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‘Sentimental Value’ Star Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas Interviewed From Telluride
TV & Streaming

‘Sentimental Value’ Star Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas Interviewed From Telluride

by jummy84 September 6, 2025
written by jummy84

EXCLUSIVE: Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas is the quiet sister, Agnes, opposite Renate Reinsve’s louder, more histrionic older sibling Nora in Joachim Trier’s unbelievably brilliant Cannes Grand Prix winner Sentimental Value. “Agnes is the diplomat of the family,” Lilleaas tells us, “trying to keep everyone together in the family.”

Trier didn’t know much about Lilleaas before he decided to cast her as Agnes, an academic historian who lives with her husband and son in the spacious house in Oslo where she was raised with Nora and their late mother.

Their father Gustov Borg, played with a sort of wounded gusto by Stellan Skarsgård, is a once-famous film director who abandoned his family when he made the choice to concentrate on his career.

Sometimes, when I watch movies, my eye is drawn to the quiet character to the left of the frame; they’re just slightly out of the main action. But their stillness compels you to pay attention. That’s what happened when I first saw Lilleaas in Sentimental Value.

Lilleaas comes from a theater background. Her parents ran a theater production company that made sets and costumes. They also went out on the road, putting on shows in the towns and villages surrounding the little mountainside village they lived in at Goc located in Hallingdal Valley in Buskerud County, situated between Oslo and Bergen in Norway.

RELATED: Oscars 2026 International Feature Film Submissions By Country

At the age of 2, her parents cast her in an historical play about a woman who’s beheaded because she had an abortion.

“They thought she killed her baby,” Lilleaas explains.

“I was very little. And I’ve been told that on the day of the premiere I threw a tantrum and said, ‘I don’t want to do it anymore.’ So that’s sort of the beginning for me,” Lilleaas says.

Trier says he met with many actors for Agnes. “And she’s extraordinary,” he says. “And I like actors that sometimes don’t jump up and do the jazz hands.

“Renate can f*cking do that. She’s funny,” he adds. “And she could do levity and all that. So I love that in her, the spectrum of Renate. But I needed someone opposite her who could hold that silence, and that took a bit of work. We had to do a couple of casting sessions, and suddenly I saw it in Inga, who is remarkable and she gives herself to the camera. Her closeups are extraordinary — cinematic as hell.”

RELATED: ‘Sentimental Value’ Trailer: First Look At Joachim Trier’s Cannes Grand Prix Winner Starring Renate Reinsve, Stellan Skarsgård & Elle Fanning

Lilleaas and I meet for a cuppa tea in a private dining room toward the rear of the New Sheridan Hotel along Telluride’s main boulevard. I’d seen her before, at the film’s now-famous 19-minute world premiere ovation during Cannes and at a party. Then up in the mountains, Skarsgård introduced us at the annual brunch for Telluride’s festival patrons.

Stellan Skarsgård and Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas

Baz Bamigboye/Deadline

They hadn’t sought the busier area. Instead she and Skarsgård stood with their backs to it all. They weren’t being stand-offish, not at all. They just weren’t seeking the limelight. By the way, their fellow stars Reinsve and Elle Fanning were standing out of the spotlight too. The sight of them all made me smile.

Following her tantrum at 2 years old, it was at high school that Lilleaas decided that she wanted to get into the theater program, and that was “the first time I can remember actually thinking about wanting to be an actor. And before that it was just a feeling I had. … I liked doing theater. And then I applied to these theater schools, and that’s sort of when I understood that maybe I could be an actress,” she says as we sip our hot drinks.

RELATED: 2025-26 Awards Season Calendar: Dates For Emmys, Oscars, Grammys & More

She hadn’t fully comprehended that “actually there was a job that people had that was just being an actor, not making the theater, which was what I had seen my parents do, doing the whole thing from the construction and all the work that goes into it.”

Although she loved the “whole process” of making theater, there was a determination to focus on the thespian part of it.

As a big fan of Julia Roberts, Pretty Woman and Steel Magnolias played on repeat. “And I just thought she was so beautiful and a really good actress. So I remember her from when I was young. I remember seeing Erin Brockovich in the cinema actually, and I was so blown away by that movie and by her,” Lilleaas says. 

Equally, she got a kick out of just seeing the kids in high school who were in her parents’ classes. “I went to see their shows, and we went to Oslo to see productions. … And they would go on field trips with the class, and I would come with them twice a year maybe. But what I grew up with is the amateur theater and seeing the high school kids perform. So that’s what I grew up identifying with and wanting to be. So I didn’t really go outside for inspiration. It was sort of there on my doorstep,” she says.

Renate Reinsve and Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas in ‘Sentimental Value’

Neon/Everett Collection

“And when I look back at it, for me as a kid, they were amazing. They probably maybe weren’t that amazing, but I felt that it was amazing what they were doing. And then I grew up and there was a lot of very good Norwegian actors to look up to.”

