Anne Hathaway in Viktor & Rolf: Hollywood Stands Up To Cancer Event on 1/28/2024

Anne Hathaway in Viktor & Rolf: Hollywood Stands Up To Cancer Event on 1/28/2014

From justjared.com

Anne Hathaway is the center of attention while attending the 2024 Hollywood Stands Up to Cancer Event on Tuesday (January 28) in Culver City, Calif.

FYI: Anne is wearing a Viktor & Rolf jacket and pants.

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with husband Justin Mikita and Jesse Tyler Ferguson
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Earlier that day
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over the weekend
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Full Article(s) and More Pictures on justjared.com:
Anne Hathaway & Jesse Tyler Ferguson Smile for Stands Up to Cancer! | 2024 Hollywood Stands Up to Cancer, Anne Hathaway, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Justin Mikita : Just Jared

Anne Hathaway: ‘Rio 2’ Premiere in Miami Beach on 3/21/2024

Anne Hathaway: ‘Rio 2′ Premiere in Miami Beach on 3/21/2014

From dailymail.co.uk

Anne Hathaway at the Rio 2 Premiere in Miami Beach on Friday, March 21, 2024

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Anne Hathaway at the Miami Walk Of Fame Inauguration on Friday
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Jemaine Clement, Kristin Chenoweth, George Lopez, Rodrigo Santoro, Andy Garcia, Anne, Carlos Saldanha and Jamie Foxx were at the event

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Later in the day

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Full Article(s) and More Pictures on dailymail.co.uk:
Anne Hathaway stuns in purple and orange ensemble at Rio 2 premiere | Mail Online

Anne Hathaway is attacked by a parrot as her head is playfully pecked during Miami Walk Of Fame inauguration | Mail Online

Anne Hathaway in Richard Nicoll: ‘Interstellar’ LA Premiere (10/26/2024)

Anne of Green Gables star Jon Crombie outed at funeral

Anne of Green Gables star Jon Crombie outed at funeral

https://twitter.com/spaikin

Scroll down to June 14th. I was really surprised his sister stated that he was gay but chose to keep his orientation private. I know that there have been rumors about that circulating for years since he never married nor was seen with a woman. Although I did read he had girlfriends. He probably knew how to avoid the spotlight, besides Anne of Green Gable stars were never front page celebrity news. That is good, they used common sense to avoid being tabloid fodder. Anyway, I can imagine despite the fact he is dead, a lot of female fans will be disappointed. He was cute and a nice guy. According to his sister, he came out a few years ago.

R.I.P. Jonathan Crombie from Anne of Green Gables

R.I.P. Jonathan Crombie from Anne of Green Gables

https://www.cbc.ca/m/news/canada/jona…t-48-1.3038948
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Jonathan Crombie, Anne of Green Gables actor, dead at 48
Actor best known for playing Gilbert Blythe in TV movies, also played lead in Drowsy Chaperon in 2024
UPDATED2:27 PM ET
CBC News
media duration: 2:48play video
Canadian actor Jonathan Crombie dead at 48
VIDEO
Jonathan Crombie, who played Gilbert Blythe in the Anne of Green Gables movies, has died at the age of 48, CBC News has learned.

He was also the son of David Crombie, who was mayor of Toronto from 1972 to 1978 and served as a federal Progressive Conservative cabinet minister in the 1980s.

The actor’s sister, Carrie Crombie, told CBC News on Saturday that her brother suffered a brain hemorrhage and died in New York City on April 15.

"We’ve been going through lots of stories the last couple days," she said.

"He was funny, he was sweet, he loved acting, he loved comedy and singing and dancing. As a little kid, he just loved Broadway shows and all of that kind of stuff and would sing and dance in the living room."

Answered to the name Gil

Jonathan Crombie will be best remembered for his role in the CBC TV movie Anne of Green Gables in 1984 and its two sequels in 1987 and 2000.

Carrie Crombie said her brother never shied away from the fame that came along with playing the role of Gilbert Blythe, and happily answered to the name Gil when recognized by fans on the street.

