Kandi Burruss Reveals Her Aunt Bertha of 'Old Lady Gang' Has Alzheimer's: 'It's Not Easy'New Foto - Kandi Burruss Reveals Her Aunt Bertha of 'Old Lady Gang' Has Alzheimer's: 'It's Not Easy'

Kandi Burruss/Instagram Kandi Burrus revealed that her Aunt Bertha Jones has been diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease She said the diagnosis hasn't been easy for her family and that they're trying to manage it Aunt Bertha, part of the trio "Old Lady Gang," previously appeared in Bravo'sKandi & the Gang Kandi Burrussrevealed that her aunt Bertha Jones was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease. TheReal Housewives of Atlantaalum, 49, shared the health update during a sit-down interview with Amazon Live on Wednesday, May 21. She admitted that she doesn't even know how to begin discussing the difficult and personal family issues that have followed the diagnosis. "We're having a really hard time because my Aunt Bertha has Alzheimer's," she said. "So, you know, trying to manage that." "If anyone's ever dealt with somebody in your family going through that, and it gets worse, it's not easy," she continued. "So… it's a time." The PEOPLE Appis now available in the Apple App Store! Download it now for the most binge-worthy celeb content, exclusive video clips, astrology updates and more! Burruss then quickly moved past the conversation, noting that she didn't want to "get all emotional" about it. Alzheimer's is adegenerative brain diseasethat is caused by complex brain changes following cell damage. It progressively affects memory, thinking and behavior seriously enough to interfere with daily tasks. Burruss' aunt is part of the beloved "Old Lady Gang." In addition to Jones, the trio — which earned the nickname "Old Lady Gang" during their time onRHOA— also includes Burruss' mom, Mama Joyce Jones, and the singer's aunt, Nora Wilco. Old Lady Gang/Instagram 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. Burruss later honored the three women by naming her Atlanta soul food restaurant "Old Lady Gang." Its menu includes a mixture of recipes from the trio. RHOAis just one of the reasons why Aunt Bertha has been known to fans for years. She also made appearances on Bravo'sKandi & the Gang,a reality show that documented all the behind-the-scenes drama of theOld Lady Gangrestaurant. She also appeared in season 2 ofSecret Celebrity Renovation, during which Burruss surprised her with a special design makeover. Read the original article onPeople

Kandi Burruss Reveals Her Aunt Bertha of ‘Old Lady Gang’ Has Alzheimer’s: ‘It’s Not Easy’

Kandi Burruss Reveals Her Aunt Bertha of 'Old Lady Gang' Has Alzheimer's: 'It's Not Easy' Kandi Burruss/Instagram Ka...
Sparks has been making music for more than half a century. They see no reason to retireNew Foto - Sparks has been making music for more than half a century. They see no reason to retire