Her favourite then was Ane Dahl Torp (The Wave, Cold Lunch), but there were many others she followed.

RELATED: Breaking Baz @ Cannes: Stellan Skarsgård Finds A Sweet Party Spot After The Triumph Of Joachim Trier’s Cannes Sensation ‘Sentimental Value’

At 17, she was an education exchange and went to live in Brazil  and went to a normal high school with Brazilian kids and gradually learned Portuguese for a year.

Her local-language skills were helped along by watching “the telenovelas, like our soap operas.” She remembers seeing telenovelas such as Tropical Paradise and Once in a Blue Moon. The common factor being, both featured Wagner Moura, the Cannes Film Festival Best Actor star of Kleber Mendonça Filho’s The Secret Agent.

“I saw him, he taught me Portuguese in a way,” Lilleaas says brightly. “Because I watched him and other actors, of course, in the telenovelas, and I remember him so well because he was so good.”

Wagner Moura and Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas

Baz Bamigboye/Deadline

And just hours after hearing that story, there they were, hanging out with the Sentimental Value and The Secret Agent teams at the Neon party. 

I ask Lilleaas about her preparations for taking on the role of Agnes in Trier’s movie. 

“We had a lot a rehearsal. I’ve never done that before to that extent. But we went through every scene that I was in and with the other actors and we blocked it and we had a really thorough talk about it. And so when we came to set, we had had a plan, sort of, that we could follow or not. So it wasn’t like, ‘This is how we’re going to do it,’ but it wasn’t set in stone.”

Trier’s pre-production runthrough of the screenplay gave her confidence. “We’ve been through this. So we’ve tried it out,” Lilleaas says. “We know a little bit about what it’s like. And in Norway, there’s not a lot of money for rehearsals.“

And then “when you do it again, you get deeper into it. I think it’s not just the first read of the thing. So you can actually dig deeper. And you have sort of a memory of what the other actor did.“

They shot in a studio and at various locations including the family home that’s at the center of the film’s drama. It’s a dramatic structure located in Oslo’s posh west end of the city.

Lilleaas knew Reinsve a little because they’d worked together with a  small theater company that Reinsve had started. They worked summer seasons on theater projects with children who are home and don’t go on vacation.

Then Trier brought them together for Sentimental Value. The two actors rehearsed together, and Lilleaas had a feeling of, “How was this dynamic going to be?”

“We had talks about family and sisterhood and stuff like that,” says Lilleaas, who has an older sister and a younger brother. “I’m in the middle,” she says, laughing.

“It’s great. I mean, I know a little bit of what it’s like to be a younger sister, and I know what it’s like to be a bigger sister and how that’s different, how the dynamic is different and the responsibility is different. When you’re someone’s younger sister, like I am in the movie, you’re protected in a way, and there’s someone who’s always been there. You’re not the first, you’re not the test [child],” she says.

From left: Joachim Trier, Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas, Stellan Skarsgård, Elle Fanning and Renate Reinsve at the Deadline Studio during the 2025 Toronto Film Festival

Deadline

“And when you’re an older sister, at least for me, there’s this enormous responsibility to protect the younger one that I don’t feel with my older sister. They’re so much more relaxed, which is probably annoying for her that you can just walk through life with the feeling of no responsibility.”

I point out that in the film, Agnes, although younger, is the grownup.

“But I think at some point it shifted in their relationship because when there were children, Nora, the older sister, protected the younger sister and took care of her and was her steady rock.” She feels that affected Nora “in a way that broke her a little bit. And it affected her, as you see in the movie. And so at some point, the healthier one becomes the protector in adulthood. … A lot of people can relate to that and recognize that. … And that’s because of the sort of older sibling sacrifice in a way, or her taking the fall, I guess. … That makes the younger one able to be the protector because maybe they’re more secure.”

But, in her view, it doesn’t mean that the younger — and, in this instance, stronger — sister, is not “affected by the childhood.”

Agnes has her scars, only they’re not immediately as visible as Nora’s.

“When we worked on it, I think that Agnes has a relationship with her father. He’s not absent from her life, but he’s not there. So she can call him, but he’s not involved that much,” she says.

As a child, Agnes and her father were close — after all, he chose her to play a role in one of his films.

And then he disappeared into editing and into probably traveling with the film. “And he was gone. And for a child, that must be so devastating and it must make you feel that you were used by your parents somehow. You don’t necessarily understand then. But I imagine that that’s the feeling that you were sort of taken advantage of in a way.

“I can only imagine, being an actor, how much you give of your inner self and how much that costs. And for someone just to take it and leave, it’s hard enough when it’s someone you don’t really know. But when it’s your own father, it must really make you confused to put it lightly,” she says.

