Thursday, March 29, 2007

Will Diana Ross Style Cause A Chain Reaction?

Singing sensation Diana Ross attended Muhammad Ali's Celebrity Fight Night XIII at the Marriot Desert Ridge Resort and Spa wearing a monochrome pattern dress.


Diana Ross, who shot to fame in girl group The Supremes, is something of a music icon, even though in 2005 she teamed up with Westlife for a remake of her 1991 hit When You Tell Me That You Love Me.


We'll forgive Diana for that particular misdemeanour, after all people have done worse things. But we won't forgive (or forget) the shawl she has teamed with her gorgeous monochrome dress!


She arrived at Muhammad Ali's Celebrity Fight Night XIII on trend with a monochrome dress but undid all her good style work by throwing the fuchsia coloured shawl over her shoulder.
Never mind Why Do Fools Fall In Love? this is more a case of Why Do Fools Team Fuchsia Pink With Monochrome?!


Monochrome is a hot trend for the spring summer 07 season and the look works well when top to toe monochrome marries subtle splashes of red and orangey tones in shoes, make up and accessories (see bottom right).


If you're going to snap up the latest fashion trend go for John Zack's Monochrome Wrap Dress - but don't team it with fuchsia like Diana.


Hopefully the fashion faux pas won't cause a Chain Reaction and Diana will look in the Mirror, Mirror before going out!
Talk to the Style Team today over at MySpace!

Monday, March 26, 2007

CELEBRITY FIGHT NIGHT XIII with musical performances by Diana Ross and more...


Billy Crystal, Donald Trump, David Foster, Reba McEntire, Sharon Stone, Muhammad Ali, Diana Ross, Patricia Smith, Emmitt Smith, Kevin Sorbo, Khalia Ali, Michael Buble, Shaun White, Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Doug Flutie, John Elway, Tony Hawk, Lhotse Merriam, Derrek Lee, Michael Johnson, Missy Peregrym, Buzz Aldrin, Kurt Warner


(News Item):CELEBRITY FIGHT NIGHT XIII with musical performances by Diana Ross, Michael Bublé and Neil Sedaka under the direction of David Foster.




Muhammad Ali will honor Sharon Stone with the “Muhammad Ali Humanitarian Award,” Donald Trump will receive the “Muhammad Ali Entrepreneur Award,” Steve Nash will receive the “Muhammad Ali Sports Achievement Award” and John Elway will be honored with the “Muhammad Ali Sports Legend Award.”



This black tie event begins with cocktails and a silent auction with dinner, a live auction and entertainment immediately to follow.




The Celebrity Fight Night Foundation established The Muhammad Ali Awards as a way to acknowledge leaders in the sports, entertainment and business communities who best represent the qualities associated with the Champ and his fight to find a cure for Parkinson’s disease.




In recent years, Robin Williams, Jim Carrey, Magic Johnson, Tony Hawk, Billy Crystal, Michael J. Fox, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Chevy Chase, Jack Nicklaus, Wayne Gretzky, Joe Montana, Barry Bonds, Emmitt Smith, Evander Holyfield, Chris Evert, and Jerry Colangelo have received these awards.




Additional award recipients have included Randy Johnson, Curt Schilling, Luis Gonzalez, Howard Schultz, CEO of Starbucks, and Bob Emfield and Tony Margolis, Founders of Tommy Bahama. Each year dozens of celebrity guests attend the event that has raised more than $38 million dollars in twelve years


Thursday, March 22, 2007

Diana Ross' teen could be the next big thing

In the movie "ATL," someone told the character Ant, "You tell me. You're the one that's shinin'."
The same could be said of the acting career of Evan Ross, who made his film debut as Ant.

This is a big year for 18-year-old Ross. Earlier this month, he co-starred in the HBO film "Life Support" with Queen Latifah.
And on Friday, his latest project, "Pride," opens to tell the true story of a black swim team in Philadelphia. Ross plays the stuttering, shy Reggie, who comes up with the bright idea to form the team.

"Things are good; heading in the right direction," says Ross in a recent telephone interview from Los Angeles. "I'm so passionate about what I'm doing. My focus is in the right place."
In fact, Ross -- the youngest son of Detroit native Diana Ross -- is so focused on acting that he says his mother worries about him constantly. When he's home, he resides with her. Like most mothers, the Motown diva gets concerned about whether her baby is eating properly and getting enough rest when he's on location.

"My mom tells me, 'Don't get overtired, and don't get yourself sick."
Of course, the teen always listens to his mother, but on this point, the actor, singer and dancer says he's taking advice from Terrance Howard, his "Pride" co-star: "Let me get through the door, and then I'll sleep."

