Rachel Weisz anxious about playing Jackie Kennedy

London, May 20 (ANI): Actress Rachel Weisz is already feeling the huge responsibility of playing Jacqueline Kennedy in husband Darren Aronofsky”s new film – because she”s a Brit portraying an American icon.

The Mummy star will be play the role of Jackie and the film will portray Jackie’s life and how she coped with her husband President John F. Kennedy’s assassination in 1963.

Despite being eager to start shooting for the film, she can’t help being a little anxious as to whether the American audience will accept a Brit actor playing the role of an American icon that everyone loved so much.

“It”s a recent project so the script is being developed and it”s a great script. I will have to start to do some reading,” The Daily Express quoted her as saying.

“Jackie Kennedy is American royalty and a 20th century icon, so it”s extremely scary, daunting, challenging and a huge responsibility. I don”t know exactly how I will play her yet because I haven”t started really working on it, but of course it”s a big responsibility,” she added. (ANI)

Rachel Weisz vows to return to London stage every year

New York, March 22 (ANI): After winning the Laurence Olivier Award for best actress, Rachel Weisz has promised to do a stage show in London every year.

The actress had landed the prize for her performance in ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’.

“I”m greedy – I”d like to do film and theatre. It was eight years since I”d last been on stage and it was just too long a gap,” the Daily Express quoted her as saying.

She added: “I hope to do a play every couple of years – actually no: maybe every year. It”s the greatest feeling in the world being on stage and doing a live performance. It”s very wild and risky.”

Weisz started acting in a student theatre group while studying at Cambridge University. (ANI)

Mountaintop surprise winner at Olivier Awards

The Mountaintop, a drama about civil rights campaigner Martin Luther King, scooped the best new play honour at the coveted Laurence Olivier Awards.

The win for 28-year-old US playwright Katori Hall came as a surprise, with corporate drama Enron and contemporary rural story Jerusalem both heavily fancied ahead of the ceremony.

Rachel Weisz won in the best actress category for her portrayal of Blanche DuBois in A Streetcar Named Desire.

Mark Rylance was named best actor for the second time for his performance as Rooster in Jerusalem.

Best director went to Rupert Goold for Enron.

The musical awards were dominated by Spring Awakening, the cult hit Broadway show. It took four prizes, including best new musical.

A high-octane production of Hello, Dolly! won three prizes, including best actress in a musical for Samantha Spiro and best theatre choreographer for Stephen Mear.

The Royal Opera House swept the board in the opera categories and won a further award in dance.

Its production of Tristan Und Isolde picked up awards for best new opera production and outstanding achievement in opera for Swedish soprano Nina Stemme’s performance of Isolde.

The venue’s third nod was for best new dance production for Goldberg: The Brandstrup Rojo Project.

- Reuters

Mountaintop surprise winner at Olivier Awards

The Mountaintop, a drama about civil rights campaigner Martin Luther King, scooped the best new play honour at the coveted Laurence Olivier Awards.

The win for 28-year-old US playwright Katori Hall came as a surprise, with corporate drama Enron and contemporary rural story Jerusalem both heavily fancied ahead of the ceremony.

Rachel Weisz won in the best actress category for her portrayal of Blanche DuBois in A Streetcar Named Desire.

Mark Rylance was named best actor for the second time for his performance as Rooster in Jerusalem.

Best director went to Rupert Goold for Enron.

The musical awards were dominated by Spring Awakening, the cult hit Broadway show. It took four prizes, including best new musical.

A high-octane production of Hello, Dolly! won three prizes, including best actress in a musical for Samantha Spiro and best theatre choreographer for Stephen Mear.

The Royal Opera House swept the board in the opera categories and won a further award in dance.

Its production of Tristan Und Isolde picked up awards for best new opera production and outstanding achievement in opera for Swedish soprano Nina Stemme’s performance of Isolde.

The venue’s third nod was for best new dance production for Goldberg: The Brandstrup Rojo Project.

