Nick and Lulu Wonderland (News Stand)

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This web page is about Nick & Lulu in "The Guardian" for fans. This is a site devoted to our favorite TV couple, Nick Fallin and Lulu Archer.

Friday, September 30, 2005

The Fabulous Baker boy-9T05



From:9TO5
By Kristy Meudell

Simon Baker is every bit the charmer when he meets me in the hallway of his Sydney hotel. Squeezing my hand and pulling me in to kiss his cheek, he has a mischievous school-boy twinkle in his eye when he refers to his publicist and says, “He told me you were cute.” Livelier than I expect after a full day of press commitments (the first of which was for an early morning breakfast show), he's much cheekier than I had imagined and about as far removed from the stereotype of a Hollywood movie star as you can get.

“How much do you think a bottle of Fiji water costs?” he asks me incredulously just before we sit down. Then, without waiting for a reply, he states: “Seven dollars! Can you believe that? And that’s not even for a big bottle, it’s for one of those small ones.”

While his horror at the outlandish prices of the hotel mini bar is somewhat out of sorts for someone of his calibre, he is the first to point out that he isn’t your typical movie type. Simon Baker describes himself as someone “too old” for a fan club, and certainly doesn’t see himself as any kind of star.

“Everyone I think has a different definition of what a movie star is. I think Gregory Peck is a movie star, I think Carey Grant was a movie star, but I’m not a movie star,” he says with a laugh. “I’m just an actor that works in movies.”

At the end of 1995, Simon Baker left Australia for the US with his wife and son and enough money to last a few months. Steadily, he’s been able to make a living out of his craft. There have been roles in movies including L.A. Confidential, The Affair of the Necklace, Book of Love, but his real claim to fame has been his starring role in the drama series The Guardian, a TV show which lasted three years and attracted 12 million viewers a week in the US alone.

“I didn’t think we would still be there [in LA] after so long. I didn’t really think anything. I know we didn’t have enough money to stay this long – we only had enough to stay for about three months! It doesn’t feel like 10 years. It feels like a long time, but not that long. I can remember the day we arrived, definitely. I found a baseball in the gutter of the house we were staying in. It was almost like a good luck charm – until a friend took their dog for a walk and threw it and lost it.

“They’re not my friend anymore,” he jokes with a big movie-like grin.

Adjusting his heavy rimmed glasses, Simon says he is grateful to have worked consistently. He emphasises that it hasn’t been an easy ride, but there’s not even a hint of bitterness when I suggest that acting has more to do with luck than with anything else.

“A lot of it has to do with luck,” he admits. “Some of it has to do with talent, but more of it has to do with luck. Some actors just do one movie and that movie makes loads of money and then they can pick from any script they want. They can say that they only want to work with Martin Scorsese. And you can vent and moan about it, but then you just have to go, ‘OK, I’m still a working actor’.

“It’s hard work and it’s a tough struggle at times, but it’s not rocket science, it’s just making movies, it’s just pretending to be someone else. You’re not saving the world.”

While he makes a valid point, Simon does agree that not just anyone can act.

“Well, that is, as they say, why we get the big bucks. But I tell you, there’s only a select few who actually get the big bucks. I’m fortunate enough to be able to make a decent living out of it. Am I up in the high echelons of earners as an actor? No, I’m not. I’m not a big movie star who commands huge amounts of money and a lot of the roles I come across that are really, really interesting, you’ve almost gotta pay to play them, to be in the movie. It’s a funny sort of business. It’s hard and it always has been because it’s the marriage of art and commerce and I don’t necessarily think that it’s a happy marriage a lot of the time.”

His family – wife Rebecca, who Baker describes as his “rock”, and his three children, Stella, Claude and Harry – are a welcome contrast to the realities of his work. For Baker, his family and their happiness are paramount and consequently, there is more to his life than just work.
“It’s important for me to be challenged,” he says. “I’m pretty odd like that ’cause I really do like to be challenged and be absorbed by what I’m doing and let it just sort of soak me up. But at the same time, I’m inherently lazy. I don’t like to work too much. When I work, I really like to get into it, and then when I’m not working, I just like to put it aside.”

This healthy outlook perhaps makes Baker overly critical of the scripts that come his way.
“You never know with movies what will make a good one,” he laments. “There have been a lot of roles where I’ve gone, ‘Phew, lucky I didn’t do that’ – plenty of those – but there have also been roles where I’ve gone, ‘Well, actually, that wouldn’t have been so bad’, ’cause the movie turned out pretty good. But you can’t wonder what might have been.”

He doesn’t even wonder about what yet might be. He’s never been one to plan too far ahead, not five years or even six months. If big-time movie success comes his way, then great, but if not, he’s not bothered. He understands that fame and celebrity often come with a price.

“It’s not the be all and end all. It’s not the only reason for doing it. You know, there’s something nice about the certain perks related to it, absolutely, but the loss of identity, the scrutiny which you come under can be so not desirable, it’s not something I’m interested in. I like the idea of being a little anonymous, but at the same time, I like going to places like the Cannes Film Festival and staying in a nice hotel. I want all the good things, but I don’t want the bad things. I also want the big bucks,” he adds with a laugh, “’cause that means when I’m not working, I can have a really good time!”

For all of Simon Baker’s time in Tinseltown, his Australian accent and ethos have remained in tact. In his heart, Australia will always be his home and though he dreams of Paddlepops and meat pies at the mention of a visit back to Oz, a move home isn’t on the cards.

