Jones in real life. “Go Harrison. Fighting the Nazi’s on screen and now in real life!” And that is true, Indiana Jones punching Nazis has been a common meme during the rise of the MAGA party so it is only fitting for Ford to share his support for Harris!

    “Harrison Ford. Still fighting Nazis all these years later,” another user shared and it just feels grefat to be his fan.

    Don’t disappoint Harrison Ford, now

    Again, I don’t think celebrity endorsements should make or break an election. However, it does feel great knowing that Harrison Ford is out here ready and willing to fight for what is right. For years, people have photoshopped Harrison Ford to make it seem like he supports Donald Trump. Ford has, since, made it clear that that is not the case.

    Him going out of his way to film a video in support of Kamala Harris just shows us how dire this election is. People who aren’t overtly political are coming out and showing their support. That should tell you something! If a celebrity who isn’t that politically vocal feels the need to share support for one candidate over another, doesn’t that say a lot?

    As Ford points out in his video, former members of the Trump administration are speaking out against Trump. They are begging people to not put him in power again and yet that doesn’t seem to be enough! Hopefully, Ford sharing his support for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz will at least sway someone to vote blue this upcoming election. After all, if it came down to it, I’d want to be on Indiana Jones’ side.


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  • Harrison Ford Endorses Kamala Harris: “A President Who Works For All Of Us”

    Harrison Ford Endorses Kamala Harris: “A President Who Works For All Of Us”

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    With three days until the presidential election, Harrison Ford is getting out the vote for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz.

    On Saturday, the Academy Award nominee announced his endorsement for the Democratic nominee and her running mate in two heartfelt video statements explaining why others should vote for the vice president as well.

    “I’m Harrison Ford, doing something I never thought I’d do: telling people I’ve never met who I’m voting for and why I think they might do the same,” he said in a video for Rolling Stone. “This election, I’m casting my ballot for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz. Do I agree with every one of their policies? Of course not. Do I think they’re perfect? Come on, for crying out loud, they’re people just like you and me.

    “But these two people believe in the rule of law. They believe in science. They believe that when you govern, you do so for all Americans. They believe that we are in this together. These are ideas I believe in. These are people I can get behind. Look, I’m frustrated about a lot of things in this country. I’m sure you are too. But the other guy, he spent four years turning us against each other while embracing dictators and tyrants around the world. That’s not who we are. We don’t need to ‘make America great again.’ Come on, we are great. What we need is to work together again. What we need is a president who works for all of us again,” added Ford.

    In a second video, Ford called attention to Trump’s former staff that has since come out against him. “When dozens of former members of the Trump administration are sounding alarms, saying, ‘For God’s sake, don’t do this again’ — you have to pay attention. They’re telling us something important,” he said.

    Noting that many of them are voting against the Republican party for the first time “because they know this really matters,” Ford added: “Kamala Harris will protect your right to disagree with her about policies or ideas. And then, as we have done for centuries, we’ll debate them, we’ll work on them together, and we’ll move forward. The other guy, he demands unquestioning loyalty, says he wants revenge. I’m Harrison Ford. I’ve got one vote, same as anyone else, and I’m going to use it to move forward. I’m going to vote for Kamala Harris.”

    The Shrinking star’s endorsement comes as Harris makes one final push for undecided voters, concluding her historic $370 million paid media campaign with ‘Brighter Future‘, an ad running across CBS and Fox during the 1pm ET slate of NFL games on Saturday.

    Ford previously endorsed Joe Biden during his 2020 campaign against Trump.

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  • Robert Downey Jr. is returning to ‘Avengers’ films as a villain in 1 of Marvel’s Comic-Con twists

    Robert Downey Jr. is returning to ‘Avengers’ films as a villain in 1 of Marvel’s Comic-Con twists

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    SAN DIEGO (AP) — Marvel Studios returned to San Diego Comic-Con with dancing Deadpool variants and a choir for a panel that included news about the next two “Avengers” films and surprise guests, including Harrison Ford and Robert Downey Jr.

    Downey is returning to Marvel’s films, but not as Iron Man. He’ll play the villain Victor Von Doom, or Doctor Doom, in at least one of the upcoming “Avengers” movies. Downey kicked off Marvel’s movie successes in “Iron Man” and played the popular character in nine films, but on Saturday appeared wearing Dr. Doom’s mask and a green cloak.

    “New mask, same task,” Downey said to frenzied cheers.

    The Russo brothers, who will be directing the movie featuring Downey, said his appearance in the film is “proof of the unimaginable possibilities in the Marvel multi-universe.”

    The reveal capped a jubilant return by Marvel to Comic-Con’s Hall H.

    Marvel Studios President Kevin Feige kicked off the panel by saying that due to this weekend’s success of “Deadpool & Wolverine,” the sprawling Marvel Cinematic Universe had now topped $30 billion in box-office earnings. In a nod to a scene in the movie, a choir sang Madonna’s “Like a Prayer” before Feige spoke.

    “Deadpool & Wolverine,” released Thursday, has already broken one record and could shatter more in its opening weekend. Feige used Saturday’s panel to chart the course ahead for the MCU, revealing Ford’s character in the next “Captain America” film and revealing “Avengers: Secret Wars and “Avengers: Doomsday” as the titles of the next two films in the epic superhero team-up series. “Doomsday” will hit theaters in 2026.

    Feige said all the actors introduced Saturday would appear in the upcoming “Avengers” movies, which will be directed by Joe and Anthony Russo. The brothers guided the “Avengers” franchise through its sprawling storyline capped by “Avengers: Endgame” in 2019 that included the death of Downey’s Tony Stark/Iron Man character.

