Showing posts with label People. Show all posts
Showing posts with label People. Show all posts

Thursday, March 24, 2022

PEOPLE Exclusive: Wanda Sykes Recalls the Time She 'Shushed' Michelle Obama at White House Correspondents' Dinner

Wanda Sykes isn't nervous to host the 94th Academy Awards on Sunday.

The comedian and actress, 58, who's hosting the show alongside Amy Schumer and Regina Hall, tells PEOPLE in this week's issue that doing the White House Correspondents' Association dinner in 2009 more than prepared her for Hollywood's biggest night.


"I was just thrown into the fire," Sykes recalls. "I had no idea the magnitude of people who would be in that room."


One particular exchange from that night will stay will her forever.


"At the Correspondents' dinner, I shushed the First Lady," Sykes tells PEOPLE. "Michelle Obama was sitting right next to me, and I'm going over my material, my jokes, and I'm focused on prep, and she's trying to make conversation. And I just gave her a look like, 'Woman, I'm working over here! What are you doing? Pipe down.' "


"I think I'll be okay in this role," she says with a laugh. 


ABC's late-night talk show host Jimmy Kimmel was the last Oscars host when he headlined the ceremony in both 2018 and 2017. Kevin Hart had been named as host of the 2019 show but stepped down amid controversy over his resurfaced homophobic tweets.

Monday, February 14, 2022

PEOPLE Exclusive: Harry Hamlin Says Playing a Gay Man in Making Love 'Ended My Film Career': It Was 'Ahead of Its Time'


It's been four decades since Harry Hamlin played a gay writer in 1982's Making Love, a film about a same-sex affair — and the first of its kind for a major studio.


"I was told by a lot of people, you can't do that movie," says the actor, 70, reflecting on the film's 40th anniversary. "I think it had been offered to pretty much everybody in town and everyone had turned it down because they thought it might be damaging to their careers."

 

"I didn't see it that way," Hamlin tells PEOPLE. "I was looking for something serious and something meaningful, rather than doing a movie about vampire bats invading a small town in in the Midwest, which is the type of fare I was being offered at the time."


In Making Love, Hamlin played the role of Bart, a writer who becomes romantically involved with Zack, a young doctor (Michael Ontkean) married to Claire, a TV exec (Kate Jackson). "It was way ahead of its time," he says.


"Even though I was told by my friends not to do it, my agent said I should," he notes. "He said I was somewhat Teflon because I was out in the press having had a son with Ursula Andress. (Their son, Dmitri Hamlin is now 41.) And he said, 'Everyone knows you're straight so you're going to be okay.' But I didn't really pay much attention to any of that noise. I thought it was interesting and bold. I was attracted to that."


Looking back, he says the reception to the film "ended my film career."


"For years, I'd think was that the reason why I stopped getting calls? And finally realized that was the last time I ever did a movie for a studio," the actor says. "I've done independent films but never a studio film. I had been doing nothing but studio films and basically going out on all the castings for all the movies. That stopped completely."


"It never really got the attention that I think it probably deserves, given the time in which it was released," says Hamlin of the film. 


Now married to Lisa Rinna, 58, of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, with whom he has two daughters, Delilah, 23, and Amelia, 20, Hamlin says, "The movie was panned and my performance was ignored. The reviews were all negative, pretty much." 


"As far as the film business sort of shutting the door, I think it just had to do with the fact of the studio system being a closed system and once they saw there could be some confusion about my sexuality, then they just said they didn't want to take the chance,"

adds Hamlin. "If they were contemplating having me be a love interest to a young female star, the thought was, 'How is the audience going to react?' Even though I was straight, I think the perception at the time was that anybody who could play gay must be gay."