Monday, August 15, 2011

Jessica Alba puts new baby kick in "Spy Kids" movie

LOS ANGELES | Mon Aug 15, 2011 4:52pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - It's been a busy week in the home of Jessica Alba and her husband Cash Warren, and it's about to get busier.

Alba gave birth over the weekend to her second daughter, Haven Garner Warren, and this coming Friday, Alba's new movie, "Spy Kids: All the Time in the World 4D," lands in theaters.

"Cash and I are so excited to announce the birth of our daughter Haven Garner Warren," Alba posted on her Facebook page over the weekend. "She was born on Saturday, weighed 7 lbs. and 19 inches long. Healthy and happy! Big sister Honor couldn't be more excited about the new addition to our family."

Being a mom mirrors Alba's role in the fourth installment of "Spy Kids." Both she and her character, Marissa, have new babies in their lives, but that's where the similarities end. Marissa is a retired secret agent and when she is pulled back in to action, she brings her two stepchildren along.

Prior to giving birth, Alba, 30, sat down with Reuters to talk about the film, her career and motherhood.

Q: This is the first time you've played a mother on the big screen. Did being a real-life mom have anything to do with wanting to be a part of this project?

A: "Yeah. I probably wouldn't have done this movie if I wasn't a mom already. So I definitely wanted to do the movie because of (3-year-old Honor). She inspired me to want to do that."

Q: Your character juggles a lot in the film between a new born, step-kids and a career. Did that ring true for you?

A: "That's definitely one of the topics that ('Spy Kids' filmmaker) Robert Rodriguez and I talk about a lot and how much time flies when you have kids -- he has five! All of a sudden they're on two or three milestones down the road. You're like, 'Wait! When did they start doing that?' I can certainly relate to that. And I certainly relate to trying to juggle and balance work and family life."

Q: With another little one on the way, that will add a whole new set of variables.

A: "I feel like I'm just getting my footing as a woman and just feeling comfortable in my choices. It's a challenge to figure out how much is too much work or not enough. Or if I'm giving up so much that I'm not going to have the opportunities that I would have if I worked a little bit more. I don't know. But my focus is Honor's happiness. If she's cool, I think everything will fall in to place."

Q: How did "Spy Kids" come your way?

A: "I was talking to Robert after I had Honor about how I'd really like to do a kids movie and how I'd love to do a movie that portrays a mom that's modern and cool. That's part of what this character is."

Q: You can't get a cooler mom than one who's a spy!

A: "(laughs) I really enjoyed doing the action sequences in the beginning of the movie. I haven't really done too much action since I did (the TV series ) 'Dark Angel,' so it was fun to do. I'm actually eager to do an action movie now -- a full action movie. I think that's what I'll be looking for next."

Q: Do you find that you're now making different career choices because you have children?

A: "(Before kids) my choices were to try and stay globally relevant and become relevant as a movie star. That's what my manager said! (laughs) I concentrated on movies that were going to be globally distributed and had a sufficient (advertising) budget, that were going to be a paycheck and where I was the lead. That was my focus for a lot of my career.

"After I had my daughter, that (goal) was not fulfilling creatively. I had worked with a lot of first time directors, which was fine, but there's only so much that you can learn as an actor from someone who's trying to find their way on set. Now it's about working with filmmakers that I look up to and that I feel are going to challenge me and take me to the next level as an actor."

Q: Have those projects come along yet?

A: "Yeah - working with Robert Rodriguez, Michael Winterbottom, whom I worked with (on 2010's 'The Killer Inside Me') and Paul Weitz with 'Little Fockers.' And Garry Marshall, even though I had just a little scene in 'Valentine's Day,' but nobody does romantic comedies like Garry Marshall."

(Reporting by Zorianna Kit, Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)



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Emmy-winning "Breaking Bad" to end after fifth season

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BBC America travels beyond "Doctor Who" for new hits

LOS ANGELES | Mon Aug 15, 2011 8:33am EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - If you thought BBC America was all about time-traveling doctors and men behaving badly in cars, get ready to adjust your TV set.

The cable network that introduced Americans to colorful British talent like Ricky Gervais, chef Gordon Ramsay and the car series "Top Gear" is making a big push into original programing in a bid to better compete with fast-growing U.S. channels.

Think "Mad Men", but with cut-glass British accents and a political thriller element, and you have "The Hour" -- a six episode new co-production beginning on August 17, that will launch BBC America's "Dramaville" block every Wednesday night.

Starring Dominic West of "The Wire", "Atonement" actress Romola Garai, and critically-acclaimed young Briton Ben Wishaw, "The Hour" is set in the fledgling world of investigative television news in 1956 London.

But "The Hour" is just a taste of things to come, says BBC America general manger Simon Perry.

Thirteen years after it was established in 1998, the cable channel has just announced its first original scripted drama

-- a series called "Copper" set in the immigration melting pot of 1860s New York and featuring a young Irish police officer. It will debut in the summer of 2012.

It has also given the go-ahead to two new reality series featuring BBC America favorites, talk show host Graham Norton and "Top Gear" presenter Richard Hammond, and the network has five other unscripted pilots in development.

"We have seen that signature original shows are how cable channels break through and create a bigger profile with audiences and the ad sales community and take channels to the next level," Perry told Reuters.

BREAKING BIG

It's a strategy that has worked for many U.S. cable channels including AMC, which has reaped multiple Emmy wins and added millions more viewers since 2007 by developing dramas like "Mad Men", "Breaking Bad", "The Walking Dead" and "The Killing".

The changes have been more than a year in the making but they come as BBC America is coming off its best quarter yet. More than 1.3 million viewers tuned in to watch the 6th season premiere in April of classic British sci-fi series "Doctor Who", giving BBC America its biggest ever audience.

"Our ratings are up 30 percent this quarter over last year, advertising sales are up 40 percent, so there was never a better time than now to take the plunge," Perry said.

Perry declined to comment on costs, but Hollywood trade paper Variety has reported that the channel's programing budget has been tripled for the next five years. BBC America is owned by BBC Worldwide, the commercial arm of the publicly-funded BBC, and can be seen in 68 million U.S. homes.

The influx of new programing doesn't mean that BBC America will lose its uniquely British character, nor abandon its philosophy of presenting shows that are "intelligent, innovative and at times irreverent," Perry said.

Many of the shows in development build on familiar names, including "Top Gear" presenters Richard Hammond and James May, and comedy talk show host Graham Norton.

"We are trying to give the audience more of what they already love, and build from that strength," said Perry.

For all the comparisons that have been drawn by TV industry watchers between BBC America's "The Hour" and AMC's "Mad Men," producers say the drab world of post-war London depicted in their show has little in common in tone or character with the aspirational advertising men and women of 1960s New York.

As Abi Morgan, creator of "The Hour" told television journalists recently; "America was all great and big and shiny...and we were all held back by tea pots and rather bad plumbing. That's what we wanted to show."

(Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)



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