• MSN
  • Hotmail
  • More
    • Autos
    • My MSN
    • Video
    • Careers & Jobs
    • Personals
    • Weather
    • Delish
    • Quotes
    • White Pages
    • Games
    • Real Estate
    • Wonderwall
    • Horoscopes
    • Shopping
    • Yellow Pages
    • Local Edition
    • Traffic
    • Feedback
    • Maps & Directions
    • Travel
    • Full MSN Index
  • Bing
  • NBCNews.com
  • TODAY
  • Nightly News
  • Rock Center
  • Meet the Press
  • Dateline
  • msnbc
  • Breaking News
  • Newsvine
  • Home
  • US
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Travel
  • Local
  • Weather
Advertise | AdChoices
  • Recommended: Audiences: Movie trailers give too much away, but don't deter attendance
  • Recommended: Seven ways celebrities have come out as gay, from weddings to magazine covers
  • Recommended: 5 fantastic moments from the White House Correspondents' Dinner
  • Recommended: Conan O'Brien gets 'goofy' at White House ahead of Correspondents' Dinner

From breaking news to news you can't use, but enjoy anyway, we offer the hot stories of the day in TV, movies, music and celebrities.

  • ↓ About this blog
  • ↓ Archives
    • Icons Email E-mail updates
    • Icons Twitter Follow on Twitter
    • Icons Feed Subscribe to RSS
  • 19
    Sep
    2012
    10:37am, EDT

    New life, new look? Katie Holmes almost unrecognizable on Russian magazine cover

    By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, TODAY

    Follow @ TODAY_ent

    Those of us outside of Russia may never buy a Russian copy of Harper's Bazaar, but thanks to the magic of the Internet, we can still see how Katie Holmes looks on the cover of the October 2012 issue. And she looks ... sleekly glamorous and almost unrecognizable.

    Gilles Bensimon / Harper's Bazaar

    Katie Holmes on the cover of Harper's Bazaar in Russia.

    "America's Top Model" fans should take note -- Holmes was photographed for the Russian edition by fashion photographer Gilles Bensimon, who's been a guest photographer on that show.

    And he did a stunning, if somewhat shocking, job. Holmes, 33, is always pretty, but this cover takes Tom Cruise's ex-wife to a different level. No Joey from "Dawson's Creek" here. With smokey eyeshadow, nude lipcolor, and long wavy hair, she looks like a different woman.

    New life, new look?

    Do you prefer this glamour girl Holmes, or her old self? Tell us what you think on Facebook.

    Related content:

    • Matthew Fox hungry after 40-pound weight loss
    • 'Security video' reveals Jennifer Aniston with a baby bump
    • Stone, Garfield use paparazzi to their advantage

     

    Show more
    Explore related topics: katie-holmes, celebrities, featured
  • 17
    Sep
    2012
    7:25am, EDT

    Church of Scientology responds to 'hatchet-job' Vanity Fair article on Tom Cruise

    Frazer Harrison / Getty Images

    Tom Cruise.

    By The Hollywood Reporter

    The Church of Scientology has fired off an eight-page letter to Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter over its cover story about the organization, accusing the magazine of "shoddy journalism, religious bigotry and potential legal liability."

    Tom Cruise exposé in Vanity Fair: 7 shocking new revelations

    The magazine's October 2012 issue, with Scientologist Tom Cruise's ex-wife Katie Holmes on the cover, features an expose of the organization, written by Maureen Orth, that includes an allegation that the church held secret auditions to find a wife for Cruise following his divorce from Nicole Kidman.

    PHOTOS: Scientology's historic Hollywood holdings

    Among the shocking details: the women weren't told the real reason they were videotaping auditions; the chosen woman, a beautiful, Iranian-born honors graduate named Nazanin Boniadi, was cut off from her family and prompted to break off her engagement as part of her grooming period; she drew the ire of Cruise and Scientology leader David Miscavige over minor things perceived to be major acts of insubordination; Cruise would not break up with her directly and would not acknowledge her as she was forced to vacate his home; and Boniadi was banished to Scientology headquarters in Clearwater, Fla., where she was humiliated by being forced to clean toilets with toothbrushes and dig ditches in the dead of night, all the while forbidden to tell anyone what had just happened to her.

    Other allegations include: Kidman was determined by the church to be a Suppressive Person and therefore an enemy to all Scientologists; Cruise's ex-girlfriend Penelope Cruz was dismissed by Miscavige as being a "dilettante" because she refused to give up her Buddhist beliefs; Cruise "was reportedly unable to entice a number of beautiful, well-known actresses" to become his future wife, including Sofia Vergara and Scarlett Johansson; and Cruise underwent a rigorous course of auditing -- long interrogation sessions during which the subject is required to reveal painful and deeply personal information about themselves -- and Miscavige would then reveal the secrets on those tapes to entertain whomever he was with.