I think I understand why actors act and how they can pour themselves into a role. Yet I feel that they’re not always appreciated for what they put into it, I say.

“I think if you turn on your empathy a little and think about it, what you’re actually doing is you’re putting the most vulnerable part of yourself for everyone to see and enjoy,” Lilleaas says. But, she warns: “That does cost something for people. And I think there’s a lot of judgment against actors.”

I suggest that,in part, it’s based on the ever-ready diet of celebrity coverage that dominates the media. Everything is showbiz. The president of the United States treats the White House like some mammoth soundstage where he can treat foreign leaders as if they’re the stooges on a television game show.

And then there’s the assumption that every actor must have stacks of money and that everything is done for them.

“And I think people look at that and they want that,” Lilleaas says. “So maybe there’s a little jealousy in there that you want that, but you don’t know what you’re paying to get that.”

Most actors, she says, “aren’t famous. They’re very hardworking, normal people.”

From left: Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas, Elle Fanning, Renate Reinsve, Stellan Skarsgård and Joachim Trier at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival

Monica Schipper/Getty Images

I was in the Grand Lumiere in Cannes when Sentimental Value was greeted with that extraordinary 19-minute ovation. 

How did she feel being in that rare moment, I ask.

“It was overwhelming, of course. We’d just seen the movie, which was nice. I had seen it once before, in a smaller theater. So this was huge. And there were a lot of people, and it was so nice to hear people react and you can feel the energy in the room. … And this feels good. And then they applaud. And I was prepared that if they like it, they’ll applaud. And thought, ‘Maybe it’ll last a little,’ but I didn’t know what was long and what was short. You don’t know what six minutes is. You don’t know what 19 minutes is. So I just sort of dissociate a little because you’re filmed at the same time,” she recalls with a delayed looked of shock on her face.

I confess to her that I was one of those from the media who filmed her. Although, I must say that my iPhone is nowhere near as big as the official cameras that Thierry Frémaux escorted into the auditorium to film the ovation. 

“I had tears in my eyes because I thought it was just great and a little overwhelming, of course. And I was moved by the movie,” she says. “I was moved by people’s reaction to the movie. And when you look people in the eye after they’ve seen it, there’s this connection that we know we’ve experienced something together and that we have this understanding of our pain, each other’s pain, without having to say it because we’ve seen the movie and it sort of describes it. And so now we know each other.”

It’s a bond made between people watching a big screen in the dark, she remarks. “I think that’s so powerful to experience, and that makes me cry a little.”

I remember feeling that the Sentimental Value screening was a seminal night for cinema. But the irony of it was that this was a film about acting, about the film industry and the destruction that it can cause to the people who toil in it .And it was taking place in this cathedral of cinema.

“And it was very huge for me to just be there,” Lilleaas says. “I felt so privileged and I felt like it was a dream to be there. And how much respect people have for movies there. That’s very moving.”

But what did she think of the whole the Cannes red carpet — the gowns, the jewelry, the shoes, and all that palava?

Reading my question back, I realize how sexist it is. I guess I wouldn’t have asked Denzel Washington about the color of his tuxedo or his ear stud.

I chastise myself, wishing that I could take it back. 

However, Lilleaas responded that she thought the whole red carpet panoply “was a lot,” especially when that kind of exhibitionism “is so far from the core of the movie.”

Nonetheless, she thought the glam fest was “fun” and that she “likes to dress up” but suggests that she found it “a little overwhelming as well.”

As we’re talking, Lilleaas suddenly looks up with a start. There’s a trophy head of a buffalo known as “Old Joe,” as the brass plaque reveals, mounted on a dining room wall. “It’s garish,” Lilleaas cries.

We’d been so deep into our conversation that neither one of us had noticed the darn buffalo staring right down at us.

Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas with her “friend” Joe mounted on wall at New Sheridan Hotel in Telluride

Baz Bamigboye/Deadline

Not much call for buffalo in Oslo. She and actor husband Gunnar Eiriksson (Pørni, Power Play) reside there with their 4-year-old son. ”It’s a very chill, everyday life with my family,” she allows.

She went straight home from Cannes and into the routine of picking up her child at kindergarten. “It’s very quick to get back to reality from that unreal setting to somewhere close to normal life. That’s life as life. That’s what’s important to me. And that’s what has value. And the other stuff is fun and a little crazy, but it not real life,” she observes.

Lilleaas agrees that you can’t act real life on stage or screen if you don’t ever experience it as a normal person.

That’s why she believes that “a lot of actors should have other jobs in their life. They need to know what it’s like to have a job that’s not acting and to work with other people who are not actors. Because you can’t spend your whole career life working with the same type of people, we’re very similar often. And to just do the acting, then you don’t actually know what you’re talking about somehow, I think.”

