NEWS ARCHIVE
 
  
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On November 2, the results of a national, Mazda-commissioned Yankelovich survey of twentysomething year-olds, who were asked to name America's most Out-Of-The-Box male and female celebrities in each of six categories were announced. Those named most OOTB by survey respondents include: Movies: Jim Carrey (36% of respondents voted him most OOTB), who finished slightly ahead of Robin Williams (30%) in the male movie actor category. (Reuters/Variety November 2, 1998)
 
Jim Carrey and Henry Kissinger were spotted at the L.A. eatery Spago with friends, including Milos Forman. According to Kissinger's spokeswoman, the former Secretary of State "has always admired Carrey's work and wanted to meet him."
 
At the beginning of October, under a veil of secrecy, UTA, the United Talent Agency, officially switched its status from agency to management firm. Jim Carrey, who is UTA's biggest client, was understood to have called his young agent, Nick Stevens, about the shift. "Don't worry about it," Stevens told him. "Will the credits on my next project read, 'A Nick Stevens Film'?" Carrey asked, half-seriously. "I'll never be a credit grabber, even as your new producer," the agent-cum-manager replied. UTA's decision to become a management firm came at a time of rising tensions between agents and managers. A growing number of agents have been defecting to enter the management business. A prime lure, of course, is the chance to become more entrepreneurial by producing clients' projects and ultimately selling a stake in their firms to networks or other multinational corporations. The sharpest reaction to the UTA decision emanated from those managers whose clients are represented by the agency. The Gold-Miller Co. represents Jim Carrey, who suddenly now has an abundance of managers and no agent. "We refuse to be alarmist about the situation," said a spokesman for the management firm.
  
The on-again off-again relationship between Jim Carrey and Lauren Holly is officially off. Lauren Holly says she will always love Jim Carrey, but that their romance is finished. Holly, who filed for divorce in 1997, told the New York Daily News not to make too much of her several appearances with Carrey during the summer. She says she accompanied him to the premiere of The Truman Show as a "show of support." She also denies there was anything going on with actor-director Ed Burns, who she describes as one of her many male friends. For the record, Holly's boyfriend is Todd Gustawas, who runs Matthew Conaughey's movie company, the News says. A friend of Carrey said in Hollywood: "Lauren refused to give up the glitzy nightlife and also wanted to start a family right away - but Jim said no." Lauren Holly
 
Kylie Minogue At the beginning of July, Jim Carrey and Australian Pop Princess Kylie Minogue were sharing a Friday night dinner for two at a candle lit table in the Little Door restaurant, Los Angeles. There's no harm in two celebrities discussing their trade in a swanky LA eatery, you may say. But to the astonishment of fellow diners, Jim started discussing his relationship with former wife Lauren Holly loud and very unflattering with tones. In fact, Jim's confessions to Kylie were so candid they've raised rumours that the actress only walked down the aisle with him the first time to further her movie career, Jim described her as an obsessive net worker."It's terrible being in love with someone who's constantly working the room," he told Kylie. "I can't go to a dinner party or a restaurant without Lauren going around networking. She never allowed us to enjoy each other's company. She's too busy being a social astronaut." An NW reporter who happened to be sitting at the table next to Jim & Kylie couldn't believe his ears: "He was talking so loudly and unkindly about Lauren, the woman he's supposed to love." English actress Amanda Donohoe, who co-starred with Carrey in Liar Liar, introduced the comic to Kylie at the end of June. They immediately formed a strong liaison, and at the Little Door dinner a tanned an mini skirted Kylie was an attentive listener. They were talking ot each other like they were old friends, said one ears dropping diner. "Jim looked very relaxed with his new long hair. She was asking him about Hollywood and his movies. She said she really wants to try and make it as an actress. He said he'd do everything he could to help her - and that she would make a great comedienne." (NW Magazine July 27 1998) 
 
The tiny Gulf Coast community of Cedar Key, Florida, is about to be overrun with Hollywood types, including Jim Carrey. Carrey and crew have picked Cedar Key to film The Incredible Mr. Limpet, the remake of a 1964 movie in which Don Knotts played a bookish man who dreams of life under the sea. Scouts from Warner Bros. studios were looking for a fishing village that could be seen from the water, said Judith Hagin, film commissioner for Ocala and Marion County. The village's forests were once a major provider of cedar for pencils in the mid-1800s, and it still is home to some fishermen. Lately, the town 50 miles southeast of Gainesville has become home to an artist community. "They were quite taken with the fact that it had never been seen on film before," Ms. Hagin said. Carrey and his supporting cast will spend a month filming in Cedar Key early next year.
 
