Court of Appeal heightens risk for directors around personal liability for IP infringement internationallawoffice.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from internationallawoffice.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Reese Witherspoon was already a huge star by the time she accepted the role of June Carter Cash in the Johnny Cash biopic
Walk the Line, but her performance in the film catapulted her career to new levels. Witherspoon won an Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance in the film on March 5, 2006.
Screenwriters Gill Dennis and James Mangold drew from two different Johnny Cash autobiographies when they co-wrote the script for
Walk the Line; 1975 s
Man in Black: His Own Story in His Own Words and 1997 s
Cash: The Autobiography. Their script explores some of the darker aspects of Cash s early life and how that impacted him over time more completely than either book, including the childhood death of his brother, Jack, and his bitter estrangement from his father, Ray.
15 Years Ago Today: Reese Witherspoon Wins Best Actress Oscar 979kickfm.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from 979kickfm.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
PITTSBURGH I can’t wait until I’m 45 and get all those great parts. Elizabeth Hartman, in a 1971 interview.
The first reports of 43-year-old Elizabeth Hartman’s June 10 suicide here were sketchy. Homicide detectives weren’t sure just who the slight woman was who had thrown herself from the fifth-story window of her efficiency apartment. A handful of neighbors volunteered what they knew. She was an unemployed actress, they thought, who had starred long ago in some movie with Sidney Poitier.
She would have hated that description. Even though she was subsisting on disability insurance, Social Security benefits and family handouts, even though her days were spent with various psychiatrists or wandering through the Carnegie Art Museum or merely sitting, listening to records, when somebody asked Hartman what she did, she replied, “I’m a film actress.”