Lilleaas has practiced what she preaches. She has worked in the costume department of her parents’ business. Her first main job was as a dental assistant. “I was super unqualified for the work — I was 17,” she reveals.

That was followed by a stint as a teacher and helping out in a care home for senior citizens.

That last gig must’ve been helpful in her understanding of Agnes’ father, played by Skarsgård.

I’d seen them in Cannes at the Closing Night party, and I liked how he often seemed to be protective of her in a kindly, fatherly way. Same in Telluride. This world was new to Lilleaas, and she appreciated that he was “so sweet to her.”

And, she adds, “He’s so down to earth and so warm and empathetic, and he’s such a good actor.” 

Working with him on Sentimental Value, she says that “when you just look in his eyes, you see his soul, you can feel his presence, and I can see something in there. I don’t know what it is, but it resonates with me. And so I react to that intuitively, which was so much fun and so interesting and rewarding as an actor to work with him. Yeah,and he’s very nice.”

Her Agnes in Sentimental Value, she notes, “is not in the darkest place throughout the movie. So for me it was very light and happy to go to work. And I really like feeling things at work. So it was a lot of fun. We had a great time.”

Future work, Lilleaas says, is “a little up in the air” while she helps promote Sentimental Value through the fall and winter. Following TIFF, the picture screens on four dates at the New York Film Festival beginning with a gala on September 30 at Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln Center. It’s screening three times at the BFI London Film Festival, premiering there on October 12 at the Royal Festival Hall. It’s released into theaters in the US and UK on November 7.

The world of the stage remains in her blood. Before and after filming Sentimental Value she stood in for her uncle, a teacher at a drama school in Oslo, where she taught 19-year-old students for half a semester.

She found the experience refreshing. “I love being a teacher,” she enthuses. “It’s like acting, teaching. I’ve done it before as well. And I learned so much about acting from it because I have to try to explain myself. And I think it’s really interesting and it’s so much fun to see younger people experience themselves in doing that. And to see them grow as people mostly, not so much the acting part, it’s more the human being growing up and taking that step into adulthood. I think it’s such a privilege to be a witness to.”

It’s also a privilege for me as well, to watch a new star get ready to soar.

September 6, 2025 0 comments
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'Married to Medicine' Star Dr. Heavenly Kimes Reveals Pushback From Bravo After Announcing Run For Georgia State Rep: T'm Doing Something Unprecedented'
Celebrity News

‘Married to Medicine’ Star Dr. Heavenly Kimes Reveals Pushback From Bravo After Announcing Run For Georgia State Rep: T’m Doing Something Unprecedented’

by jummy84 September 5, 2025
written by jummy84

‘Married to Medicine’ Star Dr. Heavenly Kimes Reveals Pushback From Bravo After Announcing Run For Georgia State
Rep: T’m Doing Something
Unprecedented’

Where there’s a will, there’s a way.

In a newly released interview with Pastor #JamalBryant, Married to Medicine’s Dr. Heavenly revealed that Bravo stars are “not allowed to run for office.” The medical professional announced her candidacy in July on the Democratic ticket for Georgia State Representative in District 93.

Speaking previously with PEOPLE about her campaign, Dr. Heavenly said:

“I’m not a career politician. I’m a mom, a doctor, a business owner — and I’m not afraid to stand up for what I believe in. I’m running to serve, and I’m ready to work.”

However, her transition into politics nearly hit a roadblock. She told Pastor Bryant that she was unaware of #Bravo’s rules regarding political runs, and it took the network “eight weeks” to finalize her contract and outline the parameters for showcasing this next chapter of her life.

Clearly, nothing, and no network, can stop Dr. Heavenly from making moves!??


September 5, 2025 0 comments
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Erin Bates and Chad Paine
TV & Streaming

Erin Bates’ Husband Shares Worrying Update on ‘Bringing Up Bates’ Star After ‘Severe Seizure’

by jummy84 September 5, 2025
written by jummy84

After the birth of her seventh baby with husband Chad Paine on August 25, Erin Bates developed a severe UTI and kidney infection, which sent her into septic shock. In the latest update from Paine, he revealed how things have recently taken a turn for the worse.

Taking to Instagram on Thursday (September 4), Paine shared how Erin “suffered a lengthy and severe seizure” on Wednesday night (September 3), leaving her “extremely weak” and “only half conscious.” He noted that his wife is currently in the ICU and “doctors are running scans and tests to determine the cause.”

“Up to this point, Erin’s infection was getting better, but we found ourselves back in a place of heartache, uncertainty, and tears,” he wrote in an emotional post alongside photos of himself by his wife’s bedside. “As her husband, it is one of the hardest things I’ve ever faced — to sit by her side and watch her struggle while being so helpless to ease her suffering.”

He went on to say he “can’t even imagine life without my best friend,” adding, “We hold on to faith that healing is coming, even in the midst of the unknown. Your prayers are felt and we are forever grateful.”