Jim Carrey and Sir George Martin
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A documentary on the making of the album In My Life premieres on cable's Bravo channel 9 p.m. Nov. 12. The documentary reveals that Martin remains a calm, lordly presence in the studio, able to ride herd over Williams and Carrey without bruising egos or stifling creativity. The hour-long special documentary covers concepts, conversations and a bit of carrying on; it's a low-key Sir George shaping these performances, appearing carefree yet setting clear mandates for his chosen artists. With: George Martin, Jim Carrey, Phil Collins, Celine Dion, Goldie Hawn, Bobby McFerrin, John Williams, Robin Williams. Filmed in England by Buena Vista Intl. Television. Producer-director, Alan Benson; camera, Peter Bartlett, Francis De Groote, Gary L. Watson; editor, Stephen Singleton; sound, Paul Vigars, Fred Vogler, Wayne Bell, Leigh Crisp. 60 MIN.
 
Lauren Hutton hosts a six part series, Bravo Profiles: The Entertainment Business, examining the pleasures and tortures of our culture's most glamorous industry. On October 7, Premieres & Junkets has Jim Carrey telling of his special kind of hoopla.
 
Several anonymous sources have confirmed that Jim Carrey has accepted the Lord Jesus Christ as his own personal saviour and will begin a 50 state evangelical tour as soon as production of the movie is concluded. Jim is committed to spreading the gospel of Jesus Christ to all of the unsaved. "For God so loved the world," Jim recently remarked to a passerby, "that he gave his only Son, so that whosoever believeth in Him shall not perish, but have everlasting life. By the way, did you know that I'm Jim Carrey?"
 
Jim Carrey won a major victory on September, 31 in his battle with the publishers of Woman's Day over an article which described him as "groper Jim". A Supreme Court judge threw out a central part of the magazine's defence to the actor's defamation action for damages and told it to modify other defences. The article, which appeared in July last year, alleged Carrey sexually harassed female actors and was offensive, erratic and childish. Justice John Hedigan ruled the magazine could not argue as a defence that the "sting" of the article was that Carrey was psychologically unstable. At a hearing in May lawyers for Woman's Day argued Carrey's allegedly lewd, crude and disgusting behaviour was simply a symptom of his mental instability. Jeff Sher, QC, quoted extracts such as: "Jim would come to the set in weird and wacky disguises, grope the female crew and cast members, then run away and think it was hysterical." Mr Sher also said there were references to a "manic funny guy", his immature attitude to women, and Carrey being "juvenile and sexually silly". But Justice Hedigan said the headline of the article described the plaintiff as "groper Jim" not "crazy Jim". It concerned his public and personal behaviour and the way he treated female actors and his then wife Lauren Holly. The judge said Carrey was a comic actor who relied on farce rather than wit and the themes of his films were exaggerated behaviour. "In my judgement, psychological instability, unattended by some limiting criteria, would permit the dragging in of every variant in behaviour from some assumed norm," Justice Hedigan said. "Phrases such as 'the manic funny guy' do not seem to me to found any reasonable basis for the claim being made." Allowing a generalization that Carrey was psychologically unstable to go before a jury would have grotesque and insupportable consequences for a plaintiff who claimed the article had a plain meaning. Justice Hedigan said Mr Sher, appearing for ACP Publishing, argued that in simple terms the actor was "nuts". Mr Sher told the court: "We are saying this man is lewd, crude, disgusting, psychologically unstable and behaves in a reprehensible, rattish and childish manner." But Justice Hedigan said Carrey's barrister, Simon Wilson, QC, argued that the meaning of the article was quite clear and no jury could think the magazine was saying his client was crazy. In his statement of claim, Carrey said the magazine accused him of sexually harassing actors Alicia Silverstone, Courtenay Cox, Jennifer Tilley, Drew Barrymore and Courtney Love. He said he was portrayed as a "lewd, crude and disgusting person" whose offensive behaviour caused actresses to refuse to work with him. Justice Hedigan also threw out an ACP defence that it could argue Carrey acted offensively towards women in general because he did not tell his then estranged wife he had formed a relationship with Lauren Holly. ACP will now have to make a fourth defence. No date has been set for the trial of the action.
 
