Emma Watson touches down in France for rare Cannes Film Festival appearance: See the photoNew Foto - Emma Watson touches down in France for rare Cannes Film Festival appearance: See the photo

Mademoiselle Watson has returned for her long-awaited encore. ActressEmma Watsonarrived in the South of France on May 20 ahead of her appearance at the78th Cannes International Film Festival, which kicked off on May 13. This marks Watson's first appearance at the esteemed festival in 12 years (she made her Cannes debut in 2013 for the premiere ofSofia Coppola's"The Bling Ring.") While fans will have to wait and see what the"Harry Potter"alum dons on the red carpet, Watson pulled off a stylish arrival. As the People's Choice-winning actress made her way through Nice Airport, Watson exuded Boho chic in a long floral-printed skirt, which she paired with a sleek black shirt-jacket and matching sunglasses. Watson, 35, followed up the look on May 21 with a summery ensemble that did not disappoint. While arriving at Cannes' Palace of Festivals and Conferences center, perPeople magazine, the British actress stunned in awhite and pink plaid dress. She topped the elegant frock with a gold-chain purse and dark sunglasses. Emma Watson in Cannes. 📷pic.twitter.com/f9R7cklawc — Film Crave (@_filmcrave)May 21, 2025 Denzel Washington confronts photographerin tense moment at Cannes Film Festival Watson did not scrimp in the glamour department for her 2013 Cannes debut either. The actress delivered a series of head-turning looks, including a floor-length black-and-white dress she wore alongside Coppola and "Bling Ring" co-stars Taissa Farmiga and Katie Chang. "The Bling Ring,"a crime comedy inspired by the real-life gang that burglarized the homes of several celebrities in the late 2000s, starred Watson as Nicolette "Nicki" Moore, who was based on former television personality Alexis Neiers. 'Can you hold up the movie in customs?'Wes Anderson questions Trump film tariff proposal Despite her upcoming appearance at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival, Watson has kept a low profile on the silver screen. Her last major film appearance was the 2019 coming-of-age drama"Little Women,"an adaptation of the classic novel byLouisa May Alcott. TheGreta Gerwig-directed film, which also starredSaoirse RonanandFlorence Pugh, earned a nomination for best picture at the92nd Academy Awards. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Emma Watson spotted in France for rare Cannes Film Festival appearance

Emma Watson touches down in France for rare Cannes Film Festival appearance: See the photo

Emma Watson touches down in France for rare Cannes Film Festival appearance: See the photo Mademoiselle Watson has returned for her long-awa...
Kim Kardashian dons a graduation cap and marches closer to becoming a lawyerNew Foto - Kim Kardashian dons a graduation cap and marches closer to becoming a lawyer

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) —Kim Kardashianis a step closer to following in her father's footsteps and becoming a lawyer. She has completed a legal apprenticeship and is now eligible to take the California bar exam, her representative confirmed Wednesday. The entrepreneur and reality TV star posted anInstagram Storyfrom a small private ceremony at the Beverly Hills Hotel, where she smiled as she donned a graduation cap. Jessica Jackson, a lawyer who mentored her in the program, called it "one of the most inspiring legal journeys we've ever seen." "Six years ago, Kim Kardashian walked into this program with nothing but a fierce desire to fight for justice," Jackson says in a speech in the video. "No law school lectures, no ivory tower shortcuts, just determination. And a mountain of case law books to read." California allows people to study under a lawyer or judge as an alternative to law school. Kardashian could become a licensed lawyer if she passes the state's notoriously difficult state bar exam. Jackson said Kardashian spent "18 hours a week, 48 weeks a year for six straight years" on the program. Her late father, Robert Kardashian, was an attorney and counted O.J. Simpson among his clients. Kardashian revealed the milestone roughly a week after shetestified in a Paris courtroomabout her fear of being killed during a 2016 armed robbery. "I was certain that was the moment that he was going to rape me," she told a Paris court May 13 about the ordeal. "I absolutely did think I was going to die." Kardashian has in recent years been a criminal justice reform advocate and in 2018successfully lobbied President Donald Trump to commutethe sentence of Alice Marie Johnson, a grandmother who was serving a life sentence without parole for drug offenses.