Erin, who now shares seven children with Paine, was one of the stars of the reality series Bringing Up Bates, the Up TV series that centered on the daily lives of Gil and Kelly Jo Bates, their 19 children, and their extended family. The show ran for ten seasons between 2015 and 2021.

Previously, Paine announced the arrival of baby number seven, Henry Blythe, born on August 25th after “a long and emotional labor,” according to his August 27 Instagram post. “Henry is doing wonderful, but we would so appreciate your prayers for Erin as she continues to recover from some complications,” Paine wrote at the time.

Fans, friends, and family jumped into the comments of Paine’s latest post to share their prayers and well-wishes.

“We are continuing to pray every day for a miraculous healing. Love you all,” wrote Erin’s brother, Lawson Bates.

Lawson’s wife, former Nickelodeon star Tiffany Espensen, added, “Our thoughts, prayers, and love are with you Paine Family ❤️ We love y’all so much!”

“Sweet Erin 😭💔 Praying right now for her complete healing, and will continue!” wrote another.

“Chad, we are upholding you all in prayer daily 🙏🏻,” said one commenter.

Another added, “Thank you so much for taking time to update us. I know this has to be unimaginably hard.”

“This is so hard to read. I’m praying for Erin,” added one user.

September 5, 2025 0 comments
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The Surprising Confession! This Bollywood Star Admits His Role "Didn't Come Naturally" | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

The Surprising Confession! This Bollywood Star Admits His Role “Didn’t Come Naturally” | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 September 5, 2025
written by jummy84

Known as the Greek God of Bollywood, this versatile actor has been a part of numerous iconic performances in a career spanning over two decades. With a range of critically acclaimed and commercially successful films, they’ve established themselves as a prominent figure in Indian cinema. Starting from Jodhaa Akbar to Dhoom 2, Koi Mil Gaya to Agneepath, Hrithik has left everyone mesmerized again and again. However, one film where even he felt he had come short was the 2003 romantic drama Main Prem Ki Diwani Hoon, alongside Kareena Kapoor.

“I Wasn’t Mature Enough for That Role” – Hrithik Confesses
During an honest interaction with fans through a Film Companion interview (as pointed out in a Reddit thread and covered by BollywoodShaadis), Hrithik spoke of how difficult it was for him to deal with the character Prem Kishan. As per a question of whether he ever found any role difficult to relate to, Hrithik immediately mentioned Main Prem Ki Diwani Hoon.

“I wasn’t mature enough to appreciate that side of myself,” he admitted. “I usually don’t do characters that are so far from my natural self. That hyper, euphoric, uppity ‘wo ho ah ah’ energy don’t come so naturally to me.”

To the delight of the audience, Hrithik made light of one of his own scenes from the film, mimicking a popular line, “Oh Aunty, oh no,” in a squeaky voice. His mock self-deprecation elicited laughter, demonstrating his capacity to laugh at his own earlier faux pas.

Hrithik Gears Up for ‘War 2’
In the coming days, Hrithik will be back in action on the big screen with War 2, helmed by Ayan Mukerji and produced by Aditya Chopra. Featuring Jr NTR and Kiara Advani alongside him, the action entertainer sequel to the 2019 blockbuster is set for a worldwide release on August 14, 2025, in Hindi, Tamil, and Telugu. The film will face a box-office clash with Rajinikanth’s ‘Coolie’.

September 5, 2025 0 comments
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lego star wars death star 2
Music

LEGO’s $1,000 Star Wars Death Star Is Its Most Expensive Set Ever

by jummy84 September 4, 2025
written by jummy84

LEGO is making a safe bet that the most dedicated Star Wars fans will be willing to pony up $1,000 for its most expensive set to date, a 9,023-piece, painstakingly detailed Death Star.

The collector’s set contains enough sections to recreate unforgettable scenes from Star Wars: A New Hope to Star Wars: Return of the Jedi, including locations such as Emperor Palpatine’s throne room, Princess Leia’s cell, and the Imperial shuttle hangar.

It comes with 38 minifigures, including Luke Skywalker (as both a Jedi and disguised Stormtrooper), Han Solo, Princess Leia, Darth Vader, Emperor Palpatine, and more, giving Star Wars fans equal opportunity to reenact the lightsaber duel between Darth Vader and Obi-Wan Kenobi or swing across the retractable bridge with Luke and Leia.

Related Video

See photos of the LEGO Star Wars Death Star Ultimate Collector Series set below. It will be available for purchase on October 4th, with LEGO Insiders (sign up for free here) getting early access beginning October 1st.

This isn’t LEGO’s first Death Star set. It previously released a 4,016-piece kit that’s now classified as a “retired product.”