    On its website, the church posted a letter denying the allegations that was penned by Jeffrey K. Riffer of the law firm Elkins Kalt Weintraub Reuben Gartside LLP and was addressed to Vanity Fair's Carter.

    "We are writing regarding your, your editor’s and reporter’s shoddy journalism, religious bigotry and potential legal liability arising out of Vanity Fair’s upcoming story about the Tom Cruise divorce," reads the letter, which has been turning up on the blogs of Scientology watchers for several days. "Significantly, while Maureen Orth was preparing her story, Vanity Fair ignored its staff and contributors who have firsthand knowledge of Mr. Cruise and of Mr. Miscavige and who would burden her story with the truth."

    Riffer also accuses Orth of failing to make a legitimate attempt at a request for an interview with Miscavige, calling it a "disingenuous sham."

    "... (S)he couldn’t possibly have thought that an 'Oh, by the way' phone call to the Church’s Public Affairs office requesting an interview with the ecclesiastical leader of the religion could possibly be accommodated," the letter reads. "If she were serious, she would have done at least a molecule of research in seeing that Mr. Miscavige travels across the country and around the world almost non-stop, unlike the anti-Scientologist apostate sources who form the basis of her already-written story and who are available on a moment’s notice at the press of 'send' on any anti-Scientology hate-site blog. Is it usual for you to take over the editorial direction of Vanity Fair articles or is that reserved for hatchet-jobs of minority religions and its members?"

    The letter goes on to address a list of 32 questions submitted to the church by Vanity Fair, including one seeking comment on the notion that Miscavige has been a "kind of 'third wheel' in Cruise's relationships and marriages."It cites Miscavige's extensive travels as proof that he is "not a 'third wheel' to anything or anyone."


    Follow @ TODAY_ent

    STORY: Is Harvey using Scientology to market 'Master'?

    The letter also attempts to discredit Orth's sources.

    "Ms. Orth appears to have only gleaned her information from fringe hate sites and their webmasters," it reads. "If she were writing a story about a Sikh religious leader, would she first latch onto the sites of white supremacists, then interview their most virulent and violent members and follow it up with mere 'fact check' questions to the Sikhs themselves? At the eleventh hour? And refuse to give the names of her white supremacist sources?

    "The scenario is no different here. Scientology is a new religion and its beliefs not as well known as those of more ancient history. That does not excuse you or Ms. Orth for being ignorant. Rather, it demands you be even more sensitive to finding out what the true beliefs are of Scientology -- which can only be told by the religion itself. Just because you don't think you are bigoted doesn't mean you aren't. Bigotry and ignorance go hand in hand and you are definitely and wilfully ignorant of the actual beliefs of Scientology and the activities of its Churches."

    The letter, which was written before the Vanity Fair issue hit newsstands, also threatens legal action.

    "The disgraceful allegations Vanity Fair apparently plan to publish about Mr. Miscavige are defamatory," it reads. "If Vanity Fair goes forward with publication of such defamatory allegations, now that it is on notice that the story is false, the stain on its reputation will lastlong after any reader even remembers the article. The sting of the jury verdict will last longer still; far longer than any pleasure from racing to publish a poorly researched and sourced story."

    STORY: Scientology held secret auditions to find Tom Cruise a wife (report)

    Cruise's longtime lawyer, Bert Fields, also has denied that Cruise and the church held auditions for a mate.

    In a statement provided to The Hollywood Reporter earlier this month, Fields wrote, "Vanity Fair’s story is essentially a rehash of tired old lies previously run in the supermarket tabloids, quoting the same bogus 'sources.' It’s long, boring and false.”

    Cruise's most recent marriage ended after Holmes filed for divorce June 28 and the couple reached a settlement two weeks later.

    Fields has threatened legal action recently against the National Enquirer and other media outlets in the wake of the high-profile breakup.

    Related content:

    • Fellow Scientologist Kirstie Alley defends Tom Cruise
    • Vanity Fair writer defends Cruise article
    • Report: Scientologists sought spouse for Tom Cruise
    • It's official: Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes are divorced

     

    Show more
    Explore related topics: katie-holmes, tom-cruise, vanity-fair, scientology, featured
  • 3
    Sep
    2012
    9:23am, EDT

    Report claims Church of Scientology auditioned potential brides for Tom Cruise

    By Randee Dawn, TODAY contributor

    Hollywood is full of auditions, but back in 2004 a very unusual casting call was allegedly put out for young women: The Church of Scientology wanted to find a potential spouse for Tom Cruise.