Kim Kardashian dons a graduation cap and marches closer to becoming a lawyer

Kim Kardashian dons a graduation cap and marches closer to becoming a lawyer BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) —Kim Kardashianis a step closer to f...
Elizabeth Banks Reveals What It Would Take for Her Sons Felix, 14, and Magnus, 12, to Act Alongside Her (Exclusive)New Foto - Elizabeth Banks Reveals What It Would Take for Her Sons Felix, 14, and Magnus, 12, to Act Alongside Her (Exclusive)

Jamie McCarthy/Getty Elizabeth Banks tells PEOPLE she's open to acting alongside her sons, but she's not sure if they would want to She explains that her two sons — Felix, 14, and Magnus, 12 – are not interesting in acting yet Banks shares her two sons with her husband Max Handelman Elizabeth Bankswould love to act alongside her sons, but they aren't so sure. Speaking with PEOPLE at the premiere of her new television seriesThe Better Sisterat the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on Tuesday, May 20, the actress, 51, was asked if she'd ever want her two sons — Felix, 14, and Magnus, 12, whom she shares with husbandMax Handelman— to play her kids in a movie. "If my kids decide to get into acting, which they have currently no interest in, then I would be thrilled to ever do anything with them if they would deign to hang out with me," says Banks. "It's unlikely. In fact, it would have to be a paying job for them to actually want to hang out with me." Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. JC Olivera/GA/The Hollywood Reporter via Getty Earlier this month, Banks shared with PEOPLEhow she spent her Mother's Day, saying that while her kids are "incredible," she was able to celebrate her special day away from them. "I got to celebrate Mother's Day by going away for the weekend with my husband, which is exactly what I wanted for Mother's Day," she told PEOPLE. "My kids are incredible. They're very good about cards and flowers and fun things like that. They didn't forget or anything. But we were not together on Mother's Day, and that was fine with me." Marion Curtis / Starpix for Prime Video Although her sons might not be interested in acting yet, there's another way Banks bonds with her kids. Speaking withEntertainment Weeklyabout her movieSkincare, the actress shared that while making the movie, shelearned how to do facialsfrom a variety of different experts and has even applied that knowledge to her son, Magnus. "He'll come to me and probably, I would say once a month, just be like, 'Mommy, can I have a facial tonight before bed?' And it becomes our bedtime routine, and I'm really loving having that experience with him," Banks said. "For sure, giving facials to my kid is the number one thing I'm taking away from the film," she joked. Read the original article onPeople

Elizabeth Banks Reveals What It Would Take for Her Sons Felix, 14, and Magnus, 12, to Act Alongside Her (Exclusive)

Elizabeth Banks Reveals What It Would Take for Her Sons Felix, 14, and Magnus, 12, to Act Alongside Her (Exclusive) Jamie McCarthy/Getty Eli...
Martin Scorsese is getting his own documentary after a career making docs about othersNew Foto - Martin Scorsese is getting his own documentary after a career making docs about others

Melinda Sue Gordon/Apple Apple TV+ announced on Wednesday their best reason yet for not canceling the free trial subscription that comes with a new Apple product. Martin Scorsese, the most influential living film director by any reasonable metric, agreed to open up his archives and be the subject of a five-part documentary calledMr. Scorsese. In a statement,Rebecca Miller, the project's director, said that Scorsese's "work and life are so vast and so compelling that the piece evolved from one to five parts over a five-year period; crafting this documentary alongside my longtime collaborators has been one of the defining experiences of my life as a filmmaker." Ronan Killeen/Apple Use of the past tense there suggests thatMr. Scorsesehas already been shot, or mostly shot, though no word has been given yet on a premiere. The New York Film Festival, which happens each year in late September, seems like the obvious spot for such a launch, but has Martin Scorsese, or Apple for that matter, ever done anything obvious? No, and that's why documentaries are made about them. Miller, whose previous films includeThe Ballad of Jack and RoseandMaggie's Plan, is also married toDaniel Day-Lewis, the star of such notable Scorsese films asThe Age of InnocenceandThe Gangs of New York. (She's also playwrightArthur Millerand photographerInge Morath's daughter, in case you didn't know.) As a reminder, here's how Scorsese and the three-time Oscar winner worked together to make romantic sublimation and repressed emotions weirdly sensual. In addition to Day-Lewis (who was hardly a "get" for Miller, she knows where the guy lives), other announced interview subjects include Scorsese collaborators likeRobert De Niro,Leonardo DiCaprio,Mick Jagger, the lateRobbie Robertson,Sharon Stone,Jodie Foster,Cate Blanchett, andPaul Schrader, as well as chums likeSteven Spielbergand Scorsese's wife and children. The project promises to explore his work from his student experiments through classics likeTaxi Driver,GoodFellas,The Departed, Killers of the Flower Moon,and more, isolating recurring themes like "the place of good and evil in the fundamental nature of humankind." Documentaries are not new to Scorsese, though he's usually the one calling action. Indeed, from his earliest days, he's had almost something of a shadow career to his more visible one making award-winning narratives. One of his first gigs was actually as a cameraperson and one of several editors onWoodstock, the lodestar of all modern concert films. The following year, he and a collective called "The New York Cinetracts" produced a fascinating "city symphony" project,Street Scenes 1970, which contrasted protest movements on either side of the political fence. Janus Films In 1974, after the release of his breakthroughMean Streetsand before the Oscar-winningAlice Doesn't Live Here Anymore, he turned the camera on his parents Charles and Catherine (and Catherine's cooking) for the charming short featureItalianamerican. This was a time when access to film equipment, not to mention distribution, for "average people" to showcase themselves was almost unheard of. Four years later, after the triumph ofTaxi Driver(which won the Palme d'Or at Cannes), Scorsese madeThe Last Waltz, the "farewell" concert by The Band. (Ask most cinephiles what the best concert film of all time is, and they'll either say it'sThe Last Waltzor Jonathan Demme'sStop Making SensewithThe Last Waltzin close second. And both will be right.) In the 1990s, Scorsese made two documentaries about cinema history. The first,A Personal Journey With Martin Scorsese Through American Movies, is exactly what it sounds like — a look at how passionate filmgoing shaped Scorsese's worldview, and filled with remarkable clips and observations. (It's also close to four hours long, but should be twice that.) He followed that up withMy Voyage to Italy, which was the same tune as above, but with Italian movies. This one is a little over four hours, and also could keep going and would be just as great. RAPH GATTI/AFP via Getty Other documentaries in the 2000s kept, at first, to well-known figures. One onBob Dylan. One onGeorge Harrison. ARolling Stonesconcert film. A cinematic essay about film director Elia Kazan. A second one on Dylan. But there were also some unexpected subjects. The 50 Year Argumentinvestigated the influence ofThe New York Review of Books, an important but hardly top-selling journal of essays and criticism. In 2010, he madePublic Speaking, a loving portrait of the crusty intellectual (but also, if we're being honest, comedian) Fran Lebowitz. In 2021, the two collaborated on the Netflix seriesPretend It's a City, which is basically Lebowitz and Scorsese sitting at a restaurant for seven episodes while she tells stories and he doubles over in laughter, oftentimes slapping the table in pure joy. Will Rebecca Miller be as vocal in her appreciation of Mr. Scorsese duringMr. Scorsese? Only time will tell. Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Martin Scorsese is getting his own documentary after a career making docs about others

