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WA2K Radio is now on the air

 
 
bobsmythhawk
 
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Reply Fri 28 Mar, 2008 01:05 pm
Ken Howard
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born March 28, 1944 (1944-03-28) (age 64)
El Centro, California

Kenneth Joseph Howard, Jr. (born March 28, 1944) is a Tony Award- and Daytime Emmy Award-winning American actor known for his role in the television show The White Shadow as basketball coach and former Chicago Bulls player Ken Reeves, a basketball major with a minor in life.





Biography

Career

Howard appeared on Broadway in Seesaw and as Thomas Jefferson in 1776 (a role he reprised in the 1972 film). In 1981 he won a Daytime Emmy Award for his performance as the ideal father in the CBS afternoon special The Body Human: Facts for Boys. Additional credits include the 2000 miniseries Perfect Murder, Perfect Town and the feature film Dreamer: Inspired by a True Story, both co-starring Kris Kristofferson. He was a regular on the television series White Shadow and Crossing Jordan.


Personal life

Howard was born in El Centro, California, the son of Martha Carey (née McDonald) and Kenneth Joseph Howard, Sr.[1] He grew up in the Long Island community of Manhasset, New York,[2] and attended Manhasset High School, where he started on the basketball team.[3] He is a graduate of Amherst College. He has been married to Linda Fetters, a stuntwoman, since 1992 and they reside in the Los Angeles, California area. Prior to that he was married to Margo Coleman, known professionally as Margo Howard, the daughter of Ann Landers, from 1977 - 1991, and before that to TV soap opera actress, Louise Sorel, from 1973 - 1976, when they divorced.

Howard is very active and supportive of the National Kidney Foundation. He had a kidney transplant in 2000. He stands approximately 6'6" (1.98 m).
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bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Fri 28 Mar, 2008 01:09 pm
Dianne Wiest
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born March 28, 1948 (1948-03-28) (age 60)
Kansas City, Missouri
Years active 1975 - present
[show]Awards won
Academy Awards
Best Supporting Actress
1986 Hannah and Her Sisters
1994 Bullets Over Broadway
Emmy Awards
Outstanding Guest Actress - Drama Series
1989 Road to Avonlea
Golden Globe Awards
Best Supporting Actress - Motion Picture
1994 Bullets Over Broadway
Screen Actors Guild Awards
Outstanding Supporting Actress - Motion Picture
1994 Bullets Over Broadway
Outstanding Cast in a Motion Picture
1996 The Birdcage
Other Awards
NBR Award for Best Supporting Actress
1986 Hannah and Her Sisters
NYFCC Award for Best Supporting Actress
1986 Hannah and Her Sisters
1994 Bullets Over Broadway

Dianne Wiest (born March 28, 1948) is an American actress. She has enjoyed a successful career on stage, television, and film, and has won a Golden Globe, an Emmy and two Academy Awards, as well as been nominated for the BAFTA award.





Biography

Early life

Wiest was born in Kansas City, Missouri. Her father was a college dean and former psychiatric social worker for the U.S. Army, and her Scottish-born mother, Anne, worked as a nurse; her parents met in Algiers.[1][2] She had two brothers: Greg and Don Wiest. Wiest's original ambition was to be a ballerina, but in late high school she switched her goal to theatre. She made her film debut in 1980 in It's My Turn,[3] but did not establish herself as a film actress until her association with Woody Allen during the 1980s.


Stage career

Wiest studied theatre at the University of Maryland, leaving after her third term in order to tour with a Shakespearean troupe, eventually appearing in a supporting role in the New York Shakespeare Festival production Ashes.[3] She appeared at the Long Wharf Theatre in New Haven, CT, playing the title role in Hedda Gabler, and understudied off-Broadway in Kurt Vonnegut's Happy Birthday, Wanda June at the Lucille Lortel Theatre. She made her Broadway debut in Robert Anderson's Solitaire/Double Solitaire, taking over in the role of the daughter in 1971.[4] She landed a four-year job as a member of the Arena Stage in Washington, D.C.,[5] appearing in many plays including a memorable Emily in "Our Town," Honey in "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf," and leading roles in "The Dybbuk," "The Lower Depths," and "Heartbreak House."[1] She also toured the USSR with the Arena Stage Company.