In other Star Wars news, Amy Adams, Matt Smith, Aaron Pierre, and Mia Goth recently joined Ryan Gosling in the cast for Shawn Levy’s upcoming film, Star Wars: Starfighter. Now in production, it’s set to premiere on May 28th, 2027.

For more, read Matt Goldberg’s essay on the future of Star Wars, and see where it landed on our list of the best action movie franchises of all time.

September 4, 2025 0 comments
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NFL Star Stefon Diggs Responds To Claims That He's A 'Pain In The Posterior + Issues Public Apology: 'Obviously I Don't Want To Come Across As That'
Celebrity News

NFL Star Stefon Diggs Responds To Claims That He’s A ‘Pain In The Posterior + Issues Public Apology: ‘Obviously I Don’t Want To Come Across As That’

by jummy84 September 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Screenshot

NFL Star Stefon Diggs Responds To Claims That He’s A ‘Pain In The Posterior + Issues Public Apology: Obviously I Don’t Want To Come Across As That

Stefon Diggs broke his silence with the media on Wednesday after weeks of speculation surrounding his demeanor during training camp.

Addressing comments from NBC Sports Boston’s Phil Perry and Tom Curran that he was “becoming a bit of a pain in the posterior,” Diggs responded, “I was referred to as a pain in the a**, pain in the posterior, but I’m going to say exactly what it really is. Obviously I don’t want to come across as that… If I rubbed anybody the wrong way, I’ll I really want to apologize.”

Diggs emphasized professionalism moving forward: “If somebody calls you an asshole and then they start acting like one. . . . I won’t. That’s not me.”

What are your thoughts on Cardi’s man apology?

 


September 4, 2025 0 comments
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SIMONE ASHLEY'S SECRET ROMANCE EXPOSED!" - Bridgerton Star Spotted Kissing Mystery Man At US Open | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

SIMONE ASHLEY’S SECRET ROMANCE EXPOSED!” – Bridgerton Star Spotted Kissing Mystery Man At US Open | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 September 4, 2025
written by jummy84

US Open’s front row became a celebrity-filled event on September 1, as cameras spotted Bridgerton star Simone Ashley courtside with comedian Zakir Khan and actor Kal Penn. While spectators loved Simone’s stylish and elegant look, it was her snuggling session with a mystery guy that made all the headlines. The 30-year-old actress, who came to fame for her role as Kate Sharma, was seen giggling, watching the match, and even exchanging a kiss in the stands.

As Just Jared reports, the guy is Tim Sykes, a 44-year-old restaurateur and a regular at New York’s dining scene. He is linked with Ruby’s Café and Dudley’s and is a member of the Wish You Were Hear Group, which runs restaurants in New York, Los Angeles, and Las Vegas. Although his Instagram account is private, fans were quick to spot that Simone follows him.

Zakir Khan Makes History
Comedian Zakir Khan, who had recently sparked controversy with his record-breaking U.S. comedy tour, sat directly next to Simone. Famous for his “Sakht Launda” character, Zakir had people laughing when a user cracked a joke online, “Sakt launda bhi sharma gaya,” as he sat close to the kissing pair.

Only weeks before, Zakir was the first Indian comedian to do a full Hindi-language set at New York’s Madison Square Garden, entertaining a sold-out audience of 6,000. His face even illuminated billboards in Times Square, symbolizing a defining moment in his career.

Kal Penn Joins the Trio
It was joined by actor Kal Penn, who has been a part of House MD and How I Met Your Mother. With Simone Ashley, Zakir Khan, and Kal Penn seated together, the courtside row turned into an ideal picture of desi talent leaving its mark on the world.

September 4, 2025 0 comments
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Michelle Dockery, Downton Abbey Star, Is Pregnant With First Baby
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Michelle Dockery, Downton Abbey Star, Is Pregnant With First Baby

by jummy84 September 3, 2025
written by jummy84

5. Downton‘s first OMG moment came when Matthew Crawley, the series’ dashing male lead, was killed in the season three finale. “There were a lot of very upset people demanding apologies,” Stevens told Entertainment Weekly of his decision to exit the show at the end of his three-year contract.

As for why he was ready to say goodbye to Downton, he explained, “Doing a long-running TV thing was amazing on all sorts of levels. But at the moment, it’s about seeing how I can keep myself challenged and entertained.”

6. In an interview with E! News, Fellowes stressed it was Steven’s choice to leave (and not return for an appearance in season four) that lead to the character’s sudden demise.

Noting that in America, contracts tend to be longer, “it seemed to them that the production team had just decided you know,” he continued as he made a throat-slitting motion. “But in fact, he had just gotten to the end of his three-year contract and he wanted to go on and do different stuff…We just had to make it work. Some of the letters I got made your hair stand on ends!”

7. But Matthew’s devastating death didn’t keep away viewers as the season four premiere shattered ratings records, attracting 10.2 million viewers.

