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Jennifer Lawrence Says She Didn't Need Intimacy Coordinator With Robert Pattinson On 'Die My Love' Set
TV & Streaming

Jennifer Lawrence Says She Didn’t Need Intimacy Coordinator With Robert Pattinson On ‘Die My Love’ Set

by jummy84 November 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Jennifer Lawrence is opening up about her experience on the set of Die My Love with co-star Robert Pattinson.

The film, directed by Lynne Ramsay, who also co-wrote the screenplay alongside Enda Walsh and Alice Birch, follows Grace (Lawrence), who develops postpartum depression, and, alongside her partner Jackson (Pattinson), enters psychosis.

Lawrence and Pattinson share intimate scenes, and the American Hustle star revealed why she felt so comfortable working with her co-star.

“We did dance lessons together, which was like team building exercises,” she said on the latest episode of Las Culturistas podcast. “In the end, it ended up being more helpful just for choreography of sex scenes and fighting scenes.”

The topic of an intimate coordinator came up but Lawrence didn’t remember if they had one and explained why she ultimately didn’t need one.

“We did not have one or maybe we did, but we didn’t really… I felt really safe with him,” she said. “He’s not pervy and he’s very in love with [partner] Suki [Waterhouse]. We mostly were talking about our kids and relationships so there wasn’t any weird, like, ‘Does he think I like him?’”

“If there was a little bit of that I would probably have an intimacy coordinator. A lot of male actors get offended if you don’t want to f*** them, and then the punishment starts. But he was not like that, for the record.”

Intimacy coordinators are people hired to facilitate communication between actors and directors during intimate scenes. This position emerged in response to the #MeToo movement.

Lawrence also shared her thoughts about appearing nude in the film, which was done when she was pregnant with her second child.

“I don’t care about nudity. I’m not sensitive about it,” she said. “I think being pregnant took a lot of, like, vanity anxiety away. Before No Hard Feelings, I was dieting and not eating carbs and working out. I was pregnant [in Die My Love]. What was I gonna do? Not eat?”

Die My Love opens in theaters on November 7, and it also stars LaKeith Stanfield, Nick Nolte, Sissy Spacek, Gabrielle Rose, Debs Howard, Sarah Lind, and Marcus Della Rosa.

November 6, 2025 0 comments
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When Kiss Becomes Culture: Enrique Iglesias, Udit Narayan And India’s Uneven Lens On Celebrity Intimacy
Bollywood

When Kiss Becomes Culture: Enrique Iglesias, Udit Narayan And India’s Uneven Lens On Celebrity Intimacy

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Spanish pop sensation Enrique Iglesias may have kicked off his India tour with a roar in Mumbai, but it was not the vocals that drew attention — it was a kiss. A viral clip from the opening night shows the singer sharing a rather prolonged lip kiss with an excited fangirl on stage, an act that has since triggered a quiet murmur of reflection rather than outrage. It was, by all accounts, a moment charged with adoration, thrill, and the signature flamboyance Enrique brings to his performances. Yet, the absence of collective moral policing over the act — especially in a country known for its swift outrage — is what stands out most.

The same India that once balked when veteran playback singer Udit Narayan kissed an award show host on stage seems, this time, to have shrugged off the moment with global acceptance. The contrast reveals something telling about the evolving — and perhaps uneven — moral compass of celebrity culture in India. When Narayan’s brief peck made headlines years ago, it was treated almost as a breach of cultural decorum. The conversation was not about intent or context, but propriety. Fast forward to Enrique’s concert, and the conversation isn’t about right or wrong at all — it’s about spectacle.

Enrique, who has long carried a stage persona built on romance and intimacy, has performed similar gestures with fans worldwide — kisses, hugs, and the occasional dance-floor swirl. For Indian audiences, this was perhaps a long-awaited glimpse into the raw theatre of Western pop culture, brought to life right before their eyes. But beneath the cheers lies an unspoken acceptance: that when intimacy comes wrapped in an accent and global stardom, it feels less transgressive, even charming.

Enrique Iglesias Instagram Post

Western Pop Culture V/S Indian Pop Culture 

This double standard is not new. Indian pop culture has often separated what’s “acceptable” from the West and what’s “inappropriate” at home. The same audience that squirmed at Udit Narayan’s harmless kiss or trolled other Indian celebrities for public displays of affection seemed to interpret Enrique’s act as a sign of charisma and connection. It wasn’t scandal — it was seduction as performance.

