Hollywood hits and misses in 2010
Few people have ever turned a proposed demotion into such a plus. After quitting when
-- Whitney Friedlander (Paul Drinkwater / Associated Press)
Someone was too quick to embrace the whole “new year, new you” adage. In January, the “Hills” star showed the world that she’d had a little bit of work done. (Actually it was 10 procedures, but who’s counting?) Consider this further proof that nothing on reality TV is actually real.
-- Whitney Friedlander (David Becker / Getty Images)
It’s hard to imagine a world with too much of
-- Emily Christianson (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
Skeptics questioning Scarlett Johansson’s Broadway abilities were left eating their words when the star garnered rave reviews for her performance in the revival of Arthur Miller’s “A View From the Bridge.” The actress even took home the Tony for best featured actress, for her turn as Catherine, in the story about an uncle (Liev Schrieber) with inappropriate feelings for his niece (Johansson).
-- Emily Christianson (Jennifer S. Altman / For The Times)
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It’s been a great year for our Golden Girl. First, she charmed the pants off of us at the
-- Jevon Phillips (Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images)
And the award for first female director Oscar winner goes to ...
Not only did Bigelow beat out ex-husband James Cameron for the best director win, she did it not with a stereotypical chick flick but with
-- Whitney Friedlander (Lawrence K. Ho / Los Angeles Times)
Finally, moviegoers have a way to fight back against the rapid plasticization of middle-aged Hollywood stars. We can just go see some new faces. Think your favorite actor or actress is starting to look a little funny? Go check out a boffo performance by newcomers Hailee Steinfeld (
-- Patrick Kevin Day (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
Is it just us, or has 2010 been especially harsh on celebrity love lives? Despite winning
A few other divorces and separations for the year:
-- Whitney Friedlander
Photo: Sandra Bullock receives an apparently loving touch from her husband, Jesse James, as she is announced as the lead actress winner at the Academy Awards in March (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
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Many tears were shed for the grand farewell of three major TV series this year: “Lost,”
--Patrick Kevin Day
Above: Matthew Fox in the “Lost” finale. (Mario Perez / Associated Press)
Sadly, this hasn’t been the easiest year for the pop diva. Her album “Bionic” tanked. She canceled her summer concert tour. She’s going through a divorce from husband, music marketer Jordan Bratman. And she was in “Burlesque.”
Here’s hoping that a
-- Whitney Friedlander (Juanjo Martin / EPA)
After a five-year absence,
-- Todd Martens (Andrew Milligan / Associated Press)
-- Emily Christianson and Whitney Friedlander (Michael Becker / Associated Press)
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Director
-- Whitney Friedlander (Suzanne Tenner / Associated Press)
It seemed like a good idea on paper, right?
One man on a sparse stage offering up a history lesson. Perhaps not the easiest sell for a theater production. Unless the man is
-- Lisa Fung (Jacquelyn Martin / Associated Press)
Pop vixen
-- Todd Martens (Joseph Nair / AFP / Getty Images)
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-- Whitney Friedlander (Joan Marcus / Associated Press)
After finding mainstream success with her “Paper Planes,” a heavily licensed, Clash-sampling cut that won the border-hopping electronic artist a Grammy nomination,
That hasn’t quite panned out, as the first glimpse of the album, “Born Free,” was far more punk than dance and came with a controversial, extremely violent video. Soon after,
A shame, as The Times’ Ann Powers wrote, “It feels like a serious artist’s sometimes tentative but very promising step toward a broader vision of herself. In its 12 tracks, M.I.A. explores both what it means to serve as a sexual/romantic ideal in the
-- Todd Martens (Leon Neal / AFP / Getty Images)
This Huntington Beach band survived a tragedy and documented it in full on record. Avenged Sevenfold confronted the unexpected death last year of drummer James “The Rev” Sullivan on its recently released “Nightmare.” The darkly personal hard-rock song cycle was instantly embraced by fans and gave the locals its best-ever sales week on the U.S. pop charts. “Nightmare” landed at No. 1 in early August, topping the chart with 162,000 copies, according to Nielsen SoundScan. After three weeks, the album was still in the top 20.