8. If Stevens had notified Fellowes sooner of his intention to leave the series, he said he would’ve staged fan-favorite Lady Sybil’s exit differently: “I probably would have killed them together in a car crash.”

September 3, 2025 0 comments
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Nouvelle Vague Star Zoey Deutch: Godard/Linklater Connection Is Clear
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Nouvelle Vague Star Zoey Deutch: Godard/Linklater Connection Is Clear

by jummy84 September 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Zoey Deutch was 19 when Richard Linklater, idly sketching ideas on a lunch container, told her she would be Jean Seberg.

It was a moment between shots on Linklater’s 2016 “Everybody Wants Some!!,” when Deutch first caught Hollywood’s attention as part of the film‘s stacked ensemble cast. “And in passing, casually, [he said], ‘I have a movie about ‘Breathless,’ I think I want you to play Jean,’” she told IndieWire at the Telluride Film Festival.

It was nearly a decade before Deutch would adopt Seberg’s game pixie cut to star in “Nouvelle Vague,” Linklater’s black-and-white homage to the French New Wave that recreates the 1959 filming of “Breathless” on the streets of Paris. The film, which premiered at Cannes and is now heading out on a busy fall festival tour, was written by Holly Gent and Vince Palmo, Jr. (“Me and Orson Welles”) with French screenwriter Laetitia Masson.

'Dead Man's Wire'

It’s a light and tasty soufflé that chronicles Godard’s groundbreaking debut which he shot at top speed MOS (without sound) in mainly single takes, barking dialogue from his notebook to the actors, who had no script. Working on a Linklater movie, however, requires discipline.

“Rick is focused, but it’s fun,” said Deutch. “And he has cultivated these systems that are in place for it to be as calm an experience as possible. He requires rehearsal time, usually about the same amount of rehearsal as shooting days, which is rare.”

For “Nouvelle Vague,” Linklater gave the actors a rehearsal manifesto. “He typed up three different sections of what he wanted all of the actors to understand going into this movie,” said Deutch. “One of them was to be clear that we are making a movie, a love letter to cinema about Godard, but we are making it in the opposite style of how he made it. We are not hoping to just spontaneously get lucky. We are going to be precise and thoughtful and do all the research and create magic a different way.”

Would Godard approve? Impossible to know, but Deutch believes that Linklater is the only person who might get the master’s nod.

'Breathless'
‘Breathless’Sotheby’s

“They are two artists that have maintained their artistic integrity as filmmakers that do what they want to do and make movies that they want to make, not what other people want to see,” she said. “That is a rare quality. Even the greatest filmmakers of all time, most of them, waver at one point or another, and that’s OK. It is astonishing that [Rick] has never wavered from doing things that he wants to do for himself — not selfishly, but because that’s what you do. You make things that live inside of you that you have to get out and then it relates to other people. He and Godard share that quality.”

Three years ago, Linklater finally mentioned “Breathless” to Deutch again. “He kept saying, ‘Do not cut your hair quite yet,” she said. “‘What does that mean? You’re going to recast me?’ I didn’t know how real it was at all until I actually cut my hair.”

Two years prior to filming, Deutch began learning French. “It was a great gift that [Seberg] had a particular accent with her French-speaking,” she said. “When she was making ‘Breathless,’ she had just started learning French, so I didn’t have the daunting task of of trying to reshape my mouth to sound French. But that element of the process was the most helpful in creating an understanding of what was going through her head while she was filming.”

When Deutch watched “Breathless,” she found Seberg mysterious. Once she began production, that perception flipped on its head.

“It’s an odd movie,” she said, “I had a lot of questions, quite a few things that don’t make sense. Once I started acting in a language that I was just learning, I understood where that mysteriousness was coming from. It’s fear and it’s a defense mechanism you put on: ‘Instead of looking scared, let’s try mysterious. Let’s try looking like I’m not going to let you know what’s going on here.’ She’s improvising a movie in a language that she’s just learning with a director that’s giving her zero guidance. It’s an avant-garde style of filmmaking. She’d only made two movies before. Otto Preminger was the most rigid stylistically. It was the polar opposite.”

Preminger was notoriously cruel to Seberg. “She had already been traumatized by Hollywood in a major, major way, destroyed by the critics, destroyed by him,” said Deutch. “She comes to do this, and it’s scary. So the language barrier was a great window into what I would imagine she was going through.”

'Nouvelle Vague'
‘Nouvelle Vague’Jean-Louis Fernandez

Linklater and Deutch agreed to not foreshadow Seberg’s later darkness. “We honor a specific moment in time of this beautiful, brave, gifted woman’s life that is oftentimes just thought of as tragic,” she said. “It was important to not read the last page. I would visit her grave in Montparnasse. We were shooting the last scene on the same street, and it was raining and I said, ‘Why don’t we go talk to Jean?’ So Rick and I walk over to Jean’s grave. We look up and the sun came out. The weather forecast said it was going to rain all day long. We were able to shoot that scene, and we felt like it was a little bit of her blessing.”

