21 de agosto de 2009

[[CANDIDS]] Selma Blair in Monrow


Selma Blair wore a pair of Monrow vintage sweat shorts in heather grey while returning home from a workout. The shorts are retail for $88 and are available for purchase here.

20 de agosto de 2009

[[CANDIDS]] Selma Blair Likes Titties N' Beer

Actress Selma Blair returns home from a morning workout. She was spotted wearing a pink shirt with the phrase 'Titties N' Beer' on it, that is the name of a track on the late Frank Zappa's album 'Have I Offended Someone?' Selma was once married to Frank Zappa's son, Ahmet Zappa, they divorced in 2006.


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16 de agosto de 2009

[[MEDIA-VIDEO]] Selma Blair's Hand Is Feeling Better



We caught up with Selma Blair and boyfriend Mikey Day in Los Angeles. She held onto her hand and said that it was feeling a lot better.

15 de agosto de 2009

[[MEDIA-VIDEO]] Selma Blair Waves And Says 'Hi'



Selma Blair smiles for the camera and seems genuinely flattered when the photographer compliments her taste in shoes.

10 de agosto de 2009

[[CANDIDS]] Selma Blair Carrying Groceries

Actress Selma Blair steps out in a black jumper and saddle shoes as she carries home groceries.





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8 de agosto de 2009

[[MEDIA-VIDEO]] Selma Blair And Boyfriend Mikey Day At Palihouse



Actress Selma Blair leaves The Hall At Palihouse with her boyfriend, actor Mikey Day. The two costar in the NBC series "Kath & Kim."

[[INTERVIEWS]] Playboy


The Hellboy hottie talks about those girl-on-girl kissing scenes we love so much and insists, with a straight face, that she's the flattest woman in Hollywood


Q1

PLAYBOY: You've starred in movies like Legally Blonde, The Fog and Hellboy, but how does it feel knowing fans would love nothing better than to see you kiss Sarah Michelle Gellar again the way you do in Cruel Intentions?
BLAIR: It's insane how big an impression that kiss has made. It's the one thing people remember me for. No matter what their age, they say, "Oh my God, you're that girl from Cruel Intentions who kissed Sarah Michelle Gellar." I'm flattered. I think it was the first girl-on-girl kiss in a popular mainstream American film, so it broke the door down.

Q2

PLAYBOY: In a short story you wrote for the erotic anthology Stirring Up a Storm, the main character enjoys sexual thoughts about a beautiful young woman she happens to see one day. Are we detecting a trend here?
BLAIR: The assignment was to write an erotic story, and I don't have an erotic bone in my body, so I thought, Just go the girl-on-girl way. Now that I think of it, though, I have done three girl-on-girl kisses on-screen -- Cruel Intentions and Feast of Love, and I just finished Driving Lessons, in which I kiss a young girl. I didn't realize I had done so much lesbian exploration, yet I've never done any in my real life. Gay women do hit on me a lot, though. When lesbian friends tell me they're in love with me after our friendship has been cemented, it always shocks me. Why would they think I'm gay, except maybe because I'm open, loving and don't mind gayness at all?

Q3

PLAYBOY: You just said -- jokingly, we hope -- you don't have an erotic bone in your body. We beg to differ. Don't you think you're sexy?
BLAIR: I do feel like a sexual being but not especially when compared with other people. While I was making The Sweetest Thing with Cameron Diaz and Christina Applegate, I felt like a different species. They're such girlie girls -- adorable, endearing, typical blonde, beautiful-figured women -- whereas I'm a brunette tomboy. I'm kind of missing the gene that immediately endears people to me, but that's okay.

Q4

PLAYBOY: You've done offbeat movies like Storytelling and others like Cruel Intentions that enjoy a huge cult following. But what movie plays closest to what it's like inside your head?
BLAIR: Cruel Intentions holds up after all these years, so it's okay to have it as a guilty pleasure. It paved the way for everything on TV now. It opened people up to how good teenage stories can be. But sadly, inside my head it's more like Woody Allen's Interiors or Bob Rafelson's Five Easy Pieces -- lonely movies with strong imagery and something a little off. I don't have a lot of the teen-genre spirit in me, which is funny because that's pretty much all I've been playing the past 10 years.

