NEWS & NOTES : `BAYWATCH'S' LEE MAKING DOCUMENTARY ABOUT LIFE IN HER ROCKIN' HOUSEHOLD.Byline: Daily News Wire Services Pamela Anderson
Pamela Denise Anderson (born July 1, 1967) is a Canadian-born actress, sex symbol, glamour model, producer, TV personality, and author. Lee announced Thursday that she has signed a deal with Trimark Pictures Trimark Pictures Inc., was a production company formed by Mark Amin in 1985 and was the parent company of Trimark Holdings Inc. Formerly Vidmark Entertainment, Trimark Pictures specialized as a small studio, producing and distributing theatrical, independent, television and home to release ``Tommyland,'' a documentary she is making about herself, her husband, Motley Crue drummer Tommy Lee, and their life together. Lee has been working on the project for four months, representatives for the actress told the Hollywood Reporter. While the film is still in the editing stages, it will be ready for release in the first quarter of 1997. The documentary will be at least 80 minutes long and is centered on a party the ``Baywatch'' star threw for her husband last year, which was documented by multiple cameras. In case fans aren't sufficiently drawn by Lee, her musician spouse and their various friends, they will also be able to feast their eyes on several clowns and assorted other individuals from Cirque du Soleil Cirque du Soleil (French for "Circus of the Sun") is an entertainment empire based in Montreal, Quebec, Canada and founded in Baie-Saint-Paul in 1984 by two former street performers, Guy Laliberté and Daniel Gauthier. who provided entertainment for the party. Aces high: Sweden's Ace of Base and Roxette, Australia's INXS INXS In Excess (band) INXS Internet Exchange Service and the U.S.' R.E.M. were among the 97 artists that picked up nods Thursday at the inaugural Pan-European music awards. Known as Platinum Europe, the accolades were sponsored by the trade group the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry to recognize artists whose albums have exceeded sales of 1 million within Europe. Keitel in `Copland': Harvey Keitel has joined the ensemble cast of Miramax's much-talked-about ``Copland,'' which entered production Thursday in the New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of area. The actor, who has starred in a number of Miramax films, including ``Pulp Fiction,'' ``The Piano,'' ``From Dusk Till Dawn'' and ``Smoke,'' will get above-the-title billing with Robert De Niro Noun 1. Robert De Niro - United States film actor who frequently plays tough characters (born 1943) De Niro and Sylvester Stallone. ``Copland'' also features Ray Liotta, Annabella Sciorra, Janeane Garofalo, Michael Rapaport and Peter Berg. ``Copland,'' which was written and is being directed by James Mangold (``Heavy''), is about a hearing-impaired sheriff (Stallone) in a small New Jersey town populated by members of the New York Police New York Police may refer to:
NYPD New York Play Development officers he idolizes. Keitel will play corrupt officer Ray Donlan. Hall of Famers: Ed Asner, Steven Bochco, Charles Kuralt, Angela Lansbury, Aaron Spelling, Lew Wasserman and the producing team of Marcy Carsey and Tom Werner are the latest to be inducted into the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences' Hall of Fame. The eight new honorees represent the 78th through 85th inductees into the hall of fame. ATAS ATAS Academy of Television Arts & Sciences ATAS Aboriginal Tutorial Assistance Scheme ATAS Air-to-Air Stinger ATAS Advanced Tank Armament System ATAS Active Towed Array Sonar ATAS Australian Tsunami Alert System ATAS Association of Turkish American Scientists will hold its 12th annual Academy Hall of Fame induction ceremony Oct. 5 at a black-tie event at Walt Disney World Noun 1. Walt Disney World - a large amusement park established in 1971 to the southwest of Orlando Orlando - a city in central Florida; site of Walt Disney World Resorts near Orlando. Robbins honored: Tim Robbins was awarded the Humanitas Prize in the feature film category for his examination of the effects of capital punishment capital punishment, imposition of a penalty of death by the state. History Capital punishment was widely applied in ancient times; it can be found (c.1750 B.C.) in the Code of Hammurabi. in ``Dead Man Walking,'' which he adapted for the screen, directed and co-produced. The Humanitas Awards, announced Thursday, also saw ``Hiroshima'' and ``Gulliver's Travels'' as well as episodes of ``Frasier,'' ``Picket Fences,'' the children's show ``Fast Forward'' and an episode of ``Life With Louie'' receive honors for writing that ``entertains and enriches the lives of the viewing public.'' A total of $120,000 in prize money was given to the writers. The Humanitas Prize, founded in 1974, honors entertainment writers for authentically communicating the human experience in their scripts. New `Expectations': Hank Azaria has joined the cast of 20th Century Fox's ``Great Expectations,'' in which he will appear opposite Robert De Niro, Anne Bancroft, Gwyneth Paltrow and Ethan Hawke. Azaria will play a wealthy, arrogant architect in the film, which is a modern-day adaptation of Charles Dickens' 19th-century novel about a young boy whose life is transformed when he helps an escaped convict find food. Later he finds that the convict has become his mysterious benefactor. Azaria most recently starred in ``The Birdcage.'' CAPTION(S): 2 Photos Photo: (1) ROBBINS (2) LEE |
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