• 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
  • 25
    Dec
    2012
    9:50am, EST

    Sacha Baron Cohen 'failed' first 'Les Miserables' audition at age 20

    By Randee Dawn, TODAY contributor

    Singing is a perfect way to ring in Christmas Day, but who knew it would be coming from TODAY's Matt Lauer and "Les Miserables" star Sacha Baron Cohen?

    Baron Cohen spoke with Lauer on Tuesday, but not before the actor began crooning, "I am contractually obligated to do this whole interview in song." Baron Cohen plays corrupt innkeeper Monsieur Thenardier in the film, and like all of the actors, sings all of his lines in the movie.

    He noted (after returning to his usual spoken voice) that "Les Miserables" is "a staple in London," and when he was 20, he gave a stab at being in the chorus. "I passed the singing bit," he noted, but fell down when it came to the dancing part. Not that he didn't give it a good try: "There's like 200 people standing outside in the rain (at the audition), and then it came to the dancing bit ... and you had to learn a routine and it was clear I had absolutely no idea how to do it," said Baron Cohen. "So when it came time for action ... I decided to freestyle." 

    He did not get the job. "I failed," he added.


    Follow @ TODAY_ent

    Not so in "Les Miserables," where there's a lot of singing (and minimal dancing). By the end of the interview, Baron Cohen was back to singing -- and so was Lauer. Check out the video for the rest!

    "Les Miserables" opened in theaters on Dec. 25.

    Related content:

    • 'Les Miserables' dreams a dream, and dreams big
    • 'Lincoln,' 'Les Mis' among SAG nominees
    • Hathaway on 'Les Mis' premiere wardrobe malfunction
    • Crowe bursts into song in 'Les Mis' trailer

     

    Show more
    Explore related topics: music, movies, les-miserables, featured, sacha-baron-cohen
  • 16
    May
    2012
    10:03am, EDT

    Sacha Baron Cohen talks terrorists and Ryan Seacrest in rare interview

    By Ree Hines, TODAY contributor

    Sacha Baron Cohen is no stranger to the big or the small screens, but it's a rare treat for fans to see the actor out of character. On Wednesday morning, for only the third time in his career, the man behind "Da Ali G Show," "Borat" and "Bruno" left his alter egos behind and spoke for himself.

    Cohen, who was in Cannes promoting his latest film, "The Dictator," explained to TODAY's Ann Curry just why that's such a rare event.

    "Well, the movies that I did up until now, they involved real people and so we wanted to limit the exposure of for lawsuits -- at the moment I think I have the Guinness World Record for most sued actor in history," he said with a smile. "But basically if people saw that I was me, and that Borat was not a real person, beforehand, then they could injunct the movie and shut the movie down."

    But with the purely fictional "Dictator," that's not a problem.

    "This is a different kind of movie," he assured.


    Follow @ TODAY_ent

    But not so different when it comes to getting laughs at the expense of others -- of course in this case, the others aren't people on the street.

    "The subjects of the satire are all of these heartless dictators who are feared in their own countries and rule with, you know, using violence and oppression, but are ludicrous characters," Cohen explained. "And the great thing is, at the moment, they're being overthrown. So anything you can do to mock them and undermine them that kind of false authority, I think it's a positive thing."

    Which explains his over-the-top lead role as Supreme Leader Aladeen of the Republic of Wadiya -- a part he researched, but not quite as thoroughly as other parts in the past.

    "It kind of backfired on 'Bruno,' because I had a terrorist group come after me," Cohen revealed. "And, you know, (they) decided to seek their revenge. But they haven't got me yet. That's why I'm here -- hiding in Cannes."

    Of course, Cohen hides in plain sight often, thanks to those characters he usually takes with him. That's how he's able to pull off pranks, like his now-infamous stunt at the 2012 Oscars in which he dumped an urn of ashes all over Ryan Seacrest -- right on the red carpet. But no worries, he made up for that by buying Seacrest a brand new jacket.

    "And it had a little label inside -- 'Made by slave child labor,'" Cohen joked. "But he didn't send me a thank you note. Unbelievable."

    "The Dictator" opens in theaters nationwide May 16.

    Do you think Cohen should show fans the man behind the characters more often? Share your thoughts on our Facebook page.

    Follow @ReeHines

     

    Related content:

    • 'Dictator' will delight fans of Sacha Baron Cohen
    • Sacha Baron Cohen's 'Dictator' threatens Matt Lauer's family, promotes film
    • Arab-American group slams Baron Cohen's Dictator as 'damaging lunacy'
    Show more
    Explore related topics: movies, featured, sacha-baron-cohen, the-dictator
  • 15
    May
    2012
    1:36pm, EDT

    'Dictator' will delight fans of Sacha Baron Cohen

    Paramount Pictures

    Sacha Baron Cohen as "The Dictator."