In 1976, Wiest went to the Eugene O'Neill National Playwrights Conference and played leading roles in Amlin Gray's Pirates and Christopher Durang's A History of the American Film. At Joe Papp's Public Theatre she took over the lead in Ashes, and played Cassandra in Agamemnon, directed by Andrei Şerban. She appeared in two plays by Tina Howe, Museum and the The Art of Dining. In the latter, Wiest's role as the shy and awkward authoress Elizabeth Barrow Colt won every off-Broadway theatre award for her performance: an Obie Award, a Theatre World Award, and the Clarence Derwent Award, given yearly for the most promising performance in New York theatre. In early 1980, she appeared on Broadway in Frankenstein, directed by Tom Moore, portrayed Desdemona in Othello opposite James Earl Jones and Christopher Plummer, and co-starred with John Lithgow in Christopher Durang's romantic screwball comedy Beyond Therapy, directed by John Madden. (A few years later she played opposite Lithgow again in the Herbert Ross film Footloose). Also in the 80s she was acclaimed for her performances in Hedda Gabler, directed by Lloyd Richards at Yale Repertory Theatre, and in Harold Pinter's A Kind of Alaska, Janusz Glowacki's Hunting Cockroaches, and Lanford Wilson's Serenading Louie.


Films

Once Wiest was established as a strong film actress through her work in Woody Allen's films, she was available for the stage less frequently, though she performed in the 1990s in In the Summer House, Square One, Cynthia Ozick's The Shawl, and Naomi Wallace's One Flea Spare. In 2003, she appeared with Al Pacino and Marisa Tomei in Oscar Wilde's Salome. In 2005, she starred in Kathleen Tolan's Memory House, and then at Lincoln Center in the late Wendy Wasserstein's final play Third, directed by Daniel Sullivan.

Under Allen's direction, Wiest won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for Hannah and Her Sisters (1986). She followed her Academy Award success with performances in The Lost Boys (1987) and Bright Lights, Big City (1988) before starring with Steve Martin, Mary Steenburgen, Jason Robards, Keanu Reeves and Martha Plimpton in Ron Howard's Parenthood, for which she received her second Oscar nomination.

In 1990, Wiest starred in Edward Scissorhands. She returned to Woody Allen in 1994 for Bullets Over Broadway, a comedy set in 1920s New York City, winning her second Best Supporting Actress Oscar for her portrayal of Helen Sinclair, a boozy, glamorous, and neurotic star of the stage. She appeared in the film Practical Magic (1998) and the television mini-series The 10th Kingdom (2000). From 2000 to 2002, Wiest portrayed interim District Attorney Nora Lewin in the long-running NBC crime drama Law & Order.


Personal life

Wiest had never been married but has two adopted children born 1987 and 1991. She graduated from the University of Maryland in 1969 with a degree in Arts and Sciences.[6]
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Fri 28 Mar, 2008 01:13 pm
Reba McEntire
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Background information

Birth name Reba Nell McEntire
Born March 28, 1955 (1955-03-28) (age 53)
Origin McAlester, Oklahoma, U.S.
Genre(s) Country
Occupation(s) Singer, Actress
Instrument(s) Vocals
Years active 1974 - present
Label(s) Mercury (1975-1983)
MCA Nashville (1983-present)
Associated acts Jacky Ward, Tom Petty, Hank Williams Jr., Willie Nelson, Reverend Ike, Vince Gill, Brooks & Dunn, Linda Davis, Trisha Yearwood, Martina McBride, Kelly Clarkson, Justin Timberlake, Kenny Chesney, Pake McEntire

Reba Nell McEntire (born March 28, 1955) is a Grammy award-winning and Golden Globe-nominated American country music singer and performer, and actress.[1] Sometimes referred to as The Queen of Country Music,[2][3] she is known for her lively stage-shows and pop-tinged ballads. She has issued 31 albums, with over 55 million records sold worldwide[4] in her 33-year career.

Reba McEntire was the most successful female recording artist in country music in the 1980s and 1990s, during which time she scored 23 number-one hits and released five gold albums, six platinum albums, two double-platinum albums, four triple-platinum albums, a quadruple-platinum album, and a quintuple-platinum album, for certified album sales of 33.5 million over the 20-year period. [5] She expanded her activities as an actress in film, on stage, and particularly on television, where she starred in a situation comedy, Reba, which lasted from 2001 to 2007. [6]




Biography

Early life

Reba McEntire was born in McAlester, Oklahoma on March 28, 1955 to Clark Vincent McEntire and Jacqueline Smith (a sharecropper's daughter). She grew up near Chockie, Oklahoma, learning to ride in rodeos, sing, and play music. McEntire was raised on the 7,000-acre family ranch, traveling with her parents and siblings to the rodeos at which her father competed. Clark McEntire was named World Champion Steer Roper three times, in 1957, 1958, and 1961. (McEntire's grandfather, John McEntire, had won the same title in 1934.) McEntire's mother had aspired to a career in music but never pursued it. [7]