What makes this difference starker is how both moments unfolded under the same cultural sky. Udit Narayan’s gesture — a moment of warmth, even clumsy affection — was dissected for crossing a line. Enrique’s, meanwhile, was celebrated as a hallmark of fan engagement. The singer, dressed in his casual black tee and cap, barely hesitated before the fan leaned in, their kiss lasting long enough to blur the line between surprise and intent. Cameras flashed, the crowd roared, and the moment was sealed into social media eternity — without much moral commentary.

This isn’t to say India has suddenly abandoned its conservative streak. Rather, it has learned to selectively suspend it. The incident underscores how global exposure and celebrity hierarchies can reshape moral interpretations. The foreign performer becomes a vessel of cultural aspiration, a kind of acceptable exception. What feels too bold for Indian stars becomes perfectly palatable when delivered through a Western lens — a reminder that admiration often rewrites boundaries faster than reason does.

Also Read:Emraan Hashmi Slams Toxic Masculinity: ‘Men Thinking ‘We’ll Do Whatever We Can’ Costs Women Their Dignity’

There’s also the matter of power dynamics on stage. In both cases — Narayan and Enrique — the act wasn’t coerced. But one was seen as overreach, the other as a dream come true. The distinction isn’t about gender or consent; it’s about the narratives audiences construct around who holds the right to intimacy in public. An Indian singer doing it appears indulgent; a global icon doing it looks romantic.

For India’s entertainment landscape, this moment is more than tabloid fodder. It’s an opportunity to examine how globalisation is quietly reshaping the nation’s moral lens. Western pop stars are often granted immunity under the pretext of performance art — their actions seen as extensions of their artistic identity. But Indian artists are still expected to embody restraint, their reputations tied to social respectability.

Enrique’s Mumbai kiss, therefore, is less about scandal and more about symbolism. It represents how India continues to negotiate modernity through borrowed gestures — accepting the global stage’s freedoms selectively while demanding restraint from its own. The camera captured more than a kiss; it revealed a country still learning how to separate admiration from inhibition, and art from morality.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Julia Roberts' Surprising Intimacy Coordinator Decision
Fashion

Julia Roberts’ Surprising Intimacy Coordinator Decision

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

The role of an Intimacy Coordinator was popularised in 2018, after the #MeToo movement took hold, and it focuses on keeping actors, directors and sometimes crew safer when it comes to intimate scenes. “An Intimacy Coordinator position interrupts the production power dynamics and provides a confidential space for actors, directors and producers to discuss concerns and potential barriers to consent,” Michela Carattini, SAG-AFTRA-accredited IC Trainer and Company Director of Key Intimate Scenes tells R29. “An intimacy coordinator provides risk assessment and risk mitigation strategies to support the actors, the director, the production, and in some cases, the crew. ‘Intimate scenes’ can vary in definition, but universally include scenes with simulated sexual activity (including sexual assault) and/or nudity.”
October 15, 2025 0 comments
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Henry Threadgill Extends His Compositional Daring Into Intimacy » PopMatters
Music

Henry Threadgill Extends His Compositional Daring Into Intimacy » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 9, 2025
written by jummy84

The musical art of composer Henry Threadgill has taken many forms over the course of more than half a century. When he emerged as a darting, era-spanning alto saxophonist with the trio AIR in 1971, Threadgill was already defying expectations, playing in the post-bebop “free style” of that loft jazz era, but also covering ragtime songs along the way. His bands over the years were adventurous and unusual: a sextet with two drummers, cello, and brass; the Very Very Circus with two electric guitars and two tubas; a Flute Force Four with, you guessed it, four flutes; the Make a Move band with guitar and accordion; and Zooid, his most recent band, which shapeshifts from project to project.

Along the way, it became clear that Threadgill’s bracing saxophone playing was only a small part of his art. As a composer and bandleader, he had developed a distinctive voice, refracting the lineage of jazz through his personal musical language: contrasting timbres, overlapping rhythms, and a practice of improvisation that encouraged unusual intervals and fresh melodic patterns. During recent recordings, it became clear that Threadgill’s art has expanded beyond any single band to encompass ensembles of unusual size and composition.