    By Todd McCarthy, The Hollywood Reporter

    REVIEW: Sacha Baron Cohen's shotgun blasts of scabrous humor hit more than they miss in "The Dictator," a self-consciously outrageous send-up of a mad-dog Middle Eastern autocrat who has his eyes and heart opened -- but not too much -- during a crazy visit to New York City. Rebounding from the disappointing "Bruno,"Baron Cohen employs a comic range that ricochets between wicked political barbs and the lowest anatomical farce, to often funny and occasionally hilarious effect. This is his most conventionally formatted narrative film, without the pretense to catching people off-guard in real situations, and while it will prove too extreme for a portion of the mainstream public, Baron Cohen's fans should generally welcome it to good box-office returns.


    Follow @ msnbc_ent

    PHOTOS: Sacha Baron Cohen's 5 most memorable stunts: Ali G, Bruno, General Aladeen

    Dedicated “In loving memory of Kim Jong-il,” who occupied a place of comic honor in "Team America: World Police," "The Dictator" can only have been made with two other late despots, Muammar Gaddafi and Saddam Hussein, especially in mind, given the extent of ego and quantity of medals brandished by Admiral General Aladeen (Baron Cohen) of Wadiya. Instantly recognizable due to his substantial black beard, Aladeen has been in power since the age of 7, sends even valued associates to the executioner for the merest perceived slight and has a wall of photographs of his celebrity sexual conquests, the latest of whom is Megan Fox, seen here making a hasty exit after a handsomely rewarded night between the sheets.

    VIDEO: 'The Dictator' drops Kim Jong-II Ashes on Ryan Seacrest

    Like any notorious tyrant, Aladeen needs at least one double to throw enemies off and even to be assassinated from time to time, which is what gets him into trouble in the quick-firing script by Baron Cohen, Alec Berg, David Mandel and Jeff Schaffer. Aladeen's resentful chief henchman Tamir (Ben Kingsley), finds a dimwitted shepherd who's a twin for his boss and, on a trip to New York, plans to pass the imposter off as the real thing for a speech at the United Nations. Tamir also will have the stand-in sign a new, democratic constitution that will make him and various business associates, notably a Chinese capitalist (Bobby Lee), very rich indeed.

    VIDEO: The Dictator: Trailer

    Sidelined and shorn of his facial shrubbery, Aladeen is relegated to the hoi polloi for the first time in his life -- and in the United States, no less. Much of the film's most successful cultural humor stems from the almost unimaginable relationship between Aladeen, who takes up the name of Allison Burgers, and vegan/feminist/all-natural/way-too-politically correct manager of the Free Earth Collective, Zoey (a brown-haired Anna Faris), whom he first encounters at an anti-Aladeen protest rally. Some truly riotous stuff stems from the interloper's startling verbal and sometimes physical abuse of store customers and staff and Zoey herself, who sometimes gets upset at his all-purpose assault on every race, color and creed but more often doesn't seem to know what the hell he's saying.

    STORY: Sacha Baron Cohen’s Dictator congratulates new French President

    Further fresh laughs stem from an unexpected reunion with his former chief rocket scientist and nuclear expert Nadal (Jason Mantzoukas), whom Aladeen thought he had executed but who is now among the refugees who cram the “Death to Aladeen” restaurant. The extremes of the film's political black humor arrive in a diabolically clever scene in a tourist helicopter over Manhattan as an older American couple become increasingly alarmed overhearing these two suspicious-looking characters speaking some Middle Eastern language peppered with English phrases like 9/11 (they're actually discussing a Porsche), Empire State Building and Statue of Liberty and making explosion noises. The far shores of outrageous bodily comedy are reached in two scenes at the Collective, one in which Zoey has to teach her odd sort-of boyfriend how to masturbate and another featuring an emergency childbirth in which Aladeen, after successfully seeing it through, blithely asks: “Where's the trash can? It's a girl.”

    VIDEO: The Dictator opening scene

    The climax, naturally, involves the unavoidable encounter of the two Aladeens, real and phony, at the much-anticipated signing of the new democratic constitution. Larry Charles, who guided both Borat and Bruno for Baron Cohen, directs in an entirely unadorned, straightforward manner that means only to serve the augment the comic exploits of the star, though this time without the mockumentary aspects. The pair also continue to acknowledge when enough is enough; this one comes in at a tight 84 minutes, just two minutes longer than its predecessors.