- Reuters

Rachel Weisz a cavewoman to her boyfriend

Washington, July 13 (ANI): Actress Rachel Weisz has said that she is no less than a cavewoman when it comes to her boyfriend.

The Constant Gardner star who has been with Darren Aronofsky for eight years, and shares three-year-old son Henry with him, revealed she loved the director for being a “manly man” who is always “totally himself”.

“In life I am a chameleon, and can sense very quickly how to fit in. But with him, I am not being adaptive. I am cavewoman to his manly man. He is always totally himself,” Contactmusic quoted her as telling Britain’s Harper’s Bazaar magazine.

“I love it that he doesn’t feel the need to fill silences with polite chat – his ability to cut to the chase is very exotic to me,” she added.

The stunning Oscar-winner further said that Darren was excited to return to Rachel’s native London, where she was due to feature in the theatre production of ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’.

She said: “For him it’s all so exotic. He’s enchanted by the city, especially shopping at Argos, pronounced ‘our ghost’ without the T!’” (ANI)

Rachel Weisz wants botox banned for actors

London, July 7 (ANI): Actress Rachel Weisz has left no doubts on her opinion on botox, saying that she would prefer it to be banned for actors.

The Constant Gardener star said that she wanted the cosmetic treatment forbidden onscreen since it came under the way of altering an actor’s expression.

“It should be banned for actors, as steroids are for sportsmen. Acting is all about expression; why would you want to iron out a frown?” the Daily Express quoted her as telling Harper’s Bazaar magazine.

The British Oscar-winner further said that she was more impressed by the London street fashion rather than what she saw on the lanes of New York or LA.

She added: “I love the way girls in London dress; it’s so different to the American ‘blow-dry and immaculate grooming’ thing.” (ANI)

Marie Curie named greatest woman scientist of all time

London, July 2 (ANI): Nobel Prize-winning nuclear physicist Marie Curie, who discovered that radiation therapy could treat cancer, has been voted the greatest woman scientist of all time.

The Polish-born researcher bagged over a quarter of the votes (25.1 per cent), almost double the votes received by her nearest rival Rosalind Franklin (14.2 per cent), the English biophysicist who helped discover the structure of DNA.

Third on the list was Hypatia of Alexandria, played by Rachel Weisz in a recent film about the fourth century Egyptian philosopher.

New Scientist magazine conducted the poll of 800 scientists and members of the public, which was commissioned by cosmetics company L’Oreal.

At the fourth position was astrophysicist Dame Jocelyn Bell Burnell with 4.7 per cent votes.

London-born Ada, the Countess of Lovelace, the mathematician who wrote the first computer programmes grabbed the fifth spot in the poll.

Austrian physicist Lise Meitner who discovered nuclear fission was sixth in the list, while British chemist Dorothy Hodgkin who pioneered X-ray techniques was at seventh.

Then came French-born Sophie Germain, who was one of the world’s greatest mathematicians, followed by American marine biologist Rachel Carson, who pioneered the global environmental movement ninth.

Standing proudly at the tenth spot is modern role model Dr Jane Goodall, the world famous primatologist, with 2.7 percent votes.

“The poll indicates the vital need to celebrate and raise awareness of the many female scientists who have shaped modern science since Marie Curie – and who are making a bigger contribution than ever,” the Telegraph quoted Dr Roger Highfield, the editor of New Scientist magazine, as saying.

Grita Loebsack, of L’Oreal said: “Women are at the forefront of advances in many scientific disciplines, particularly in health and life sciences.”

“The aim of the poll was to celebrate the contribution women have made to scientific research but also to highlight the lack of modern role models to encourage young women to pursue careers in science,” she added.

