Farrah Fawcett: Last News

+26

‘Iron Man’ star Terrance Howard mocked over unrecognizable new look: ‘His Farrah Fawcett era’

Hustle & Flow, Crash and The Butler, recently appeared on the online talk show Straighttalkphanee to explain why he’s suing giant Hollywood talent agency CAA (Creative Artists Agency).He says he was paid $325,000 per episode per episode for his popular TV show Empire, while The Big Bang Theory cast was paid $2 to 3 million per episode, despite Empire having more viewers.What goes unremarked upon in the interview – but what immediately caught most viewers’ eye – is Howard’s new hair: A red bob, complete with Charlie’s Angels-esque Farrah Fawcett flick.“Imma try to watch the video and give him a chance before commenting on the hair but it’s hard,” one person commented under the video.“Bro got the Farah Fawcett look and wants to be taken seriously,” wrote another person – a common comparison.“I’m sorry, I know he’s talking about a serious topic but I can’t get past the fact that Terrence Howard is in his Farrah Fawcett era,” wrote another commenter.“Are we supposed sit here and ignore Terrence’s wig?” asked another, while one follower said his new look made him resemble “a pimp from the 70s.”Howard has made frequent complaints about his pay as an actor in the past.In 2008, it was announced he would not be reprising his role as Robert Downey Jr’s sidekick in an Iron Man sequel. He said he was sacked over his refusal to take a major pay cut – claim which Marvel Studios publicly disputed at the time.
nypost.com

All news where Farrah Fawcett is mentioned

nypost.com
58%
188
‘Iron Man’ star Terrance Howard mocked over unrecognizable new look: ‘His Farrah Fawcett era’
Hustle & Flow, Crash and The Butler, recently appeared on the online talk show Straighttalkphanee to explain why he’s suing giant Hollywood talent agency CAA (Creative Artists Agency).He says he was paid $325,000 per episode per episode for his popular TV show Empire, while The Big Bang Theory cast was paid $2 to 3 million per episode, despite Empire having more viewers.What goes unremarked upon in the interview – but what immediately caught most viewers’ eye – is Howard’s new hair: A red bob, complete with Charlie’s Angels-esque Farrah Fawcett flick.“Imma try to watch the video and give him a chance before commenting on the hair but it’s hard,” one person commented under the video.“Bro got the Farah Fawcett look and wants to be taken seriously,” wrote another person – a common comparison.“I’m sorry, I know he’s talking about a serious topic but I can’t get past the fact that Terrence Howard is in his Farrah Fawcett era,” wrote another commenter.“Are we supposed sit here and ignore Terrence’s wig?” asked another, while one follower said his new look made him resemble “a pimp from the 70s.”Howard has made frequent complaints about his pay as an actor in the past.In 2008, it was announced he would not be reprising his role as Robert Downey Jr’s sidekick in an Iron Man sequel. He said he was sacked over his refusal to take a major pay cut – claim which Marvel Studios publicly disputed at the time.
nme.com
65%
532
Ryan O’Neal, 70s Hollywood icon, dies at 82
Love Story and Paper Moon in the 1970s, has died at 82.On Friday (December 8), O’Neal’s son Patrick confirmed the news in a series of Instagram posts, sharing that his father died “with his loving team by his side supporting him and loving him as he would us”.Patrick O’Neal described his father as “my hero”, adding, “I looked up to him and he was always bigger than life”.O’Neal, who is considered one of the stars of the New Hollywood era of the late ‘60s and ‘70s, first rose to prominence on the US soap opera Peyton Place, playing the character of Rodney Harrigton between 1964 and 1969.He soon moved into film acting, starring in the romantic drama Love Story in 1970 opposite Ali MacGraw, for which he was nominated for his only Academy Award for Best Actor.Some of his most acclaimed work came alongside director Peter Bogdanovich, in the 1972 comedy What’s Up, Doc? and 1973 road movie Paper Moon, in which he starred with his real life daughter Tatum O’Neal, who became the youngest ever Oscar winner for the film, winning Best Supporting Actress.Ryan O’Neal went on to star in Stanley Kubrick’s Barry Lyndon (1975), Richard Attenborough’s A Bridge Too Far (1977) and Walter Hill’s The Driver (1978).O’Neal received a diagnosis of chronic leukaemia in 2001 and later of prostate cancer in 2012.He had marriages to the actresses Joanna Moore and Peyton Place co-star Leigh Taylor-Young, before starting a long-term relationship with Farrah Fawcett until her death in 2009.In addition to Tatum and Patrick, O’Neal had two more children, Griffin and Redmond.
DMCA