Cryer marries TV Guide Channel's Lisa Joyner
Jon Cryer married entertainment reporter Lisa Joyner in Mexico this weekend.
Cryer and Joyner, host of TV Guide Channel's “InFANity,” were wed Saturday in Cabo San Lucas, Cryer's spokeswoman, Karen Samfilippo, said Monday.
He co-stars with Charlie Sheen in the hit CBS sitcom “Two and a Half Men.”
Cryer also starred as the nerdy outcast Duckie in the 1986 teen movie classic “Pretty in Pink.”
Cryer, 42, has a 6-year-old son, Charlie, from a previous marriage.
Judge declines to toss out lawsuit against De Niro
A federal judge declined Monday to dismiss a lawsuit alleging Robert De Niro misrepresented his health on a movie production insurance form.
U.S. District Judge Manuel Real denied a motion by the Oscar winner asking the court to toss the suit by the Fireman's Fund Insurance Co., which insured production on the Fox film “Hide and Seek.”
De Niro's motion called the suit “a case that should never have been filed.”
“We are still confident that we will prevail,” De Niro's attorney Robyn Crowther said following the judge's ruling.
Fireman's Fund claims the actor misrepresented his health when he wrote on an insurance form that he had never been diagnosed with or treated for prostate cancer.
Danza to reprise role in ‘The Producers' in Vegas
Tony Danza will reprise his lead role as Max Bialystock in the Las Vegas version of Mel Brooks' hit Broadway show “The Producers,” he told The Associated Press.
“I love the part,” said Danza, a former star of TV's “Taxi” and “Who's the Boss,” who signed to take over Aug. 13 as the down-on-his-luck theatrical producer who hatches a wildly successful play despite his best attempts to fail.
“My take is, I think Max is a likable guy,” Danza said by telephone from his home in Los Angeles. “Sure he's up to no good. But it's almost like he can't help himself.”
Mel Brooks, who wrote the play based on his 1968 movie about a pair of con artists who overfinance a Broadway musical in the hopes of producing a flop and making off with the investors' money, called Danza perfect for the show.
“I think for Vegas, you need a show that has a lot of laughs and a lot of legs,” said Brooks, 80, one of the few people to have won Oscar, Emmy, Grammy and Tony awards.
Danza, 56, was one of the Maxes in the long Broadway run of the show, which opened in 2001 with Nathan Lane as Max and ended April 22 after 2,502 performances.
- From wire reports
Cryer and Joyner, host of TV Guide Channel's “InFANity,” were wed Saturday in Cabo San Lucas, Cryer's spokeswoman, Karen Samfilippo, said Monday.
He co-stars with Charlie Sheen in the hit CBS sitcom “Two and a Half Men.”
Cryer also starred as the nerdy outcast Duckie in the 1986 teen movie classic “Pretty in Pink.”
Cryer, 42, has a 6-year-old son, Charlie, from a previous marriage.
Judge declines to toss out lawsuit against De Niro
A federal judge declined Monday to dismiss a lawsuit alleging Robert De Niro misrepresented his health on a movie production insurance form.
U.S. District Judge Manuel Real denied a motion by the Oscar winner asking the court to toss the suit by the Fireman's Fund Insurance Co., which insured production on the Fox film “Hide and Seek.”
De Niro's motion called the suit “a case that should never have been filed.”
“We are still confident that we will prevail,” De Niro's attorney Robyn Crowther said following the judge's ruling.
Fireman's Fund claims the actor misrepresented his health when he wrote on an insurance form that he had never been diagnosed with or treated for prostate cancer.
Danza to reprise role in ‘The Producers' in Vegas
Tony Danza will reprise his lead role as Max Bialystock in the Las Vegas version of Mel Brooks' hit Broadway show “The Producers,” he told The Associated Press.
“I love the part,” said Danza, a former star of TV's “Taxi” and “Who's the Boss,” who signed to take over Aug. 13 as the down-on-his-luck theatrical producer who hatches a wildly successful play despite his best attempts to fail.
“My take is, I think Max is a likable guy,” Danza said by telephone from his home in Los Angeles. “Sure he's up to no good. But it's almost like he can't help himself.”
Mel Brooks, who wrote the play based on his 1968 movie about a pair of con artists who overfinance a Broadway musical in the hopes of producing a flop and making off with the investors' money, called Danza perfect for the show.
“I think for Vegas, you need a show that has a lot of laughs and a lot of legs,” said Brooks, 80, one of the few people to have won Oscar, Emmy, Grammy and Tony awards.
Danza, 56, was one of the Maxes in the long Broadway run of the show, which opened in 2001 with Nathan Lane as Max and ended April 22 after 2,502 performances.
- From wire reports




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