    “When we directed ”Avengers: Endgame,” Joe and I truly believed that it was the end of the road for us in the Marvel Cinematic Universe because we had put all of our passion, our love, our imagination into “The Winter Soldier,” into “Civil War,” into “Infinity War,” climaxing all of it with “Avengers: Endgame,” Anthony Russo said. “That four movie run was incredible and it left us creatively spent with all of our emotions on the film. In the time since, through a very special story, Joe and I have come to potentially see a road forward with you.”

    They called “Secret Wars” the “biggest story that Marvel Comics ever told,” and Joe said it was the first comic book run he read as a child that made him “fall in love with comics.”

    Saturday’s session comes after Marvel skipped the convention last year due to the Hollywood strikes, which prevented writers and actors from speaking on panels.

    The cast of “Captain America: Brave New World” — Giancarlo Esposito, Tim Blake Nelson, Danny Ramirez and Anthony Mackie — joined the stage first and teased details about the upcoming film. Esposito revealed that he will be playing the villain, Seth Voelker, also known as Sidewinder.

    When asked about what it was like to join a Marvel project, Esposito said it was a “dream come true.

    “When your dreams come true and you get the call, you walk through the door,” he continued. “I have a great deal of gratitude for all the fans who really had this dream come true, because it was fan casting that linked us together.”

    The cast then stepped aside to share a scene from the movie on the big screen, which revealed that President Thaddeus “Thunderbolt” Ross, played by Ford, is hoping to rebuild the Avengers with Mackie’s Sam Wilson. It also showed Ford’s character transform into the Red Hulk.

    Ford joined the panel after fans were treated to clips from the movie and flexed his muscles to the roaring crowd. He also expressed excitement over his latest role, saying, “I am delighted, and proud to become a member of the Marvel Universe.”

    The cast and director of “Thunderbolts(asterisk)” also surprised fans with a short clip from the movie. Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Florence Pugh, Sebastian Stan and David Harbour (in full costume and speaking in character as the Red Guardian at first) stormed the stage and shared some more details about their characters.

    The film is slated to be released in May 2025.

    The final film teased at the panel was “The Fantastic Four,” starring Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby, Joseph Quinn and Ebon Moss-Bachrach. The movie will begin filming on Tuesday in London, Feige said.

    He said the film will hit theaters in almost exactly one year in July 2025.

    Following a video director Matt Shakman created specifically for Comic-Con that featured the cast in full ’60s glory, he and Feige revealed the official title of the film, “The Fantastic Four: First Steps.”

    The session included no mention of Jonathan Majors, who played the villain Kang the Conqueror and was previously a major part of Marvel’s “Avengers” plans. The actor was fired by the studio after he was convicted in December of assaulting a former girlfriend. He was sentenced to a yearlong counseling program in April and avoided jail time.

    Marvel already took over Hall H on Thursday with an electric panel celebrating “Deadpool & Wolverine,” in which the audience was treated to a full screening and surprise guests joining stars Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman on stage.

    The mounting enthusiasm for the film at Comic-Con was reflected across the country as the fans rushed to see it in theaters, securing the film as the new record holder for the Thursday preview for an R-rated movie. The comic book film sold an estimated $38.5 million worth of movie tickets from preview screenings Thursday.

    The “Deadpool & Wolverine” success woke up a sleepy year for Marvel and assuaged worries about its box-office underperformance in late 2023. The superhero factory hit a record low in November with the launch of “The Marvels,” which opened with just $47 million.

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  • The POTUS Is Fictional: Best US Presidents in Film

    The POTUS Is Fictional: Best US Presidents in Film

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    Here’s an article from the Wayback Machine . . . causes one to think: can politics get any worse?

    Originally published 2/25/2021

    Here’s the best conspiracy theory you’ll hear all day (among the many coming out of the White House): None of this is happening.

    Everything since the 2016 presidential election is just B-roll for a parody movie about the American presidency. Our actual president is dancing with Annette Bening at a state dinner. Our president is balancing the federal budget with common sense. Our American president is kicking ass on Air Force One.


    Like most people these days, I rely on movies to feel anything close to a real emotion. When it comes to political fervor, most of my passion for democracy comes from watching movies about fictional presidents, preferably with excellent cinematography and unrealistically attractive actors who recite Aaron Sorkin lines in bold pantsuits during dramatic “walk-and-talk” tracking shots. Who hasn’t closed their eyes and pretended The West Wing’s Martin Sheen was running America with his soft, uncular gaze?

    But rather than analyze what that says about my and most Americans’ civic values (or the fact that 96.5 percent of us don’t give a f**k about democracy, according to a recent Yale study), I’m going to keep searching for the next great American president in my Netflix queue.

    These are the best fictional American presidents (and their finest moments).


    Thomas J. Whitmore (Bill Pullman), Independence Day

    What is it about disaster movies that used to bring such solace? Was it witnessing unity in the face of adversity? Was it the emotional gravitas of humanity’s final reckoning? Was it all the really cool explosions?

    More importantly, whatever happened to major studios’ steady roll-out of disaster movies every year? Oh, that’s right. We’re Living in One.

    As much as Donald Trump wishes he had the charisma of Bill Pullman, President J. Whitmore’s inspiring speech at the end of 1996’s Independence Day is too iconic to forget:

    “We can’t be consumed by our petty differences anymore. We will be united in our common interests.

    “Perhaps it’s fate that today is the 4th of July, and you will once again be fighting for our freedom, not from tyranny, oppression, or persecution—but from annihilation. We’re fighting for our right to live, to exist.”


    Tom Beck (Morgan Freeman), Deep Impact

    Americans coming together in order to survive a global catastrophe? Utterly preposterous (literally: Americans are more politically divided over the current global health crisis than other advanced countries).

    But Mimi Leder’s 1998 movie gave us his majesty Morgan Freeman as President Tom Beck. Freeman’s solemn speeches make this mediocre disaster movie a must-see.

    “Millions were lost, countless more left homeless, but the waters receded. Cities fall, but they are rebuilt. And heroes die, but they are remembered,” he says.