The Top 10 woman scientists of all time are:

1. Marie Curie (25.1 percent)

2. Rosalind Franklin (14.2 percent)

3. Hypatia of Alexandria (9.4 percent)

4. Dame Jocelyn Bell Burnell (4.7 percent)

5. Ada, Countess of Lovelace (4.5 percent)

6. Lise Meitner (4.4 per cent)

7. Dorothy Hodgkin (3.8 percent)

8. Sophie Germain (3.7 percent)

9. Rachel Carson (3.3 percent)

10. Dr Jane Goodall (2.7 percent) (ANI)

Rachel Weisz decides to cut down on work in favour of family

London, May 22 (ANI): Hollywood actress Rachel Weisz has decided to cut down on her work in a bid to spend more time with family.

Rachel, who is promoting her forthcoming flick ‘Agora’, is keen to spend time with fiance Darren Aronofsky and their two tear old son Henry.

“I used to work back to back. Now I do two projects a year and take a big break between them. I have to consider where I’m travelling to if Darren’s going to be working at the same time,” the Daily Express quoted her as saying.

She revealed that Darren and she co-ordinated their work to find family time together.

“I filmed Agora in Malta for four months, and Darren edited there. I started and two weeks later he came out with his editor.

Before that we were both at home in New York. So we’ve managed to keep the family together. And it works,” she said. (ANI)

Rachel Weisz’s 85-year-old scientist-aunt was her inspiration for Agora role

London, May 18 (ANI): Rachel Weisz’ has revealed that her 85-year-old scientist-aunt was the actress’ muse for her role in the new film Agora.

The Mummy star said that she sought inspiration from her aunt Judith, and tried inhabiting the expert’s experiences, to portray the character of Hypatia, an astronomer in ancient Alexandria in the movie. I had one real-life scientist in my world I could speak to, and that was my aunt. She devoted her life to science – she was an endocrinologist, did cancer research, and she never married or had children,” the Telegraph quoted her as saying.

“Before I started making this film I said to her, ‘Auntie Judith, why did you never marry?’

“She said, ‘I never believed a man when he said that I would allow me to work as hard as I wanted to, and I realised I loved my work more than anything and I didn’t want anything to get in he way of it,”‘ she added. (ANI)

Rachel Weisz ‘to play ’40s movie icon Hedy Lamarr in biopic’

London, May 13 (ANI): British actress Rachel Weisz is loosely attached to play Hedy Lamarr, the 1940s screen siren who combined beauty with brains, in Amy Redford’s indie tale ‘Face Value’.

The biopic centers on Lamarr’s eccentric life, particularly her less publicized second career as a scientist.

Discovered by Hollywood boss Louis B Mayer and signed with MGM studios, Lamarr was born in Vienna and began her career in European cinema. Her films include White Cargo, Ziegfeld Girl and her most famous role of all in Cecil B DeMille’s Samson and Delilah, reports The Telegraph.

But she was also a typical example of “beauty with brains.” The stunner helped to create a method of changing frequencies – known as frequency-hopping -that became a forerunner to modern wireless communications.

Lamarr made her last film in 1957 and died in 2000.

Weisz, 38, is in negotiations for the role in the film directed by Redford, daughter of Robert Redford.

Weisz was recently cast in “The Whistleblower,” the story of a Midwestern police officer who travels to post-war Bosnia and exposes atrocities. (ANI)

Sex sells more than Obama when it comes to mag covers

New York, January 26 (ANI): President Barack Obama may have won a million hearts with his inauguration speech, but sex still remains the unchallenged bestseller when it comes to magazine sales.

While the Time featured America’s first African-American president on its cover a whopping 13 times, Newsweek showed him 11 times.

“Obama has become a one-man stimulus media package,” the New York Post quoted author Michael Levine as telling Page Six.

But, despite being on the cover of Rolling Stone four times last year, the magazine’s bestseller was its July 20 issue with the American boy band Jonas Brothers.

Similarly, New York magazine’s spring fashion issue featuring Lindsay Lohan as Marilyn Monroe reined newsstand sales.

Vogue’s November issue with actress Reese Witherspoon also fared best, while October issue with Rachel Weisz did worst. (ANI)