-- Todd Martens (Don Bartletti / Los Angeles Times)
That’s right, Stewart. Laugh it up. You deserve it. You’ve picked on CNN’s Rick Sanchez enough for him to blow up and get himself canned and your staff aligned and fired back when women-centric blog Jezebel questioned your appreciation of the fairer sex in the workplace. Not to mention you brought Barack Obama on your show -- the first time a sitting president has ever gone on the late-night talk show -- and, of course, there was that whole Rally to Restore Sanity thing with buddy
-- Whitney Friedlander (Charles Sykes / Associated Press)
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Who knew Chris Pine had it in him? Sure, we’ve seen the “Star Trek” actor in
-- Lisa Fung (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)
She’s quite possibly the biggest pop star in America right now. What more is there to say? In the last 12 months, she’s won a Grammy for album of the year, debuted a No. 1 album in October that sold more than 1 million copies in its first week and starred in her very own Thanksgiving prime-time special. Her tour won’t hit
-- Todd Martens (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
The Resnick Exhibition Pavilion, which opened in October, gives LACMA a big, clean, flexible, naturally lighted, single-story space for temporary shows. And unlike so many new art museum buildings, the art is right inside the front door, not sequestered behind a café, party space, shop or other paraphernalia incidental to the reason you are there.
-- Christopher Knight (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
Despite all intentions, “Eye for the Sensual: Selections From the Resnick Collection” is an eloquent argument against vanity exhibitions in art museums. With a smattering of first-rate works, many of which have been on individual loan to museums before, the ragtag array is achingly incoherent.
-- Christopher Knight (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)
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Now that we’re running out of comic-book characters and old TV show characters to bring to the big screen, what’s left but to take real-life people and turn them into movies? True, the lives of Mark Zuckerberg, boxer “Irish” Micky Ward, Aron Ralston and King George VI don’t lend themselves to sequelization. But three-fourths of them are still alive, so it’s always possible we could be seeing “The Social Network 2,” “The Fighter Returns” and “Another 127 Hours” in our near future.
-- Patrick Kevin Day
Pictured: James Franco in “127 Hours.” (Chuck Zlotnick / Associated Press)
They don’t have the “Right Stuff”? They already were “larger than life”? The puns can keep coming. But seriously guys, the Beatles never did a reunion tour despite their gaggle of grown-up fans. What makes you think you can?
-- Whitney Friedlander (Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images for DCP)
The favorite of design magazine editors and L.A. Times arts critics alike was honored in September with a $500,000 grant.
-- Whitney Friedlander (Matt Harbicht / Getty Images)
Oh, “Glee,” you and your envelope-pushing ways. Except this time it’s not always for the singing. There was the racy GQ cover (pictured -- and shot by Terry Richardson no less). Soon after, Mr. Shue (Matthew Morrison) showed his pecs for Details, and even “Other Asian” Mike Chang (dancer Harry Shum Jr.)’s six pack got a magazine spread. We get it. You’re attractive not-kids playing misfit kids on a TV show. Can we move on now?
-- Whitney Friedlander (Terry Richardson / Associated Press)
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Far East Movement, the
-- Todd Martens (Stefano Paltera / For The Times)
It’s too soon to tell if the highly anticipated, highly expensive stage adaptation about your friendly neighborhood you-know-who will actually fly, but the multiple injuries, canceled previews and other hiccups seem to have caught director Julie Taymor in a nasty web.
-- Whitney Friedlander (Jacob Cohl / Associated Press / The O and M Co.)
In late 2010, the Smithsonian Institution included a 23-year-old, 13-minute video from the late artist David Wojnarowicz about social indifference to the AIDS epidemic in an exhibition about gay identity in art at the National Portrait Gallery. But after politicians called it “anti-Christian,” Smithsonian Secretary G. Wayne Clough removed the project from the exhibition.
A couple of weeks later, Los Angeles’ Museum of Contemporary Art painted over a mural it commissioned from Italian street artist Blu on a wall at the Geffen Contemporary, after seeing its depiction of dollar bills covering military-style coffins.
Both controversies generated debate about what constitutes censorship at a public institution.
-- Whitney Friedlander
Photo: Italian artist Blu works on his MOCA mural before its whitewashing. (Justin T. Ho / For The Times)