Edisi 24 Oktober 2014 | International Bali Post

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I N T E R N A T I O N A L

I N T E R N A T I O N A L

16 Pages Number 211 6th year

Price: Rp 3.000,-

Entertainment

Friday, October 24, 2014

Renee Zellweger : “I’m living different, happy life”

In this march 2, 2014 file photo, Bradley Cooper arrives at the Oscars in Los Angeles. Cooper will star in the Broadway revival of “The Elephant Man,” 14-week run opening on December 7 at the Booth Theater with previews starting on November 7.

WEATHER FORECAST 23 - 32 Dps

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Page 6

Associated Press

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Friday, October 24, 2014

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Page 8

Nigeria truce is shaky, no news of abducted girls

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LOS ANGELES — Renee Zellweger says she looks different because she’s “living a different, happy, more fulfilling life.” The 45-year-old Oscar winner issued a statement to People magazine late Tuesday after she became a trending topic on Twitter, with many fans claiming the actress had become “unrecognizable.” Her appearance at a Hollywood event earlier this week sparked widespread Internet chatter. Zellweger’s most recent acting credit was in 2010, and she says, “People don’t know me in my 40s.” She said she has concentrated on her health and personal development in recent years and is “thrilled that perhaps it shows.” Zellweger said she might look different, but “who doesn’t as they get older?!”

How Cooper will stay limber for ‘Elephant Man’

Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP, File

Associated Press

NEW YORK — Bradley Cooper will contort his limbs into uncomfortable positions for eight shows a week when he begins his run in the Broadway revival of “The Elephant Man.” That means he’ll need to take extra care of his body to stay limber. “I have an inversion table. That’s a new thing, it goes like that,” Cooper said while using hand motions to show the up and down tilting of his body on the table. He’ll use it twice a day and have a chiropractor nearby. The play by Bernard Pomerance, which premiered at the Booth Theatre in 1979, shows some two dozen snapshots in the life of the grotesque Joseph Merrick, tracing his journey from an abused circus freak to a curiosity of London’s high society. Cooper won’t use prosthetics, opting instead to imply

disfigurement through facial expression and twisted posture. Cooper, an Academy Award nominee, already knows the physical demands of portraying the character onstage from a short run at the Williamstown Theatre Festival in 2012. “I got to research the real guy and I just fell in love with who he was a human being, as a man,” Cooper said. “It’s been a wonderful, eye-opening experience into that world of the late 1800s in London and Leicester and what he went through.”

Cooper became fascinated by Merrick’s life after seeing the 1980 film version by David Lynch, which he cites as the catalyst for wanting to pursue a career in acting. But he wasn’t acquainted with the stage production until much later, when he was studying at the Actors Studio Drama School in New York. “It wasn’t until grad school where we had to choose a thesis and I came across Bernard Pomerance’s play,” Cooper said, adding that Merrick had loomed large for him growing up: “I probably thought about him maybe every day since I was 12, so I took a shot at it and it seemed to feel like a fit.” But the actor has had a busy schedule over the past few years, so it took a little more than a whim for him to thread the boards for the play’s 14-week Broadway run starting Nov. 7.

REUTERS/Issei Kato

Japan’s new Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Yoichi Miyazawa attends a group interview at his ministry in Tokyo October 23, 2014. Japan was stung Thursday by its third political scandal in a week after the country’s new industry minister -- whose predecessor resigned in disgrace over misspending -- admitted that his underlings had spent office cash at a sex bar.

AP Photo/Dan Steinberg, File

In this Nov. 20, 2010 file photo, actress Renee Zellweger arrives at “CNN Heroes: An All-Star Tribute” awards show in Los Angeles. Zellweger says she looks different because she’s “living a different, happy, more fulfilling life.”

New Japan minister hit by S&M bar scandal

Agence France-Presse

TOKYO - Japan was stung Thursday by its third political scandal in a week after the country’s new industry minister -- whose predecessor resigned in disgrace over misspending -admitted that his underlings had spent office cash at a sex bar. The new revelations deal another serious blow to the administration of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe which was already facing a public backlash over its bid to turn Japan’s shuttered nuclear reactors back on and its stalling plans to revive the economy.

As news of the sex-bar scandal broke Thursday, industry minister Yoichi Miyazawa, a Harvard graduate and former top bureaucrat in the finance ministry, distanced himself from the affair, saying he wasn’t present at the sex club in the city of Hiroshima. But he acknowledged that some

staff at his political office had billed 18,230 yen ($170) as entertainment expenses during a visit in September 2010, Jiji Press news agency said. “I came to know of that through a media report, and it was true,” Miyazawa told reporters in Tokyo on Thursday. “It is also true that I myself was not there,” he added. The venue’s shows depict women being tied up with ropes, and male customers are allowed to take part in the show by whipping them, according to blog posts written by

club visitors. It was not immediately clear if Miyazawa -- a nephew of late prime minister Kiichi Miyazawa and a cousin of Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida -- would step down. “(Miyazawa) will handle the case properly,” said Chief Cabinet Secretary Yohishide Suga, the government’s top spokesman, in the only comment from Abe’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party. Double resignations On Tuesday, Miyazawa was tapped to replace industry minister

Yuko Obuchi, who stepped down over claims she misspent political funds, while Justice Minister Midori Matsushima also quit after days of allegations that she had misspent money in what opponents insisted was an attempt to buy votes. The double resignations earlier this week marked the first significant problem for Abe since he swept to power in December 2012, ending years of fragile governments that swapped prime ministers on an annual basis. Continued on page 6


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