Tag Archives: 60th

World marks 60th anniversary of Beatles landing in NYC – ABC News

  1. World marks 60th anniversary of Beatles landing in NYC ABC News
  2. The Beatles Conquered New York 60 Years Ago Today The New York Times
  3. The Beatles touched down in America 60 years ago. Thousands of shrieking fans mobbed JFK to catch a glimpse of the Fab Four. Yahoo Entertainment
  4. Watch: The Beatles Arrive in America on February 7, 1964 Mentalfloss
  5. The Beatles, the New York mob and two mysterious deaths: Sixty years after Beatlemania swept America, PHILIP NORMAN retraces how the unprecedented frenzy led to band manager’s ‘murder’ … and one star’s interracial romance bein Daily Mail

Read original article here

Amitabh Bachchan-Jackie Shroff, Salman Khan And Others At Anand Pandit’s 60th Birthday Bash – NDTV Movies

  1. Amitabh Bachchan-Jackie Shroff, Salman Khan And Others At Anand Pandit’s 60th Birthday Bash NDTV Movies
  2. About Last Night’s Party: Salman Khan Hugging Amitabh And Abhishek Bachchan Eclipsed Everything Else NDTV Movies
  3. Hrithik Roshan, Ameesha Patel steal attention at Anand Pandit’s bash; newlyweds Randeep Hooda and Lin also attend Hindustan Times
  4. Viral video! Salman Khan hugs Abhishek Bachchan and Amitabh Bachchan at Anand Pandit’s birthday bash Times of India
  5. Post Dunki release, Shah Rukh Khan makes his first public appearance as he graces Anand Pandit’s 60th birthday bash; says ‘I wish I look like him when I am 60’ – See photos | Hindi Movie News – Times of India IndiaTimes

Read original article here

New York Yankees’ Aaron Judge crushes 60th home run

NEW YORK — In the middle of the trot for the most noteworthy and historic home run in more than a decade, one that took Aaron Judge to a level graced by baseball royalty, the Yankees slugger chose not to revel or exult or luxuriate in the moment. And about an hour later, the Yankees’ slugger celebrated the occasion of the 60th home run in his magnificent 2022 season Tuesday night by lamenting the fact that he had not hit it earlier in the game, when the bases were loaded, as opposed to when he did, in the bottom of the ninth inning with them empty and New York trailing the Pittsburgh Pirates.

“I was kind of kicking myself while I was running around the bases,” Judge said. “Like, man, you idiot, you should have done this a little earlier.”

Eventually, goaded by his teammates and manager, Judge had offered those who had stuck around at Yankee Stadium and been treated to more of his magic a half-hearted curtain call. It was more out of duty than desire. All season, as he has chased ghosts and the numbers with which they’re associated, the sorts of things that matter greatly in the baseball world but very little in Judge’s, he has been numbingly steadfast in his insistence that the team supersedes the individual. To him, this all felt weird, disappointing, wrong — another round number reached, but with his team still down three runs and just three outs away from another loss, just like when he hit 50.

Only something happened. Anthony Rizzo reached base, and then Gleyber Torres, and then Josh Donaldson, and up stepped Giancarlo Stanton, and Wil Crowe left a changeup too high, and Stanton sent it over the left-field wall on a line. This time, it seemed Judge was the first one out of the dugout, there to greet his teammates at home plate, to celebrate an improbable 9-8 victory that took a night important to the rest of the world and imbued it with consequence for him, too.

As wild as it is to believe Judge thinks this way — that he’s so team-focused, so tunnel-visioned, that he doesn’t allow himself the grace to enjoy this moment unless his teammates have something to celebrate, too — everyone around him swears it’s true. That he really is machinelike in his conviction, the personality inverse for the person whose one-time record he tied Tuesday.

When Babe Ruth hit his 60th home run to break his own mark in 1927, he said after the game: “Sixty! Count ’em, 60! Let’s see some other son of a b—- match that!” It was pure Babe: a little arrogant and a lot bombastic, appreciative even in the moment of his place in history, perhaps because he’d become so accustomed to writing it. Baseball’s early record books featured Ruth’s name so much they felt biographical. He was the game in the 1920s, and that he continues to play such a prominent role a century later illustrates that for all the pomposity, he understood the enormity of the shadow he was casting.