Martin Scorsese is getting his own documentary after a career making docs about others Melinda Sue Gordon/Apple Apple TV+ announced on Wedne...
Michael McStay, "Doctor Who "and "No Hiding Place "Actor, Dies at 92

David Magnus/Shutterstock Michael McStay, an actor known for his roles inDoctor WhoandNo Hiding Place, has died at age 92 The late actor was "remembered as "an actor of the highest standing, talented writer and family man" He reportedly died of heart failure on May 18 British actor Michael McStay, who was best known for his roles inDoctor WhoandNo Hiding Place, has died. He was 92. A representative for the late actor announced his death in a statement onFacebookon May 20. Crispian Woodgate/ANL/Shutterstock "It is with great sadness that we announce the death of Michael McStay, an actor of the highest standing, talented writer and family man," the statement read. "It was a privilege to have known Mike. RIP." McStay "went in peace" as he died in his sleep following lunch with his children on May 18, according toThe Daily Mail, who was first to report the news. Representatives for McStay did not immediately return PEOPLE's request for comment. McStay's rise to fame began with the role of Sergeant Perryman on the ITV detective seriesNo Hiding Place, on which he appeared in over 80 episodes. He also starred in two episodes of BBC'sDoctor Who, playing the role of Derek Moberley. Despite only appearing for a brief time, McStay shared his appreciation for the beloved show's fans during a May 2024 interview on theDoctor Who: Toby Hadoke's Time Travelspodcast. "The sort of fans that you get on a show likeDoctor Whoare your friends. They want to like you, they want to like the show. It's a great feeling," he said at the time. "It's a great bunch of people to be a part of in a way." ITV/Shutterstock The late star also landed roles in films includingRobberyin 1967 andThe Stick Upin 1977. On the small screen, he also appeared onThe Black Arrow, Park Ranger, Spy at Evening, EastEndersandTed and Alice. During the podcast appearance, McStay reflected on having staying power in the entertainment industry, saying, "You have to want to do it. I've always wanted to do it. And I had some good friends along the way that helped me." McStay's final on-camera appearance came in ITV soapCoronation Street,on which he took over the role of Alan Hoyle from John Woodvine in 2011. ​​Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. McStay is survived by his wife, actress Jennifer Clulow, and their two sons. Read the original article onPeople

Michael McStay, “Doctor Who ”and “No Hiding Place ”Actor, Dies at 92

Michael McStay, "Doctor Who "and "No Hiding Place "Actor, Dies at 92 David Magnus/Shutterstock Michael McStay, an actor ...

 

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