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Word: tabloided (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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More perilous still, we see Allen re-writing his tabloid sins at an age (he'll be 60 this year) when he looks like a pensive Rumpelstiltskin; boyish roguery ill suits him. In TV revivals of Broadway farces, he plays crabby geezers: the tourist with tsuris in Don't Drink the Water, a decrepit comic in a new version of The Sunshine Boys. Yet in his films Allen is the Woody of old--or, rather, of young. To Lenny, the raw, vibrant Linda makes Amanda seem stale and shrewish. Bonham Carter (who's a radiant 29 and certainly doesn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CINEMA: WOODY ALLEN: WHEN ART REDEEMS LIFE | 10/30/1995 | See Source »

...others; to be a goodwill ambassador to Haiti and have a world problem get attention because she brings it up; and, best of all, to be hounded worldwide by photographers. Last week the news broke that Roberts had found love with a Venetian water-limo driver--an Italian tabloid even ran a blurry photo, possibly of the two kissing. "It's not true," says Roberts' spokesperson. "I didn't ask her if she kissed him, but she kisses everyone. She's very affectionate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Oct. 23, 1995 | 10/23/1995 | See Source »

...TIME team, coordinated by correspondent Jeanne McDowell, set up shop at the Inter-Continental Hotel, just above the rooms that had served for nine months as the secret home of the Simpson jurors. Competition among the press, fierce all along, reached a peak as TV and tabloid reporters offered tens of thousands of dollars for exclusives. TIME, like most serious news publications, does not pay for interviews. Our reporters had to pursue the story, as deputy chief of correspondents Jan Simpson puts it, "the old-fashioned way: by getting to the right sources...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: To Our Readers, Oct. 16, 1995 | 10/16/1995 | See Source »

...truth universally acknowledged that any man who's just friends with PRINCESS DI is believed to be leaving his wife? A case in point is British rugby team captain WILL CARLING. Tabloid reports surfaced in the summer that Carling had indulged in some extracurricular scrimmaging with Di, whom he met at a gym. In August, however, Carling said he intended to stick by Julia, his wife of 14 months. "She picked the wrong couple to do it with this time," Mrs. Carling said, "because we can only get stronger from it." Well, not exactly. The Rugby Union announced on Friday...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Oct. 9, 1995 | 10/9/1995 | See Source »

...homework paid off for Kidman. To Die For has won the 28-year-old Australian the most lustrous reviews of her career. Told in a blur of tabloid headlines, mockumentary interviews and dramatic reconstructions, the movie is the story of Suzanne Stone Maretto, a vamp from Little Hope, New Hampshire, who persuades a smitten teenager (Joaquin Phoenix) to try murdering her husband (Matt Dillon). The film, based on Joyce Maynard's novel, is a classy collision between the chipper misanthropy of scriptwriter Buck Henry and the eroticizing of dopey young sociopaths found in director Gus Van Sant's earlier work...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AN ACTRESS TO DIE FOR | 10/9/1995 | See Source »

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