Others eventually bested 60 — first Roger Maris in 1961, then Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa and Barry Bonds, though the latter three were aided by performance-enhancing drugs, a fact that doesn’t invalidate their accomplishments as much as it offers important context through which to view them. Ruth’s record came before integration. Maris’ preceded the game’s internationalization. Every mark carries its baggage.

Which is part of the reason Judge excuses himself from the talk of numbers. He said “60” just once in a news conference following the game. He said “team” at least 10 times. He could enmesh himself in a debate about the real record or the rightful record. He prefers an almost-hymnal dedication to the party line by which he lives.

“To get a chance to play baseball at Yankee Stadium, packed house, first-place team, that’s what you dream about,” Judge said. “I love every second of it. Even when we were down, you don’t like losing, but I knew top of the lineup coming up, we got a shot to come back here and do something special. I’m trying to enjoy it all, soak it all in, but I know I still got a job to do out on the field every single day.”

He seems to mean it: somehow this life, this reality, does not bother Judge. As much as Ruth reveled in it, Maris loathed it. As he and teammate Mickey Mantle were chasing Ruth in 1961, Maris mainlined coffee and ripped cigarettes and watched his hair fall out in clumps. And as much as he willed himself to perform, Maris viewed his legacy as a burden, saying: “It would have been a helluva lot more fun if I had never hit those 61 home runs. All it brought me was headaches.”

Judge’s head is steady, clear, unwavering. Which is lucky, because as much as he would enjoy getting the numbers out of the way — hitting 61 to tie Maris for the American League record and 62 to break it — he has almost accidentally ensured there will be no clean slate. In addition to owning unbeatable leads in home runs and runs batted in, Judge’s blast in the ninth pushed his batting average to an AL-best .316. Which is to say as the Yankees sojourn on the final 15 games of their season and look to lock up an AL East title in a division they now lead by 5½ games over Toronto, they’ll do so with Judge chasing not just Ruth and Maris but the second Triple Crown in the last half-century.

This is a man who has played his entire career in the Bronx. A man who turned down a seven-year contract extension on Opening Day. Aaron Judge knows the pressure of the numbers, the accolades, the team performance, the impending free agency that comes with an altogether different sort of number this winter. Tuesday, he allowed himself to name-check his forebears — “You talk about Ruth and Maris and Mantle and all these Yankees greats … ” Judge said — but didn’t delve much further into that line of thinking.

The past is about ego. The present is about team. And the New York Yankees, undeniably Aaron Judge’s team, turned in perhaps their best win of the season Tuesday. As Stanton trotted for the grand slam that was, Judge could clear his mind of the one that could’ve been, unburdened.

On the night he hit 60 — yes, Babe, count ’em, 60 — he reveled and exulted and luxuriated in a different home run, hit by a different man of immense stature. The world can have the noteworthy and historic solo shot. Aaron Judge will take the grand slam that won the Yankees another baseball game.

Read original article here

New York Yankees’ Aaron Judge hits 60th home run, one shy of Roger Maris’ AL single-season record

NEW YORK — Only five players had hit 60 home runs in a single season in the history of the major leagues — that is, until New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge joined that exclusive club with a solo homer against the Pittsburgh Pirates on Tuesday night.

The All-Star outfielder is now one home run shy of tying Roger Maris’ American League single-season record of 61 home runs, set in 1961, which also stood as the major league mark for 37 years.

With his 60th home run, the 6-foot-7 Judge also tied Babe Ruth (1927) for eighth place on the single-season home run list as the Yankees rallied for a 39-8 win.

“I have to believe it’s right there with some of the best, very short list of all-time seasons, what he’s doing,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said of Judge’s nightly chase for baseball history. “Our focus is obviously on winning, and what’s at stake for us as a team. But within that, to watch what he’s doing, you certainly realize what a special season you’re getting to witness.”

There have now been nine 60-home run seasons in MLB history, done by six different players. Judge joined Hall of Famers Ruth and Maris, as well as Barry Bonds (2001), Mark McGwire (1999, 1998) and Sammy Sosa (2001, 1999, 1998).

