15-year-old "Modern Family" star Ariel Winter is moving on up ... into a big new house with her big sister ... and TMZ has learned, Ariel didn't pay a cent for it.Sources familiar with the situation tell TMZ, the San Fernando Valley house was paid for entirely by Ariel's sister Shanelle Gray and Shanelle's hubby David Barry Gray, a wealthy heir to the Pepsi fortune. The couple has plenty of dough -- they're both working actors...
- 4/24/2013
- by TMZ Staff
- TMZ
Ariel Winter's sister may have declared bankruptcy more than a decade ago, but her fortunes have changed dramatically .... as in there is no way in the world she needs Ariel's money ... TMZ has learned.Shanelle Gray is married to David Barry Gray ... who is an heir to the Pepsi fortune. His grandfather was one of the founding members of Pepsi Cola.David's grandfather, Philip Rubenstein, owned 23 of the original Pepsi plants and, with the...
- 11/22/2012
- by TMZ Staff
- TMZ
In 2000, Ariel Winter.s sister Shanelle Gray might have filed for bankruptcy but new reports have emerged saying that Shanelle is rich and doesn.t need Ariel.s money.
According to TMZ, Shanelle is married to David Barry Gray, who is an heir to the Pepsi fortune. David.s father is one of the founding members of Pepsi Cola. David.s grandpa,Philip Rubenstein owned 23 of the original Pepsi plants and with the help of Al Steele, took the company nationwide.
David.s grandfather was the President of Pepsi Cola in the 1950.s and collective lots of money. He died in 1997 and was survived by his wife, two daughters and six grandchildren. David being one of them is in line to inherit huge amounts of money from the family fortune.
Both David and Shanelle have acting businesses Gray Studios in L.A and Gray Studios in Orange County. Their business...
According to TMZ, Shanelle is married to David Barry Gray, who is an heir to the Pepsi fortune. David.s father is one of the founding members of Pepsi Cola. David.s grandpa,Philip Rubenstein owned 23 of the original Pepsi plants and with the help of Al Steele, took the company nationwide.
David.s grandfather was the President of Pepsi Cola in the 1950.s and collective lots of money. He died in 1997 and was survived by his wife, two daughters and six grandchildren. David being one of them is in line to inherit huge amounts of money from the family fortune.
Both David and Shanelle have acting businesses Gray Studios in L.A and Gray Studios in Orange County. Their business...
- 11/22/2012
- icelebz.com
Julianne Moore as Sarah Palin, Game Change Julianne Moore may not get an Oscar nomination early next year, but she seems to have an Emmy nod — probably the award itself — guaranteed thanks to her performance as U.S. vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin in the HBO movie Game Change. As the v.p. selected to run alongside Republican presidential candidate John McCain, Palin was a source of outrage, disgust, mirth, horror, and/or worship, depending on one's point of view: far-right Christian or secular liberal, Tina Fey / Saturday Night Live fan or non-fan. This year, Game Change not only earned Moore great reviews, but according to The Hollywood Reporter it has also become HBO's most successful movie — 2.1 million viewers — since Joseph Sargent's Something the Lord Made (2.6 million in May 2004). That's quite a contrast from the Sarah Palin documentaries that, whether pro or con, bombed miserably at the North American box office last year.
- 3/14/2012
- by Andre Soares
- Alt Film Guide
Paramedics arrive at the scene of a call-out, where they find a man alone, distressed and apparently unwell. They get him onto a gurney and take him to hospital. Anthony, (Emerson Brooks) one of the paramedics, blares the siren, which appears to distress him further. He wakes up uncontrollable and Anna Vargas (Jaclyn De Santis) asks for help. He then holds a gun on them both and shoots them dead. Wiping his prints clean form the ambulance; he misses the fact he got hold of Vargas's glove when they lifted him onto the gurney in the beginning. Brenda (Kyra Sedgwick) arrives at the scene and Tao (Michael Paul Chan) demos what a Gs lift is - giving her an idea as to what to look for on the DBs. But Taylor (Robert Gossett) tells her the Lafd took them away. Just as the Lapd does for its officers, she wants...
- 11/29/2011
- by mhasan@corp.popstar.com (Mila Hasan)
- PopStar
John Duigan's feature tries to be so many things at once -- a satire of suburbia, a Christ-like tale of suffering, a magical realist fantasy -- that it winds up falling short. A tale of a loner lawn doctor and his relationship with an emotionally and physically scarred young girl, the film was an official selection at last year's Sundance Film Festival and opens commercially today.
