Monday, February 28, 2011

Will Charlie Sheen ever work again?

Mon Feb 28, 2011 9:57pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Charlie Sheen says he is ready to return to acting, but the real question is whether anyone would hire the troubled sitcom star -- and how much would it cost to insure him.

Warner Bros. and CBS have had enough of Sheen, announcing late last week that they were shutting down production of his TV top-rated comedy, "Two and a Half Men."

Now, Sheen is claiming that the move will free him up to take other roles. But the man whose recent publicity tour features such highlights as "The run I was on made Sinatra, Flynn, Jagger, Richards look like droopy-eyed, armless children" has the town asking not what will he do next, but rather will he ever work again?

If history is any indication, the answer is yes, assuming he can clean up his act.

Hollywood, which counts Eddie Murphy, Russell Crowe and Hugh Grant among its crop of scandal-tarred celebrities, loves a comeback story. Take Robert Downey Jr., whose past includes stints both in jail on drug charges and in a treatment facility for substance abuse. Like Sheen's, Downey's behavior once had the industry questioning his career viability, with many arguing nobody would be willing to insure his films. A decade later, he's the star of the blockbuster "Iron Man" films.

In Sheen's case, CBS and Warner Bros. have decided that they don't think he's well enough to continue and have actively tried to get him to seek treatment. "But until you see the doctor reports, who really knows whether it's a problem or not," says Lorrie McNaught, vp at insurance brokerage firm Aon/Albert G. Ruben. "Making comments doesn't make him uninsurable." (While Sheen doesn't currently have a morality clause in his contract, one could be added to void the studio's obligations if he acts out again.)

Nevertheless, getting back to work won't come easy. Already, Morgan Creek Prods. CEO James Robinson has voiced his concerns about casting Sheen in the planned "Major League" update. "I'm not going to risk putting Charlie in the movie if he continues messing up," he told TMZ. "If Charlie doesn't straighten up ... I unfortunately can't put him in the movie."

In the same interview, Robinson cited his experience working with another troubled star, Lindsay Lohan, whom he once famously blasted for erratic behavior. "When an actor doesn't show up for work," he said, "you can lose half-a-million dollars a day paying the 250 other people there for the shoot and the costs for the set."

If you poll those in the business of insuring stars, however, the answer is consistent: Wayward stars can become very -- and in some cases, prohibitively -- expensive, but are never uninsurable. "Everyone and anything, or almost anything, is insurable," says McNaught, "it just comes down to price."

Ross Miller, a partner with New York-based insurance brokerage firm D.R. Reiff, agrees, adding, "What it can come down to is whether you can present terms and conditions to a production company or a financier that they will accept."

Such terms often include higher deductibles, which can range from $25,000 to $250,000, depending on things like the project's budget, the shooting schedule and the cast's history. (For TV stars, rates are revisited at the end of every season.)

In certain cases, the stars themselves can also be asked to put their salaries in escrow, making them personally accountable if their actions end up causing delays. If their troubles are drug related, conditions can include regular testing or having chaperones placed on set.

According to underwriting experts, rates can be anywhere from one to five percent of a project's production budget. Of course, McNaught argues all an errant star needs is an incident-free next act to get his rate back down.

"It's a really forgiving industry," she says, "and everybody loves a comeback."



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Actress Jane Russell dead at 89

LOS ANGELES | Mon Feb 28, 2011 7:36pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" star Jane Russell, who became a controversial Hollywood sex symbol, died Monday at the age of 89, her family said.

Russell, best known as the buxom star of 1940s and 1950s movie, died of respiratory problems at her home in Santa Maria, central California, according to Etta Waterfield, her daughter-in-law.

Russell, who later in life was the "full-figured girl" in television brassiere ads, was at her best in comedies that, subtly or not, spoofed her sexpot image and focused on her figure.

Multimillionaire producer-industrialist Howard Hughes discovered Russell and put her in her first movie, "The Outlaw," which stuck her with the sexpot image based on her chest, which reportedly was size 38-D.

In the photos, the sultry Russell languished on a bed of straw, looking petulant as her tight-fitting peasant blouse slipped off one shoulder. Censors held up "The Outlaw" for almost three years before a limited release in 1943.

"Except for comedy, I went nowhere in the acting department," Russell said in her autobiography. "The truth is that, more often than not, I've been unhappy about the pictures I've been in."

The promotional material was so striking that in one poll Russell was voted "favorite actress" before the voters had even seen her act. Reviews of "The Outlaw" and many of her films were less kind with one critic calling her "the queen of motionless pictures."

In 1978, she made headlines by being jailed for four days for drunken driving and began her successful battle against alcoholism.