Judge’s 59 home runs were already the most by a right-handed batter in AL history. Judge had also already joined Ruth (four) and Mickey Mantle (two) as only the third member of the storied Yankees franchise to have multiple 50-HR seasons while wearing pinstripes.

But Maris’ home run record isn’t the only historic mark Judge is chasing.

Judge’s batting average entering Tuesday was .316, one point off Minnesota Twins first baseman Luis Arraez’s AL lead. Judge, who is all but a lock to lead the league in homers and RBIs (127), has a chance to become the 11th player to win the Triple Crown since RBIs became official in 1920.

Read original article here

Tom Cruise receives happy 60th birthday wishes from Christopher McQuarrie and Val Kilmer

Tom Cruise receives happy 60th birthday wishes from Mission Impossible director Christopher McQuarrie and Top Gun costar Val Kilmer

Tom Cruise received birthday wishes from a number of high-profile collaborators as he turned 60 on Sunday.

Among those to post birthday wishes the perennial A-lister included filmmaker Christopher McQuarrie, who has worked alongside Cruise in 2012’s Jack Reacher as well as multiple Mission: Impossible films, including the forthcoming Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part One and Part Two.

‘Happy 60th Birthday, Tom,’ McQuarrie captioned an accompanying shot of Cruise clinging to the wing of a vintage plane in mid-air.

The latest: Tom Cruise received birthday wishes from a number of high-profile collaborators as he turned 60 on Sunday. He was snapped Sunday in England 

Cruise, who returned to the role of Capt. Pete ‘Maverick’ Mitchell in the summer smash Top Gun: Maverick, also received kind words from two of his costars in the movie, Val Kilmer and Glen Powell.

Kilmer said, ‘Happy Birthday Mav @TomCruise from Ice!’ in reference to his reprising the role of Adm. Tom ‘Iceman’ Kazansky in the sequel.

Powell, who plays the role of Lt. Jake ‘Hangman’ Seresin in the movie, reposted the death-defying image McQuarrie shared.

He wrote: ‘This is 60. TC, there is just no one like you. Keep hangin’ in there. Happy Birthday!’

Christopher McQuarrie, who has worked alongside Cruise in 2012’s Jack Reacher as well as multiple Mission: Impossible films, shared a shot of Cruise clinging to the wing of a vintage plane in mid-air

Cruise, who returned to the role of Maverick in the summer smash Top Gun: Maverick, also received kind words from two of his costars in the movie, Val Kilmer and Glen Powell 

The movie has been a smash hit, as it has garnered $564 million in box office totals domestically and more than $1.1 billion in international totals, according to Box Office Mojo, making for Cruise’s highest-earning film ever on a worldwide basis.

This weekend, the film dropped only 16 percent from the previous weekend, a practically unheard of drop for such a high-profile blockbuster.

Cruise was seen working last November in Cambridgeshire, England perfecting the stunt, as he was seen donning a bodysuit and headgear during the death-defying sequence, Page Six reported.

The plane in the stunt is a 1941 Boeing B75N1 Stearman biplane, and was 2,000 feet in the air when Cruise did the maneuver. 

The outlet reported that the stunt was likely in preparation for an upcoming Mission: Impossible movie.

Read original article here

New photos show John Glenn orbiting Earth on 60th anniversary

Sunday marks 60 years since NASA astronaut John Glenn became the first American to orbit Earth. 

On Feb. 20, 1962, the “Mercury Seven” member set out on the agency’s three-orbit Mercury-Atlas 6 mission aboard the spacecraft he named Friendship 7.

New images released to Fox News show the mission – and Glenn – in remarkable detail.

The pictures, created by “Apollo Remastered” author Andy Saunders, were made using source footage provided by Stephen Slater, who headed up the archive research and production for “Apollo 11.”

Saunders, who has previously shared remastered images of the Apollo 15 moon landing, regularly posts new images on Twitter and Instagram.

To produce each new image, Saunders told Fox News he stacked hundreds of frames of the film on top of each other in several areas of the film — “averaging out” the image noise — and “stitched” the frames together, with each image containing more than 1,000 image samples. The output was then constructed using digital processing techniques.