LOS ANGELES (AP) — They've spent more than half a century together as bandmates, putting out dozens of records. But brothers Ron and Russell Mael — the duo behind the art-popband Sparks— have no intention of retiring anytime soon. The band's sound has been ever-evolving since its inception. Ron, 79, and Russell, 76, view resisting any impulse to remain the same or rest on a previous record's success as a central priority. Ahead of the release of "Mad!," their 28th studio album, on Friday, as well as an upcoming tour, the pair spoke with The Associated Press about why they keep working, not waiting for inspiration to strike and why it's been so meaningful for younger generations to find their music. The interview has been edited for clarity and brevity. AP: Talk about how you approach making new music after all of these years. RUSSELL: After 28 albums, the challenge is just trying to find new ways to kind of retain the universe that Sparks has created, but to obviously try to make it fresh for people that have been following the band for a long time. And the other thing is also just to try to make an album that maybe doesn't sound like it's from a band with a 28-album-long history, so that if someone were to pick up the new "Mad!" album, and this was the first exposure they had to Sparks, that it would be as poignant and provocative in all sorts of ways as anything we've done in our past. AP: You both grew up in Los Angeles during a pivotal time for rock music but moved to the U.K. early on in your careers for a bit. Do you feel like your surroundings inform your creative process? RON: When we first started out, we had never even been to Europe or anywhere. But we kind of pretended like we were a British band because that was the music that we really responded to. And we always kind of liked bands that had an image. LA bands, in general — at the time we were starting — an image was something that ran counter to musical integrity. And we always thought that was ridiculous. So, we kind of were in general just really attracted to British bands. Other than a few things like The Beach Boys and that sort of thing, in general, we weren't influenced by LA bands at all. AP: Have you given much thought to why you make so much music? RON: Other people tell us we're prolific and we don't really sense that. I mean, the one thing we do do is not wait for inspiration. We kind of have to pursue it. When you wait for that lightning bolt, it kind of can take more time than you really want to take waiting. We work a lot knowing that not everything is going to pan out. But in order to kind of give the appearance of being prolific, we have to actually sit down and pursue those things rather than waiting for some kind of divine inspiration. AP: Have you guys ever thought about retiring? RUSSELL: Retiring? What's that? If your whole thing in life kind of is creating stuff, there's no, you know, there is no such thing as doing something else, so, you know, it hasn't crossed our minds. Maybe we're blind or something to that, but no, we're really happy. AP: I'm sure you know thatThe Last Dinner Partycovered your song, "This Town Ain't Big Enough For The Both Of Us." Have you been surprised by younger listeners connecting with your music? RUSSELL: We're happy with the younger following and really diverse following also that Sparks has. It's just kind of reassuring to us that what we're doing is connecting in a modern way to younger people and really diverse sorts of people as well. And so that's almost the most satisfying thing. Obviously, we're happy that we have fans that have stuck with us from Day 1 and that they're still there. But then having new fans that are kind of coming with a different reference point to what Sparks is — with some