She soon formed a singing group with her brother and sister, known as The Singing McEntires. Her sister, Susie Luchsinger, has a successful career in Christian music and co-hosts "Cowboy Church," a Christian show on RFD-TV, while her brother, Pake McEntire, had success as a country music artist in the 1980s. The trio had a local hit with "The Ballad of John McEntire," a tribute to their grandfather, that was aired by local disc jockey Glen Steele in 1971. Older sister Alice was not involved in the group. McEntire also followed in the family rodeo tradition, becoming a barrel racer, the only event open to women. [8]


Music career


In 1974, while majoring in teaching at Southeastern Oklahoma State University in Durant, McEntire sang "The Star Spangled Banner" at the National Rodeo Finals in Oklahoma City. Rodeo attendee and country singer Red Steagall suggested that she go to Nashville to pursue a solo career. She scored a contract with Mercury Records and began her professional career with a hard honky tonk sound, which didn't go over well at a time when country music was dominated by outlaw country artists like Willie Nelson and David Allan Coe. Around the time of the release of her first album, she married Charlie Battles, a professional steer wrestler and bulldogger.

McEntire's first charting single, "I Don't Want to Be a One-Night Stand," peaked at #88 in 1976. The song was from McEntire's debut album, Reba McEntire. Her first Top-20 entry came in 1978 with "Three Sheets in the Wind/I'd Really Love to See You Tonight" (duets with Jacky Ward). This was a one-off single, however, not appearing on any album. Her second album, Out of a Dream, gave her 5 Top-40 hits, the biggest being a rendition of Patsy Cline's "Sweet Dreams," which made it to #19 in 1979. McEntire considers Cline one of the biggest influences on her career.

McEntire continued to make strides on the singles chart, reaching the Top 10 for the first time with "(You Lift Me) Up to Heaven," which peaked at #8 in August 1980. "Feel the Fire," her third album, released in October 1980, was another failure, but after a couple more Top-20 singles she reached the Top Five with "Today All Over Again" in October 1981. The song was featured on her fourth album, Heart to Heart, released in September, which helped it become her first to chart, reaching #42 in the country LP list. She achieved a new high on the singles chart in August 1982 when "I'm Not That Lonely Yet" reached number three. It was included on her fifth album, Unlimited, released in June 1982, which hit #22. But that was only the beginning. The LP also spawned "Can't Even Get the Blues" and "You're the First Time I've Thought about Leaving," which became back-to-back number-one hits in January and April 1983. By then, she had moved up from playing nightclubs and honky tonks to being the regular opening act for the Statler Brothers. She went on to work in the same capacity with Conway Twitty, Ronnie Milsap, Mickey Gilley, and others. [9] These songs, like others at the time had a Country-Pop sound to them, unlike some of McEntire's later hits.


1984-1990: Breakthrough

With more pop-oriented balladry, Reba McEntire began to expand her audience during the early 1980s. In 1984, she signed to MCA Nashville and quickly became one of the best-selling country artists of all time. She released her first album with the label, Just a Little Love, the same year. After McEntire signed with MCA, Mercury released The Best of Reba McEntire in 1985. Two years later, she released her first collection of greatest hits for MCA, simply titled Greatest Hits. No new material was recorded for the album. The album was later released under the same title Reba McEntire's Greatest Hits in 1992, which featured an alternate album cover.

McEntire had bigger plans for second album under MCA. Set to have Harold Shedd produce her next album, she rejected his suggestions for songs and the sweetened arrangements he imposed on them and appealed to Jimmy Bowen, the newly installed president of MCA's country division. Bowen allowed her to pick her own material and to eliminate the strings and other pop touches used on Just a Little Love and her Mercury releases. The result was titled My Kind of Country, released in November 1984, which was dominated by covers of old country songs previously performed by Ray Price, Carl Smith, Connie Smith, and Faron Young. Even before the album's release, however, and before its advance single, "How Blue," hit number one. [10] My Kind of Country was McEntire's first album to go "Gold" by the RIAA, while it also peaked at No. 13 on the Top Country Albums chart. The second (and last) single from the album, "Somebody Should Leave" also hit No. 1, and set the stage for a string of McEntire hits that would eventually reach No. 1 on the Country charts.

McEntire won the "Female Vocalist of the Year" award from the Country Music Association four times in a row (1984, 1985, 1986, 1987). She is the only woman in the Association's history to win the award four years in a row, but not the only woman to win the award four times. Martina McBride shares that honor with McEntire (1999, 2002, 2003, 2004). McEntire is one of only five solo female artists (others include Shania Twain, Barbara Mandrell, Dolly Parton, and Loretta Lynn) to win the Country Music Association's highest honor, "Entertainer of the Year".

