Keri Russell | Page 25 | the Fashion Spot

Keri Russell

^ She does look beautiful! Here is a transcript from the show I mentioned a few posts above:

Tavis: Keri Russell is a Golden-Globe-winning actress who of course starred on the popular drama, "Felicity." She also has appeared in a number of notable films, including "Mission Impossible 3," "The Upside of Anger." Her most regent projects - plural - include the acclaimed film "Waitress," which comes out on DVD this week, and you can catch her in theaters in the new movie, "August Rush." The film also stars Robin Williams and Terrence Howard. Here now, a scene from "August Rush."
[Clip]

Tavis: So this movie's about you in search of your son, and in real life, you not long ago had a baby, but nobody would know it looking at you, Keri.
Keri Russell: Oh, but I promise you, I did. (Laughter) I promise you I had that baby.
Tavis: And how is the baby?
Russell: He's so good, he's so good. I had a little guy. We were convinced it was a girl, and we got a guy. I'm so happy. And he's with the babysitter right now.
Tavis: So speaking of a guy, your husband is working on your house back in New York.
Russell: This is true.
Tavis: And you and I have nothing in common except for the fact that we're both in construction hell right about now.
Russell: My husband, Shane, is a carpenter, and he's completely redoing a Brooklyn - one of those old, beautiful Brooklyn brownstones. And top to bottom, literally - I just talked to him on the phone, and he is so upset because he's tearing off the roof and laying a new roof, the whole thing all by himself.
Tavis: In New York?
Russell: In New York.
Tavis: Does he know what time of year it is, Keri?
Russell: I know. Okay? It's raining. He's like - I can honestly say these are some of the worst couple of days I've had in years. He's, like, just fighting weather and everything, but he's doing a beautiful job and I can't wait to live there.
Tavis: Yeah, well, we'll both be out of this before too long.
Russell: Yeah, and you're, like, in craziness with yours?
Tavis: I'm almost there, but you guys better get done. I'm in California, at least, although we have a rainy season. But you'd better get done fast on your project, though.
Russell: I know. (Laughs)
Tavis: I'm glad you're here, though.
Russell: Oh, thank you.
Tavis: A couple of projects - you are one busy sister. Let's talk first about "August Rush." The storyline - I'll let you say it. The storyline on this is?
Russell: Well, it's sort of a fable about - I like to say it's sort of a fable about a family love story, really, and them all finding each other. And I was watching your show with James Taylor, and it's funny because he was - which by the way, oh, god, that was so great. James is, like - that was so great, your interview.
Tavis: He's an amazing guy. He's an amazing guy.
Russell: It was really wonderful. But he talked a lot about the music sort of coming to him, and then him sort of sharing it in that concert experience. And in a way, that's what "August Rush" is about. This little boy, sort of this music comes to him, and everyone's like, how do you get that? And he creates symphonies and rhapsodies, and he's a child prodigy.
And it's amazing that there are people really out there, and you meet someone like James, and you do, you go, yeah, that really happens. But so this story, it's really - what I loved so much when I first read it, it was just this idea that this kid who's been left, basically, to be an orphan - the voiceover at the beginning says I know my parents are out there and I know they want me, and I'm going to find them.
And there was something about that unwavering faith that, I don't know, especially with that kid, Freddie Highmore, saying it, I just love it. I'm a sucker for those kind of movies, about wanting to find your home and really believing that you can.
Tavis: What do you take from working on a project like that? Because you referenced the conversation with JT not long ago, and that conversation, there was so much in there, there's so much to take. You can chew on that, marinate on it.
Russell: I know, I'm like - I know, I know.