    “We honor them with every brick we lay, with every field we sow, with every child we comfort and then teach to rejoice in what we have been re-given. Our planet, our home. So now, let us begin.”


    Dave Kovic (Kevin Kline), Dave

    A classic American Everyman doing a better job running the government than the elected official? What madness.

    In Ivan Reitman’s 1994 Oscar-nominated movie, Kevin Kline is Dave, and Dave is all of us. He also happens to be the doppleganger for the president of the United States.

    Among the movie’s most memorable scenes is when Dave Kovic, an “affable temp agency owner,” owns the sh*t out of the presidential cabinet by balancing the federal budget with common sense and basic math.


    James Marshall (Harrison Ford), Air Force One

    In this small movie you’ve probably never heard of, President James Marshall is played by Harrison Ford, a small screen actor you’ve also probably never heard of.

    Wolfgang Petersen’s 1997 action movie finds the POTUS and his family held hostage by communist radicals on Air Force One. While the American government rallies to rescue the president, he decides to just start kicking ass. Later, in an off-the-cuff speech, he decides to stop acting like a polite politician and act like a leader.

    “And tonight, I come to you with a pledge to change America’s policy. Never again will I allow our political self-interests to deter us from doing what we know to be morally right,” he says. “Atrocity and terror are not political weapons. And to those who would use them: Your day is over.”

    The American President (1995) 1990s romantic comedy movie trailer Michael Douglas Annette Bening

    Michael Douglas plays President Andrew Shepherd in Aaron Sorkin’s 1995 film. Annette Bening plays Sydney Ellen Wade, a passionate lobbyist for Earth-saving environmental legislation (pre-Greta Thunberg and climate scientists finally b*tch-slapping us in the face”)–who becomes the POTUS’s girlfriend.

    If you haven’t watched President Shepherd’s affirmation of democracy and human decency in the face of political subterfuge, then you’re missing one of the finest speeches in American rhetoric to ever win an Oscar:

    “America isn’t easy. America is advanced citizenship. You’ve gotta want it bad, ’cause it’s gonna put up a fight,” he declares in his national address.

    “It’s gonna say, ‘You want free speech? Let’s see you acknowledge a man whose words make your blood boil, who’s standing center stage and advocating at the top of his lungs that which you would spend a lifetime opposing at the top of yours.’

    “…We have serious problems to solve, and we need serious people to solve them. And whatever your particular problem is, I promise you Bob Rumson is not the least bit interested in solving it. He is interested in two things, and two things only: making you afraid of it, and telling you who’s to blame for it. That, ladies and gentlemen, is how you win elections.”

    In a year when reality feels so much more surreal and dystopian than fiction, movie presidents encourage us to keep believing in impossible governmental ideals–like fair democracy, equal rights, and not being assholes.

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  • Kristen Stewart’s Pretty Sure She Doesn’t Have a Future in the MCU

    Kristen Stewart’s Pretty Sure She Doesn’t Have a Future in the MCU

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    Image: Neon

    In the last couple of years, it feels like more big name actors have come into the MCU rather than relative unknowns and rising stars. From Harrison Ford to Oscar Isaac and Aubrey Plaza, anyone’s up for grabs these days—unless you’re Kristen Stewart, that is.

    Guesting on the “Not Skinny but Not Fat” podcast, the Love Lies Bleeding star was pretty frank in not having any interest in suiting up anytime soon. “It sounds like a fucking nightmare,” she said. Having been in the Twilight series and co-starring in 2012’s Snow White & the Huntsman alongside MCU veteran Chris Hemsworth, she doesn’t think she’s too good for these movies. Rather, her issue with the megafranchise is a fairly common one amongst audiences: they feel like they’re designed by committee and don’t allow for much in the way of creative freedom, both for a particular film’s director or the performers themselves.

    “You would have to put so much money and so much trust into one person,” she explained, “and it doesn’t happen. What ends up happening is this algorithmic, weird experience where you can’t feel personal at all about it.” In her eyes, “the system would have to change” if she were to actually sign up for a role.

    The other thing that would get her onboard? Greta Gerwig. She freely admitted her tune would change if the Barbie and Little Women director approached her with it, she’d sign on. Who could Stewart play, and what Marvel character(s) would Gerwig best be suited for? Let us know who you think they’d mesh with—or if they’d even be good fits for the MCU period—in the comments below.

    [via Variety]


    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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  • M. Emmet Walsh, unforgettable character actor from ‘Blood Simple,’ ‘Blade Runner,’ dies at 88

    M. Emmet Walsh, unforgettable character actor from ‘Blood Simple,’ ‘Blade Runner,’ dies at 88

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    LOS ANGELES – M. Emmet Walsh, the character actor who brought his unmistakable face and unsettling presence to films including “Blood Simple” and “Blade Runner,” has died at age 88, his manager said Wednesday.

    Walsh died from cardiac arrest on Tuesday at a hospital in St. Albans, Vermont, his longtime manager Sandy Joseph said.

    The ham-faced, heavyset Walsh often played good old boys with bad intentions, as he did in one of his rare leading roles as a crooked Texas private detective in the Coen brothers’ first film, the 1984 neo-noir “Blood Simple.”

    Joel and Ethan Coen said they wrote the part for Walsh, who would win the first Film Independent Spirit Award for best male lead for the role.

    Critics and film geeks relished the moments when he showed up on screen.

    Roger Ebert once observed that “no movie featuring either Harry Dean Stanton or M. Emmet Walsh in a supporting role can be altogether bad.”

    Walsh played a crazed sniper in the 1979 Steve Martin comedy “The Jerk” and a prostate-examining doctor in the 1985 Chevy Chase vehicle “Fletch.”

    In 1982’s gritty, “Blade Runner,” a film he said was grueling and difficult to make with perfectionist director Ridley Scott, Walsh plays a hard-nosed police captain who pulls Harrison Ford from retirement to hunt down cyborgs.