In 1986, McEntire released the album Whoever's in New England. The album, along with the title track, are considered the album and song that put McEntire on the map and from then on, Reba McEntire was a household name. While "Whoever's in New England" was not her first number one single (it was actually her fifth), the song was considered her first career record. The album was her first number one album. The song also earned McEntire her first Grammy Award. It is seen by many as an "answer song" to Barry Manilow's 1976 "Weekend in New England" hit, as sung by the wife of a philandering husband who has an ongoing affair with someone in New England. Later that year, Southeastern Oklahoma State University honored her as a distinguished alumna. By this time, McEntire started co-producing her own records, starting with Whoever's In New England. She would continue this tradition the rest of her career.

McEntire released her next album, What Am I Gonna Do About You, in September 1986, prefaced by a single of the same name that hit number one, as did the gold-selling LP, which also featured the chart-topping single "One Promise Too Late." [11] She released Reba McEntire's Greatest Hits in April; it became her first platinum album and eventually sold over three million copies. (It also became her first album ever to cross over to the pop charts.) [12] McEntire's string of hits continued with the release of The Last One to Know in September 1987, prefaced by a single of the same name that reached number one in December. The album, also featuring the number one hit "Love Will Find Its Way to You," reached number three and eventually went platinum. [13]

In 1988, McEntire released Reba, which featured "New Fool At An Old Game" reached #1, as did the single "I Know How He Feels." The album's lead-off single was "A Sunday Kind of Love," a cover of the 1947 Jo Stafford pop hit. It peaked at number five in July. [14]

Also in 1988, McEntire founded Starstruck Entertainment, a company that handled management, booking, publishing, and other aspects of her career and, eventually, represented other artists as well. [15]

McEntire released two albums in 1989. Sweet Sixteen was released in May, while a live LP, Reba Live, was released three months later. The album Sweet Sixteen featured the number one hit "Cathy's Clown," a song recorded originally by The Everly Brothers.

McEntire's string of number one hits continued throughout the 1980s and into the early 1990s. In 1990, McEntire released the album Rumor Has It. The album featured the number one hit "You Lie" and it also included the song "Fancy." The latter became McEntire's signature song and CMT ranked it at #26 on its list of the 100 Greatest Country Songs. The video ranked #35 on the list of the 100 Greatest Country Videos. "Fancy" was considered one of the greatest songs of all time. In 1990 Garth Brooks was suposed to open a show a Lainer Land near Braselton,GA but her manager/husband deided to to go with another act.


1991-1999: Reba in the 1990s

Reba McEntire was riding at the top of success. Personally, however, her world would come crashing down in the spring of 1991. On March 16, a plane carrying seven of McEntire's band members and her road manager crashed, killing all on board. McEntire was devastated. There was a minor controversy over her decision to perform on the Academy Awards a week after the crash. But, she appeared on the show to dedicate the nominated song, "I'm Checking Out" from the film Postcards From the Edge, to her fallen band members. During the performance, McEntire was visibly emotional, holding back tears. She had been known to refer to them as her "Crazy Eight." Ultimately, she earned the respect and affection of her peers for her decision and her stoic toughness and perseverance.

She dedicated her next album, For My Broken Heart, to them when it was released in October. The disc was another hit, going gold and platinum simultaneously shortly after its release and eventually selling four million copies, its singles including the chart-topping title song and another number one, "Is There Life Out There." [16]

Her 17th album, It's Your Call, was released in December 1992, and it was an immediate million seller, eventually going triple platinum. (It was also her first Top Ten pop album.) Its biggest single was "The Heart Won't Lie," a duet with Vince Gill that hit number one in April 1993. [17] McEntire's next No. 1 was also a duet, "Does He Love You," sung with Linda Davis; it hit number one in November 1993 and was included on her September release Greatest Hits Vol. 2, an album that sold two million copies practically out of the box and another three million over the next five years. "Does He Love You" won McEntire her second Grammy, for Best Country Collaboration with Vocals, and a CMA award for Vocal Event of the Year. [18]

Her 18th regular studio album, Read My Mind, appeared in April. Another million-seller that went on to go triple platinum, it produced five country chart singles, among them, "The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter" and, controversially, "She Thinks His Name Was John," a song about a woman who contracts AIDS from a one-night stand. Even McEntire's star power could propel such an atypical country subject only as high as number 15 in the charts. Meanwhile, she had parts in two feature films released during the summer, a speaking role in the drama North and a cameo in the children's comedy The Little Rascals. (She also made an uncredited appearance in the Western film Maverick and was heard on the soundtrack album.) She executive produced and starred in a TV movie based on her song, Is There Life Out There? And she published her autobiography, Reba: My Story, which became a best-seller. [19]

Renowned for her flashy stage performances, McEntire was the first woman to have the highest grossing concert tour in country music. In 1994 and 1995, her stage show outgrossed all other country artists. For her contribution to the recording industry, McEntire has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 7000 Hollywood Blvd. In 1995, she was inducted into the Western Performers Hall of Fame at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City.

