Shahid Kapoor's mother sued


Shahid Kapoor's mother, Neelima Azeem, has been sued by producer Rajesh Vyas in the Andheri Metropolitan Court for failing to rope in the stars she had promised for her movie.
According to The Times of India, Neelima was to write, direct and choreograph a film for a total fee of Rs 66 lakh, which she also promised would star the likes of Priyanka Chopra and Emraan Hashmi. When she could not get the two on board for the film, she then promised that she would get her son Shahid as the lead, but did not live up to her promise again.
When asked, Neelima said that the court summons had come as a rude shock to her.
"I did sign a contract but there was no mention that I would work only after getting Priyanka and Emraan on board. For Vyas' sake, I approached both the stars, but neither of them was interested in the film," she said.
She said she then spoke to Kunal Kapoor, Shreyas Talpade, Jimmy Shergill and Sonu Sood but Vyas turned them down as desperate actors. As for her son, she exclaimed that Shahid is a superstar and the Rs 8 crore film does not deserve him.
Neelima also alleged that she was the one who repeatedly tried to contact Vyas, who disappeared for four years after their last discussion in 2009, to no avail. She herself was only paid Rs 12 lakh after working on the script for six months.
"These people have run out of money and are trying to make some by defaming me," she said.
The next hearing is scheduled for 12 June 2013. (Source)



Chris Tong can't recognise culprits


Malaysia-born MediaCorp actress Chris Tong, who had recently been robbed in downtown Kuala Lumpur, blamed herself for not being able to recognise the faces of the robbers and admitted that she is not a good citizen. This is also her first statement released after the horrendous attack one week ago.
The incident happened at 1am morning on 21 May at Cheras, Kuala Lumpur while Tong was out buying supper. She was attacked by a suspicious man when on her way to collect her car and suffered scrapes and bruises to her arms and legs as a result.
In a phone interview with The Straits Times, the 30-year-old actress was caught unaware as the man came from behind and pushed her to the ground shortly after. She previously told the media that the man is tall and has tanned skin, but she had difficulties in recognising the culprit's face.
The following is the original Facebook post by Tong:
"I had, again, asked the policemen to come to my residence again for investigation. I have troubled them for several times. I believe I'm not a good citizen. It's regrettable that I couldn't provide sufficient evidence for the policemen. When I was asked to recognise culprits, I replied to them that I may not able to do so. This is true. I couldn't simply pinpoint anyone, right? I feel angry of myself as I'm so stupid! Attached herewith is my recent photo. Although my bruises had recovered, but it's sad to say I'm a living idiot. I'm so sorry." (Source)


Jacqueline Fernandez to act with Salman Khan


Sri Lankan beauty queen Jacqueline Fernandez has bagged a role opposite Salman Khan! The actress who shot to fame with movies like "Murder 2" and "Housefull 2" would be the female lead opposite the Bollywood heartthrob in a remake of the 2009 Telugu hit, "Kick".
Two of her films, "Housefull 2" and "Race 2", had grossed over Rs. 100 in collections and caught the attention of Sajid Nadiadwala, who was looking for fresh actresses. He targeted Jacqueline after he and Salman Khan were impressed with her work. Previously, Deepika Padukone was being considered for the role.
The film marks Sajid Nadiadwala's directorial debut and would be ready by July 2014 as Salman's Eid release.
Nadiadwala has also hired the services of Hollywood cinematographer Alexander Witt and got international stunt directors Spiro Razatos and Philippe Guegan to work on this film.
Despite Jacqueline's success with her last two films, having grossed over Rs. 100, working with Salman Khan is the gig that will give her the leverage every newcomer in Bollywood would want. (Source)


Shahrukh Khan to undergo surgery


After shooting of his much-anticipated film "Chennai Express", Shahrukh Khan is now looking forward to sorting out some personal issues, which is to concentrate on his shoulder surgery that he has been delaying for over six months now.
Over the years, the accident-prone actor has had a total of seven surgeries on several parts of his body. His shoulder surgery will be his eighth!
Even though there are reports that the star will fly to London to consult the best doctors and get his treatment done, it is now reported that he will be operated in Mumbai's Lilavati hospital.
Khan got injured on the sets of Rohit Shetty's rom-com two months ago but he postponed his surgery to finish the film's shoot.
Though the star has already started promoting "Chennai Express", he is expected to be able to work again by mid-June. (Source)



