Brit Marling is being billed as "the first female multi-hyphenate to have two films premiere side by side" at Sundance. Awkward a noun as "multi-hyphenate" is, it does the job.
Interview
- Interview
- Interview
Tom Shillue: 'Supernormal' Storyteller
Stand-up comedian and master storyteller Tom Shillue won an ECNY Award for "Best One Person Show" for "Supernormal," "an evening of stories so normal, they're radical."
- Interview
George Clooney: 'I Learned A Lot From TV' (Video)
While George Clooney is an Oscar-nominated director, screenwriter and actor, he learned a lot about acting from working in television.
- Interview
Chris Weitz Crafts a Moving Tale with 'A Better Life'
Chris Weitz emerges from big-budget spectacles with his most intimate and moving film to date, "A Better Life," the story of single father who aspires to a better future for his teenage son.
- Interview
Alexander Payne on His 'Descendants' Star George Clooney
Payne spoke with Back Stage about his leading man, who delivers one of his best performances in an already stellar career.
- Interview
Shiri Appleby began her acting career at the tender age of 3, starring in cheery commercials for breakfast cereals and fast-food chains.
- Interview
Julie Benz is a woman of many talents. She's played a shady FBI operative ("Roswell") and a plucky missionary (last year's "Rambo").
- Interview
Peter Lorre and Sydney Greenstreet
Like the Laurel and Hardy of crime, the unlikely but popular duo of Sydney Greenstreet and Peter Lorre made an unofficial series of Warner Bros. films during the 1940s, often wartime thrillers in which they schemed with or against each other.
- Interview
Radha Mitchell: Finding Success
Radha Mitchell has quietly been blazing a path through Hollywood with her solid skills and sensual beauty in such varied films as High Art, Pitch Black, Phone Booth, Man on Fire, and last year's Finding Neverland. In each of these pictures, the striking Aussie has effortlessly hit the ball ...
- Interview
If Laura Kenny had been around in 1930s and '40s Hollywood, it's a good bet that this mainstay of Seattle's theatre scene would have been cast in the kind of roles that kept Marjorie Main, Marie Dressler, Thelma Ritter, and other such successful character actresses in demand. As ...