Tavis: I was so high after that conversation; I could have flown from L.A. to New York unaided.
Russell: That's what - I know.
Tavis: Just unaided, flew. But what do you take, since you made the comparison or drew the link, what do you take from - as a person, get the actress thing aside for the second - what do you take as a person from working on a project like that?
Russell: Well, in light of especially what we're talking about with him, when I hear stuff like that and when I believe in stuff like this movie is about, it makes me think, remember that what's that figure that we only use like 3 percent of our brain or something?
I really think that we all are capable of so much, that if we could just, like, kind of plug into something or maybe unplug, maybe just be open - I don't know what that is. But that's kind of what I take from it. And that faith is important. Like really believing and not giving up. And I don't mean, like, whatever - whatever your god - that's not what I mean. I think really believing in something and working hard, and I think there's something to that.
Tavis: To "Waitress." It's out on DVD. So much talk of late. I know you've been asked about this a thousand times, but the story of Adrienne Shelly - I'll let you share a little bit for those who haven't heard the story. Just a sad story. She produced something wonderful here, and yet - well, I'll let you tell the story.
Russell: Yeah. Yes, we made this movie, "Waitress," that Adrienne Shelly wrote, directed, and was also starring in. She played a character. And not only - she also wrote a song I sing in it. She picked our outfits. She was - every frame of this film is Adrienne. And we shot the movie in 20 days, it was a real low budget, just one of those kind of movies, like, you drive way out. We shot it in Canyon Country out in Lancaster. We'd get Taco Bell on the way home at 1:00 in the morning, drive home, you know what I mean? Try not to fall asleep. And then we were waiting. She'd edit it and we were waiting to hear whether or not it got into Sundance, and I got this crazy phone call that she had been killed, and tragically, tragically murdered, and it was a crazy story.
And left behind her wonderful husband and a little girl who's three, who actually, when she was two and a half, Sophie - she's the little toddler that I'm holding at the end that I'm, like, singing with.
Tavis: She makes a cameo.
Russell: She does. And yeah, so it's really upsetting. Like, two days later we found out we got into Sundance, and the only thing I can say is it's absolutely a tribute to Adrienne, any success of this. And the wonderful thing is that her husband, Andy, immediately in need of, like, create some sort of action amidst all of this formed this foundation, the Adrienne Shelly Foundation, which he's raised all this money, a bunch of us are on the board, really cool people - not that I'm really cool, but some other really cool people.
Tavis: But you are, yeah. (Laughter)
Russell: Really cool people are on it, and raised all this money for women filmmakers, just to support their work. The statistics of even like Sundance, for instance, the submissions, the statistic is crazy about the ratio of men versus women. I think there's, like, of hundreds of men, there's, like, five women directors. So it's really about supporting people like Adrienne and letting their work be heard.
Tavis: Well, it's powerful of him to do that, but it's kind of you all - beyond kind - to participate and support what he's doing in her memory. What does having a show like "Felicity" for those four seasons do for one's career? Speaking of cool, such a very cool show.
Russell: It was a cool show. What does it do? Well, I think TV, it definitely - there's a different visibility, obviously, if you're in someone's home versus being in a film that only certain people see, so that was good for me. And it also makes you a hard worker. I think that's something that people don't know about hour TV.
Tavis: TV is crazy, isn't it?
Russell: It is crazy, that schedule.
Tavis: Those hours, yeah.
Russell: And doing an hour of drama with - we did have an ensemble cast, but I was pretty much in every scene. So I don't think people realize, you go to work at 5:00 in the morning and then you start finishing Friday nights at 5:00 in the morning. (Laughs) Because turnarounds, and you're working on average about 15-hour days, 17-hour days.