of the older fans, it's like, "That was the golden era," or whatever, but the younger fans don't have those reference points in a really healthy way, we think. And so, from the last few years of albums that we've had, those for them are the golden era of Sparks and right now is the golden era. AP: I read that you guys grew up inPacific Palisades.How have you been processing the fire? RUSSELL: To even kind of even comprehend that all of the Palisades is just … you know, it was really sad. The elementary school that I went to got completely destroyed so it's just hard to comprehend. It's pretty staggering.

Sparks has been making music for more than half a century. They see no reason to retire

Sparks has been making music for more than half a century. They see no reason to retire LOS ANGELES (AP) — They've spent more than half ...
Tim McGraw Gets Candid About How Meeting Wife Faith Hill 'Saved My Life': 'I Was a Wild Man'New Foto - Tim McGraw Gets Candid About How Meeting Wife Faith Hill 'Saved My Life': 'I Was a Wild Man'

Tracy Lawrence/Youtube; Amy Sussman/Getty Tim McGraw is opening up about how meeting Faith Hill changed his life "I couldn't have found a better woman," said the Grammy winner on Tracy Lawrence'sRoad Housepodcast McGraw and Hill have been married since 1996 and share three daughters Faith Hillmakes husbandTim McGraw's life better. In a new interview onTracy Lawrence'sRoad Housepodcast, McGraw opened up about how meeting Hill and entering a romantic relationship helped turn his life around. The pair, whoshares three daughters, met in 1994 before falling in love on tour and tying the knot in 1996. "I've been lucky. I've been very fortunate. First off, meeting my wife saved my life. I was a wild man," said the 58-year-old Grammy winner of Hill, 57. "I was having fun." "She turned my life around. I couldn't have found a better woman. Not only beautiful and talented, but just a good, good person. And then having our daughters," explained McGraw, who shares Gracie, 27, Maggie, 26, and Audrey, 23, with the "Breathe" singer. "It's life-changing. They make you a better person, and they certainly calm the demons in you." The "Live Like You Were Dying" artist recalled putting the girls through school, coaching their sports, making breakfasts and more, noting the experience of fatherhood "changed everything about my life." "It changed my perspective. It changed the way I thought about what my future would be. It certainly took me out of myself," said McGraw, who's been sober since 2008 and candidly spoken in the pastabout how Hill supported him in quitting alcohol. Kevin Mazur/Kevin Mazur/ Getty Elsewhere in the interview, he detailed feeling "lucky" to have accomplished so much in life before revealing what he considers the pinnacle of his career: "My tours with Faith." "The Soul2Soul tours with Faith, for a couple of reasons, because it's rare that people get to do that in this business, that a husband and wife get to go on tour at the pinnacle of their careers and get to do stuff together," said McGraw. The PEOPLE Appis now available in the Apple App Store! Download it now for the most binge-worthy celeb content, exclusive video clips, astrology updates and more! Terry Wyatt/Getty Images The pair has toured together several times throughout their careers, and their most recent run of Soul2Soul shows wrapped in 2018. "More importantly," added McGraw, "she makes me a better artist every time I have to sing with her. Because to me, I think Faith, when you listen to her music and you listen to her albums, I think she is probably one of the best singers in the world." "She just really has such a soulful voice, and her musical taste is just so incredible," said the musician. Read the original article onPeople