    Although The Dictator arrives at a happy ending, after a fashion, it's more nuanced and intellectually satisfying than one expects and is preceded by a pointed political speech that will rile up pro- and anti-American establishment sentiment for different reasons. Musically, the film is lively and diverse.

    Mostly shot in New York, the film's main overseas setting is the quasi-Moorish-styled Plaza de Espana in Sevilla, Spain, most famously used for the British officers' club in "Lawrence of Arabia."

    Related content:

    • 'Anchorman 2' teaser will debut with 'Dictator'
    • 'Dictator' threatens Lauer's family, promotes film
    • Johnny Depp, are we over you?

     

    Show more
    Explore related topics: movies, featured, sacha-baron-cohen, the-dictator
  • 7
    May
    2012
    9:30am, EDT

    Sacha Baron Cohen's 'Dictator' threatens Matt Lauer's family, promotes film

    By Randee Dawn, TODAY contributor

    Admiral General Shabazz Aladeen had no qualms about being interviewed by TODAY's Matt Lauer on Monday. He made sure that Lauer's family was being taken care of, just in case things didn't go the way he liked. "By the way, how are your family? ... How is your wife Annette?" he asked at the top of the interview. "What is she doing now?"

    "She's probably watching this interview," said Lauer.

    "Incorrect!" said Aladeen, pulling a swatch of brown locks from his pocket. "Is this her hair?"

    Fortunately, it's all an act -- a very funny one, as General Aladeen is actually Sacha Baron Cohen, promoting his new film "The Dictator." He was escorted to the TODAY studios in grand fashion, emerging from a stretch limo with a handful of guards -- short-skirted, beret-sporting ladies wielding fake machine guns. He then proceeded to kiss folks in the plaza and staged a bloodless coup in the control room. So he was all warmed up by the time Lauer sat him down for a chat.

    More photos: 'The Dictator' arrives, brings the big guns

    Here's what you need to know about his country, Wadiya: "It is 1300 miles from Tel Aviv as the SCUD flies," he said. "It has a population of 4 million, but obviously that figure changes depending on my mood."

    The General is also a love machine, at least according to himself: He's had relations with Megan Fox, Katy Perry and Oprah. "No relationships, just sex activity," he said.

    And as for his infamous Oscar red carpet experience, where he spilled ashes reportedly from late Korean dictator Kim Jong-il on Ryan Seacrest? All a misunderstanding. "It was not Kim Jong-il's ashes," said Aladeen, who then went into a long explanation about how Jong-il was actually consumed by his "fat son" and became "Kim Jong-Yum."


    Follow @ TODAY_ent

    So after the veiled threats about his family and discussion of bombs in the air and ash-spilling, did Lauer and The Dictator part as friends? Undoubtedly -- Aladeen would have it no other way, raising the back of his hand for a kiss, which Lauer bestowed.

    "(My movie) will be released next Wednesday," said Aladeen. "As for your family, let's see."

    "The Dictator" opens May 16.

    More Sacha Baron Cohen video:

    • 'Dictator' star: I was 'banned' from Oscars
    • Bruno's quest to be 'uber-famous'
    • Borat learns about America
    • Borat celebrates film's boffo box office

    Related content:

    • Has the BBC banned 'The Dictator' from its shows?
    • 'Dictator' dumps urn of ashes on Ryan Seacrest at Oscars
    • Baron Cohen's 'Dictator' threatens 'consequences' if Oscar ban continues
    Show more
    Explore related topics: matt-lauer, ryan-seacrest, featured, sacha-baron-cohen, the-dictator
  • 23
    Mar
    2012
    7:39pm, EDT

    BBC: 'Borat' anthem played at Kuwait medal ceremony for Kazakhstan winner

    Vince Bucci / Getty Images

    Borat Sagdiyev, played by actor Sacha Baron Cohen, attends a "book signing" in 2007 in Los Angeles.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Kazakhstan's shooting team demanded an apology after a spoof national anthem from the comedy film "Borat" was played instead of the real one at a medal ceremony in Kuwait, the BBC reported Friday.

    The team's coach told Kazakh media the organizers of the Kuwait tournament had downloaded the parody from the Internet by mistake and had also got the Serbian national anthem wrong.

    Video of Thursday's original ceremony posted on YouTube shows gold medalist Maria Dmitrienko listening solemnly to the anthem before smiling.


    The BBC reported that the team demanded an apology and the ceremony was later rerun.

    The spoof anthem, from the movie featuring British comedian Sacha Baron Cohen, "Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan," praises Kazakhstan for its superior potassium exports and for having the cleanest prostitutes in the region.