    Born Michael Emmet Walsh, his characters led people to believe he was from the American South, but he could hardly have been from any further north.

    Walsh was raised on Lake Champlain in Swanton, Vermont, just a few miles from the U.S.-Canadian border, where his grandfather, father and brother worked as customs officers.

    He went to a tiny local high school with a graduating class of 13, then to Clarkson University in Potsdam, New York, and the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York City.

    He acted exclusively on the stage, with no intention of doing otherwise, for a decade, working in summer stock and repertory companies.

    Walsh slowly started making film appearances in 1969 with a bit role in “Alice’s Restaurant,” and did not start playing prominent roles until nearly a decade after that when he was in his 40s, getting his breakthrough with 1978’s “Straight Time,” in which he played Dustin Hoffman’s smug, boorish parole officer.

    Walsh was shooting “Silkwood” with Meryl Streep in Dallas in the autumn of 1982 when he got the offer for “Blood Simple” from the Coen brothers, then-aspiring filmmakers who had seen and loved him in “Straight Time.”

    “My agent called with a script written by some kids for a low-budget movie,” Walsh told The Guardian in 2017. “It was a Sydney Greenstreet kind of role, with a Panama suit and the hat. I thought it was kinda fun and interesting. They were 100 miles away in Austin, so I went down there early one day before shooting.”

    Walsh said the filmmakers didn’t even have enough money left to fly him to New York for the opening, but he would be stunned that first-time filmmakers had produced something so good.

    “I saw it three or four days later when it opened in LA, and I was, like: Wow!” he said. “Suddenly my price went up five times. I was the guy everybody wanted.”

    In the film he plays Loren Visser, a detective asked to trail a man’s wife, then is paid to kill her and her lover.

    Visser also acts as narrator, and the opening monologue, delivered in a Texas drawl, included some of Walsh’s most memorable lines.

    “Now, in Russia they got it mapped out so that everyone pulls for everyone else. That’s the theory, anyway,” Visser says. “But what I know about is Texas. And down here, you’re on your own.”

    He was still working into his late 80s, making recent appearances on the TV series “The Righteous Gemstones” and “American Gigolo.”

    And his more than 100 film credits included director Rian Johnson’s 2019 family murder mystery, “Knives Out” and director Mario Van Peebles’ Western “Outlaw Posse,” released this year.

    Johnson was among those paying tribute to Walsh on social media.

    “Emmet came to set with 2 things: a copy of his credits, which was a small-type single spaced double column list of modern classics that filled a whole page, & two-dollar bills which he passed out to the entire crew,” Johnson tweeted. “’Don’t spend it and you’ll never be broke.’ Absolute legend.”

    Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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  • The Doctor Is Waiting, Here’s What We Know About ‘Shrinking’ Season 2!

    The Doctor Is Waiting, Here’s What We Know About ‘Shrinking’ Season 2!

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    Bill Lawrence may get praise for his work on Ted Lasso, but he has another Apple TV+ series that deserves our love and attention too. Shrinking, which stars Jason Segel and Harrison Ford, is another hit from the Scrubs creator and a must-watch for Lasso fans.

    The first season of Shrinking wrapped in March of 2023, and we’re coming up on a year without the show. That doesn’t mean that our wait is over for season 2, as Apple TV+ has yet to announce a premiere date.

    Let’s talk about what to expect from season 2 of Shrinking!

    Where did we leave off with season 1?

    While everyone was improving in their personal lives, things are going to get messy for Jimmy (Segel) when season 2 rolls around. At least, that’s what we can assume, because the end of season 1 saw his patient Grace (Heidi Gardner) push her boyfriend off a cliff.

    Jimmy will likely face some consequences after he crossed ethical boundaries to help Grace and ignored his friends’ insistence that his style of therapy was going to get him in trouble. Other than that, we’re not sure what to expect. Maybe Paul (Ford) is still working on his relationship with his daughter? Maybe more of Jimmy and Gaby (Jessica Williams)?

    Who is coming back for season 2?

    Jessica Williams in Shrinking
    (Apple TV+)

    As of now, Williams, Segel, and Ford are all slated to return for the second season. We’re also supposedly see returning players Michael Urie as Brian, Lukita Maxwell as Alice, and Christa Miller as Liz. There isn’t any news yet about Lily Rabe’s Meg or Luke Tennie’s Sean but hopefully, they’re both back as well.

    Given the ending of season 1, we will probably see more of Grace. Whether that’s a good thing for Jimmy or not, we’ll have to wait and see.

    When can we be back with our favorite therapists?

    As of right now, there is no release date for Shrinking season 2. We don’t yet even know if they’ve started filming/when it will be finished. Hopefully, it is sooner rather than later because we miss our favorite chaotic group of coworkers!

    (featured image: Apple TV+)

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]



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  • Harrison Ford Has Funny Reaction To Jason Segel At The Critics Choice Awards & Delivers Heartfelt Speech For Career Achievement

    Harrison Ford Has Funny Reaction To Jason Segel At The Critics Choice Awards & Delivers Heartfelt Speech For Career Achievement

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    Harrison Ford was honored at the Critics Choice Awards with the Career Achievement Award and delivered a heartfelt speech.

    “I’m really happy to be here tonight [and] to see what our business is turning into,” Ford said, accepting his award after a standing ovation from the crowd. “And all of the talented people who are getting opportunities that probably would not have existed in the early part of my career. I’m really happy about that.”

    The Star Wars alum said he felt “enormously lucky” for the honor and thanked his “lovely wife,” Calista Flockhart, who was visibly emotional with tears in her eyes.

    Ford noted that his wife “supports me when I need a lot of support — and I need a lot of support.”

    “I’m grateful to all the fine actors — I see many of them here tonight — that I’ve worked with and I’m deeply happy to have had the opportunities that I’ve had,” he continued. “Thank you, I won’t take any more of your time.”