Tim McGraw Gets Candid About How Meeting Wife Faith Hill 'Saved My Life': 'I Was a Wild Man'

Tim McGraw Gets Candid About How Meeting Wife Faith Hill 'Saved My Life': 'I Was a Wild Man' Tracy Lawrence/Youtube; Amy Sus...
Dissident Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi's presence in Cannes speaks volumesNew Foto - Dissident Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi's presence in Cannes speaks volumes

CANNES, France (AP) — Before this week, the dissidentIranian filmmaker Jafar Panahihadn't attended the premiere of one of his films in more than 15 years. Panahi, one of the leading international directors, was banned from traveling out of Iran in 2009 for attending the funeral of a student killed in the Green Movement protests, a judgment later extended to two decades. But even when placed under house arrest, Panahi kept making movies, many of which are among the most lauded of the century. He made 2011's "This Is Not a Film" on an iPhone in his living room. "Taxi" (2015) was clandestinely shot almost entirely within a car. These and other films of Panahi's premiered to considerable acclaim at international film festivals where the director's conspicuous absence was sometimes noted by an empty chair. When his last film, 2022's "No Bears," debuted, he was in jail. Only afterhis hunger strike made worldwide newswas Panahi — who had gone to Tehran's Evin Prison to inquire about his friend, the then-jailedfilmmaker Mohammad Rasoulof— released, in early 2023. Two years later, with his travel ban finally lifted, Panahi arrived at the Cannes Film Festival with a film, "It Was Just an Accident," riven with the fury and pain of incarceration by the Islamic Republic. "Being here does matter, of course. But what's even more important is that the film is here," Panahi said in an interview on a Palais terrace. "Even when I went to jail, I was happy that the film was done. I didn't mind being in prison because my job was done." Yet Panahi's appearance in Cannes, where the film premiered Tuesday, carries tremendous meaning — and risk — for a filmmaker who has played such a massive role in international cinema in absentia. But for a director who has previously had his films smuggled out of Iran on USB drives, risk is a constant for Panahi. "Yes, this is an ongoing risk," he says, speaking through an interpreter. "Now it will probably be higher. But the Iran situation is unpredictable. It changes everyday. New politics everyday. So we have to see what happens the day we go back." Last year, in order to reach Cannes, Panahi's countryman Rasoulofcrossed the Iranian border on footbefore resettling in Germany. (His film, "The Seed of the Sacred Fig," was ultimately nominated for best international film at the Oscars.) Panahi says they speak every other day. After the premiere of "It Was Just an Accident," Rasoulof texted Panahi to congratulate him on the moment. Unlike Rasoulof, though, Panahi — whose "No Bears" captured him emotionally gazing across, but not crossing, the border — has no plans to flee. "I'm flying back to Tehran on Sunday," he says. "It's simple. I'm unable to live here," he elaborates. "I have no ability to adapt to a new country, a new culture. Some people have this ability, this strength. I don't." What Panahi does have, as his latest film shows once again, is the ability to deftly lace complicated feelings of resistance, sorrow and hope into gripping movies of elegant, if heartbreaking, composition. In "It Was Just an Accident," which is in competition for the Palme d'Or in Cannes, a man named Vahid (played by Vahid Mobasser) believes he sees his former captor and torturer. Though blindfolded while imprisoned, Vahid recognizes the sound of the man's prosthetic leg. He abducts him, takes him to the desert and begins to bury him in the ground. But to satisfy pangs of doubt, Vahid decides to confirm his suspicion by bringing the man, locked in his van, to other former prisoners for identification. In this strange odyssey, they are all forced to confront revenge or forgiveness for the man who ruined their lives. Panahi drew from his own imprisonment but also from the stories of detainees jailed alongside him. "It was the experience of all these people I met in prison, mixed with my own perception and experience," said Panahi. "For instance, the fact of never seeing the face of your interrogator is everyone's experience. But then the people who have spent over a decade in prison have more experience than myself, so I've been very sensitive to their narratives." "It Was Just an Accident" may be Panahi's most politically direct film yet. It's certainly his most anguished. That's a product of not just his personal experience in prison but of theprotests in Iran following the death of Mahsa Amini. "I think ultimately violence will be inevitable. And it's exactly what the regime wants, because it gives a justification to the repression," says Panahi. "The longer they remain and the more pressure they put on the people, the more the people will feel that they have no other solution. And that's when it will get dangerous." That doesn't mean Panahi is without hope. "The Iranians' struggle and fight for freedom is extremely precious," he says. "What people are doing is so impressive. The regime is just trying to divide us. That's all they focus on now, to create division between the people." In Iran, film productions need to receive script approval from the government to shoot in public. Panahi refuses to do that, knowing they won't allow him to make the films he wants to. So committed is he to making film, he notes that the downside to being able to travel is that he might have to spend a year promoting his film, instead of making the next one. On Thursday, Neon acquired the North American distribution rights. "There's nothing else I can do. Maybe if I had other abilities, I would have changed to something else," Panahi says. "When you know that's the only thing you can do, you find ways. Now, I've gotten used to it. It was harder at the beginning. There were less people doing underground films. We started this fashion, in a way, so there are ways we have learned and practiced, many of us." More than perhaps any filmmaker on earth, you can expect Panahi to find a way to keep making movies, no matter the circumstances. "I'll try," he nods, "at least." ___ For more coverage of the 2025 Cannes Film Festival, visithttps://apnews.com/hub/cannes-film-festival.

Dissident Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi's presence in Cannes speaks volumes

Dissident Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi's presence in Cannes speaks volumes CANNES, France (AP) — Before this week, the dissidentIrania...
A Betty Boop musical shouldn't work. But with Jasmine Amy Rogers, it's 'phenomenal.'New Foto - A Betty Boop musical shouldn't work. But with Jasmine Amy Rogers, it's 'phenomenal.'