    "Borat" portrays Kazakhs as ignorant and backward and was banned in Kazakhstan.

    This article includes reporting by msnbc.com staff and Reuters.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Staff Sgt. Robert Bales charged with 17 counts of murder in Afghanistan massacre
    • China struggles to contain wave of defiance in Tibet
    • Police: Suspect in French killing spree was hit by 20 bullets
    • Landmark case: Nigerian villagers sue Shell over oil spills

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    28 comments

    Ha Ha. Kinda funny.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: kazakhstan, shooting, cohen, borat, sacha-baron-cohen, kuwait-medal-ceremony
  • 26
    Feb
    2012
    7:30pm, EST

    Sacha Baron Cohen dumps fellow dictator Kim Jong-Il's 'ashes' over Ryan Seacrest

    By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, NBC News

    Sacha Baron Cohen not only was allowed to stride the red carpet in costume as Admiral General Aladeen, "The Dictator" from his upcoming movie, but he brought a fellow dictator along with him. Kind of. Clad in full dictator regalia, he was accompanied by two beautiful women in short-skirted "army" uniforms and red berets. And in his arms, he carried a cremation urn with an image of late North Korean leader Kim Jong-il.

    Watch on YouTube

    But those ashes didn't stay in the urn long. When Baron Cohen stepped over to talk to E! red-carpet host Ryan Seacrest, he dumped the "ashes" all over Seacrest's tux.

    Before it happened, Seacrest asked Baron Cohen's "Dictator" character who he was wearing, and Baron Cohen replied, "I'm wearing John Galliano, but the socks are K-Mart." He then said he was thrilled to bring his "dear friend and tennis doubles partner Kim Jong-il to the Oscars."

    He then tipped the urn as if to show Seacrest something and the urn spilled all over the host. As security led Baron Cohen away, he told Seacrest: "Now if somebody asks who you are wearing, you will say Kim Jong-il."

    Seacrest did not appear pleased with the act as he brushed off his black tuxedo (see for yourself), although he allowed that he thought the "ashes" were really pancake mix, and told co-host Giuliana Rancic that "I had an idea something was coming, I didn't know in what fashion or form."

    Others were more entertained by the joke though.


    Follow @ TODAY_ent

    Tina Fey told the host, "You're a victim of comedy."

    "I understand this is a dead body," said Antonio Banderas.

    Seacrest seemed to take it in his stride later, however, tweeting "My mom always told me to pack two jackets for red carpets, always wondered why. Now I know."

    Did you think the ash-dumping was funny or rude? Vote in our poll, and tell us on Facebook.

     

    Related content:

    • 10 things you should know about Oscar night
    • Will 'The Artist' dance off with best picture?
    • 'The Artist' rules Independent Spirit Awards
    • 'Dictator' allowed on red carpet in costume
    Show more
    Explore related topics: oscars, ryan-seacrest, featured, sacha-baron-cohen
  • 30
    Dec
    2011
    1:40pm, EST

    Look back: When Ron Paul met Bruno

    AP, Getty Images

    GOP presidential candidate Ron paul, left, and comedian Sacha Baron Cohen as Bruno.

    By Kurt Schlosser, NBC News

    As Republican presidential hopeful Ron Paul rises to the top of the pack just a few days before the all-important Iowa caucuses, we thought this was as good a time as any to revisit his cinematic roots.

    The Texas congressman famously appeared in the 2009 Sacha Baron Cohen comedy "Bruno," about a flamboyant Austrian fashion reporter. The character comes from the Cohen stable that also brought us Borat and Ali G, and will, in 2012, offer "The Dictator."

    Paul is featured in a scene in "Bruno" in which Cohen's character interviews the congressman after his run for the presidency in 2008. After one question about what designer clothing Paul is wearing, things take a turn. The two men have to leave the interview space during a technical malfunction and they are alone in a nearby bedroom. Depending on your sense of humor -- or your politics, perhaps -- hilarity ensues:

    Is this 2009 clip on YouTube, Paul laughs about the matter and how he was expecting an interview on Austrian economics, but "that didn't turn out that way ... by the time he started pulling his pants down I thought, 'what in thunder is going on here?!'" The congressman laments the fraud involved in getting the interview and says the fact that audiences buy into Cohen's "raunchy material" is a sad reflection of our culture.

    Related content:

    • Kelly Clarkson tempers Ron Paul endorsement
    Show more
    Explore related topics: sacha-baron-cohen, ron-paul

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."

Ree Hines, TODAY contributor

Ree Hines is a frequent TODAY.com and NBCNews.com contributor.

  • Follow on Twitter

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 (22)
    • 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