‘I think he was really proud of being Gilbert Blythe…he really enjoyed that series and was happy, very proud of it.’- Carrie Crombie
"I think he was really proud of being Gilbert Blythe and was happy to answer any questions…he really enjoyed that series and was happy, very proud of it — we all were," she said.

"[But] I think his proudest part was when he played the lead in Drowsy Chaperone on Broadway. That was just an amazing thing for him to be able to do."

Anne of Green Gables producer Kevin Sullivan said dozens of actors, including Jason Priestley, tried out for the role of Gilbert Blythe but none captured the sprit of the character.

Casting director Diane Polley, Sarah Polley’s mother, eventually discovered the then-17-year-old Crombie while he was acting in a high school play.

"She said, ‘Trust me. He’s it," Sullivan said. "We never screen-tested him. We met him and he was cast. It was a perfect storm … It just all worked perfectly."

Answered every fan letter

Sullivan said Crombie and the on-screen character he came to em**** were actually pretty similar.

‘Jonathan was as generous, as kind, as sensitive and as ambitious, in some ways, as the character he came to be identified with.’— Kevin Sullivan, producer
"I think for legions of young women around the world who fell in love with the Anne of Green Gables films, Jonathan literally represented the quintessential boy next door, and there were literally thousands of women who wrote to him over the years who saw him as a perfect mate," Sullivan said.

"I think there will be hundreds of people who will be floored that this has happened. It’s such a devastating tragedy. In reality, Jonathan was as generous, as kind, as sensitive and as ambitious, in some ways, as the character he came to be identified with."

Sullivan said Crombie and Megan Follows, the actress who played Anne Shirley in the movies, had a special relationship off screen.

"Megan was more of a seasoned professional, in some ways, than Jonathan was," he said.

"He was kind of a newbie and I just remember that they were able to ground each other extremely well and the relationship that they had was one of great affection … they were both very generous with each other and both really made those performances vivid and real."

‘Kinda quirky’

Jonathan Crombie also performed with a sketch comedy troupe featured in the Canadian TV series Comedy Now! in 1998. Carrie Crombie said her brother was incredibly passionate about improv and sketch comedy.

"John was funny. He was kinda quirky in some ways," she said.

"Like he would only take the bus back and forth from Toronto to New York. And, to be honest, that’s how we are going to be bringing him back. We felt that it was an ode to Jonathan. He would never go on a plane, so we’re going to make the trek from New York to Toronto on a bus with his ashes."

Crombie said her brother just didn’t feel it necessary to spend the money required to make the journey by plane.

"He always seemed to attract interesting people on buses. He always had great stories about characters on buses, so we always had fun listening to his impersonations."

Carrie Crombie said she didn’t think her brother had any major health issues, and was committed to staying healthy. She said his organs have been donated, which is something he would have been proud of.

She said a "huge, wonderful celebration of life" will be held in his honour some time in the coming weeks.

Anne Hathaway: ‘Rio 2’ Screening in LA on 4/26/2024

Anne Hathaway: ‘Rio 2′ Screening in LA on 4/26/2014

From dailymail.co.uk

Anne Hathaway at a Screening of Rio 2 in LA on Saturday, April 26, 2024

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Full Article(s) and More Pictures on dailymail.co.uk:
Anne Hathaway spreads anti-cigarette message on black blouse at screening of film Rio 2 | Mail Online

70th Anniversary of Anne Frank’s Betrayal

70th Anniversary of Anne Frank’s Betrayal

A sad day – I always wondered would we be the same had Anne survived and simply disappeared into the world, had she been allowed.


Anne Frank and Amsterdam: A dark date in the diary


Seventy years since Anne Frank’s arrest, Chris Leadbeater visits the house that shielded her

Chris Leadbeater

Saturday, 2 August 2024
It always seems strange to see a large crowd waiting outside a site of great sorrow. It is a hot summer’s day in Amsterdam and the holiday-happy queue is snaking around the corner from the Prinsengracht canal, spilling into the adjacent Westermarkt square. Behind me, a family fidgets in the heat. Ahead, four teenagers are lost in their smartphones. But no one is bothered by the delay – and the time passes in a burble of laughter and conversation.