McEntire's 19th album was called Starting Over, released in October 1995. Intended to mark the 20th anniversary of her recording career, it was a collection of covers of well-known songs. It not only topped the country charts but hit number five in the pop charts, selling a million copies. But, boasting only one Top Ten hit, a revival of Lee Greenwood's "Ring on Her Finger, Time on Her Hands," among three chart singles, and not achieving a multi-platinum certification, it suggested that McEntire finally had peaked commercially as far as country music was concerned. [20] In 1996, Reba scored a #2 hit on the Dance/Club play charts with a remix of "You Keep Me Hangin' On." She is the only country artist to date to achieve this. The CD single, which contained 4 different mixes of the song, peaked at #4 on the sales charts.

She returned back on the country charts somewhat with her 20th album, What If It's You, released in November 1996. The album spawned four Top 20 hits, with "How Was I to Know" reaching number one and "The Fear of Being Alone" and "I'd Rather Ride Around with You" each getting to number two. Simultaneously certified gold and platinum, the album eventually topped two million copies. [21] While the number ones slowed down, and album sales did not match the success of Greatest Hits Volume Two, McEntire remained one of the most successful music artists. A string of hits continued through the mid-late 1990s with songs such as "Why Haven't I Heard From You," "And Still," and "If You See Him," a duet with Brooks & Dunn. She teamed up with the popular country duo Brooks & Dunn in the spring of 1998 for a single called "If You See Him/If You See Her." It hit number one in June, helping to set up the release of her 21st album, If You See Him, which also brought her three additional Top Ten hits on its way to selling a million copies. She appeared in the TV movie Forever Love (the title of one of those Top Ten hits) during the year and made several guest-star appearances on TV series. [22] Her 1997 package tour with Brooks & Dunn was the largest grossing tour in country music history at the time until 1998 when it was surpassed by Canadian country singer, Shania Twain's Come on Over Tour.

In May 1999, McEntire had two new albums ready for the fall. The Secret of Giving: A Christmas Collection, a September release, was her second holiday CD, which she accompanied with a TV movie, The Secret of Giving. The disc eventually went gold. So Good Together, issued in November, was her 22nd regular studio album, prefaced by the Top Five single "What Do You Say." Although none of the songs from the album topped the country charts, it did feature a second Top Five hit, "I'll Be," and a Top 20 hit in "We're So Good Together," and it went platinum before the end of 2000. [23]


2000-present: Return to music

In the summer of 2001, she released a single, "I'm a Survivor," that peaked in the country Top Five and prefaced a new compilation, Greatest Hits Vol. 3: I'm a Survivor, released in October. It topped the country charts and went gold. [24] She finally returned to record making after two years in the summer of 2003 with a new single, "I'm Gonna Take That Mountain," which peaked in the country Top 20. Room to Breathe, her 23rd regular studio album and first in three years, followed in November and went platinum over the next nine months. The disc's second single, "Somebody," in August 2004 became her first #1 single in more than six years as well as her most recent chart-topper; and it was followed by another Top Ten hit, "He Gets That from Me" (#7), and the Top 20 "My Sister." [25] In the summer of 2004, McEntire returned to the concert stage with her first tour in three years with the Reba McEntire 2004 Tour.

McEntire found time in the spring of 2005 to return to the musical theater, if only for one night. In another piece of inspired casting, she portrayed the "cock-eyed optimist" from Arkansas, Ensign Nellie Forbush, in a special concert version of Rodgers and Hammerstein's South Pacific performed at Carnegie Hall. The all-star production, also featuring Broadway star Brian Stokes Mitchell and actor Alec Baldwin, was filmed for a PBS special on the network's Great Performances series and recorded for an album, both of which were released in 2006.[26]

In November 2005, McEntire released Reba #1's. Along with two new songs, the two-disc collection featured every one of McEntire's singles that had ever reached No. 1 on any U.S. country music chart. The total figure of 33 includes 22 which reached No. 1 on Billboard Hot Country Songs chart, with the remainder having topped the country charts of Radio & Records, or of the now-defunct Cash Box or Gavin Report charts.

In 2006, McEntire began a multi-week concert stint at the Las Vegas Hilton with REBA: Key to the Heart. In November 2006, McEntire was the first recipient of a star on the Music City Walk of Fame in downtown Nashville. She was honored along side Roy Orbison, Ronnie Milsap and others. The same month, McEntire was honored by CMT as the first recipient of the CMT Giant honor.