Deutch’s preparations also included visiting Chanel to be fitted for haute couture. “It was a little-girl fantasy dream come true to go to Coco Chanel’s apartment to get a custom dress made,” she said. “It felt like I was going back in time and and channeling her.”

Trained as a dancer and raised by industry parents (actress Lea Thompson and director Howard Deutch), Deutch has done it all: romantic comedies (“Set It Up”), thrillers (“Juror No. 2”), biopics (“Rebel in the Rye”), series (“The Politician”), and theater (“Our Town”).

Eastwood cast her in “Juror No. 2” after an audition eight years before. “I never heard anything back, and he remembered it,” she said. “So often we feel that these auditions go into the abyss and it can be painful. This is the universe reminding me: ‘If you stay the course, keep working and trying, you keep going.’”

'Nouvelle Vague,' Zoey Deutch
‘Nouvelle Vague,’ Zoey DeutchARP Sélection

“Our Town” was an “awesome and healing” experience, she said. “Making films is my life. It’s my favorite thing in the world. But I can get into the trap of being so hard on myself once the day is done. In theater when you go home at night and you go, ‘I didn’t quite nail that,’ you don’t need to torture yourself. You go, ‘Tomorrow is a new day, and I’m going to try that tomorrow night.’ It’s a metaphor for life. You have another shot. You don’t have to be like, ‘Oh, that happened, and it was horrible.’”

Now 30, Deutch is taking her career reins by moving into producing films like “Buffaloed.” “I wanted to generate things instead of waiting around for them to happen,” she said. “I started in comedy. I was highly sought out for the one-dimensional female character in the male-driven comedy. Then I overcorrected a little, and I decided to only play scammers and unlikable female characters. I’m now in this new phase where I’m coming into myself as a woman more. I want to make beautiful things like ‘Hamnet.’ ‘Nouvelle Vague’ is a beautiful movie about art and and staying true to yourself, and it’s joyful, and it’s fun, and it’s a celebration of cinema.”

Next up: She also produced “The Threesome” (Vertical, September 5) directed by Chad Hartigan, a smart take on how a ménage à trois really impacts its players. She shot the relationship drama in Little Rock, Arkansas right before “Nouvelle Vague.” She reached out to the director years ago, wanting to be in his orbit. When she heard another actress fell out of “The Threesome,” she messaged him on Instagram: “Can you meet me for coffee? I want to make this movie with you.” “I fought a little for that one,” she said.

She also stars in the upcoming Lionsgate thriller “The Anniversary” (October 29) and just finished a “wild” and untitled David Wain comedy (“Celebrity Pass Movie”) as well as a love story for Netflix, “Voicemails for Isabelle.” “It’s a story about grief and sisterhood and falling in love,” she said.

Netflix will release “Nouvelle Vague” in select theaters on Friday, October 31, and stream on Netflix starting on Friday, November 14.

September 3, 2025 0 comments
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'Basketball Wives' Star Brittany Renner Has Heated Custody Exchange w/ NBA Player PJ Washington: 'Suck My D*ck'
Celebrity News

‘Basketball Wives’ Star Brittany Renner Has Heated Custody Exchange w/ NBA Player PJ Washington: ‘Suck My D*ck’

by jummy84 September 2, 2025
written by jummy84

‘Basketball Wives’ Star Brittany Renner Has Heated Custody Exchange w/ NBA Player PJ Washington: ‘Suck My D*ck’

Things turned nasty during a recent custody exchange between #BrittanyRenner and #PJWashington.

Footage making its rounds on the internet shows how things quickly went left when PJ arrived to pick up his son from Brittany. Before the #DallasMavericks player makes it down the front steps, Brittany confronts him about their son crying, as the toddler seemingly didn’t want to go. “Every time he does this, I’m going to record it,” Brittany tells PJ. “This is the third time he’s done it; he just doesn’t want to go with you,” she continues, “So, actually show up!”

Things only escalate from there, with Brittany and her mom following PJ to the car as he places the child in the backseat. “It’s up with me, just know that,” Renner says, to which PJ tells her to “suck d**k.” When Brittany’s mom enters the chat with “What you say?” PJ says, “I didn’t stutter…Suck my d**k.”

Brittany’s mother then accuses PJ of giving his “hoe” wife, Alisah Chanel, $170,000, while only putting $11,000 in his son’s bank account. Well, Alisah, who is sitting in the passenger seat during the crazy ordeal, quickly replies with, “Shut the f**k up!”

The recording ends before verbal threats turned physical.


September 2, 2025 0 comments
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