In Forbes magazine's highest paid entertainers listed by 1998's rank, Jim Carrey occupies the No.37 position, with an estimated income in millions of dollars $32.5.
 
According to Variety, Martin Scorsese has placed his Dean Martin biopic on hold until probably late in the next year. Scorsese wants an all-star cast, which is impossible to accomplish in a near future, due to scheduling difficulties from the stars. Scorsese's dream cast includes Tom Hanks as Dean Martin, John Travolta as Sinatra, Hugh Grant as Peter Lawford, Adam Sandler as Joey Bishop and Jim Carrey as Jerry Lewis.
 
Jim Carrey donated artwork and personal items for Legacy Founders Cottage auction, held on September 23. Other donors include Reba McEntire, Charlton Heston, John Travolta, Priscilla Presley, Sissy Spacek, and Vice President Al Gore. Legacy Founders Cottage is a licensed special care facility in Dallas that provides 24 hour medical, psychological and spiritual services for persons with AIDS during critical stages of the illness in a homelike setting.
 
Jim Carrey injured
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Jim Carrey was briefly hospitalized with a minor neck injury on September 23 after a scuffle with professional wrestler Jerry Lawler on the set of a movie about the late Andy Kaufman. According to the Associated Press, on Tuesday night at Los Angeles' Olympic Auditorium Carrey and wrestler Jerry Lawler were lensing a scene which recreated a fight between Kaufman and Lawler.Carrey and professional wrestler Jerry The King Lawler - the very man who broke Kaufman's neck during a wrestling exhibition 16 years ago - were about to begin the fight scene Tuesday when Carrey tried to set the mood by spitting in Lawler's face. That's when the brawny Lawler, 48, did some ad-libbing of his own, throwing the gangly star to the ground before security pulled him away. Jerry turned around and got really angry, ran back across the ring toward Jim Carrey, and Lawler started swinging, said Andy Cisneros, an extra who watched the bizarre, wrestling-like melee. Jim couldn't get out and got onto the floor and Jerry grabbed him by the hair.Carrey's manager, Eric Gold, says his client was just playing the part and that the wrestler acted unprofessionally. "Jim was immersed in the role as Andy, played it as Andy would have," Carrey's manager, Eric Gold, tells the wire service. "Mr. Lawler acted unprofessionally, and he attacked him. He attacked him, and he injured his neck." "Jerry turned real angry, ran back across the ring, pushed…Jim Carrey, and he started kind of swinging," a witness was quoted as saying. Carrey, who was believed seriously injured at first, was rushed to a Los Angeles hospital, where X-rays showed no serious damage. He was treated and released with a minor neck strain. When Jim returned on set on Wednesday, wearing a neck brace and a visible look of discomfort, had difficulty talking - but was better in the fight arena's dressing room scenes with Courtney Love. The cameras had stopped when Carrey and Lawler got into the last brawl, but Carrey kept going.It's now up to director Milos Forman to decide how to cut/use the scene.
 
Variety reports that Universal won the rights to adapt Dr. Seuss' book How the Grinch Stole Christmas for a live action feature with Jim Carrey attached to star. Ron Howard will direct and his Universal based Imagine Films company will produce. Carrey will play the Grinch, a creature with a heart two sizes too small who attempts to spoil Christmas in Whoville by dressing as Santa Claus and stealing all the Christmas gifts, trees and food. "Grinch is a great character. He's a great sort of anti-hero who winds up growing and doing the right thing," Howard said. Universal will pay an upfront rights fee of approximately $5 million  to Audrey Geisel, the author's widow. However, what's generating the biggest buzz is the back end potential of the deal, which includes around 4% of the box office  gross profits plus a merchandising and soundtrack take said to approach the 50% range. According to the latest reports, the movie is tentatively set to open by Christmas 2000, not 1999, as originally said. 
  
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