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The lineup of performers includes Alicia Keys, Annie Lennox and Melissa
Etheridge, who won an Academy Award this year for the song "I Need to
Wake Up," which was featured in Gore's environmental documentary "An Inconvenient
Truth." Thurman, Jones to host Nobel Peace concert
"I'm ABB - Anybody But Bush," A hot night of Global swarming
"I really wish he wasn't running the country. I didn't want him to be elected, but I hoped he wouldn't do a bad job. I have to say it's been less than impressive." Posted on Mon, Nov. 24, 2003
On the December 22 Late Show with David Letterman, actress Uma Thurman extolled how she’s "awfully proud" of Bill Clinton and thinks that if he’d been on the ballot he would have won again. As for Hillary, she considers her "incredible" and proclaimed: "I’m so proud of New York for electing her." Thurman appeared to plug a new movie titled, I think, The Tell, or something like that. She recounted for Letterman how she attended an election night party with Bill and Hillary. Thurman declared of Bill Clinton: "He’s done a very, very good job. I’m awfully proud of him." Of Hillary: "I think she’s so incredible. I’m so proud of New York for electing her." When Letterman wondered if Gore was hurt by Bill "and his activities with the intern," she held up both her hands as a stop signal to Letterman as she turned her head away from him. As Letterman suggested the intern situation led Gore to distance himself from Clinton, Thurman chimed in: "That was a bad decision." She predicted: "I think that if Clinton could have been on that ballot as well as those two I think he would win again, intern or no intern." Thursday December 28, 2000 (Vol. Five; No. 276) |
Wednesday’s Access Hollywood caught actress Uma Thurman walking into the Talk magazine/Miramax election party in New York City. She gushed: "It’s the best news ever. Yeah, it’s the best news ever. Hillary has won, it’s such a total victory I think for women all over America and for her and for New York. I’m thrilled as a New Yorker." Thursday November 9, 2000 (Vol. Five; No. 234)
LOS ANGELES, Dec. 10 (UPI) -- More than 100 Hollywood celebrities have written to President Bush, urging him to avoid a first-strike war with Iraq. Other celebrities who signed the letter included Oscar-winners Kim Basinger, Angelica Houston, Jessica Lange and Susan Sarandon -- as well as actors Matt Damon, Ethan Hawke, Samuel L. Jackson, Uma Thurman and Laurence Fishburne. Published 12/10/2002 3:09 PM |
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