    That's according to the new issue of Vanity Fair magazine, which features a cover story ("What Katie Didn't Know: Marriage, Scientology-Style") about the reported audition process. According to the article, a secret project was initiated within Scientology to get Cruise, perhaps Scientology's highest-profile member, a girlfriend and potential wife. Scientology members were brought in to audition for a training film, then asked what they knew about the "Top Gun" actor. 

    Finding the right Scientologist for Cruise was crucial, according to former head of Scientology's in-house studio Marc Headley, who said he watched several audition tapes. "You can't do anything to displease Scientology, because Tom Cruise will freak out," he told Vanity Fair. (For the record, Scientology reps deny there was a search, and Cruise declined an interview with the magazine.)

    "The allegations about the Church supposedly 'auditioning' prospective brides for Tom Cruise is a false piece of gossip that has been floating around the tabloids for several years sourced to a group of anti-Scientologists," a Scientology rep told NBCNews in a statement.

    According to Vanity Fair, Scientologists thought they found the right woman for Cruise in Nazanin Boniadi, an Iranian-born actress and then-Scientologist who has appeared on shows like "How I Met Your Mother." The two dated for several months, during which the article says she reported back to an official about every detail of their lives together, and signed multiple confidentiality agreements. But the two didn't mesh, and eventually she was asked to move out, told by a Scientology official, "Naz, you can lead a horse to water, but you can't make him drink."

    Reportedly, Boniadi confided in a Scientology friend about the relationship, and when officials found out she was punished with manual, menial labor such as digging ditches and cleaning toilets with a toothbrush. A Scientology spokesperson told Vanity Fair, "The Church does not punish people, especially in (that) manner."


    Follow @ TODAY_ent

    Boniadi has since left Scientology. Cruise wed actress Katie Holmes in 2006; the couple's divorce was finalized in August. 

    Related content:

    • It's official: Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes are divorced
    • Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes divorcing
    • Now that the marriage is over, can the old Katie Holmes come back?
    • All 3 of Cruise's marriages ended when wife was 33

     

    Show more
    Explore related topics: katie-holmes, movies, tom-cruise, vanity-fair, featured
  • 17
    Jul
    2012
    10:55am, EDT

    Katie Holmes and Suri Cruise OK after garbage truck hits their car

    James Devaney / WireImage

    Katie Holmes and Suri Cruise

    By Access Hollywood

    Katie Holmes and daughter Suri Cruise had a bumpy ride on Monday night after their car was hit by a garbage truck. 

    According to People, the star mother and daughter were leaving the Chelsea Piers recreational center, when a garbage truck struck their Mercedes.

    VIEW THE PHOTOS: Stars who split in 2012

    “Suri was crying in the car,” a source told the mag. Katie, 33, was not driving during the incident.


    Follow @ TODAY_ent

    The New York Police Department also confirmed the incident with the mag. A police report was reportedly filed once Katie and her daughter were home.

    VIEW THE PHOTOS: The adorable Suri Cruise!

    This marks the second time their car has been hit in recent days. Last Friday, during a trip to FAO Schwartz, a car driven by the paparazzi hit their car.

    VIEW THE PHOTOS: Tom Cruise & Katie Holmes: A look back

     Related content:

    • Confident Katie Holmes not a 'little girl' anymore
    • Cruise and Holmes reach divorce agreement
    Show more
    Explore related topics: katie-holmes, featured, suri-cruise
  • 10
    Jul
    2012
    12:57pm, EDT

    Confident Katie Holmes not a 'little girl' anymore

    Elle

    By Us Weekly

    Get ready for Katie Holmes 2.0. In mid-May, the "Kennedys" actress, 33, sat down with ELLE magazine for a revealing cover story interview for its August issue, which hits stands July 17. And, in new excerpts from the prescient sit-down -- exclusive to Us Weekly -- Holmes drops even more illuminating hints about her impending split from Tom Cruise and her planned reinvention.

    PHOTOS: Katie's transformation during her Cruise marriage

    (About a month and a half after Holmes chatted with ELLE, she filed for divorce from Cruise, 50, after nearly six years of marriage; the former couple settled their divorce on Monday, with Holmes getting primary custody of their daughter Suri, 6.)

    The former "Dawson's Creek" star admits to ELLE that, as a younger woman, she struggled with her sexual confidence: "I always felt like a little girl before ... I didn't even know what sexy was."

    PHOTOS: Tom and Katie's final days together

    The secret to feeling sexy? "Anytime you feel good about yourself, you embody sexiness," the soon-to-be-single Holmes advises. "It's almost like a power or a confidence or a secret."