Glenn can be seen waiting for launch for more than two hours before the space flight as well as in orbit, watching the booster and the curvature of Earth. 

According to NASA, an initial launch attempt on Jan. 27 was postponed due to thick clouds that would have prevented observation of the rocket’s ascent. 

Mechanical and weather problems added further delays. 

“Apollo Remastered” author Andy Saunders created the Mercury-Atlas 6 mission images using source footage provided by Stephen Slater.
NASA/Andy Saunders; Digital Source: Stephen Slater

Glenn boarded the capsule at Launch Complex 14 of what is now known as Florida’s Canaveral Space Force Station.

Following additional delays, and after nearly four hours in the capsule, the countdown reached zero at 9:47 a.m. EST, and the Atlas rocket’s three main engines ignited. 

Four seconds later, the rocket rose above the launch pad and, two minutes and nine seconds after that, its two booster engines cut off and were jettisoned. 

After continuing to operate on the power of its center-mounted sustainer engine, at five minutes and one second into the flight, the sustainer engine cut off, and Friendship 7 separated two seconds later. 

Glenn was in orbit and Friendship 7 turned around, flying with its heat shield in the direction of flight. 

Glenn snapped pictures and continued to report on his and the spacecraft’s condition, successfully controlling the capsule’s altitude and eating a tube of applesauce and a xylitol pill before he was given the OK for his second orbit. 

Andy Saunders has previously shared remastered images of the Apollo 15 moon landing.
NASA/Andy Saunders; Digital Source: Stephen Slater

As Glenn passed over Cape Canaveral during the start of his second orbit, controllers noticed a signal indicating that the spacecraft’s landing bag had deployed, meaning that the heat shield required for reentry was no longer in place.

Although engineers believed the signal was an error, they devised a plan to keep the retrorocket pack on after retrofire, with the aim of having the straps keep the heat shield in place.   

Glenn, who was not told explicitly about the issue, was advised to ensure the landing-bag deploy switch was in the “off” position. 

He was given the green light to proceed to his third orbit, and controllers instructed Glenn to place the landing-bag switch in the automatic position and keep the retropack in place after retrofire if a light should come on.

Glenn reported he hadn’t heard bumping noises during attitude maneuvers that would indicate a deployed landing bag. 

Close to California, the spacecraft fired its three retrorockets to slow its velocity, and engineers closely monitored Friendship 7’s reentry into the Earth’s atmosphere.

Remastered image from the Apollo 15 moon landing.
NASA/Andy Saunders; Digital Source: Stephen Slater

As planned, a temporary radio blackout lasting four minutes and 20 seconds occurred as the spacecraft sped through the upper atmosphere, and Glenn described reentry as a “real fireball outside” while pieces of the retropack burned off.

He manually controlled the spacecraft’s altitude and, eventually, exhausted its fuel supply.

At 28,000 feet, the drogue parachute deployed early, and at 10,800 feet the main 63-foot red and white main parachute followed suit.

Friendship 7 splashed down in the vicinity of Grand Turk Island at 2:43 p.m. EST. 

Glenn’s flight lasted for four hours, 55 minutes and 23 seconds. 

The closest vessel, the destroyer USS Noa, completed the retrieval from the water, and the recovery operation took 21 minutes 

Pictures show John Glenn waiting for launch for more than two hours before the space flight as well as in orbit.
NASA/Andy Saunders; Digital Source: Stephen Slater

Glenn blew the side hatch, and doctors escorted him to the ship’s sick bay for a medical examination. He was then flown to Grand Turk Island, arriving there about five hours after splashdown.

Later, President John F. Kennedy presented him with the NASA Distinguished Service Medal.

Following a tour on Feb. 23, 1963, NASA formally passed Friendship 7 to the Smithsonian’s Institution in Washington, DC.

When he was 77 years old in 1998, Glenn got a chance to fly again with six astronauts aboard the STS-95 Discovery shuttle flight.

Glenn, who was born in Ohio July 18, 1921, later became a US senator and served in that role for 25 years. He also worked with college students at Ohio State University.