Tavis: Is it worth all that? And I don't mean to be arrogant or pompous about that or arrogant. I'm just asking. So much time.
Russell: It's a lot of work. It's hard. It's really hard work. I think it would be great if everyone could just share that amount of work. It was too much work for me. For me, honestly, it was sort of life-arresting. I love, love with all my heart JJ and Matt, who created the show. Still friends with them, still really good friends with other people that were on the show with me.
But I needed a break, and I took a break after that. I moved to New York, I didn't act for a year. I was, like, do I want to do this anymore? Maybe I just want to go to, like, school and read books.
Tavis: See, I'm struck now by the juxtaposition of spending your entire life on that set for four years, and doing this in 20 days.
Russell: Twenty days.
Tavis: Yeah. So as an actress, you're challenged how, when you're doing something in 20 days? That makes Sundance, no less.
Russell: I know, it's funny. It's weird, just sometimes it works. You, like, throw it out on the wall and whatever's going to stick. And with that, it just did, and I think it's a complete testament to Adrienne's script. It was just - in reading it, it was so fresh and funny and sharp, and then really true when it needed to be true. And that's what worked, and having people like Andy Griffith, who is such a dream, and just everything kind of fit together.
Tavis: This is a long way from the "Mickey Mouse Club."
Russell: So long, but I don't know, that was so good.
Tavis: Yeah. (Laughs)
Russell: The "Mickey Mouse Club," I loved. It's so funny.
Tavis: So who, you, Justin Timberlake, Britney Spears - a long list of folk.
Russell: (Laughs) Christina Aguilera.
Tavis: Christina Aguilera, yeah.
Russell: Ryan Gosling, who a lot of people don't know is a fabulous actor.
Tavis: Great actor, yeah. So would you recommend something like that? You've done the child actor thing, and you seem so well-adjusted.
Russell: Oh, well, gee, thanks. If my kid - no, I would never let my kid do it. I do not regret for a second my life, and I really am grateful for my life, but I think it's a slippery slope. I think for a kid - well, let me say one difference about me being a kid actor is I wasn't a kid on a movie set. I wasn't one, and then there were like 300 adults.
I was one of 19 kids. I think that's a big difference.
Tavis: That's a good point, yeah.
Russell: But that being said, I think it's a very strange world when a kid has to be in an adult, responsible world. Childhood is all about making mistakes, and that's when you figure out, oh, I shouldn't do that, that didn't work. When you're a kid actor, there are no mistakes. There's money on the line. Anything with money on the line, it's weird.
And I always say the term; those kid actors are creepy, because it's creepy. (Laughter) They're doing interviews with, like, Barbara Walters, and they're like, "Well, Barbara -" and I'm like, you're 10. You don't say "Well, Barbara," like, who are you?
Tavis: But it is true, though. I hear your point and I feel the same way when I see kid actors talk that way to adults. And yet it's also true that when you're a kid actor -
Russell: I was never allowed to do that.
Tavis: - you grow up so much faster, though.
Russell: You have to. Well, because you have to - you're in an adult-rules world, and I do think you miss out on some - at least I can only talk for myself, I guess. I missed out on some social things. Like, I never - I missed out on college and the end of high school, and I think you learn important things. I love my life, I love where I am, I made it, but I completely understand why some people lose their way.
Tavis: She is a fine actress, awfully talented, and I'm honored she had time to come by and see us. A couple of projects, as I mentioned earlier, "August Rush," in theaters now. Rush and go see it. And on DVD now, "Waitress." Got some love at Sundance. And so Keri Russell, an honor to have you on the program. Nice to meet you.
Russell: Nice to meet you.
Tavis: Thanks, Keri Russell.
Russell: Thank you very much.
pbs.org
 