Q5

PLAYBOY: A Dirty Shame, which John Waters directed, strays pretty far from the teen genre. Do you know there are Internet threads debating whether your freakishly massive breasts in that movie are real?
BLAIR: I remember some people were shocked when they thought I would disfigure myself like that for a movie. I thought, People are daft. I mean, those breasts are gargantuan. Hideous. Nobody would find them attractive -- well, okay, maybe two people out there would be fascinated by them. No, I wouldn't do that to myself in real life. I remain the flattest woman in Hollywood.

Q6

PLAYBOY: Growing up, how did you deal with the crap you must have been handed for being named Selma?
BLAIR: I've always thought of it as an old woman's name, so I demanded that everyone call me Blair. In high school, when people found out my name was Selma, they'd call me things like Smell-ma or Salmonella. That stuff basically came from friends, and I never really had any enemies, so I just kind of smiled through it. I still don't like my name. It does not fall prettily off the tongue. In fact, it's hideous. My middle name is James, and I like to be called that.

Q7

PLAYBOY: What sort of kid were you?
BLAIR: Creative, artistic, always drawing and writing. Going to school, I dressed differently every day so I couldn't be categorized. Like, one day I'd dress like an equestrian -- very strange. My mom gave me a necklace when I was six; on one side was a smiley face, and on the other was a frowning face. She'd have me flip over the necklace to suit my mood. She introduced me to her friends as her little manic-depressive child. My home life came out of a movie by Wes Anderson -- too stylized to be believed.

Q8

PLAYBOY: Speaking of Anderson, is he on the list of directors you would love to work with?
BLAIR: A long time ago I dated Jason Schwartzman, who is in Rushmore, so I've met Wes, but I don't think he was taken with me. I could definitely see being in one of his stories, and I would love to be. I've prayed to work with Roman Polanski. I wish I could've been in Bitter Moon, exploring that world of heartbreak with him. Whenever I'm in Paris I see him in restaurants, but I've never met him. I keep meaning to write him a letter, but I'd just come off like a stalker.

Q9

PLAYBOY: Did you always want to become an actress?
BLAIR: I started at a great small private school in Michigan, Kalamazoo College, where I had a photography scholarship and was introduced to theater. I transferred to the University of Michigan, where I majored in photography. When I moved to New York, I didn't know whether I'd pursue photography or acting, but I would lock myself in the darkroom for 12 hours at a time. It turned out it was harder to make money as a photographer than as an actress.

Q10

PLAYBOY: Describe some of your photographs.
BLAIR: I didn't have many models I was comfortable asking to pose for me, so I did a lot of self-portraits. But I didn't want them to look as if they were of me, so I made myself up like Magritte's mother, who drowned herself and was supposedly found with her nightdress wrapped around her head. I took a bunch of self-portraits in that state and some very macabre, victim-y ones in which I'd torn off my clothes, found a ditch at the side of the road and jumped in.

Q11

PLAYBOY: Is it true you lost out on an early acting job on Dawson's Creek that put another actress on the map?
BLAIR: I had tested for the Joey role, and it came down to me, Katie Holmes and one other girl. Holmes got it fair and square. She hadn't done anything before that. I remember seeing her walk into the room and thinking, She is just the tallest girl. There's no way they'll give it to her. She won't even fit on camera, she's so tall. Then I ate my words. She was adorable.

Q12

PLAYBOY: In the first Hellboy movie, your pyrokinetic character torches a lot of cool stuff, flirts with Hellboy and looks hot. Do you get to do more in Hellboy II: The Golden Army?
BLAIR: In the first movie, Liz is very much a wounded little girl coming to grips with whether Hellboy is her boyfriend or not. In the new movie she's more sure of her powers. She lives with Hellboy, they have lovers' spats, and there's a lot of humor in that because of our superpowers -- he's so strong, and I'm so fiery. Evil creatures come from the underworld to destroy Earth, and without spoiling it, I'm right along with Hellboy. I'm a part of the force and more of a superhero in this one.