    Just as tantalizingly, Holmes alludes to her ability to cope and address problems -- no matter how intimidating -- with adversaries.

    "If something's not OK, then I make it known," says the star. "I will deal with things ... the way my mom taught us girls how to be. She stressed listen, learn, always be strong and be true to yourself."

    VIDEO: Her first week of freedom

    In previously released quotes from the interview, Holmes snapped when asked about the stigma of being "Mrs. Tom Cruise."

    "He has been Tom Cruise for 30 years," she said of the "Rock of Ages" star. "I know who I am and where I am and where I want to go, so I want to focus on that."

    Indeed, a source told Us on Monday shortly after news of Cruise and Holmes' settlement: "She is ... very happy. She can move on and finally live her life."

    Related content:

    • Katie Holmes, Tom Cruise reach divorce deal
    • Katie Holmes slideshow
    • Tom Cruise slideshow
    Show more
    Explore related topics: katie-holmes, tom-cruise, featured
  • 9
    Jul
    2012
    1:10pm, EDT

    Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes reach divorce agreement

    By Courtney Hazlett, TODAY

    Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes are officially no longer husband and wife. Less than two weeks after Holmes filed for divorce, the couple have settled on a divorce agreement, according to a statement issued by Jonathan W. Wolfe, an attorney for Holmes.

    "The case has been settled and the agreement has been signed. We are thrilled for Katie and her family and are excited to watch as she embarks on the next chapter of her life. This result could not have been achieved without the hard work of my partner Gary Skoloff and our co-counsel Allan Mayefsky, Michael Mosberg and Larry Trachtenberg of Aronson Mayefsky and Sloan and Peter Walzer and Chris Melcher of Walzer & Melcher in California. We thank Tom’s counsel for their professionalism and diligence that helped bring about this speedy resolution."

    Holmes filed for divorce June 29, and the couple would have had to appear in court to July 17, had they not come to an agreement before then. 

    Cruise and Holmes, who were married five years, did not disclose any details about who would have custody of their daughter Suri, or what financial arrangements were reached. Just prior to announcing that a settlement was reached, reps for Holmes and Cruise issued a joint statement to E! saying they were moving forward with Suri's best interests in mind.


    Follow @ TODAY_ent

    "We are committed to working together as parents to accomplish what is in our daughter Suri's best interests," the couple told E! News. "We want to keep matters affecting our family private and express our respect for each other's commitment to each of our respective beliefs and support each other's roles as parents."

    Related content:

    • All three of Cruise's marriages ended when wife was 33
    • Is it a happy birthday when you're Suri Cruise?
    • Happy 50th, soon-to-be-single Tom Cruise
    • Katie Holmes slideshow
    • Tom Cruise slideshow
    Show more
    Explore related topics: katie-holmes, tom-cruise, featured
  • 5
    Jul
    2012
    9:24am, EDT

    Katie Holmes before breakup: I'm starting a 'new phase'

    Pascal Le Segretain / Getty Images

    In a pre-split interview with ELLE magazine, Katie Holmes talked about coming into her own.

    By Us Weekly

    As for Katie Holmes' plans to go single this summer, the writing was on the wall -- or at least in the August issue of ELLE magazine.

    In a cover story interview conducted six weeks before the 33-year-old actress filed for divorce from Tom Cruise, Holmes dropped not-totally-subtle hints about a transitional period in her life.

    "I definitely feel much more comfortable in my own skin," the "Kennedys" star said of entering her 30s. "I feel sexier. I think in my 20s, it's like you're trying too hard to figure everything out."

    PHOTOS: How Katie transformed during her marriage to Tom Cruise

    Holmes was 27 -- and mother to newborn daughter Suri, now 6 -- when she wed Cruise, now 50, in November 2006.

    The actress and fashion designer added tellingly: "I'm starting to come into my own. It's like a new phase."

    Holmes (who next stars in a modern version of Anton Chekhov's play "The Seagull," and has shot the film "Molly," which she co-wrote) seemed to bristle when asked about the reality of being "Mrs. Tom Cruise."


    Follow @ TODAY_ent

    PHOTOS: Katie and Tom, the way they were

    "He has been Tom Cruise for 30 years," she said of the "Rock of Ages" star. "I know who I am and where I am and where I want to go, so I want to focus on that."

    She also shot down assumptions that marrying the superstar helped her acting career. "Things are not handed to anyone," she said, as excerpted in Page Six.

    "If anything, you work a little bit harder when you're in such visible circumstances."

    Page Six also reported that Holmes "didn't speak about Tom in a lovey-dovey way at all" during the interview. "She deflected the Tom questions and brought them around to herself."

