Wedding vows break for Larry David, wife, Laurie
The enthusiasm is gone: Larry David and his activist wife, Laurie, have separated after 14 years of marriage.
The split was “very amicable and ... they're going to continue to raise their two (daughters) together as friends,” spokeswoman Heather Lylas said Tuesday.
No further details were provided.
David, 59, is the star and creator of the HBO hit comedy “Curb Your Enthusiasm,” which chronicles the always strange daily doings of its curmudgeonly centerpiece. The TV Larry David's much put-upon wife is played by Cheryl Hines.
David also co-created the NBC classic “Seinfeld.”
More shady Spears photos become public
Britney Spears is showing up yet again in unflattering photos splashed across newspapers and Internet Web sites.
Mexican TV and print media published pictures that celebrity Web site TMZ said showed the 25-year-old pop star vacationing in Puerto Vallarta. Spears, her long, blond hair extensions pulled back in a ponytail, is wearing a white-and-turquoise cover-up over a bikini that reveals her not-so-toned backside.
Spears completed a monthlong stay at a luxury Malibu, Calif., rehabilitation treatment facility in March after a series of run-ins with the paparazzi that included a stop at a San Fernando Valley hair salon, where she sheared her own locks.
Other photos on the Internet have appeared to reveal Spears out partying while wearing nothing underneath her short skirts. Other photos have shown her battling weight gain.
Jolie would rather be known for philanthropy
Angelina Jolie, who won an Oscar for 1999''s “Girl, Interrupted,” says she wants to be remembered for her humanitarian work.
“I have no animosity toward Hollywood or the demands of the red carpet, all that silliness,” Jolie, 32, tells Esquire magazine in its upcoming July issue. “That's my job, and I'm happy to have it. But when I die, do I want to be remembered as an actress? No.”
“I recently had an op-ed (column) published in a newspaper,” she continues. “And at the end, it didn't say I was an actress. It said that I was a UN goodwill ambassador - that's all. And I was really proud.”
Jolie, an activist for issues ranging from global poverty to wildlife conservation, says she has found meaning as a citizen of the world.
“I entered this business before I had focus and purpose in my life,” says Jolie. “I was very unhappy, very unhealthy, and when I sat down for an interview, I didn't know why. I felt like I didn't have anything to share. It was a very empty time.”
- From wire reports
The split was “very amicable and ... they're going to continue to raise their two (daughters) together as friends,” spokeswoman Heather Lylas said Tuesday.
No further details were provided.
David, 59, is the star and creator of the HBO hit comedy “Curb Your Enthusiasm,” which chronicles the always strange daily doings of its curmudgeonly centerpiece. The TV Larry David's much put-upon wife is played by Cheryl Hines.
David also co-created the NBC classic “Seinfeld.”
More shady Spears photos become public
Britney Spears is showing up yet again in unflattering photos splashed across newspapers and Internet Web sites.
Mexican TV and print media published pictures that celebrity Web site TMZ said showed the 25-year-old pop star vacationing in Puerto Vallarta. Spears, her long, blond hair extensions pulled back in a ponytail, is wearing a white-and-turquoise cover-up over a bikini that reveals her not-so-toned backside.
Spears completed a monthlong stay at a luxury Malibu, Calif., rehabilitation treatment facility in March after a series of run-ins with the paparazzi that included a stop at a San Fernando Valley hair salon, where she sheared her own locks.
Other photos on the Internet have appeared to reveal Spears out partying while wearing nothing underneath her short skirts. Other photos have shown her battling weight gain.
Jolie would rather be known for philanthropy
Angelina Jolie, who won an Oscar for 1999''s “Girl, Interrupted,” says she wants to be remembered for her humanitarian work.
“I have no animosity toward Hollywood or the demands of the red carpet, all that silliness,” Jolie, 32, tells Esquire magazine in its upcoming July issue. “That's my job, and I'm happy to have it. But when I die, do I want to be remembered as an actress? No.”
“I recently had an op-ed (column) published in a newspaper,” she continues. “And at the end, it didn't say I was an actress. It said that I was a UN goodwill ambassador - that's all. And I was really proud.”
Jolie, an activist for issues ranging from global poverty to wildlife conservation, says she has found meaning as a citizen of the world.
“I entered this business before I had focus and purpose in my life,” says Jolie. “I was very unhappy, very unhealthy, and when I sat down for an interview, I didn't know why. I felt like I didn't have anything to share. It was a very empty time.”
- From wire reports
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