Glenn was a Marine pilot during World War II, fought in the Korean War and became an airplane test pilot, setting a speed record in 1957 during a flight from Los Angeles to New York that took less than 3.5 hours.

He died in Columbus, Ohio, Dec. 8, 2016, at the age of 95.



Read original article here

Historic photos show the first American to orbit Earth on 60th anniversary of Mercury-Atlas 6 mission

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Sunday marks 60 years since NASA astronaut John Glenn became the first American to orbit Earth. 

On Feb. 20, 1962, the “Mercury Seven” member set out on the agency’s three-orbit Mercury-Atlas 6 mission aboard the spacecraft he named Friendship 7.

New images released to Fox News show the mission – and Glenn – in remarkable detail.

The pictures, created by “Apollo Remastered” author Andy Saunders, were made using source footage provided by Stephen Slater, who headed up the archive research and production for “Apollo 11.”

Saunders, who has previously shared remastered images of the Apollo 15 moon landing, regularly posts new images on Twitter and Instagram.

FORMER ASTRONAUT AND US SENATOR JOHN GLENN DIES AT 95

To produce each new image, Saunders told Fox News he stacked hundreds of frames of the film on top of each other in several areas of the film — “averaging out” the image noise — and “stitched” the frames together, with each image containing more than 1,000 image samples. The output was then constructed using digital processing techniques.

Glenn can be seen waiting for launch for more than two hours before the space flight as well as in orbit, watching the booster and the curvature of Earth. 

According to NASA, an initial launch attempt on Jan. 27 was postponed due to thick clouds that would have prevented observation of the rocket’s ascent. 

Mechanical and weather problems added further delays. 

Glenn observes his booster falling away against the curvature of Earth through the capsule window, signifying the moment he had reached orbit.
(NASA/Andy Saunders; Digital Source: Stephen Slater)

Glenn boarded the capsule at Launch Complex 14 of what is now known as Florida’s Canaveral Space Force Station.

Following additional delays, and after nearly four hours in the capsule, the countdown reached zero at 9:47 a.m. EST, and the Atlas rocket’s three main engines ignited. 

Four seconds later, the rocket rose above the launch pad and, two minutes and nine seconds after that, its two booster engines cut off and were jettisoned. 

After continuing to operate on the power of its center-mounted sustainer engine, at five minutes and one second into the flight, the sustainer engine cut off, and Friendship 7 separated two seconds later. 

Glenn was in orbit and Friendship 7 turned around, flying with its heat shield in the direction of flight. 

Glenn snapped pictures and continued to report on his and the spacecraft’s condition, successfully controlling the capsule’s altitude and eating a tube of applesauce and a xylitol pill before he was given the OK for his second orbit. 

As Glenn passed over Cape Canaveral during the start of his second orbit, controllers noticed a signal indicating that the spacecraft’s landing bag had deployed, meaning that the heat shield required for reentry was no longer in place. 

REMEMBER WHEN? JOHN GLENN’S FIRST SPACEFLIGHT, 50 YEARS LATER

Although engineers believed the signal was an error, they devised a plan to keep the retrorocket pack on after retrofire, with the aim of having the straps keep the heat shield in place.   

Glenn, who was not told explicitly about the issue, was advised to ensure the landing-bag deploy switch was in the “off” position. 

He was given the green light to proceed to his third orbit, and controllers instructed Glenn to place the landing-bag switch in the automatic position and keep the retropack in place after retrofire if a light should come on.

Glenn reported he hadn’t heard bumping noises during attitude maneuvers that would indicate a deployed landing bag. 

Close to California, the spacecraft fired its three retrorockets to slow its velocity, and engineers closely monitored Friendship 7’s reentry into the Earth’s atmosphere.

As planned, a temporary radio blackout lasting four minutes and 20 seconds occurred as the spacecraft sped through the upper atmosphere, and Glenn described reentry as a “real fireball outside” while pieces of the retropack burned off.

He manually controlled the spacecraft’s altitude and, eventually, exhausted its fuel supply. 

Glenn holds steadfast as he observes the retro pack burn up outside his window.
(Credit: NASA/Andy Saunders; Digital Source: Stephen Slater)

At 28,000 feet, the drogue parachute deployed early, and at 10,800 feet the main 63-foot red and white main parachute followed suit.