In February 2007, McEntire saw the end of her hit television sitcom, Reba, after six successful seasons. The same month McEntire performed with Kelly Clarkson for a taping of a future installment of CMT Crossroads. The program aired June 24 on CMT.

McEntire has been working on her Duets album for the past year and marks the final album due in her current contract with MCA Records. A new contract may be negotiated or she may switch to a new record label.[27] The album was released on September 18 and features duets with some of the biggest names in music such as Justin Timberlake, Rascal Flatts, Faith Hill, LeAnn Rimes, and Carole King. The first single was a duet with Kelly Clarkson and a remake of Clarkson's song "Because of You." The song rose quickly up the country chart and became McEntire's 30th Top 2 country single, peaking at #2 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs, and is also her 50th Top 5 single. This ties her with Dolly Parton for the record among female country artists. In the summer of 2007, McEntire hit the road with the Key to the Heart Tour. For the first time in her career, the album debuted at #1 on both pop and country album charts selling more than 300,000 copies in its first week. It has been recently certified platinum.

On January 17, 2008, Reba embarked on the 2 Worlds, 2 Voices Tour 2008, a co-headlining tour with Kelly Clarkson.


Acting career

Theatre

In February 2001, Reba McEntire stepped in as a replacement star in the Broadway revival of Irving Berlin's musical Annie Get Your Gun that had begun performances in 1999 with Bernadette Peters in the title role of Annie Oakley. McEntire had been preceded as a replacement in Annie Get Your Gun by soap opera star Susan Lucci and TV actress Cheryl Ladd, both of whom kept the show going while being largely ignored or derided by theater insiders. McEntire turned out to be an entirely different proposition. Although she lacked legitimate theater experience, she had by now done plenty of acting on television and even a little in film. Second, she had long since brought unusually high production values to her concerts that included choreography and costume changes, good preparation for similar demands in the theater. Third, she could, of course, sing. And fourth, with her rodeo background and Oklahoma accent, she was an ideal Annie Oakley, just as she had been in her previous TV portrayal. The result was a triumph for McEntire. Reviews were ecstatic, and tickets sold out. The Tony Awards did not have a category for replacements, but she was given special awards for her performance by the Drama Desk, the Outer Critics Circle, and Theatre World. She stayed in the show until June 22. Even though there was no new cast album recorded to immortalize her appearance,[26] a promotional CD containing only McEntire's performances of "You Can't Get a Man with a Gun" and "I Got Lost in His Arms" was made to be sent to discount members.


Reba

Her most extensive filmed acting role began on October 5, 2001, however, when the half-hour situation comedy Reba premiered on the WB TV network, the show became the primary focus of McEntire's activities, and she moved to Los Angeles to accommodate it. [28] The show became an instant hit on the WB network, becoming the most-watched comedy series on the network ever and earned McEntire a People's Choice Award and a Golden Globe nomination. When the WB Network closed, the show transferred to its successor, the CW network, for its final season in 2006-7.


Personal life

On June 25, 1987, she filed for divorce from Charlie Battles, her husband of 11 years. After her divorce was settled and Battles was awarded the couple's ranch in Oklahoma, she moved to Nashville. [29] McEntire married Narvel Blackstock, her manager and former steel guitar player, on June 3, 1989, in Lake Tahoe, Nevada. The couple took control over all aspects of her career. They have one son, Shelby Steven McEntire Blackstock, who was born on February 23, 1990.
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Fri 28 Mar, 2008 01:18 pm
Vince Vaughn
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born Vincent Anthony Vaughn
March 28, 1970 (1970-03-28) (age 38)
Minneapolis, Minnesota

Vincent Anthony Vaughn (born March 28, 1970) is an American film actor. He began acting in the late 1980s, appearing in minor television roles before coming to wider renown with the 1996 movie, Swingers. Vaughn has since appeared in a number of high-grossing Hollywood films, mostly comedies. He is a member of the Frat Pack.





Biography

Early life

Vince Vaughn was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, the son of Vernon Lindsay Vaughn, a salesman for a meat company, and Sharon Eileen (née DePalmo), a Canadian-born real estate agent and stockbroker once ranked as one of the United States' top money managers by Bloomberg Wealth Manager magazine.[1][2] He has two older sisters, Valerie and Victoria. He was raised "both Protestant and Catholic" by his Catholic mother and Protestant father.[3][4][5] He has English, Irish, German, Lebanese, and Italian ancestry.[6] Vaughn's parents divorced in 1991. He grew up in Buffalo Grove, Illinois and then Lake Forest, Illinois, where he graduated from Lake Forest High School in 1988, with writer Dave Eggers. Vaughn developed an interest in theater at a young age. Although he had planned to pursue a career in water polo, he decided to become an actor in 1987, after being involved in a car accident which derailed his chance at athletic success.