thanks a lot cosmogrl5!!!:flower:
i love her so:heart:
i'm thinking of creating a felicity thread..hmm..what do you think?^_^
 
^ You're welcome! :flower: and Heck Yes! to the Felicity thread. :woot:

Here is a recent article from the NY Daily News which mentions her style. :)

NEW YORK — Those close to Keri Russell joke that the actress needs a crash course in actress attitude.
Russell finds cleaning her house "therapeutic," does her own wash and buys her own clothes. Her bag isn't a Balenciaga but an off-white cotton satchel emblazoned with "Certified Organic Mom."

And because she doesn't have a nanny, when she needs to leave 5-month-old son River at home to fulfill her press duties, her mother flies in from Texas to baby-sit. That's the case as she does interviews to promote August Rush, which opens today.

"I want to raise my kid. I was totally being a martyr at first, thinking I could totally do it on my own. And I did, for a while," says Russell, 31, who finally hired a sitter a few weeks ago so she and her husband could go out for a night.
As far as a full-time caretaker goes, "for a control freak like me, it ain't going to happen."
She and her carpenter husband, Shane Deary, live in Brooklyn, where they're renovating a brownstone themselves, and like most appliance-deprived New Yorkers, she dreams of having her own laundry room. The two were married on Valentine's Day, and son River Russell was born June 9 in New York. While she does interviews, Deary "is making our house," Russell says, literally rebuilding the roof. "It is soooo hot. He can fix anything. He has great ideas."
She's a bit out of her element, sporting a full face of makeup and walking around in teetering stilettos, not the cozy moccasins she wears most of the time. Russell points to the sleek, black, wide-leg slacks she has on.
"They're beautiful, but I could never buy these pants. It's just not worth it. I would splurge on a great pair of high heels, because you can wear them to something fancy, but regular clothes? I'd rather go on a trip than spend $10,000 on clothes, and fly first class as a treat."
Over a breakfast of eggs, bacon and wheat toast, Russell apologetically concedes that for her press duties, she did enlist help to pick out ensembles for her television appearances.
In her case, the clothes don't make the woman. The key to her cheerful demeanor? "I'm just happy," she says.
But on screen, she happily plays sad. In the urban fable August Rush, Russell is cellist Lyla, a music whiz who has one romantic night with a fellow musician (Jonathan Rhys Meyers), becomes pregnant and thinks her baby dies in a car crash. But in fact, her ambitious father has secretly given the infant up for adoption.
Years later, her musical prodigy son (Freddie Highmore) is back in Manhattan, and their worlds collide.
It's Russell's second consecutive time playing a mother, after this year's critical darling Waitress. Now that Russell is a mother herself, watching Rush "is so much more emotional. No one tells you that when you have a baby, you literally take a crazy pill and anything to do with kids — it's not even remotely your kid — and you burst into tears," she says.
"I can't imagine having a kid and knowing that they're out there. I'm sort of glad I wasn't a mom when I was shooting it."
But she's glad she had the perspective of being a child performer, like her Rush character. Russell started out on the Mickey Mouse Club with Justin Timberlake, Christina Aguilera and Britney Spears and could understand Lyla's need to escape from her regimented life.
Working full time, Russell says, is "so weird and confusing to a kid, when you're supposed to be messing up and making mistakes. When you're in a professional setting, there's no messing up. Only later does it trip you up. When you're so controlled and everything is so regimented, you do break out."
She did her own breaking out after finishing her WB series Felicity in 2002.
"I made a little bit of money on Felicity, and I was really the only one of my friends on the show who didn't buy a house, who didn't have a really fancy car. So I could move to New York and live in an apartment and not have to work for a year," she says. "I was a kid that year. I went dancing. I didn't get to do any of that when I had to be at work at 5 a.m."
Now, though, Russell has a much more relaxed life in Brooklyn, hitting coffee shops in the morning, reading a book with River along in a sling. "As much as I don't regret my life," she says, "I value so much being at home for dinner with my family."
 
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just a heads up. keri is on martha stewart today. i'm not sure what time everyone gets it. she cooks chicken and a spinach and rice dish. talks about river a bit, and her new home and obviously AR.

her hair is up, gray sweater i think, she looked flawless.
 
^ Thanks! I cannot wait to go home now. My DVR records every show she appears in. :)
 
look at that profile..so gorgeous!!:heart:thank you style savy:flower:
does anyone know where i can find her martha stewart video??i'm dying to see it!!:buzz:
 
Here is her SELF cover, hopefully we will get the editorial soon
style.popcrunch.com


and on the cover of December's C magazine
ebay
 
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^ I really want to read the C magazine interview but don't know where to get it. Anyone know?

I bought Self, and for Self, it was a pretty decent sized interview. Some of the pics were silly though. They had her on Martha's Vineyard or something and made her act "New England." :lol:
 
The other day on Martha, Keri told her that she wanted to do a comedy next. Well....

Some movie news from DarkHorizons.com.
Keri Russell is in negotiations to star opposite Adam Sandler in Disney’s family comedy “Bedtime Stories” says The Hollywood Reporter.
The Matt Lopez-scripted “Bedtime” features Sandler as a harried real estate developer whose life is turned upside down when the lavish bedtime stories he tells his niece and nephew begin to come true.
Russell would play Sandler’s potential love interest. Adam Shankman helms the feature which is due to start production in February.

I cannot wait! I just hope it is a GOOD Adam Sandler movie. :)
 
Thanks for the great HG, Arch. Koochie, thanks for the covers. I am looking forward to the Self magazine!

C magazine seems to be California based but I'm sure if you live in a larger metro city you'd be able to find a magazine shop that stocks it. There is this amazing magazine shop in NYC that I swear carries every magazine published!
 
i saw C at my downtown borders probably over a week ago. all the keri pics are gorgeous! (but really, when are they not?)

thanks for the scans!
 

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