NEW YORK — In high-school choir,Jasmine Amy RogersdiscoveredAudra McDonald, the six-time Tony-winning Broadway legend. "I cried the first time I heard her voice," recalls Rogers, 26. "I was seeing a Black woman do something I don't think I'd ever seen before and it changed my life. I was able to look at myself in a different way. Now she's right next door, which is out of this world." The powerhouse performers are starring just steps away from each other on 44thStreet: McDonald in "Gypsy" at the Majestic Theatre, and Rogers in "Boop! The Musical" at the Broadhurst. They are also both nominated for best leading actress in a musical at theTony Awards, airing June 8 from Radio City Music Hall (8 ET/5 PT on CBS and streaming on Paramount+). "I'm just the luckiest girl in the world," says Rogers, who is making her Broadway debut as Betty Boop, the spit-curled, baby-voiced flapper whose visage has become a familiar staple of American pop culture. The unlikely musical comedy imagines if Betty traded her black-and-white, pen-and-ink world for the hustle and bustle of present-day New York, where she falls in love with a dashing trumpeter (Ainsley Melham) and brings down a corrupt mayoral candidate (Erich Bergen). Betty made her first appearance in 1930 in Fleischer Studios' "Dizzy Dishes." Many of her earliest cartoons centered on Bettybeing chasedandpreyed uponby creepy men, although the stage show helps bring the sexpot into the 21stcentury, showing how she has always been asubversive,feminist icon, with varied careers and an unwaveringmoral compass. "She has such a strong sense of right and wrong, and loves other people," Rogers says. The character's popularity peaked nearly 90 years ago, meaning many audiences seeing "Boop!" will be introduced to her for the first time. "It's liberating, because we've gotten to take so much ownership of her. It's really, really special to get to bring new life to Betty." For Rogers, "it's been a long, long road" to playing Betty on Broadway. In early workshops of the show, she was originally cast as Trisha, a teenage Boop superfan now portrayed by actress Angelica Hale. But when the youthful character was reconceived, she went back to the drawing board and auditioned to play Betty herself. Initially, "I kind of blew it," Rogers says. "I was so nervous to the point where I couldn't get any of the dancing down. I was just a wreck." But after finishing her stint on the "Mean Girls" national tour, Rogers was eager to take another crack at the role. "I contacted my agents and was like, 'I need to get back in. I just have this feeling.'" After a half dozen rounds of auditions, Rogers was eventually cast as Betty, and led the musical's out-of-town tryout in Chicago in late 2023. To inhabit Betty, "the physicality was very nerve-racking for me," she admits. The newcomer enrolled in tap classes, and trained fastidiously with associate choreographer Rachelle Rak, figuring out how an animated siren might walk and stand. She also perfected Betty's high-pitched voice, which sits quite comfortably in the soft palate of her mouth. "It's almost effortless; it just flies out," Rogers says. "The way I speak day-to-day is probably more harmful for me than Betty's voice." Rogers is a "a triple threat," saysDavid Foster, who composed the musical's score. "She has charisma and that's something you just can't buy. She's so confident, and every microsecond that she's on stage, she's Betty. Her facial expressions, her body movements – she completely transforms into that character and doesn't let up for one split second. It's pretty phenomenal." Rogers was born in Boston and started doing theater in Milford, Massachusetts. Her very first show was "Peter Pan," where she memorably out-sang the girl playing Tiger Lily. "I had no sense of, 'This is her song and maybe don't scream over her,'" she remembers. "I was just fully belting at 7 years old in the little chorus of tribe members. But I just fell in love with it from that moment and never stopped." Her first professional gig was in the 2019 musical "Becoming Nancy" in Atlanta, helmed by "Boop!" director/choreographer Jerry Mitchell. She followed that with Dion DiMucci bio-musical "The Wanderer" at New Jersey's Paper Mill Playhouse. "I got to act in a way that I hadn't yet in my career," Rogers says. "That solidified for me, 'Oh, I'm in the right place and doing the thing I love. This is just meant to be.'" Between jobs, she supplemented her income as a babysitter, as well as a hostess atJacob's Pickleson New York's Upper West Side. She worked there for two months before booking "Mean Girls" in 2022. "That was a little side hustle I had for a while," Rogers recalls, laughing. "It's a good restaurant, but I hope I never have to be a hostess ever again. It was not for me!" "Boop! The Musical" is now playing at the Broadhurst Theatre (235 W. 44th Street). This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Jasmine Amy Rogers talks Tony-nominated turn in 'Boop! The Musical'

A Betty Boop musical shouldn't work. But with Jasmine Amy Rogers, it's 'phenomenal.'

A Betty Boop musical shouldn't work. But with Jasmine Amy Rogers, it's 'phenomenal.' NEW YORK — In high-school choir,Jasmine...

 

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