Career

In 1988, Vaughn was cast in a Chevrolet television commercial, and subsequently moved to Hollywood. Although he appeared in the 1989 season of the television series, China Beach and in three CBS Schoolbreak Specials (in 1990), and a small role in School ties (film) (in 1992) he was a struggling actor and faced many rejections. His first film role was 1993's Rudy, but Vaughn did not receive wider success until his role in 1996's Swingers. Swingers was released in July of 1996, and became a successful independent film. Afterwards, director Steven Spielberg cast Vaughn as the leading male character in the blockbuster The Lost World: Jurassic Park, which gave him increased exposure. From there, Vaughn went on to appear in several films of varied success, including playing Norman Bates in the 1998 remake of Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho. In 2000, he starred in The Cell with Jennifer Lopez, and in 2001, appeared in Made, another film penned by Favreau. Vaughn also appeared in Dwight Yoakam's directorial debut movie South of Heaven, West of Hell. Since Vaughn's role in the successful 2003 comedy, Old School, his profile skyrocketed, and his notoriety improved. In 2004, he appeared alongside Ben Stiller in the hit films Starsky & Hutch and Dodgeball, and had roles in 2005's Be Cool, Thumbsucker and Mr. & Mrs. Smith.

Also in 2005, Vaughn starred alongside Owen Wilson in the comedy Wedding Crashers, which grossed over $200 million at the United States box office. Vaughn enjoyed the shoot, even keeping an (somewhat) odd picture that a character was supposed to have painted of him. After this series of roles, Vaughn was dubbed one of the Hollywood Frat Pack, a group of actors who frequently co-star in film comedies. In 2006, Vaughn starred with Jennifer Aniston in the comedy-drama The Break-Up (also with Favreau).

In 2007, Vaughn starred in a comedy called Fred Claus, in which he played the sarcastic, wild-at-heart older brother of Santa Claus (Paul Giamatti). Fred Claus was directed by David Dobkin, who previously directed Vaughn in Wedding Crashers, and co-starred Elizabeth Banks and Kevin Spacey. Next, he momentarily moved from comedy to drama in Sean Penn's critically acclaimed film Into the Wild, a film about the adventures of Christopher McCandless, which was also a best-selling book by Jon Krakauer. He played the role of Wayne Westerberg opposite Emile Hirsch as McCandless. Into the Wild also featured Academy Award winner Marcia Gay Harden, Academy Award winner William Hurt, two time Academy Award nominee Catherine Keener, and Jena Malone.


Personal life

Vaughn dated two of his The Break-Up co-stars: actress Joey Lauren Adams during the filming of 1999's A Cool, Dry Place[7] and Jennifer Aniston between 2005 and 2006. His relationship with Aniston began the summer after her separation from husband Brad Pitt. Due to the media firestorm surrounding it, along with Pitt's relationship with Angelina Jolie, Vaughn and Aniston's relationship was showered with tabloid attention. Rumors about the relationship included the couple moving to Australia,[8] and a possible engagement. In the fall of 2006, Vaughn filed a lawsuit against three tabloid magazines, accusing them of falsely claiming that he had been unfaithful to Aniston, thus tacitly confirming their relationship.[9] By December 2006, both Vaughn's and Aniston's reps confirmed that they had broken up.[10] In Mr. and Mrs. Smith, Vaughn plays the friend of Brad Pitt's character, who is convinced that his wife (played by Angelina Jolie) is trying to kill him. In real life, Pitt and Aniston were going through a divorce, and Pitt wound up with his onscreen wife Jolie. So for a brief period of time, Vaughn had been dating his co-star's (Pitt) real off-screen wife, Aniston (however, Vaughn and Aniston's relationship took place after the Pitt-Aniston divorce, and after the filming and release of Mr. and Mrs. Smith).

In 2001, while filming Domestic Disturbance, Vaughn was arrested for getting into a bar fight with a local man who was also drunk (like Vaughn). Rumors spread that the man was Steve Buscemi who was also in Domestic Disturbance but evidence showed that the man was indeed not Buscemi.

Vaughn is also an avid fan of the Chicago Cubs and the University of Notre Dame, both of which featured prominently in his film The Break-Up.

Vaughn is part of the U.S.O. tour. He has visited soldiers all over Afghanistan, Kuwait, and Iraq.
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Fri 28 Mar, 2008 01:20 pm
Where is my goat?

There were these two guys out hiking when they came upon an old, abandoned mine shaft. Curious about its depth they threw in a pebble and waited for the sound of it striking the bottom, but they heard nothing. They went and got a bigger rock, threw it in and waited. Still nothing. They searched the area for something larger and came upon a railroad tie. With great difficulty, the two men carried it to the opening and threw it in. While waiting for it to hit bottom, a goat suddenly darted between them and leapt into the hole!