Canada's Bob Ezrin takes unique Croatian duo 2Cellos under his wing


The first time Canadian producer Bob Ezrin saw 2Cellos perform, the conditions weren't exactly optimal for the Croatian duo.
They were opening for Elton John in Orlando, with 16,500 people on hand who — Ezrin notes — had virtually no interest in watching 2Cellos. They weren't so much inhospitable as indifferent.
"The show starts with Elton on this big screen and his disembodied voice and he says: 'There's two young musicians that I'd like to introduce you to. They come from Croatia,'" Ezrin recalled.
"And when he said the word 'Croatia,' you could hear the whole audience go: 'Zzzz,'" he added, laughingly mimicking the crowd's collective snoring. "And then they hear 'Cellos' and everyone's on their BlackBerrys. They had tuned out. 'Ladies and gentlemen, the 2Cellos!' I think four hands applauded."
But Ezrin listened, and soon, so did everyone else.
"They come out on stage, they plug in and ... it's loud, it's powerful, and it's rocking. So from the first note, they got everyone's attention."
And Ezrin's, moreso than anyone else's.
He already had 2Cellos on his radar since watching a YouTube video of the classically trained duo — the jocular Stjepan Hauser and his more stoic partner, Luka Sulic — using their cellos for a rousing, powerful cover of Michael Jackson's nimble classic "Smooth Criminal," a clip that has now been viewed nearly 8.5 million times.
Not long after taking in their performance with John, Ezrin was driving from Nashville to Evansville, Ind., to meet the pair at a "fleabag motel" and start mapping out the tracklist for their major-label debut "In2ition." Released earlier this year, the album includes an impressive array of guests — including John himself on "Oh, Well," virtuoso guitarist Steve Vai on a cover of AC/DC's "Highway to Hell," "Glee" star Naya Rivera belting out Muse's "Supermassive Black Hole" and star Chinese pianist Lang Lang on Coldplay's "Clocks" — as well as interpretations of songs across all genres.
In addition to those songs, 2Cellos also interpret Rihanna's neon-hued dance smash "We Found Love," the Police's brooding classic "Every Breath You Take" and the Prodigy's frenetic "Voodoo People."
So what did the legendary Toronto producer behind such smashes as Pink Floyd's "The Wall," Kiss's "Destroyer" and Alice Cooper's "School's Out" see in the pair? For one thing, that they had the ability to illustrate the immense possibilities of an instrument typically associated exclusively with classical music.
"They're playing everything — they go from hip hop to high classical, so to be able to share that with kids is great because it shows them that music is a very broad thing and it also in a very kind of unconscious way shows them that they can express themselves in a very broad way," Ezrin said, seated next to the duo. "They don't have to be about one thing. They don't have to use one simple language."
Hauser has been playing cello since he was eight, Sulic since he was five. They met at age 14 at a summer-music camp in Europe.
"Straight away we found a chemistry," Sulic said. "I said: 'Oh, look at that lunatic. I want to play with him.'"
They were widely considered to be rivals, given that they were two phenomenal young cellists from the same small country. But they always considered themselves "great friends."
The idea to interpret pop songs began when they linked up in London two years ago.
"We were a bit fed up with playing only one kind of music, classical music," Sulic said.
Recently, the trio visited Toronto's Regent Park School of Music — an organization dedicated to providing low-cost music education to youth-in-need — to lead a workshop. With local kids hammering away competently on the steel drums, Sulic and Hauser loudly pounded Jackson's "Billie Jean" through their amps while Ezrin patrolled and offered advice.
This, they say, is part of the inspiration behind 2Cellos: stoking an interest in classical music among those who otherwise might not give the genre a chance.
"This is like a mission for us, to introduce classical music," Sulic said. "We get many emails and feedback from people who'd never heard of cello before or classical music in general."
Sulic and Hauser both remain interested in playing classical music in the future.
Still, their experiments in pop music don't always elicit support from peers in the world they've temporarily left behind.
"Especially with my old colleagues — you know, their mindset is still very conservative and they don't really appreciate different kinds of music," Sulic said.
Added Hauser: "They're not objective. They're just like, OK, this is classical music, it's worth more than any other music, just because it's classical. There's so much rubbish in classical music. There's (also) rubbish in pop music, but there's also some really great songs that can be compared with great classical masterpieces. What matters is the message and the emotion that goes through the song."
Here, Ezrin gets the last word.
"The snobbery of the classical world is very much like the snobbery of any eclectic pursuit. And all that comes from is fear.... It's not some feverish devotion to a higher standard, it's actually a fearful clinging to the fiction that this thing is actually of any importance. Because at the end of the day, the only thing that matters is those people in those seats applauding," he said.
"My message to the classical world: who wants to hang out with uptight people? Nobody."
With these three, that doesn't seem an issue. Their easygoing chemistry is obvious, such as when Ezrin goes off-script to ask whether the pair ever pursued the same woman. Hauser shakes his head and deadpans: "His taste is horrible."
Ezrin, too, gets digs in. After Hauser raves about the "legendary" producer, Ezrin is asked when 2Cellos surfaced on his radar.
"I thought you were going to say: 'When did they get on my nerves?'" he laughed. "I could say: instantly." (Source)