At the age of 60, Russell's figure once again gained the attention of millions -- this time on television screens advertising a brand of brassieres for "full-figured" women.



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Charlie Sheen escalates war of words with TV bosses

NEW YORK | Mon Feb 28, 2011 6:56pm EST

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Actor Charlie Sheen escalated his war of words with his former "Two and A Half Men" employers on Monday, demanding a pay rise as his lawyer threatened legal action over canceled episodes of the top-rated comedy.

Sheen, whose erratic behavior has put the future of his show in jeopardy, boasted on Monday morning chat shows about his partying lifestyle and said he was tired of pretending he is not "a total frigging rock star from Mars."

Hours later, his long time Los Angeles publicist quit, saying he could no longer do his job.

"I have worked with Charlie Sheen for a long time and I care about him very much. However, at this time, I'm unable to work effectively as his publicist and have respectfully resigned," Stan Rosenfield said in a statement.

Sheen, the highest paid actor on U.S. TV, launched several expletive-filled rants last week against "Two and A Half Men" creator, Chuck Lorre, causing the CBS network and series producer Warner Bros. Television to cancel production for the rest of the season.

Sheen's attorney on Monday sent letters to CBS and Warner Bros. demanding that the actor be paid for the eight episodes that will now no longer be made, the companies said.

According to celebrity website TMZ.com, the letter claims that Sheen was ready and able to go back to work, and is owed payment of roughly $16 million because of the shutdown.

Sheen said in an interview aired on "Good Morning America" that he would defend himself through "violent hatred" aimed at him, and he felt let down the show was stopped.

"I was actually disappointed," Sheen said. "People misinterpret my passion for anger."

Speculation has been rife about the future of "Two and A Half Men" would continue next season, with or without Sheen's leading role as a womanizing bachelor -- a part that seems to mimic the actor in real life.

He told NBC's "Today" show on Monday that returning would require a pay rise, saying the roughly $2 million per episode he makes now is too low. "I am a man of my word, so I will finish the TV show. I'll even do Season 10, but at this point, (because of) psychological distress, oh my God, it's 3 mil an episode. Take it or leave it," he said.

"I'm tired of pretending like I'm not special," Sheen added. "You can't process me with a normal brain."

Production of "Two and a Half Men" was first suspended in January when Sheen, 45, was persuaded to seek help after a 36-hour cocaine-fueled party at his home.

ABC News and celebrity website Radaronline had Sheen's blood and urine tested, and revealed no drugs in his system for the past 72 hours. "I am on a drug. It's called Charlie Sheen. It's not available because if you try it once, you will die," he said in the ABC interview.

The last time he took drugs, which he estimated to be about a month to six weeks ago, Sheen said he was "banging seven gram rocks and finishing them because that is how I roll."



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Oscar king Colin Firth says time to turn to comedy

LONDON | Mon Feb 28, 2011 6:57am EST

LONDON (Reuters) - Oscar winner Colin Firth said he wanted to play a comic role after winning widespread critical acclaim and a best actor Academy Award for his portrayal of the stammering King George VI in "The King's Speech."

"I want to do comedy," he told BBC radio early on Monday after winning his Oscar late on Sunday.

"I think gravitas is hugely over-egged and I would like to do something that amuses me now, change the pace, change the tone and I think it's time to continue my long tradition of making a fool of myself."

The 50-year-old Briton has already enjoyed success in lighter roles, notably as Mark Darcy -- the top human rights lawyer who is hapless at love in the "Bridget Jones" series.

That role was a nod to his breakthrough as an actor, playing the aloof Mr. Darcy in a 1995 television adaptation of the Jane Austen novel "Pride and Prejudice."

Asked whether his Oscar might help him shake off some of the associations with that role, Firth replied:

"I think Mr. Darcy will be alive and well for the rest of my life. I'd be rather sad to see him go. I think there's a bit of a misconception that I'm disgruntled about the Darcy thing and I'm not remotely bothered by it.

"I would hate to see that tag leave me, so I'm very happy for it to follow me around."

He described the feeling of being on stage to receive the highest movie accolade as "reeling backwards through space."

"I realized when I got up there why some people completely fall apart," he said.

"You're reeling backwards through space. People don't really want to see that, so you have to do your best to do your job with as much as grace as you can possibly muster."

Firth was nominated for an Oscar last year in the same category, for his role as a closeted gay professor in the drama "A Single Man."

Firth's rivals this year were previous Oscar winners Javier Bardem for "Biutiful" and Jeff Bridges for "True Grit"; Jesse Eisenberg for "The Social Network"; and Oscars host James Franco for "127 Hours."



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