The guys were still standing there with astonished looks upon their faces from the actions of the goat when a man walked up to them. He asked them if they had seen a goat anywhere in the area and they said that one had just jumped into the mine shaft in front of them! The man replied, "Oh no. That couldn't be my goat, mine was tied to a railroad tie."
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Fri 28 Mar, 2008 01:27 pm
Well, folks, if that joke didn't get your goat you don't have a sense of humor. Thanks, Bob, for the great and informative background on the celebs. My, my, all, from the rat pack to the brat pack to the frat pack. How original.

Well, this has been a strange day for music, so we might as well continue, right? Dianne Weist did have a role in The Lost Boys, so let's listen to one of the songs from that flick.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1eUqiBF16KY&feature=related
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Fri 28 Mar, 2008 05:38 pm
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cl57TNgVAaw

Moments to Remember
The Four Lads
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Fri 28 Mar, 2008 06:03 pm
Must be a graduation song, edgar."...the day we tore the goal posts down.." Yes, we'll remember always Graduation Day. That's a great song by The Freshmen. We'll do that later, folks, but here is a nostalgic one by Clifford Brown.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0LiBqn_mUH8&feature=related
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Fri 28 Mar, 2008 06:13 pm
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9mo5zL3h94

This by Perry Como gets a shaky start, but is pretty good as it progresses. The studio recording of Round and Round sold lots of copies.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Fri 28 Mar, 2008 06:30 pm
Ah, Mr. laid-back Como. I know that one, Texas. It wasn't shaky to me, buddy. I can picture in my mind the wheel going round and round.

Here's the Four Freshman, all, one of the greatest groups in jazz history.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D_qOmEMuQFY
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Fri 28 Mar, 2008 07:35 pm
Time to say goodnight, and this one by The Beatles (dedicated to John Lennon) is based on Beethoven's "Moonlight"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X4ILM7EvGsA&feature=related

To the world,

From Letty with love
0 Replies
 
Debacle
 
  1  
Reply Fri 28 Mar, 2008 08:55 pm
A couple from the incomparable Tommy Emmanuel.

Lewis and Clark

Tall Fiddler
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Fri 28 Mar, 2008 09:36 pm
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K2gtmh795yA

A goody by Lulu (Ulul, spelled backwards)
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sat 29 Mar, 2008 03:31 am
Good morning, WA2K listeners and contributors.

Debacle, welcome back. What a fantastic acoustic guitarist, and what a treat to listen to him. Thanks, buddy. I knew Golliwog's Cakewalk and what a surprise to discover that Dubussy was the composer. I never think of Lewis and Clark that I don't recall Sacajawea.

Ah, edgar. I remember that song from Sidney Poitier's movie. What a fine actor and performer. LuLu did a nice job with that one.

I noticed that the world is dark in honor of Earth Day, but this great vocalist is doing Romberg in the sunrise. I like the jazz version, but somehow wish that she had done it in the traditional way.

http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=FiEigroDiws&feature=related
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sat 29 Mar, 2008 07:26 am
Let's have a drum roll.

Today we are proud to announce a new title that has been bestowed on our Dutchy.

Cosmic Eagle

And, folks, from Lord Tennyson.

The (Cosmic) Eagle
by Alfred, Lord Tennyson

He clasps the crag with crooked hands;
Close to the sun in lonely lands,
Ring'd with the azure world, he stands.

The wrinkled sea beneath him crawls;
He watches from his mountain walls,
And like a thunderbolt he falls.

And from The Eagles

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UIcwnlbbL30&feature=related
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 29 Mar, 2008 10:09 am
I too have music for Cosmic Eagle. (edgar bows in humbleness before the very concept)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=whx-lsUyh58
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 29 Mar, 2008 10:24 am
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ele0YU-hH7A

I love Trini and the song is one of the truly great ones.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sat 29 Mar, 2008 10:32 am
Hey, edgar. Loved your Eagles song and I, too, like Trini Lopez. Great song by him, Texas.

Here's one more thing for Dutchy.

A hint: Someone shot my purple cow, but she's not dead; she's mending now. Razz

Today is Pearl Bailey's birthday, so let's listen to this oldie by her.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nLZY1f456u4
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sat 29 Mar, 2008 02:04 pm
Well, I was inspired to play this one, folks, and it has the same melody as Away in a Manger. Wonder what happened to Dutchy?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-R8mcJ-UkVQ&feature=related
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 29 Mar, 2008 02:11 pm
He's probably resting and cooling his mouse.
0 Replies
 
 

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WA2K Radio is now on the air, Part 3 - Discussion by edgarblythe
 
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