“There is always a chance and the chance is always increased whenever I come out here,” he reveals. “Yeah, I get to munch on Paddlepops, but just to be here, it’s almost kind of healthier for me to not come back because when I don’t come back, I miss it, but I can sort of ignore 'cause it’s the other side of the world.

“When I’m here, it’s like, ‘What am I doing living in America for, what am I doing?’ It’s a funny balance. And a lot of people say, ‘Well, why don’t you just move back?’ It’s not that easy for me. I have three kids, two of them that were born there, you know. My kids have established social groups and friends and relationships in the States. I can’t be that selfish.”

Our best bet to enticing the fabulous Baker boy home is through new work opportunities.
“I think what the Australian film industry really needs is to make a film that captures the Australian spirit,” he says. “I would like to do a film here. And yes, there’s been talk of Clancy of the Overflow,” he says, “but it would depend on how they were going to do it. If they were going to do it right, I would be interested.”

From 9TO5.

Saturday, September 24, 2005

Rosenberg Elected President Actors Guild


From:Associated Press
Date:Sep 24,2005

LOS ANGELES - Alan Rosenberg was elected president of the Screen Actors Guild on Friday, replacing former "Little House on the Prairie" star Melissa Gilbert, who decided not to run for a third two-year term.

Rosenberg will lead a famously fractious union of 100,000 actors that has been split in recent years on such issues as merging with the other major actors union and taking an aggressive stance in negotiations with producers.

He beat out fellow candidates Morgan Fairchild and Robert Conrad.

Rosenberg received 40 percent of the total 27,053 votes cast, according to the guild. Fairchild received 35 percent and Conrad 25 percent.

"I am honored that the members of this great union have placed their confidence in me," Rosenberg said in a statement. "I ran a campaign that offered a simple and straightforward promise — I will fight like hell to get actors their fair share."

The 54-year-old actor has appeared on such television shows as "ER," "L.A. Law" and "The Guardian" as well as in TV movies. He is married to actress Marg Helgenberger.

Connie Stevens was elected the new secretary-treasurer,replacing James Cromwell, who did not seek re-election. She received 68 percent of the votes over challenger Lee Garlington's 32 percent.

Voter turnout was about 27 percent for both elections, the guild said. Rosenberg and Stevens will begin serving their terms on Sunday.

Rosenberg's win is a victory for the "Membership First" faction of the union which opposed Gilbert in the last two elections.

The group has advocated a more aggressive approach in negotiations with producers and opposed the merger with the other major entertainment union, the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists.

"We have become weak as a union, giving in to a series of rollbacks and buy-outs at a time when the entertainment industry is recording record profits; profits that will continue to grow with new technology," Rosenberg, 54, said on his campaign Web site. "If we truly expect to earn our livings as actors, we need to stand up and fight for a fair and livable wage."

Gilbert supported a controversial plan to merge SAG with AFTRA to increase union clout when dealing with large media conglomerates. That plan was narrowly defeated in 2003.

Gilbert also backed a new three-year contract with producers earlier this year that won increases in pay and benefits, but did nothing to change a 20-year-old formula for compensating actors for DVD sales.

Increasing residual payments from DVD sales had been a major goal of the negotiations, but actors said they backed down in order to avoid a potentially lengthy and damaging strike.

From Associated Press.

Saturday, September 17, 2005

Simon Baker works for the devil


From:Monsters and Critics.com, UK
Date:Sep 16, 2005
By Joshua Tyler

Simon Baker joins Emily Blunt, Anne Hathway and Meryl Streep in the film ‘The Devil Wears Prada’. You may remember Simon from horror movies like ‘Land of the Dead’ and ‘Ring Two’, but ‘Devil Wears Prada’ is about a different kind of terror.

Based on the novel by Lauren Wiseberger, the film is the story of a small town girl who gets a big job as an assistant to a fashion magazine editor. According to Variety, Baker will play a writer at the magazine who tries to help her survive the rigors of city living while she’s tortured by her nightmare boss, Meryl Streep. Streep’s character is oddly enough, supposed to be based on a real person: Vogue magazine editor Anne Wintour.

Anne Hathaway is slated to play Streep’s abused employee, while Emily Blunt takes on the role of a high-ranking assistant. Joining along with Simon Baker is Adrian Grenier as a love interest. ‘The Devil Wears Prada’ is scheduled to start shooting in New York in the fall, which means you can expect it in theaters some time in 2006.

FromMonsters and Critics.com, UK .

Friday, September 16, 2005

Baker suited for 'Prada' 'Devil' gets a leading man



From:Variety
Date:Sep. 15, 2005
By MICHAEL FLEMING

Fox 2000 has fitted Simon Baker with the male lead in "The Devil Wears Prada," the David Frankel-directed adaptation of the novel by Lauren Weisberger.
Meryl Streep and Anne Hathaway have already been cast.

Scripted by Aline Brosh McKenna, pic is about a small-town girl who gets a job working for a major fashion magazine. Baker will play a writer at the mag who tries to help the young woman survive life in the big city.

Weisberger worked at Vogue, and the editor character Streep plays is said to be based on mag's Anna Wintour. Pic will shoot in New York this fall.

Baker, last seen in the George Romero-directed "Land of the Dead" and "The Ring Two," just wrapped "Bloom," a romantic comedy for Focus Features co-starring Sanaa Lathan.

FromVariety