"Terrance said something like that. I said to him, 'You've got back-to-back films, and you're shooting two at the same time.' He said, 'Until I get comfortable, I'm going to work and work and work until I canpass out for a minute.'

"There are no breaks," Ross says. "There is nothing given to you, even when you think there is. You take things in your own hands; that's how things get done."
It's that attitude that has Ross rising so fast in his career, says Nelson George, pop culture critic and director of "Life Support."

"It always sounds corny when people say somebody is going to be a big star, but Evan Ross is going to be a big star. When I first saw him in 'ATL,' I was like, 'Who is that kid?' "
Ross is heading straight for the top because he possesses the right attitude, work ethic and talent, George says.

"He's got all the elements. He's got vulnerability, and he's got lookability," George explains. "He's got acting chops. He can project pain and anger. He's really committed to be a great actor. He gets in there, he's super prepared and he's thought the character through very well.

"Yeah, he's Diana Ross' son, but that's not a big part of why you hire him. You feel like he's totally committed to what he's doing. There's none of that rich kid (stuff). None of that."
Lately, Ross has been filming "Life is Hot in Crack Town" and "Brooklyn to Manhattan." Soon, he will begin work on "Burning Sands." Those films are set for release next year.
He says acting doesn't look like it, but it's really hard work. He says the work also can take a toll on his emotions.

In "Life Support," he played Omari, a gay young man who was born HIV-positive. His biological sister, Tracee Ellis Ross, played his sister in the film, and that, he says, was especially emotional for him.

"I have a lot of emotions," he says. "A lot of people don't know this. A lot about people don't know about my struggles, and that's not important for them to know."

One of his struggles, he says, was spending time with street kids to learn about them for his upcoming movie "Gardens of the Night," his third 2007 release.
In the film, he plays 17-year-old Donnie, who is among a group of children who were abducted into a prostitution ring. They escape but continue having sex for food and cigarettes while living on the street.

"It was hard sitting in that room and listening to them and being around them for the day," Ross says. "It puts so much pressure on your heart."
While true love hasn't happened for Ross yet, he has been romantically linked to Lindsay Lohan. And no Hollywood actor can be taken seriously as a star until he's romantically linked to Lohan, quips Robert Thompson, professor of media and popular culture at Syracuse University.

On a more serious note, though, Thompson has paid close attention to Ross' career, and rattles off information about him effortlessly.

"Every now and then, you see someone and you think you are watching them at the very beginning of a big career," he says. "I watched every episode of 'St. Elsewhere.' It was amazing how little that show used Denzel Washington, and I never got that sense watching him that here is a really big star. I didn't get it when I watched Jim Carrey in the sitcom 'Duck Factory.'

"Evan Ross is 18 years old, and you can see this guy could really be a big star. … If I was asked to invest in the futures market of stars, he would be a good bet."

Ross says he never thinks about whether he will be a star. He is, however, beginning to realize his heritage as the son of singing and acting star Diana Ross.

"I don't mind being in such an incredible shadow," he says. "More and more, I've been watching her career and learning about her career in the Supremes. She's so incredible, and she's done such amazing things. I'm in awe and I'm inspired by the things she's done. I saw a clip of her playing a schizophrenic, and I was like, 'Oh, my gosh! I'll work harder.' "

When he's not working, he's just working on being himself.
In free moments, he says he enjoys shopping and partying. He says he's already getting flak for wearing his hair long, a deviation from his close-cropped look in "ATL."

With that and the rumors about his $100,000 birthday shopping spree, which he says aren't true, he's found people want you to be who they want you to be, and he has empathy for young Hollywood stars such as Britney Spears and Lohan.

"I hope to affect people," Ross says, "and I want to keep doing things differently. I'm not trying to look like everybody else. I'm wearing my hair long, and I'm comfortable being different, being new. You don't have to be one way, look one way. You can go against the grain. That's what I'm doing."

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Diana Ross on American Idol review!!



It was Diana Ross night on American Idol’s first finals show Tuesday, and the women reigned supreme. Most of the men misfired attempting to sing material from Ross or The Supremesa.


Brandon Rogers delivered a lukewarm You Can’t Hurry Love, Phil Stacy demolished I’m Gonna Make You Love Me and the Sanjaya Malakar travesty worsened with a pathetically weak Ain’t No Mountain High Enough.





Even front-runners Chris Sligh and Blake Lewis flopped with rearragements, Sligh injecting a Coldplay vibe into, oddly, Endless Love and Lewis executing a sub-par You Keep Me Hanging On.