    After filing for divorce last Thursday, Holmes has been seen out and about in NYC with Suri near the downtown, $12,500-a-month new apartment she secretly rented in her own name.

    PHOTOS: Tom Cruise's ageless face

    On July 4th -- the same day Holmes told the Daily News she was "alright" amidst the drama -- Holmes slammed a new report that she filed an "emergent action" to make her divorce and custody trial with Cruise public.

    "The reports are incorrect," Holmes' attorney Jonathan Wolfe told Us. "There is no such filing at this time. Other than her action for divorce, the only pending application filed by Ms. Holmes remains her request for an anonymous caption."

    Related content:

    • Cruise's son tweets support after divorce news: 'Family is forever'
    • Murdoch tweets about Cruise, Holmes; calls Scientology 'creepy'
    • Now that the marriage is over, can the old Katie Holmes come back?
    • All three of Tom Cruise's marriages ended when wife was 33
    Show more
    Explore related topics: katie-holmes, tom-cruise, featured
  • 2
    Jul
    2012
    8:34am, EDT

    Rupert Murdoch tweets about Tom Cruise, Katie Holmes; calls Scientology 'weird,' 'creepy'

    By Jane Kellogg, The Hollywood Reporter

    When Hollywood power couples break up, it seems everyone has an opinion. But when Katie Holmes announced she is divorcing from couch-jumping, "I-love-this-woman!" Scientology member Tom Cruise, none other than Rupert Murdoch, News Corp.'s chief executive, opted to give his two cents. 

    "Scientology back in news. Very weird cult, but big, big money involved with Tom Cruise either number two or three in hierarchy," the octogenarian tweeted Sunday morning.

    Princess Diana biographer Andrew Morton wrote an unauthorized biography of Cruise in 2008, alleging the "Mission:Impossible" actor had become the de facto second in command of the Church of Scientology. The controversial book attacked the star by comparing his daughter with Holmes, Suri, to the Devil's child in the cult film "Rosemary's Baby."

    He continued: "Watch Katie Holmes and Scientology story develop. Something creepy, maybe even evil, about these people."


    Follow @ TODAY_ent

    When one of Murdoch's followers asked the mogul's thoughts on Mormons, he responded, "Mormonism a mystery to me, but Mormons certainly not evil."

    Countless people, both pro- and against Murdoch and his views, reacted to his comments. But the octogenarian is standing by his words.

    "Since Scientology tweet hundreds of attacks," Murdoch wrote. "Expect they will increase and get worse and maybe threatening. Still stick to my story." 

    Related content:

    • Now that the marriage is over, can the old Katie Holmes come back?
    • Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes are divorcing
    • All three of Tom Cruise's marriages ended when wife was 33
    • Video: Rupert Murdoch: 'A split makes sense'

     

    Show more
    Explore related topics: katie-holmes, rupert-murdoch, tom-cruise, scientology, featured
  • 29
    Jun
    2012
    5:09pm, EDT

    Now that the marriage is over, can the old Katie Holmes come back?

    Matt Sayles / AP file

    Katie Holmes and Tom Cruise at the premiere of "The Kennedys" on March 28, 2011, at The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences in Beverly Hills.

    By Courtney Hazlett, TODAY

    ANALYSIS: There are few courtships I’ve witnessed as closely as Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes’. For me, it began in a conference room where it was confirmed that the two were yes, really, actually dating. The eyes of my fellow magazine editors and reporters grew wide and most comments began with “What the ...?” (You can guess what they ended with.)

    Hundreds of paparazzi photos and just a couple months later, I vividly recall standing on the “War of the Worlds” red carpet, being a little overwhelmed/grossed out by the way the two of them moved down the press line as a single, overly affectionate unit.

    Thousands more paparazzi photos and a little more than a year after that, the couple married in Italy. I, along with every other entertainment reporter around the globe, scrambled to get details about just what went on inside the castle that night they promised to love, honor, cherish and “to never close their eyes in sleep on a disagreement or upset.”

    But what went on in the castle is not nearly is a big a question as what went on in that marriage. From spontaneous couch jumping to showing off baby Suri in pre-arranged photo shoots, the couple was obviously very public. But privately, they were an enigma. Now that the marriage of five years is over, everyone who bore witness to the relationship with any level of curiosity is asking the question of what the union was like.

    Slideshow: Katie Holmes

    Steve Finn / Getty Images

    Launch slideshow

    While I don’t pretend to know what goes on inside anyone’s marriage, I can tell you what disappeared during this particular one: Katie Holmes.

