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Protraits -- Sink or swim duo
The to-be-released Titanic is being billed as the film that may have sunk
even before its release, but the same is not true of the stars of the
film.
The Romeo and Juliet boy Leonardo di Caprio is being billed as the hottest
star this summer. It is being said that Di Caprio, who is awaiting the
release of James Cameron's epic film, has nothing to fear except his own
penchant for reckless behaviour.
The 22-year-old star who got his breakthrough in 1993, playing Robert De
Niro's stepson in This Boy's Life has major roles in Marvin's Room and Man
in the Iron Mask. The real surprise this summer is the 21-year-old Kate
Winslet. The girl who won critical kudos for her roles in Sense and
Sensibility, Jude and Hamlet, is the best British bet in Hollywood this
year, beating behind the likes of Blenda Blethyn and Kristin Scott Thomas.
Gordon's girlfriend
She wasn't standing next to Gordon Brown when he went out to present the
first Labour budget in 18 years. But next year could be a different
story.
She is Sarah Macaulay, the public relations executive that Brown has been
quietly dating for more than two years. The couple were spotted together at
a Soho restaurant in London. Close friends say the rumours about their
engagement are untrue, but it is likely to be announced soon. ``It is fair
to say they are an item but they're not engaged,'' said one of Brown's
closest confidants.
The 33-year-old Macaulay is co-founder of Hobsbawm Macaulay Communications.
She is understood to have met Brown during a fund-raising event organised
for the Labour Party by her company three years ago. Brown, despite Fleet
Street rumours about his sexuality, has never discussed his friendship. But
Brown's friends talk about it rather openly. ``She is intelligent, fun and
quite political,'' said one. ``On top of that she is attractive and
successful. They are quite an item.''
Dread of deadlines
It is every author's nightmare to miss a deadline and then to be held up for
it. It was nightmare that came alive for many authors when HarperCollins in
the US cancelled 70 books because the writers missed their deadlines. David
Godwin, who is the agent for Ben Okri and Arundhati Roy among others,
described the cancellation as ``extraordinary, shocking, ridiculous''.
But Giles Gordon, agent for Fay Weldon and Peter Ackroyd, says publishers
are perfectly entitled to cancel books if authors did not adhere to a
delivery date. In a similar incident, Shirley Conran sued her publishers for
alleged breach of a £750,000 contract. She said she had made two
postponements for her novel but made the final deadline. Her publishers
thought she was four days late. Among the tardiest writers is Sir Edward
Heath, the former British prime minister. He has toyed with the idea of
memoirs since leaving office in 1975. He signed a contract with Weidenfeld
in 1985, but no book has been forthcoming. Even former prime minister John
Major's wife, Norma Major, who wrote Chequers was not immune to the
dread of deadlines. ``I felt very pressured by deadlines passing.''
Gay and gorgeous
Rupert Everett is a British actor with a difference. For one, he is not on
the Laurence Olivier-Kenneth Branagh track. He doesn't go on about art. He's
also happily and openly gay. And, now he is the star of My Best Friend's
Wedding along with Julia Roberts. He describes acting as ``a mammoth
cruise, really. I think all actors are out to be attractive.'' What about
theatre?
``It's a bore,'' he says. ``It's fruity. You have to communicate with
someone 50 yards up there. Everyone's reciting. Hollywood's another thing
though. The name of the game is schmooze.'' Tall, dark and handsome in the
matinee-idol mould, he made a brooding debut in films Another Country (1984)
and Dance with a Stranger (1985). He dipped a big toe in comedy with The
Madness of King George (1994), creating a hilariously hangdog Prince of
Wales and played the villain in Dunston Checks In. But unlike in the truest
British tradition he says, ``acting is not my life, it's part of my life''.
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