Talented Sam Rockwell plays Trent, a 21-year-old who mows lawns in an affluent if sterile suburb of Louisville, Ky., a private development with the wishful name of Camelot Gardens. Trent's lot is not a particularly happy one: His customers treat him with indifference; the local security guard (Bruce McGill) considers him a threat to neighborhood safety; and a pair of local college boys (Eric Mabius, David Barry Gray) -- one of whom is attracted to Trent -- keep causing him trouble, including siccing their pet Doberman on him.
For his part, Trent blows off steam through his assignations with a beautiful young neighborhood girl who otherwise won't give him the time of day, and by such other methods as stopping traffic by jumping naked off a bridge and shredding various items with his lawn mower.
Devon (Mischa Barton), the young girl, is a newcomer to the housing development. Largely neglected by her parents (Christopher McDonald, Kathleen Quinlan), she develops an interest in Trent and is soon tailing after him. The two begin hanging out together and even show each other the physical scars they bear -- his from a gunshot wound, hers from a heart operation. But when she sees him clubbing a Doberman to death after accidentally running over him with his truck, it precipitates a series of misunderstandings that almost get Trent killed.
Veering awkwardly in tone, the film never develops a cohesive emotional or intellectual thread. There are scattered moments that move or amuse, but the characters are either inexplicable (Trent) or caricatures (nearly everyone else), and Naomi Wallace's screenplay is pretentious and unfocused. Her self-indulgence is particularly evident in the film's final section, which includes a violently melodramatic altercation followed by a fantastical sequence in which Trent's escape from his attackers is aided by a series of biblical miracles.
Rockwell is a strong presence in the central role, but he's ultimately unable to cope with the vagaries of his character. Barton is terrific as the little girl, displaying none of the cutesy mannerisms that afflict so many other young actors. The rest of the cast gamely attempts, with little success, to cope with the stylistic demands of the material.
LAWN DOGS
Strand Releasing
Director: John Duigan
Screenplay: Naomi Wallace
Producer: Duncan Kenworthy
Co-producer: David Rubin
Editor: Humphrey Dixon
Director of photography: Elliot Davis
Production designer: John Myhre
Color/stereo
Cast:
Devon: Mischa Barton
Trent: Sam Rockwell
Clare: Kathleen Quinlan
Morton: Christopher McDonald
Nash: Bruce McGill
Sean: Eric Mabius
Brett: David Barry Gray
Running time -- 101 minutes
No MPAA rating...
Talented Sam Rockwell plays Trent, a 21-year-old who mows lawns in an affluent if sterile suburb of Louisville, Ky., a private development with the wishful name of Camelot Gardens. Trent's lot is not a particularly happy one: His customers treat him with indifference; the local security guard (Bruce McGill) considers him a threat to neighborhood safety; and a pair of local college boys (Eric Mabius, David Barry Gray) -- one of whom is attracted to Trent -- keep causing him trouble, including siccing their pet Doberman on him.
For his part, Trent blows off steam through his assignations with a beautiful young neighborhood girl who otherwise won't give him the time of day, and by such other methods as stopping traffic by jumping naked off a bridge and shredding various items with his lawn mower.
Devon (Mischa Barton), the young girl, is a newcomer to the housing development. Largely neglected by her parents (Christopher McDonald, Kathleen Quinlan), she develops an interest in Trent and is soon tailing after him. The two begin hanging out together and even show each other the physical scars they bear -- his from a gunshot wound, hers from a heart operation. But when she sees him clubbing a Doberman to death after accidentally running over him with his truck, it precipitates a series of misunderstandings that almost get Trent killed.
Veering awkwardly in tone, the film never develops a cohesive emotional or intellectual thread. There are scattered moments that move or amuse, but the characters are either inexplicable (Trent) or caricatures (nearly everyone else), and Naomi Wallace's screenplay is pretentious and unfocused. Her self-indulgence is particularly evident in the film's final section, which includes a violently melodramatic altercation followed by a fantastical sequence in which Trent's escape from his attackers is aided by a series of biblical miracles.
Rockwell is a strong presence in the central role, but he's ultimately unable to cope with the vagaries of his character. Barton is terrific as the little girl, displaying none of the cutesy mannerisms that afflict so many other young actors. The rest of the cast gamely attempts, with little success, to cope with the stylistic demands of the material.
LAWN DOGS
Strand Releasing
Director: John Duigan
Screenplay: Naomi Wallace
Producer: Duncan Kenworthy
Co-producer: David Rubin
Editor: Humphrey Dixon
Director of photography: Elliot Davis
Production designer: John Myhre
Color/stereo
Cast:
Devon: Mischa Barton
Trent: Sam Rockwell
Clare: Kathleen Quinlan
Morton: Christopher McDonald
Nash: Bruce McGill
Sean: Eric Mabius
Brett: David Barry Gray
Running time -- 101 minutes
No MPAA rating...
- 5/15/1998
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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