When Berry Goes Out, We Call It Sweet Justice
It’s not uncommon for celebrity guys to go out with their buddies, especially when the celeb in question is a professional athlete.
But Atlanta Braves outfielder David Justice has to be careful on his boys’ nights out. His wife, actress Halle Berry, demands equal privileges.
Which the National Enquirer is only too happy to publicize. In Hawaii to shoot the film “Race the Sun,” Berry was photographed in a strip club with a pair of barely dressed male dancers.
“We’re married, but we’re certainly allowed to go out and have fun,” Berry told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “I’m not threatened by my husband going out with the boys to have a good time, and he’s not threatened when I do it…. We have to have trust.”
Loose talk
“Nine Months” director Chris Columbus on what could have made Hugh Grant’s arrest for solicitation worse (in Women’s Wear Daily): “I’ll give you a list of 20 things: a 15-year-old-boy, an animal, an entire football team….”
Gerry Ford jokes offend you? Well, pardon us
Gerald R. Ford turns 82 today.
Oh, why didn’t you tell me you meant Heidi FLEISS?
Movie actor Charlie Sheen, who once said he’d never heard of Heidi Fleiss, will submit a deposition by videotape at the accused madam’s Los Angeles trial on federal money-laundering charges. Sheen, who now admits using Fleiss’ service, is in Virginia shooting an action film.
His nine-year run as Tom Arnold just ended
Actress Julianne Moore, 34, can’t be happy with the divorce judgment that obliges her to pay her husband of nine years, John Rubin, 44, the rent on his Chelsea flat, legal fees and $650 a week temporary alimony. He said he sacrificed his career for her. She accuses him of “laziness.”
Other than that, though, she’s perfectly normal
Speaking of harsh divorce proceedings, Gordon Clark, the estranged husband of O.J. Simpson prosecutor Marcia Clark, wants to write a book about their time together. Among the tidbits: He alleges that Clark is “seriously bulimic,” has “a core of self-loathing, low self-esteem” plus a “proclivity for depression (and) suicidal tendencies.” Also, she’s “alcohol dependent” and “obsesses” daily about her face and fat.
Seems somebody else has been reading Nathan Mauger
In a letter to Walt Disney Studios, Robert Eaglestaff, principal of Seattle’s American Indian Heritage School, charges that the movie “Pocahontas” is “like trying to teach about the Holocaust and putting in a nice story about Anne Frank falling in love with a German officer.”
Maybe it was the Disney writers who used Cliffs Notes
Disney has not contacted Robert Eaglestaff (see above item), but “Pocahontas” producer James Pentecost told the New York Times that “Nobody should go to an animated film hoping to get the accurate depiction of history. That’s even worse than using Cliffs Notes to rely on giving you an in-depth understanding of a story.”
, DataTimes ILLUSTRATION: 2 Color photos
The following fields overflowed: CREDIT = Compiled by staff writer Dan Webster