    RELATED: Paul Giamatti Jokes About “Going Viral” For Eating In-N-Out In Acceptance Speech At Critics Choice Awards

    Earlier in the broadcast, cameras caught Ford in the funny moment when his Shrinking co-star presented an award. As Jason Segel took the state for his presenting duties, Ford was seen cheering his co-star on and saying his name.

    RELATED: Ariana DeBose’s Reaction To Being Lumped With “Actors Who Think They Are Singers” Joke At Critics Choice Awards Lights Up Social Media

    Ford and Segel co-star in the Apple TV+ series co-created by Bill Lawrence, Segel and Brett Goldstein. In the series, Ford plays the role of Dr. Paul Rhoades, a therapist and colleague of Segel’s Jimmy Laird. A second season of the comedy-drama has already been ordered following the first season which premiered on January 2023 and consisted of ten episodes.

    Watch Ford cheering on Segel at the Critics Choice Awards in the video below.

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  • Critics Choice Awards: Harrison Ford Gets Emotional Accepting Career Achievement Honor

    Critics Choice Awards: Harrison Ford Gets Emotional Accepting Career Achievement Honor

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    Harrison Ford got emotional accepting the the Career Achievement Award at Sunday night’s Critics Choice Awards.

    The actor was introduced by his Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny director, James Mangold, who called Ford a “hypergiant.”

    “The largest stars in the known universe are called variable hyper giants. Hyper giants are about 1700 times larger than our sun. A hyper giant is so big that 5 billion of our suns can be contained within it, and they’re so weighty that they pull other heavenly bodies toward them. Of course, Harrison Ford is a star. However, I submit tonight that he is a variable hypergiant. A star so big, he contains multitudes. A star so unique, he attracts other stars. A star so bright, he has warmed each of our lives in this room in this audience and likely on this planet.”

    Mangold then went into Ford’s filmography, from American Graffiti to Blade Runner to Working Girl to Air Force One to The Fugitive and more.

    “I spit out that incredible enviable list of films and performances without even mentioning Star Wars,” Mangold continued. “He was in five of them playing the charming Han Solo, who shaped all of our young lives as boys, at least, if not as women as well. Or the five Indiana Jones films in which he portrayed the beloved titular character, an archaeologist who pulls together the contradictory notions of a fussy, moralistic, snake-phobic bookworm and a dashing adventurer with old school integrity.”

    Ford — who received a standing ovation as he took the stage, while the camera panned to his wife, Calista Flockhart, who was teary-eyed — thanked the crowd as they continued to applaud before noting, “Come on. I only have three minutes,” which earned some laughter. He kept his comments short but was visibly moved by the honor.

    “First of all, I’m really happy to be here tonight to see what our business is turning into and all of the talented people who are getting opportunities that probably would not have existed in my early part of my career. I’m very happy about that,” he said. 

    “I’m here because of a combination of luck and the work of wonderful directors, writers, filmmakers,” continued Ford, getting emotional. “I feel enormously lucky. I’m happy for this for this honor and I appreciate it very much.

    “I wanna thank my lovely wife … who supports me when I need a lot of support — and I need a lot of support,” he added. “I’m grateful to all the fine actors, I see many of them here tonight that I worked with, and I’m deeply happy to have had the opportunities that I’ve had, and I’m grateful. Thank you. I won’t take any more of your time. Thank you.”

    See a full list of Critics Choice Awards winners here.

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    Kimberly Nordyke

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  • Harrison Ford to Receive Career Achievement Honor at Critics Choice Awards

    Harrison Ford to Receive Career Achievement Honor at Critics Choice Awards

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    Harrison Ford is nominated for best supporting actor in a comedy for his turn on the Apple TV+ series Shrinking at Sunday’s Critics Choice Awards. But even if he doesn’t win, the 81-year-old actor won’t go home empty-handed.

    The organization announced Tuesday that Ford will be feted with the Career Achievement Award at the 29th annual event, which will be hosted by Chelsea Handler and broadcast on The CW. The news comes during a busy spell for Ford who also stars opposite Helen Mirren in the Yellowstone spinoff series 1923. He will next be seen in the Marvel Cinematic Universe as Thaddeus “Thunderbolt” Ross in Marvel Studios’ Captain America: Brave New World opposite Anthony Mackie and Liv Tyler. Last year, he reprised his role as Indiana Jones in James Mangold’s Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.

    That film had a glitzy premiere at the Cannes Film Festival in May, and in conjunction with the premiere, a teary Ford accepted a surprise honorary Palme d’Or for lifetime achievement. He’s been similarly honored with career prizes from with the British Academy of Film and Television Arts’ Albert R. Broccoli Britannia Award, the American Film Institute’s Lifetime Achievement Award, an Honorary César Award and the National Association of Theater Owners’ Box Office Star of the Century award in 1994.

    His acting career dates back to the late 1960s. Major credits over the decades include a breakthrough role in 1973 in George Lucas’s American Graffiti followed by, of course, playing Han Solo in Star Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope, Steven Spielberg’s Raiders of the Lost Ark, Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner, Francis Ford Coppola’s The Conversation and Apocalypse Now, Mike Nichols’ Working Girl, Philip Noyce’s Tom Clancy adaptations Patriot Games and Clear and Present Danger, Andrew Davis’ The Fugitive, Wolfgang Petersen’s Air Force One, Robert Zemeckis’ What Lies Beneath, Kathryn Bigelow’s K-19: The Widowmaker, Brian Helgeland’s 42 and Gavin Hood’s Ender’s Game.

    The Critics Choice Awards show will be executive produced by Bob Bain Prods. and Berlin Entertainment. As announced, the ceremony will also see America Ferrera honored with an eighth annual SeeHer Award. Sponsors of the awards include Verizon, Delta Air Lines, Fiji Water, Cold Stone Creamery, Milagro Tequila, Champagne Collet, d’Arenberg and Maison L’Envoyé wines.