Friendship 7 splashed down in the vicinity of Grand Turk Island at 2:43 p.m. EST. 

Glenn’s flight lasted for four hours, 55 minutes and 23 seconds. 

The closest vessel, the destroyer U.S.S. Noa, completed the retrieval from the water, and the recovery operation took 21 minutes 

Glenn blew the side hatch, and doctors escorted him to the ship’s sick bay for a medical examination. He was then flown to Grand Turk Island, arriving there about five hours after splashdown.

Later, President John F. Kennedy presented him with the NASA Distinguished Service Medal.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Following a tour on Feb. 23, 1963, NASA formally passed Friendship 7 to the Smithsonian’s Institution in Washington, D.C.

When he was 77 years old in 1998, Glenn got a chance to fly again with six astronauts aboard the STS-95 Discovery shuttle flight.

Glenn, who was born in Ohio July 18, 1921, later became a U.S. senator and served in that role for 25 years. He also worked with college students at Ohio State University.

Glenn was a Marine pilot during World War II, fought in the Korean War and became an airplane test pilot, setting a speed record in 1957 during a flight from Los Angeles to New York that took less than 3.5 hours.

He died in Columbus, Ohio, Dec. 8, 2016, at the age of 95.



Read original article here

Jim Carrey celebrates 60th birthday

The “Dumb and Dumber” actor posted a short clip on his Twitter page to say he was feeling “60 and sexy.”

He called himself “old but gold” and jokingly saying he’d spend the evening eating creamed corn and strained peaches.

Carrey has been a titan of Hollywood’s comedy scene ever since his breakout in 1994’s “Ace Ventura: Pet Detective” — a trademark, slapstick role that he has long been associated with. In the same year, he went on to star in box-office hits “The Mask” and “Dumb and Dumber.”

He developed a reputation for his offbeat, wacky performances throughout the 1990s, as he went on to play characters such as The Riddler in “Batman Forever” and a lawyer who builds his career on outlandish lies in “Liar Liar.”

Throughout the 2000s and the 2010s, Carrey remained a regular staple across popular TV and film, as he turned some of his attention to starring in children’s entertainment — from features such as “How the Grinch Stole Christmas” to “A Series of Unfortunate Events” and “Bruce Almighty.”

He’s also enjoyed a stint on “Saturday Night Live,” playing US President Joe Biden.
Most recently, he appeared on fellow Canadian The Weeknd’s latest album “Dawn FM” to narrate closing track “Phantom Regret” — a contemplative spoken-word poem.

Read original article here

Ghislaine Maxwell spends 60th birthday in prison

It’s probably not the 60th birthday she imagined for herself, but Ghislaine Maxwell spent the milestone Saturday in her Manhattan jail cell, anxiously awaiting a jury’s verdict in her sex-trafficking trial.

Deliberations in the Lower Manhattan trial will drag into next week, as jurors failed to reach a verdict before being dismissed for the long holiday weekend.

As they entered their 16th hour of work, the jury Wednesday asked for transcripts for three witnesses who testified in the case against the accused Jeffrey Epstein madam.

The 12-person panel is reviewing more than two weeks of testimony as they consider six counts against the former British socialite, including sex trafficking of a minor and sex trafficking conspiracy.

Maxwell is accused of grooming and trafficking several girls — some as young as 14 — for financier Jeffrey Epstein to abuse between 1994 and 2004.

Ghislaine Maxwell is awaiting the jury to come to a verdict in her human trafficking trial.
REUTERS

She faces a maximum of 70 years in federal prison if convicted on all counts.

Prosecutors called Maxwell Epstein’s “right hand” and a “sophisticated predator” during the trial.

Her attorneys argued throughout the proceedings that Maxwell was simply the wrong target for prosecutors eager to hold someone accountable after Epstein killed himself while awaiting trial on related sex-abuse charges.

Before Maxwell’s trial headed to deliberations, defense attorneys insisted their controversial client be referred to as “Ms. Maxwell,” rather than “the defendant,” when Judge Alison Nathan instructed the jury on the legal nuances of the case.

