Blog Reactions
Just Jared: Inside Cate Blanchett’s December 2009 ‘Vogue’ Issue
Hollyscoop Entertainment News: Cate Blanchett Shines on the Cover of Vogue Magazine
TalkingMakeup.com: Daily makeup and beauty blog and makeup tutorials: Cate Blanchett on Vogue December 2009 Cover
| Vogue USA > Annie Leibovitz fotografeert Kate Blanchett > http://www.style.com/vogue/feature/2009_December_Truth_or_Dare/ 2 days ago |
| Cate Blanchett and Desire http://www.style.com/vogue/feature/2009_December_Truth_or_Dare/ 3 days ago |
Inside Cate Blanchett’s December 2009 ‘Vogue’ Issue
Just Jared —
Check out this preview of Cate Blanchett’s spread inside the December 2009 issue of Vogue - she’s also gracing the cover!
The 40-year-old actress, who posed for famed photographer Annie Leibovitz, spoke to Vogue’s Adam Green about career choices and her family.
On career choices: “I’m not very cautious or careful. It’s always been more about having a variety of experiences than any planned ...
Cate Blanchett Shines on the Cover of Vogue Magazine
Hollyscoop Entertainment News —
The December issue of Vogue , on newsstands November 24th, features a stunning Cate Blanchett , as she takes on one of the great dramatic roles of all time: Blanche DuBois in A Streetcar Named Desire. The self proclaimed “theater geek,” opens up about the importance of theater, her career choices and her family. Here are some highlights from the interview: Cate on the importance of theater: “In the wake of everything that’s happened in the world in the last eighteen months, we’re thinking about what we’ve lost. So much of the play is about the death of poetry and ...
Cate Blanchett on Vogue December 2009 Cover
TalkingMakeup.com: Daily makeup and beauty blog and makeup tutorials —
... more about having a variety of experiences than any planned trajectory… I think that in a way, projects choose you.”
Actor Geoffrey Rush on Cate Blanchett: “As an actor, you either work off your own personality, and that’s what you’re peddling, or, like Cate, you draw out from the source material all the many dark, mysterious, and conflicting elements of the character that are going to make it engaging and trilling for the audience.”
Read full article on Vogue.com
Take A Good Look At December’s Vogue Without Heading To The Newsstand
shefinds —
... According to the creative director, Lady Gaga “turned up completely naked under a white rubber raincoat” to be shot for their December issue. Check out the video to hear unflappable Grace relay that tidbit.
Lady Gaga’s spread for the magazine was Hansel and Gretel themed, also starred British model Lily Cole, and was shot by Annie Leibovitz. Doesn’t it make crawling into an oven look like going to the circus?
Cate Blanchett is the issue’s coverlady (we just can’t bear to call her ...
Cate Blanchett Hits the Stage for Vogue's December Issue
StyleList —
... For the December issue of Vogue, Oscar-winning actress Cate Blanchett plays cover girl, but instead of flaunting her edgy fashion prowess, the Aussie star takes a more theatrical approach in the Annie Leibovitz-shot cover and fashion spread.
Going hand-in-hand with Blanchett's upcoming role as the fiery Blanche DuBois in Tennessee Williams' famed play "A Streetcar Named Desire," opening in Brooklyn, NY, the Leibovitz shoot finds the stunning 40-year-old actress draped across the stage and ...
Vogue Features Cate Blanchett for December
The Quest for "it" —
... article feature her thoughts on : the importance of theater, stability and working regular hours, and career choices among other things. On family life... “There are so few experiences in our manicured, nanny-stated existence that have the quality of circus. Theater still does.’ And so, when the boys aren’t playing with friends, they can usually be found playing backstage. ‘They’re always engaged in the family business, so to speak.’” Click here for more. ...
Cate Blanchett in US Vogue
My Fashion Life —
... that’s happened in the world in the last 18 months, we’re thinking about what we’ve lost. So much of the play is about the death of poetry and and idealism and hope – the fine, delicate things in our lives, the intangible, ephemeral things in our lives – which theatre actually represents, doesn’t it? It’s ephemeral by its very nature. If you’re not there, you miss it. It’s gone,” Cate – a self-confessed ‘theatre geek’ – tells US Vogue. ...