    Prior to taking up with Cruise, the post-“Dawson’s Creek” Katie was among New York’s fun-loving, 20-something social set. Our social circles overlapped from time to time, and she was known for being a fairly private but “normal” young woman. She would go out to clubs with groups of friends — not in the Lindsay Lohan tradition. She was mellow, danced a little and was happy, then would go home without undue drama. She shopped, went out to eat, and if not for her fame, would be just like any other young New Yorker.

    Then she met Tom.

    Holmes' evolution into Kate, as Tom renamed her, happened practically overnight. She disappeared from New York so entirely and swiftly, she didn’t even pack up her apartment, which she had just finished redecorating.  “She called some friends and told them they were welcome to anything in there,” a mutual friend informed me at the time. “She loved all that stuff so much, this is all really strange,” he said.

    Also strange — and you can’t talk Katie and Tom’s relationship without talking about this — was her overnight devotion to Scientology. All preconceived notions about Scientology aside, it was shocking to see the good Catholic-school girl with a Scientology “minder,” of all things. This constant companion was often introduced as her new best friend, and was soon identified to be Jessica Feshbach, a high-ranking Scientologist. A source very close to the couple vouched for the transformation, saying it was actually Holmes who was ensuring Scientology had a presence on her husband's film sets. "She became more devoted to it than he was for a time," the source said.

    Slideshow:

    Frazer Harrison / Getty Images

    Launch slideshow

    To be fair, Holmes is not the first person to fall so head over heels in love that they completely detach from their social circle and seemingly start that part of their life anew. You'd think that she had to be aware of it happening in real time — you don’t just give away your possessions and adopt the practices of Scientology without being aware that you’re doing so. What I don’t think she was aware of was that she was giving away her career, too.

    As the doe-eyed Joey Potter on “Dawson’s Creek,” Holmes wasn’t exactly dropping hints that there might be an Oscar in her future, but she proved in 2000’s “Wonder Boys” that she had real acting chops. Thanks to that role, it looked like she might be able to pull off what few actors can: the post-television film career.

    Between the time “Wonder Boys” was released and she married in 2006, Holmes is credited with eight more movies, the last one being “Thank You For Smoking.” Released the spring before her wedding, it was rumored that Cruise had pressured the studio to cut a scene where Holmes was to appear topless. The film’s director, Jason Reitman, later shot down the rumor, saying, “That’s a fun story; the problem is that it’s not true,” but it marks the first of many instances that Cruise was accused of steering Holmes’ career in a way he deemed fit.


    Follow @msnbc_ent

    Fast forward to today, and in the time the two have been married, the only notable work Holmes has had was her recent miniseries, “The Kennedys,” and a handful of flops. Motherhood might have put her career on hold initially, but recently, Holmes has been gunning for work and not getting it. One producer recalled for me a recent pitch meeting where her name was brought up for a role, and everyone in the room snickered.

    “That's what happens now, and it’s because of Tom,” he said. “No one takes her seriously.”  

    Luckily for Holmes, everyone loves a comeback story. She’s taken control of her marriage by filing for divorce, and now she has the opportunity to take control back of her own story -- personally and professionally.

    Here’s to the rewrite. So many people will be glad to have Katie back.

    Related content:

    • Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes are divorcing
    • All three of Tom Cruise's marriages ended when wife was 33

    More in TODAY entertainment:

    • Singer Adele expecting first child
    • Alex Baldwin has an other confrontation with photographer
    • Blake Lively: 'I eat cupcakes and don't work out'
    Show more
    Explore related topics: katie-holmes, tom-cruise, featured
  • 29
    Jun
    2012
    1:20pm, EDT

    Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes divorcing

    By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, NBC News

    Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes are getting a divorce after five years of marriage, Cruise's representative has confirmed to TODAY.com.

    "Kate has filed for divorce and Tom is deeply saddened and is concentrating on his three children," said a statement from Cruise's rep on Friday. "Please allow them their privacy."

    "This is a personal and private matter for Katie and her family," Holmes's attorney Jonathan Wolfe told People magazine. "Katie's primary concern remains, as it always has been, her daughter's best interest."

    Daughter Suri is 6. Cruise, 49, and Holmes, 33, wed in the 15th-century Odescalchi Castle outside of Rome in 2006. He had proposed at the Eiffel Tower.

    Cruise drew media headlines in May 2005 when he declared his love for Holmes and famously jumped on a couch on the set of "The Oprah Winfrey Show."

    Early in their courtship, Holmes revealed that Cruise was her first celebrity crush, and she started pining away for him in 1983 when she was four years old and saw him in “Risky Business."


    Follow @ TODAY_ent

    Cruise was married twice before, to actresses Nicole Kidman and Mimi Rogers. It was Holmes' first marriage.

    Cruise will turn 50 on July 3.

    Did you see this coming? Tell us on Facebook.