Prosecutors allege Ghislaine Maxwell was Jeffrey Epstein’s “right hand.”
Getty Images

The accused madam’s siblings, who have supported her throughout the legal drama in Manhattan Federal Court, were caught on video which aired on British networks breaking down in tears as they awaited word of their sister’s fate.

Maxwell did not testify in her own defense.

“Your Honor, the government has not proven its case beyond a reasonable doubt and so there is no need for me to testify,” Maxwell told the jurist.

The high-profile trial comes as a surge of COVID-19 cases, fueled by the Omicron variant, has swept through the Empire State, prompting Nathan to urge the jury to take precautions and stay healthy as they went into their long weekend.

Ghislaine Maxwell’s siblings, including sister Isabel, were seen breaking down in tears at her trial.
John Lamparski/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press

She warned them to expect new coronavirus protocols when they return to the courthouse Monday, and offered them masks.

“Please stay safe over the long weekend. Obviously we’ve got the variant, and I need all of you here and healthy on Monday,” she said. “So please take good care and take cautions.”

Read original article here

‘Sopranos’ star Michael Imperioli pays emotional tribute to James Gandolfini on what would have been the late actor’s 60th birthday

Michael Imperioli posted a touching remembrance to his friend and Sopranos co-star James Gandolfini in honor of the late actor’s birthday. (Photo: Patrick Hannaway/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images)

James Gandolfini’s friend and co-star Michael Imperioli posted a touching tribute to the late actor on what would have been his 60th birthday. Born on Sept. 18, 1961, the three-time Emmy winner was just 51 when died of a heart attack while in Rome in 2013.

On Saturday, Imperioli, who played Christopher Moltisanti, the troubled nephew of Gandolfini’s Tony Soprano on The Sopranos, took to social media to share a sweet message in honor of the actor.

“Dear Jim, today marks 60 years since you came into this world,” wrote Imperioli in an Instagram post, which featured a photo of the two actors. “As fate would have it, I am in Rome, the city where you left this world. I will think of you today as I wander these ancient streets. I will remember the laughs most of all. Today I am reminded how fortunate I am to have acted beside you more than I ever did (or ever will, most likely) with anyone else. What a privilege. Thank you for the friendship, generosity and kindness. Love always, Michael.”

The duo, who appeared together for six seasons on the groundbreaking HBO series, were known for having fun together on set. Recently, it was revealed by their costar Steve Schirripa that they once got so drunk before filming they had to be chained up to make it through a scene.

“On the break, while they set up the lights, Michael and Jim drank a bottle of Wild Turkey,” Schirripa told Insider of a scene where Tony and Christopher throw the body of the murdered capo Ralph Cifaretto off a cliff. “They were so drunk that they had to chain their legs to a tree because they were afraid they were going to fall off the cliff,” he added.

Gandolfini’s son, Michael Gandolfini, recently opened up about his decision to play the young version of Tony Soprano in The Many Saints of Newark, the upcoming feature-length prequel to the iconic HBO series. While he had previously revealed that he had never watched The Sopranos while it aired due to his young age (Gandolfini was just 13 when his dad died), he ultimately said deciding to take on the role as an adult was “probably the toughest decision I’ve ever had to make.” 

“You know, I didn’t want to put pressure on myself to walk out of this feeling like I’d grown in terms of my feelings towards my dad,” Gandolfini, 22, explained to Empire magazine, Yahoo Entertainment previously reported. “I just wanted to be the best actor I could be, portraying Tony in the way David [Chase, the show’s creator] wanted, scene by scene. I didn’t think about my grief because… well, I would have sh** the bed.”

Gandolfini continued, explaining the depth behind the character that made his father a TV icon. 

“My dad’s character had all this beautiful sensitivity underneath this aggression,” he observed. “This version of him is the reverse. His curiosity and sensitivity comes first. He’s not a gun-wielding gangster. He’s a kid who gets whittled down and pulled in.”

The Many Saints of Newark, which premieres in theaters and on HBO Max Oct. 1, co-stars Vera Farmiga as Tony’s mother, Livia, Corey Stoll as Corrado “Junior” Soprano and Jon Bernthal as Tony’s dad, “Johnny Boy.”



Read original article here