There is nothing vaguely inappropriate about this. And yet every group in the line ceases its chatter the second it crosses the threshold into 263 Prinsengracht. The Anne Frank House is a place that, without having to ask for it, sparks a respectful hush in its visitors.
The silence will be even more loaded two days from now. 4 August is the 70th Anniversary of the arrest of the 15-year-old girl who has become the most recognisable victim of the Holocaust. German by birth, Jewish by faith, she was wrenched from this townhouse on the border of the Jordaan district in the Dutch capital – along with seven family members and friends with whom she had shared its achterhuis (annexe) for 25 months – on 4 August 1944.
This is not just a red-letter date in the tragic end to Anne Frank’s life. It is the only one. The precise details of her death – in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in northern Germany, probably of typhus, probably in March 1945 – went unrecorded. And yet, in the symbol of persecution she has become, she is far more than one **** in six million.
خليجيةIn many ways, the home where she hid from 6 July 1942 onwards needs no introduction. It was the headquarters of Opekta, her father’s fruit-extract company. When, that July, two years after Germany had invaded the Netherlands, Anne’s elder sister, Margot, received an order to relocate to a work camp, Otto Frank decided to conceal his family in the storage space above his firm’s offices, knowing it was shielded from view by the surrounding buildings. They were joined by another family, the Van Pels – and Fritz Pfeffer, a dentist.
It is possible to grasp the crampedness that defined daily existence in these three ill-lit storeys – because Anne described it in the diary that would make her a posthumous icon. "The whole house is crawling with fleas and it’s getting worse every day," she wrote on 3 August 1943, of an infestation caused by the Van Pels’ cat. "It’s making us all very jittery."
The achterhuis retains its sense of claustrophobia today, its compactness emphasised by the journey up narrow stairs to find it. I climb carefully, through the Opekta offices – recreated in their 1940s state, ledgers open, floorboards creaking – and then come to the landing where, as in 1944, a wide bookcase is propped at the entrance to the annexe. This is a replica – but to move past it and into the gloom beyond feels momentous nonetheless.
The squashed size of this area is immediately clear – the tiny bathroom, the kitchen buried in the corner of the "living" room. But it is Anne’s bedroom which speaks loudest. There, as was Otto Frank’s plan when he preserved the townhouse as a museum in 1960, is his youngest child’s personality frozen behind glass, the walls adorned with torn-out magazine images of stars of the cinema – Greta Garbo, Ginger Rogers. They were a source of comfort when the family moved in. "Our little room looked very bare at first," Anne wrote on 11 July 1942. "But thanks to Daddy, who had brought my film-star collection … I have transformed the walls into one gigantic picture. This makes it look much more cheerful."
They are also among the most harrowing relics of this horrific era. They are the Holocaust made personal. In this con**** – the mundane celebrity fascination of a teenage girl – Anne Frank is every female relation you ever cared about: your baby sister, your little cousin, your wife or girlfriend in her formative years, that faded mantelpiece photo of your mother in her youth. It is impossible to enter the room and not be deeply affected.
You leave via the house next door, the museum having long absorbed 265 Prinsengracht. Here, an exhibition (until April2020) salutes the helpers, Otto Frank’s employees, who kept the family from sight, including Miep Gies, who guarded Anne’s diary after the arrests. Here too is a multimedia facility where multiple-choice questions – on ethical issues such as the new rise of the far right and whether a political party should ever be banned – appear on a screen. Visitors answer via keypads – and the wide-ranging results, flashed up instantly, show there are no easy answers. But the queue is still there when I step outside – proof that, 70 years on, many of us are still prepared to bear witness to 1944’s heart of darkness.
Getting there
Several airlines fly to Amsterdam Schiphol from various UK airports, including British Airways (0844 493 0787; ba.com), KLM (020 7660 0293; klm.com), easyJet (0843 104 5000; easyjet.com), Flybe (0371 700 2000; flybe.com) and Jet2 (0800 408 1350; jet2.com).
Visiting there
The Anne Frank House, 263-267 Prinsengracht (00 31 20 556 7100; annefrank.org). Open daily 9am-10pm during August; €9.
More information
iamsterdam.com
holland.com/uk

Source: Anne Frank and Amsterdam: A dark date in the diary