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    Chris Gardner

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  • Harrison Ford Sings Lullabies to His Basil Plants, So They Won’t Fear the Night

    Harrison Ford Sings Lullabies to His Basil Plants, So They Won’t Fear the Night

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    We show signs of respect in many ways, and naming things after people is one of the biggies. Streets, mountains, newly discovered critters that a team of scientists had to trek through cartel country in Peru to find—these are all things that can be vectors of respect for the living or the dead. Harrison Ford, one of our most renowned actors, has received the latter treatment. He is the proud new namesake of the Tachymenoides harrisonfordi, a snake.

    Ford, who is the vice chairman of Conservation International, an organization that supports and safeguard oceans, forests, and endangered species, has had this snake named after him, after previously lending his name to an ant (Pheidole harrisonfordi) and a spider (Calponia harrisonfordi). They spotted the thing sunning itself in Otishi National Park in May of last year, according to Conservation International

    “These scientists keep naming critters after me, but it’s always the ones that terrify children. I don’t understand. I spend my free time cross-stitching. I sing lullabies to my basil plants, so they won’t fear the night,” said Ford in a statement. (The authors of those Clickhole “They Said What?!” columns are seething right now, wishing they could come up with something this good.) 

    “In all seriousness, this discovery is humbling,” Ford continued. “It’s a reminder that there’s still so much to learn about our wild world—and that humans are one small part of an impossibly vast biosphere. On this planet, all fates are intertwined, and right now, one million species are teetering on the edge of oblivion. We have an existential mandate to mend our broken relationship with nature and protect the places that sustain life.”

    Reptiles are a priority for the organization because “most people likely don’t find snakes as cute as a fluffy panda cub,” according to Neil Cox, manager of the Conservation International–IUCN Biodiversity Assessment Unit and coauthor of the 2022 Global Reptile Assessment. He added in a statement that discovering Indy’s snake “helps us better understand how snake species exist and survive in the world, and I hope that its fun name will help draw attention to the threat of extinction facing reptiles globally.”

    And hopefully giving over his name will go far to help rehabilitate the snake’s image after the massive hit it took in the ’80s. 

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    Kenzie Bryant

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  • Resurfaced Clip Shows Harrison Ford Laughing At Playing Indiana Jones When He’s 80: ‘Indiana Jones And The Comfortable Bed’

    Resurfaced Clip Shows Harrison Ford Laughing At Playing Indiana Jones When He’s 80: ‘Indiana Jones And The Comfortable Bed’

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    By Emerson Pearson.

    No matter Harrison Ford’s age, he’s still outrunning boulders and cracking his whip.

    After visiting O’Brien’s podcast earlier this week, a viral clip from “Late Night with Conan O’Brien” resurfaced recently, featuring the host joking with Harrison Ford about the actor playing Indiana Jones when he’s 80 years old.

    The joke turned somewhat true as Ford recently appeared in “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” just weeks before turning 81. O’Brien quipped that at 80, Ford could do movies where the treasures are brought to him.


    READ MORE:
    Harrison Ford Playfully Mocks Conan O’Brien Over Han Solo Note: ‘You Can’t F—ing Remember That?’

    Ford laughed, and O’Brien suggested the title for an “Indiana Jones” film with an 80-year-old Ford: “Indiana Jones and the Comfortable Bed.”

    “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” marks Ford’s final appearance as the iconic archaeologist. However, the 81-year-old actor has no plans to retire from acting. Ford has recently joined the Marvel Cinematic Universe in the film “Captain America: Brave New World” and has other projects lined up, including the Apple TV+ comedy series “Shrinking” and the Paramount+ drama series “1923.”

    When asked about retirement last month, Ford expressed: “I don’t. I don’t do well when I don’t have work. I love to work. I love to feel useful. It’s my Jones. I want to be helpful.”


    READ MORE:
    Movie Review: Harrison Ford Gets A Swashbuckling Sendoff In ‘Indiana Jones And The Dial Of Destiny’

    For Ford, acting is more than a job; it’s a passion that he intends to continue pursuing, adding: “The intensity and the intimacy of collaboration. It’s the combined ambition somehow forged from words on a page. I don’t plan what I want to do in a scene. I don’t feel obliged to do anything. I’m naturally affected by things that I work on.”

    Audiences can watch Ford reprise his role as the adventurer in “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” now playing in theatres nationwide.

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    Emerson Pearson

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  • Harrison Ford Gives His Reaction to ‘Dial of Destiny’ Ending

    Harrison Ford Gives His Reaction to ‘Dial of Destiny’ Ending

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    The following post contains SPOILERS for Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.

    When it was announced that Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny would be the final Indiana Jones film, a lot of folks took that to mean Indy was going to kick the bucket in the film. It probably didn’t hurt that the film was directed by James Mangold, who previously made Logan, which didn’t end too happily for old Wolverine. (Maybe that’s why the film has underperformed at the box office? People don’t want to see Indiana Jones die?)

    But no, Indy survives Dial of Destiny. And in a new interview with Entertainment Weekly, Ford says they barely ever discussed the possibility that Indy could die because “the script came out, and it didn’t have Indiana Jones dying.”

    Ford did reveal that he did discuss Indy’s death later on with Mangold, who told him he didn’t want to be the guy who killed Indiana Jones.

    “I think it’s a good choice to leave him in the condition we see him at the end of the film,” Ford added. “Most of his problems have been solved, dealt with. He’s back to the form that we like to see him in, I think. And I think it’s a wonderful last scene… I really like it.”

    READ MORE: The Best Indiana Jones Movie That Was Never Made

    Mangold himself told EW that for him “there really is no attraction to just getting thousands of people in a theater and hitting them in a head with a hammer… Death is not an ending.” He explained that Logan was a very different story, and that movie needed that ending because it gave a “beautiful irony” to the character’s overall story.

    Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny is in theaters now.

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    Cody Mcintosh

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  • Celebrity birthdays for the week of July 9-15

    Celebrity birthdays for the week of July 9-15

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    Celebrity birthdays for the week of July 9-15:

    July 9: Actor Richard Roundtree is 81. Singer Dee Dee Kenniebrew of The Crystals is 78. Actor Chris Cooper is 72. TV personality-turned-musician John Tesh is 71. Country singer David Ball is 70. Business leader Kevin O’Leary (“Shark Tank”) is 69. Singer Debbie Sledge of Sister Sledge is 69. Actor Jimmy Smits is 68. Actor Tom Hanks is 67. Singer Marc Almond of Soft Cell is 66. Actor Kelly McGillis is 66. Singer Jim Kerr of Simple Minds is 64. Singer Courtney Love is 59. Bassist Frank Bello of Anthrax is 58. Actor David O’Hara (“The District”) is 58. Actor Pamela Adlon (“King of the Hill,” “Louie”) is 57. Actor Scott Grimes (“ER,” ″Party of Five”) is 52. Singer-guitarist Isaac Brock of Modest Mouse is 48. Musician Jack White is 48. Actor Fred Savage is 47. Singer Dan Estrin of Hoobastank is 47. Actor Linda Park (“Star Trek: Enterprise”) is 45. Actor Megan Parlen (“Hang Time”) is 43. Singer-actor Kiely Williams of 3LW (“Cheetah Girls” films) is 37. Actor Mitchel Musso (“Phineas and Ferb,” “Hannah Montana”) is 32. Actor Georgie Henley (“The Chronicles of Narnia”) is 28.

    July 10: Actor William Smithers (“Dallas,” ″Peyton Place”) is 96. Singer Mavis Staples is 84. Actor Mills Watson (“B.J. and the Bear,” ″Lobo”) is 83. Actor Robert Pine (“CHiPS”) is 82. Guitarist Jerry Miller of Moby Grape is 80. Folk singer Arlo Guthrie is 76. Bassist Dave Smalley of The Raspberries is 74. Singer Neil Tennant of the Pet Shop Boys is 69. Banjo player Bela Fleck of Bela Fleck and the Flecktones is 65. Actor Fiona Shaw (“True Blood,” ″Harry Potter” films) is 65. Drummer Shaw Wilson of BR549 is 63. Actor Alec Mapa (“Ugly Betty” ″Half & Half”) is 58. Country singer Ken Mellons is 58. Guitarist Peter DiStefano of Porno for Pyros is 58. Actor Gale Harold (“Hellcats”) is 54. Country singer Gary LeVox of Rascal Flatts is 53. Actor Sofia Vergara (“Modern Family”) is 51. Singer Imelda May is 49. Actor Adrian Grenier (“Entourage,” ″Cecil B. DeMented”) is 47. Actor Chiwetel Ejiofor (“12 Years a Slave”) is 46. Actor Gwendoline Yeo (“Desperate Housewives”) is 46. Actor Thomas Ian Nicholas (“American Pie”) is 43. Singer Jessica Simpson is 43. Actor Heather Hemmens (“Hellcats”) is 39. Rapper-singer Angel Haze is 32. Singer Perrie Edwards of Little Mix is 30.

    Hong Kong-born singer and songwriter Coco Lee has died by suicide. She was 48. Her sisters said in a statement on Wednesday that the star had been suffering from depression for several years with her condition deteriorating drastically over the last few months.

    Actors Rose Leslie and Kit Harington have welcomed their second child. A publicist for Harington confirmed Monday that the couple have added a daughter to their family.

    Better known as Sudan Archives, Brittney Denise Parks is an avant-garde violinist and singer-songwriter who describes her style as “fiddle soft punk.”

    A London prosecutor says Oscar-winning actor Kevin Spacey is a “sexual bully” who assaults other men and doesn’t respect personal boundaries.

    July 11: Singer Jeff Hanna of the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band is 76. Ventriloquist Jay Johnson (“Soap”) is 74. Actor Bruce McGill (“Animal House”) is 73. Actor Stephen Lang is 71. Actor Mindy Sterling (“Austin Powers”) is 70. Actor Sela Ward is 67. Singer Peter Murphy of Bauhaus is 66. Reggae singer Michael Rose of Black Uhuru is 66. Actor Mark Lester (“Oliver”) is 65. Jazz saxophonist Kirk Whalum is 65. Guitarist Richie Sambora (Bon Jovi) is 64. Singer Suzanne Vega is 64. Actor Lisa Rinna is 60. Bassist Scott Shriner of Weezer is 58. Actor Debbe Dunning (“Home Improvement”) is 57. Actor Greg Grunberg (“Heroes,” ″Alias,” ″Felicity”) is 57. Wildlife expert Jeff Corwin (“The Jeff Corwin Experience”) is 56. Actor Justin Chambers (“Grey’s Anatomy”) is 53. Actor Leisha Hailey (“The L Word”) is 52. Actor Michael Rosenbaum (“Smallville”) is 51. Rapper Lil’ Kim is 49. Actor Jon Wellner (“CSI”) is 48. Rapper Lil’ Zane is 42. Actor David Henrie (“Wizards of Waverly Place”) is 34. Actor Connor Paolo (“Revenge”) is 33. Singer Alessia Cara is 27.