     

    Related content:

    • Now that the marriage is over, can the old Katie Holmes come back?
    • All 3 of Cruise's marriages ended when wife was 33
    • Tom Cruise bares soul in Playboy interview
    • Is it a happy birthday when you're Suri Cruise?

    Slideshows:

    • Tom Cruise
    • Katie Holmes
    • The style of Suri
    Show more
    Explore related topics: katie-holmes, tom-cruise, featured
  • 11
    Jun
    2012
    3:40pm, EDT

    Awful celebrity weddings, in 5 simple steps

    Dan Steinberg / AP file

    Matthew McConaughey and Camila Alves kept their wedding low-key.

    By Courtney Hazlett, TODAY

    When Matthew McConaughey and Camila Alves married on Saturday, almost immediately I found myself thinking, "I love this wedding!" This is an odd thing for me to say, not only because I'm not one of those "wedding people," but because I'm not even a fan of McConaughey's. As an actor, he's never done a thing for me, I don't find him to be particularly attractive or even interesting.

    But I could not get enough of the couple's Texas-size, yet subtle, declaration of love. He pitched tents for his guests! The nuptials were kept secret! The couple looked handsome/beautiful! Each detail was better than the last; I can't wait to see the photos, and pretend for a moment that I might have been a guest.

    As much fun as it is to gawk at the nuptials of the famous and fame-hungry, the fact is so, so many of them are awful. Which is why McConaughey's -- which was relatively low-key, seemed personal and un-fussy -- is such a standout. If you're a celebrity and want the public to actually like your wedding, take some notes about what he and Alves did right. There are a few things to avoid. Here they are in five simple steps.

    Don't be a teenager
    There is a clear message for Miley Cyrus here -- wait until you're out of your teens to wed. From Drew Barrymore to Courtney Stodden, there are plenty of examples of how teen love does not a marriage make. No one is hating on young love here, but COME ON, KIDS. It's difficult enough to navigate a Hollywood marriage when you're a bona fide adult. Let's be realistic, what's the rush?

    Don't rent a castle
    If you're trying to prove that your wedding budget exponentially exceeds that of a non-famous person's, then go ahead, rent that castle in Italy! Yes, we're talking about Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes, who wed Nov. 18, 2006 at Odescalchi Castle in Lake Bracciano, Italy. TomKat's love was already a divisive issue going in to the wedding, and the ultra-extravagant wedding locale did not help endear them to the public. If you insist on a castle, then there are some options for bringing it down closer to Earth. Try a castle-turned-hotel, like Ashford Castle Hotel in Ireland, where Pierce Brosnan and Keely Shay married. Or, there's Baltimore's finest castle at The Cloisters, where Will Smith and Jada Pinkett married nearly 15 years ago.


    Follow @ msnbc_ent

    Don't do it twice
    Where weddings are concerned, once is generally enough, especially to the same person. The vow-renewal craze among celebrities has gotten a little out of hand, with serial offenders Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon performing the ritual every year (just this April, the couple said "I do" yet again in Paris). Heidi Klum and Seal also had a penchant for over-the-top vow renewals, and well, that didn't work out so well. Less than a year after donning Mardi Gras-styled costumes for their annual renewal in 2011, the couple filed for divorce.

    Don't wear swimwear
    A white bikini will cost you far less than a traditional dress, but that doesn't make it appropriate wedding attire. Even if you're marrying on the beach, we want to see you wearing a little more than two swatches of fabric. And leave the "jaunty sailor's cap" at home. Pam Anderson, this post was for you.

    Don't immediately file for divorce
    That celebrity wedding elephants in the room -- Kim Kardashian and Kris Humphries -- certainly loom large here. Their divorce announcement after just 72 days didn't come as much of a shock, but it still soured an already cynical public on celebrity betrothals. To be fair, Sinead O'Connor deserves a slap on the wrist, too. Marrying, splitting 18 days later, reconciling after "a beautiful evening of lovemaking," only to split again (for real)? To say this union was doomed would be an understatement.

    The bottom line seems to be this: When celebrities exhibit some modicum of down-to-earthness it can be fun to share in their happy day. Reese Witherspoon got this right in her recent wedding to Jim Toth, as did Drew Barrymore. Lovely, but low-key, is the winning combination. For a culture that loves to observe the lifestyles of the famous, our breaking point appears to be when marriage becomes something of a mockery.

    What do you like or loathe about celebrity weddings? Take it on over to our Facebook page and discuss.