Chris Brown Didn't Give Woman False Information In Fender Bender


Chris Brown did not give out incorrect information to another motorist following a fender bender in Los Angeles, his rep told Access Hollywood , despite a report claiming otherwise.
On Monday, TMZ reported that the Los Angeles Police Department is looking into the traffic incident Brown had with an unidentified woman as a "full-blown hit-and-run investigation," after Brown "allegedly refused to give the driver he rear-ended his driver's license."
But, a rep for the singer told Access Hollywood on Monday that Brown gave the woman his correct information and he took her information too.
Mark Geragos, Brown's lawyer, said the LAPD has not been in touch, Brown's rep told Access.
Additionally, Geragos called the woman within an hour of hearing the report to make sure she had the correct information and she allegedly hung up on him, according to Brown's rep.
When contacted by Access Hollywood on Monday, a rep for the LAPD was -- due to staff being off for the Memorial Day holiday -- unable to confirm whether an investigation is taking place over the incident. (Source)



Sharon Stone's beauty secret revealed


Sharon Stone swears by skincare brand Kinara to keep her looking young.
The actress wowed at the Cannes Film Festival last week where she displayed a wrinkle-free complexion.
The 55-year-old's secret has been revealed as LA brand Kinara Skincare, which the star uses religiously.
She's not alone, as more than 100 other celebrities also love the brand, including Anne Hathaway, Natalie Portman, Katie Holmes, Jennifer Garner, January Jones, Hilary Swank, Johnny Depp, Tilda Swinton, Kate Winslet, Kate Hudson, Drew Barrymore, Emily Blunt, Emma Stone and Eva Mendes.
Kinara is the brainchild of renowned US facialist and skin care expert, Olga Lorencin-Northrup.
Olga set up a spa to the stars Kinara Skin Care Clinic in the heart of West Hollywood.
Limited by existing product lines, she was driven to address prevalent skin issues effectively but not aggressively.
As a result Olga came up with the formulas for a range of spa treatments and skincare product line, with Sharon being a fan of both.
As well as a flawless face, Sharon flaunted her figure during the Cannes festival.
The veteran Hollywood star even managed to outshine younger rival Nicole Kidman at amfAR's Cinema Against AIDS 2013 charity event in Cannes last week.
Sharon wore an ambitiously-tight white Roberto Cavalli outfit, which proved she still has the fantastic shape that made her famous in her star turn in 1992 erotic thriller Basic Instinct. (Source)