    July 12: Actor Denise Nicholas (“In the Heat of the Night”) is 79. Singer Walter Egan is 75. Fitness guru Richard Simmons is 75. Actor Cheryl Ladd (“Charlie’s Angels”) is 72. Singer Ricky McKinnie of The Blind Boys of Alabama is 71. Actor Mel Harris (“thirtysomething”) is 67. Gospel singer Sandi Patty is 67. Guitarist Dan Murphy of Soul Asylum is 61. Actor Judi Evans (“Days of Our Lives”) is 59. Singer Robin Wilson of the Gin Blossoms is 58. Actor Lisa Nicole Carson (“Ally McBeal”) is 54. Country singer Shannon Lawson is 50. Rapper Magoo is 50. Actor Anna Friel (“Monarch,” “Pushing Daisies”) is 47. Singer Tracie Spencer is 47. Actor Alison Wright (“The Americans”) is 47. Actor Steve Howey (“Reba”) is 46. Actor Topher Grace (“That ’70s Show”) is 45. Actor Michelle Rodriguez (“The Fast and The Furious” films, “Lost”) is 45. Actor Kristen Connolly (“Zoo”) is 43. Singer-guitarist Kimberly Perry of The Band Perry is 40. Actor Matt Cook (“Man with a Plan”) is 39. Actor Natalie Martinez (“Under the Dome”) is 39. Actor Ta’Rhonda Jones (“Empire”) is 35. Actor Melissa O’Neill (“The Rookie”) is 35. Actor Rachel Brosnahan (“The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel,” ″House of Cards”) is 33. Actor Erik Per Sullivan (“Malcolm in the Middle”) is 32.

    July 13: Game show announcer Johnny Gilbert is 95. Actor Patrick Stewart is 83. Actor Harrison Ford is 81. Singer-guitarist Roger McGuinn of The Byrds is 81. Actor-comedian Cheech Marin is 77. Actor Daphne Maxwell Reid (“Eve,” ″The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air”) is 75. Actor Didi Conn is 72. Actor Gil Birmingham (“Twilight” films) is 70. Country singer Louise Mandrell is 69. Bassist Mark “The Animal” Mendoza of Twisted Sister is 67. Actor-director Cameron Crowe is 66. Actor Michael Jace (“The Shield”) is 61. Actor Tom Kenny (“Spongebob Squarepants”) is 61. Country singer-songwriter Victoria Shaw is 61. Bluegrass singer Rhonda Vincent is 61. Country singer Neil Thrasher (Thrasher Shriver) is 58. Actor Ken Jeong (“The Masked Singer,” “Dr. Ken”) is 54. Singer Deborah Cox is 50. Drummer Will Champion of Coldplay is 45. Actor Aya Cash (“You’re the Worst”) is 41. Actor Colton Haynes (“Arrow”) is 35. Actor Steven R. McQueen (“The Vampire Diaries”) is 35. Singer Leon Bridges is 34. Actor Hayley Erin (“General Hospital”) is 29. Actor Kyle Harrison Breitkopf (“The Whispers”) is 18.

    July 14: Actor Nancy Olson (“Sunset Boulevard”) is 95. Football player-turned-actor Rosey Grier is 91. Actor Vincent Pastore (“The Sopranos”) is 77. Bassist Chris Cross of Ultravox is 71. Actor Jerry Houser (“Summer of ’42″) is 71. Actor Eric Laneuville (“St. Elsewhere”) is 71. Actor Stan Shaw (“Harlem Nights”) is 71. Singer-comedian Kyle Gass of Tenacious D is 63. Guitarist Ray Herndon of McBride and the Ride is 63. Actor Jane Lynch is 63. Actor Jackie Earle Haley is 62. Actor Matthew Fox (“Lost,” ″Party of Five”) is 57. Keyboardist Ellen Reid of Crash Test Dummies is 57. Singer-guitarist Tanya Donelly of Belly is 57. Actor Missy Gold (“Benson”) is 53. Singer Tameka Cottle of Xscape is 48. Country singer Jamey Johnson is 48. Musician taboo of Black Eyed Peas is 48. Actor Scott Porter (“Friday Night Lights”) is 44. Actor Phoebe Waller-Bridge (“Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny,” “Fleabag”) is 38. Singer Dan Smith of Bastille is 37. Actor Sara Canning (“The Vampire Diaries”) is 36. Singer Dan Reynolds of Imagine Dragons is 36.

    July 15: Actor Patrick Wayne is 84. Singer Millie Jackson is 79. Guitarist-singer Peter Lewis of Moby Grape is 78. Singer Linda Ronstadt is 77. Drummer Artimus Pyle (Lynyrd Skynyrd) is 75. Actor Terry O’Quinn (“Lost,” ″West Wing,”) is 71. Singer-guitarist David Pack (Ambrosia) is 71. Drummer Marky Ramone (The Ramones) is 71. Guitarist Joe Satriani is 67. Country songwriter Mac McAnally is 66. Model Kim Alexis is 63. Actor Willie Aames (“Eight Is Enough,” ″Charles In Charge”) is 63. Actor Lolita Davidovich is 62. Actor-director Forest Whitaker is 62. Actor Shari Headley is 60. Actor Brigitte Nielsen is 60. Drummer Jason Bonham is 57. Actor Amanda Foreman (“Parenthood,” ″Felicity”) is 57. Singer Stokley of Mint Condition is 56. Actor-comedian Eddie Griffin (“Malcolm and Eddie”) is 55. Actor Reggie Hayes (“Girlfriends”) is 54. Actor Jim Rash (“Community”) is 52. Drummer John Dolmayan of System of a Down and of Scars on Broadway is 51. Actor Scott Foley (“Scandal,” ″Felicity”) is 51. Actor Brian Austin Green (“Beverly Hills 90210”) is 50. Rapper Jim Jones is 47. Actor Diane Kruger (“National Treasure,” “Troy”) is 47. Actor Lana Parrilla (“Once Upon a Time,” ″Swingtown”) is 46. Guitarist Ray Toro of My Chemical Romance is 46. Actor Laura Benanti (“Law and Order: SVU”) is 44. Singer Kia Thornton of Divine is 44. Actor Taylor Kinney (“Chicago Fire”) is 42. Actor Tristan “Mack” Wilds (“90210″) is 34. Actor Iain Armitage (“Big Little Lies,” “Young Sheldon”) is 15.

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