    Related content:

    • Matthew McConaughey weds Camila Alves
    • Jada Pinkett Smith has a whale of a time playing a hippo in 'Madagascar 3'
    • There goes the bride--shortest celeb marriages

     

    Show more
    Explore related topics: katie-holmes, tom-cruise, matthew-mcconaughey, featured, weddings, miley-cyrus, camila-alves
  • 18
    Apr
    2012
    4:53pm, EDT

    Is it a happy birthday if you're Suri Cruise?

    By Kurt Schlosser, NBC News

    Suri Cruise turned 6 years old on Wednesday and had her picture taken for the umpteen-millionth time. And looking at this photo made me feel sad for a little girl who's lived her short life predominantly as a paparazzi prize.

    Splash News

    Suri Cruise and her mother Katie Holmes are besieged by photographers as they head to a Broadway show in New York for Suri's sixth birthday.

    Whether she's wearing lipstick or little heeled shoes or fancy dresses or another sad expression, Suri draws more attention than her mother or father when she's trotted in front of the cameras. Some would blame Katie Holmes and Tom Cruise for subjecting their child to such attention -- mom and daughter helicoptered into New York on Monday, of course. Others blame the ever-present paparazzi for failing to give the poor girl any space -- "Suri! Over your shoulder! Suri!" Seriously, does the kid look that different than she did at 5? And don't forget to blame me. I'm putting the picture in front of your face and asking you to look at it. And, sure, go ahead and blame yourself for clicking on yet another Suri Cruise story. Vicious cycle much?

    Who knows? Maybe Suri doesn't mind. Maybe she loves the people with cameras and the constant flashbulbs. We always fail when we try to pretend we know what goes through the minds of celebrities. Half the time we think it would be great to be rich and famous and half the time we smarten up and realize how lousy that would make things.


    Follow @ msnbc_ent

    My own kid turned 5 last month and I've taken my fair share of photos of him. He hates it. I can't imagine if there were 30 of me watching his every move, shouting his name on the way from the preschool to the car. My guess is he would bury his head in his mom's shoulder. As a dad it would make me want to change something about the way I was raising him. And if I was the photographer angling for that picture, it would make me want to shoot something else.

    What's your take on Suri and the spotlight? Do you blame her parents or the "press"? Tell us on Facebook.

    Look, mom, more photos!

    • Suri Cruise slideshow
    • Tom Cruise slidehow
    • Katie Holmes slideshow

    Kurt Schlosser is a senior entertainment producer for msnbc.com and TODAY.com. When not editing the daily Celebrity Sightings slideshow he's looking at pictures of his 5-year-old son.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: katie-holmes, featured, suri-cruise

Browse

  • featured,
  • movies,
  • music,
  • reality,
  • tv,
  • celebrities,
  • dancing-with-the-stars,
  • american-idol,
  • late-night,
  • whitney-houston,
  • reviews,
  • election2012,
  • oscars,
  • justin-bieber,
  • best-bets,
  • stephen-colbert,
  • jon-stewart,
  • politics,
  • downton-abbey,
  • biggest-loser,
  • saturday-night-live,
  • teen-mom,
  • babies,
  • lindsay-lohan,
  • walking-dead,
  • colbert-report,
  • box-office,
  • twilight
Also
Advertise | AdChoices

Randee Dawn, TODAY contributor

Randee Dawn is a frequent TODAY and NBC News contributor. She is the co-author of "The 'Law & Order: SVU' Unofficial Companion."

Courtney Hazlett, TODAY

Courtney Hazlett reports on all things pop culture across NBC's various online and broadcast platforms.

  • Gawker
  • The Awl

Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, NBC News

Gael Cooper is the movies editor for TODAY.com and a pop-culture junkie. She is the co-author of "Whatever Happened to Pudding Pops?" and "The Totally Sweet '90s."

Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, NBC News Blogroll

  • Pop Culture Junk Mail
  • Gen Xtinct

Kurt Schlosser, NBC News

Kurt Schlosser is a senior entertainment producer at TODAY.com and msnbc.com.

Archives

  • 2013
    • May (25)
    • April (200)
    • March (246)
    • February (201)
    • January (266)
  • 2012
    • December (254)
    • November (232)
    • October (394)
    • September (367)
    • August (298)
    • July (280)
    • June (252)
    • May (295)
    • April (300)
    • March (263)
    • February (262)
    • January (182)
  • 2011
    • December (133)
    • November (108)

Most Commented

    Other blogs

    • The Body Odd
    • Cosmic Log
    • Red Tape Chronicles
    • PhotoBlog
    • US News
    • Open Channel

    NBCNews.com top stories

    3147,10
    © 2013 NBCNews.com
    • Entertainment on NBCNews.com
    • About us
    • Contact
    • Help
    • Site map
    • Careers
    • Closed captioning
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Privacy policy
    • Advertise