The women were at least competent — a passable Love Child by Gina Glocksen, an appealing Missing You by Haley Scarnato — and at times better than that. LaKisha Jones won the night with an impressively nuanced God Bless the Child.





And Melinda Doolittle and Jordin Sparks picked dull Ross ballads (Home, If We Hold On Together) but sang them skillfully. The first finalist is eliminated tonight (Fox, 9 ET/PT). Malakar would be the logical choice.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Diana Ross Gets 'Idolized!'


Delicious diva DIANA ROSS is heading out on tour, with a valentine for her audience in the form of her I Love You CD. One of the stops along the way is FOX's monster hit series, "American Idol," where the music icon will mentor the Final 12 as they prepare to sing songs from her catalog for Tuesday night's competition.


For Ross, who will perform live on the Wednesday night results show, the most exciting part of her "Idol" visit is mentoring the contestants."I like the idea of them knowing that they have someone they can talk to who has a supportive voice," she tells ET's KEVIN FRAZIER in a one-on-one sit-down. "Not someone who is there to criticize them, or someone who is trying to tell them what to do.


As I told them, I want to be supportive to help them bring out the best from who they are."Ross says it is incredible how much pressure these 12 hopefuls are under during this process. Truth be told, she has never undergone anything like it in her career. Still, she hopes to teach them to turn a negative into a positive."They said they were nervous with me, and I was trying to tell them that nervous and excited feel the same, so they should change their language and say they are excited.


Turn nerves into excitement and use it as a good thing," she explains.As for the criticism and advice that is imparted by the three judges -- PAULA ABDUL, RANDY JACKSON and SIMON COWELL --


Ross feels that the recipients need to listen, but not necessarily internalize the comments."There are a lot of people who can pi$$ on your dreams," she adds. "I remember there was someone who tried to keep me from being a performer. I wouldn't be here today, if I had listened to that. You have to learn what to listen to."Ross knows that the price of fame can be high.


While she has successfully raised her four children, her life has not been without its own difficulties, so when asked about the very public trials and tribulations of young pop stars such as BRITNEY SPEARS, she has the following to say: "It is not an easy task to have this attention all the time. You hope they can recover and have a life that is graceful."

Monday, March 12, 2007

Diana Ross on American Idol.


WORLD-RENOWNED ARTIST DIANA ROSS
TO COACH TOP 12 AND PERFORM ON “AMERICAN IDOL”
TUESDAY, MARCH 13, AND WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, ON FOX


World-renowned artist Diana Ross will work with the Top 12 finalists this week on AMERICAN IDOL Tuesday, March 13 (8:00-10:00 PM ET live/PT tape-delayed), and will perform on the results show Wednesday, March 14 (9:00-9:30 PM ET live/PT tape-delayed) on FOX. The contestants will perform songs from the Diana Ross and the Supremes songbook.

In a remarkable career spanning four decades, Ross has proven to be the consummate music artist, as well as one of the iconic female singers of all time. Beginning in the 1960s as lead singer of the world-renowned group the Supremes, and later as a solo performer, Ross achieved the unprecedented feat of 18 No. 1 singles in the U.S., rivaled only by the Beatles for the position of the biggest hit group of that generation.

In 1970, Ross moved to a solo career and for over three decades has continued to produce chart singles and sell-out tours, at the same time showing herself to be a successful business woman. Her many accomplishments include an Oscar nomination for her first film role, an extraordinary performance as Billie Holiday in "Lady Sings the Blues." She recently returned to the U.S. charts with her highest-debuting album in two decades, "I Love You."

DIANA ROSS' SON WORRIED ABOUT SMOKING ROLE AS GAY HIV VICTIM


DIANA ROSS' teenage son EVAN feared he'd upset his famous mum if he took on a role as a gay HIV sufferer in QUEEN LATIFAH's new TV movie LIFE SUPPORT - because the character smoked.


See picture;
Tracee & Evan Ross



Evan Ross, 18, joined big sister TRACEE ELLIS ROSS in the hardhitting new movie but had to make sure his mum would approve of his character before signing up. Ellis Ross recalls, "Evan called me when he thought he might get the role... and the interesting thing, which I thought says a lot about our family, is it wasn't the issue of playing gay or having HIV.


"It was the concern about smoking because we don't smoke in our family, and Evan was like, 'What do you think mom's gonna think of that?'" But mum Diana was thrilled to hear her son was furthering his acting career with a challenging part - and his portrayal in the film impressed writer/director NELSON GEORGE.


He explains, "A lot of young actors were afraid of that part because they didn't want it to seem that they were gay... He was very courageous because he dived right in and had no fear."