The new album, Listen Ship, features a particularly unique ensemble of four acoustic guitars (Brandon Ross on the soprano in addition to Bill Frisell, Miles Okazaki, and Greg Belisle-Chi), two acoustic bass guitars (Jerome Harris and Stomu Takeishi), and two pianos (Maya Keren and Rahul Carlberg). The musicians play a suite of 16 precise and sympathetically connected pieces that largely evade a sense of genre.

Let me emphasize: although Henry Threadgill began his career as a “jazz musician”, Listen Ship only fleetingly sounds like jazz. However, the guitar-centric pieces, in particular, contain the rhythmic give-and-take that is distinctive to jazz. The music, in terms of genre or category, is simply in its own space.

For the first six installments, Threadgill segregates the pianos and guitars, alternating between piano duets and guitar treatments. (For titles, the segments are “lettered”, A, B, etc, with “IJ” as a single piece.) The contrast between these first pieces acts as a prelude. The piano duets are slower and more legato, with notes and clusters ringing in gentle pastels that only occasionally ruffle your sonic feathers. For example, “E” is a set of whispered curls and chords, with low tones and cushioned chords setting up isolated spikes of high notes. Threadgill allows Keren and Carlberg moments of drama here, but most of the playing comes home to layers of gentle accompaniment.

The guitars-only pieces that start the suite are more likely to be contrapuntal and rhythmic, like “D”, with its delicate, dancing plucking. The guitars cover the spectrum from high to low, each voice in place but coming together in strands of written melody that cycle around like a wheel.

The first segment that brings all the instruments together develops Threadgill’s ideas more fully. On “G”, the guitars continue to assert a more percussive voice, but the pianos emerge gently from beneath and then match the guitars with vigor. Suddenly, then, this piece resets to allow the keyboards to play a ballad segment that reinforces their identity, which invites the guitars along, with a bass guitar trading lead improvisations with Ross’s soprano. Ultimately, the eight instruments converge in a single theme.

The second half of the program continues to mix the players and instruments more freely. The bass guitarists face off on a frankly funky duel on “M”; a single piano part underlies one jagged guitar melody on “P”; and the 40-second “Q” is a tightly-composed symphony in a flash.

The two longest segments of the suite also come in this second half of the program, and they are the highlights. The concluding piece, “R”, offers the richest harmonic landscape on the record. The opening piano solo sounds conspicuously like (almost) mainstream jazz, though with this program’s criss-crossing guitar accompaniment. Guitarists also solo, utilizing beautiful harmonic movement as the piece develops a solid background of rhythmic hits. In the final minute, Threadgill brings together a written melody that pays off everything that came before.

A particularly sumptuous performance emerges in segment “L”, marked by a lead guitar that begins with a Flamenco-tinged lyrical bravura. Pianos and guitars move beneath the lead with gentle, consonant support, lifting the piece to shivering beauty. Listeners familiar with some of the folk-inspired jazz of the 1970s may hear echoes of the band Oregon with Ralph Towner’s guitar. Still, soon enough Threadgill’s written theme distinguishes the piece as his own, with two guitars playing a unison melody as bass, piano chords, and contrasting melodies and percussive effects complete the album’s most masterful performance.

One other observation seems important. The soloists on this album typically stand out as utterly themselves regardless of the context in which you hear them play. Bill Frisell, Miles Okazaki, and Brandon Ross rarely disappear into a recording, essentially anonymous. However, it’s seldom obvious on this record who may be soloing. That may be because the settings are so gentle and careful that these huge musical personalities didn’t look to impose their singular stamps. Does this mostly quiet program invite or require a certain egolessness?

Compared to many of Henry Threadgill’s prior ensemble recordings, Listen Ship is a delicate work. Perhaps it tempts us to overlook it, but small can be bold as well as beautiful. This new composition and construction by Threadgill has a “chamber jazz” quality at times. Still, in its relative hush — no urgent saxophones, no amplified insistence or distortion — it invites the closest possible listening. Careful attention is richly rewarded by Listen Ship. You will hear some of the finest creative musicians in the world lose themselves in Henry Threadgill’s patterns and plans, the pathways he sets up that allow melodies and rhythms to wander, weave, and be discovered.

This is subtle music, only occasionally acerbic, but capable of a full range of interest. It moves across styles — yes, there is some folkiness, some hip jazz harmonies, some moments of noise or just texture — but it is best understood as a boundary-blasting form that reflects the adventure inside the head and soul of Henry Threadgill, the most congenial and inviting avant-garde artist in American music.
Listen Ship is a gentle, daring classic.

October 9, 2025 0 comments
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