Q13

PLAYBOY: Did you have any trouble unleashing your inner butt kicker?
BLAIR: The one note Guillermo del Toro -- the director and writer -- always had for me was "No, you're strong. You're strong!" I found it difficult to play a really strong woman once I had established her as a kind of child in the first movie. I hope it works. I'm in it a lot.

Q14

PLAYBOY: Have you ever had an erotic thought or two about Hellboy?
BLAIR: Oh my God, yes. [laughs] I have such a huge crush on Hellboy. I find him very sexy. I find his body appealing. He has a great physique, and his personality and humor are really laid-back. It's funny because I'm such good friends with Ron Perlman, and when he was in costume, I was always flirtatious, hanging onto Hellboy, touching him, holding and kissing him. When he'd take off his makeup at the end of the day, I'd be like, "Oh hey, old buddy, put your costume back on."

Q15

PLAYBOY: A guy could get scorched being around your Hellboy character. Who should stay clear of you in real life?
BLAIR: People who abuse animals or children or who throw cigarettes out in the canyons and paparazzi who take pictures of me at six in the morning when my face is still bloated from sleeping. Please, it takes a village to get me ready. Can't you wait until the village has put my face on?

Q16

PLAYBOY: The four years since Hellboy opened have been especially eventful for you, including a marriage and subsequent divorce from Ahmet Zappa, a relationship with actor and model Matthew Felker and a reported rehab stay. Do you think those life experiences informed your performance in Hellboy II?
BLAIR: I was having a much harder time when we shot the first one, going through a terrible breakup and feeling like crying every day. It was appropriate that I played Liz as wounded. In this new one Liz is more confident and, of course, not only older but ready to be in a relationship. I learned a lot in my marriage, and I remain friends with Ahmet. I'm so glad I married him, and I'm so glad I divorced him, because he turned out to be such a wonderful friend after the marriage. I didn't know someone could remain so loving after a certain type of loving was gone. I'll probably be single for a very long time, because I don't want to get into something lightly. I can't repeat former patterns. I admit I know nothing. It's scary.

Q17

PLAYBOY: Do you want to say anything about the 2007 press reports that said you spent a month at the Promises rehab facility in Malibu?
BLAIR: It was written about, but it's something I'm not prepared to talk about.

Q18

PLAYBOY: How big of a bummer is it to have to see a famous ex in a magazine or on TV, dating someone new?
BLAIR: It's very difficult. I pray I don't run into my ex-boyfriends around town. I wish they'd move back to where they came from in the Midwest or someplace. I don't want to see them on billboards or in magazines. It's heartbreaking. I'm very sensitive, and it's hard for me.

Q19

PLAYBOY: What is the most absurd thing the tabloid press has printed about you lately?
BLAIR: That Kevin Federline and I were dating. People were asking me about it. [laughs] Oh yeah, it's going really well. We're really happy. I'm pregnant. Seriously, that was strange. We had exchanged phone numbers at some place, but we didn't even see each other on the night in question. Weird.

Q20

PLAYBOY: You're about to co-star with Molly Shannon on an American TV version of Kath & Kim, the hit Australian comedy series about a dysfunctional mother-daughter relationship.
BLAIR: I have long hair for the show, and I feel like a Mormon. Talk about Goth-looking. Thank God I play a brat who says whatever she wants, isn't the friendliest girl, is juvenile and dresses like she's 13 -- in unicorn hoodies, tight jeans and Ugg boots. It's a real comedy, very funny, but a little daunting because everyone's so up in arms that we're going to ruin an Australian show. That's fine. I'm best as the underdog.






1 de agosto de 2009

[[INTERVIEWS]] Selma Blair - The Pocker House

SELMA TAKES NEW RISK AS ABUSIVE MOM
EXCLUSIVE Selma Blair, The Poker House Interview by Paul Fischer

Selma Blair is one of those actors who rarely repeats herself. On the small screen she played the spoiled teenager in the US version of the Australian sitcom Kath and Kim, and prior to that reprised her fiery role of Liz in Hellboy II. Now she returns to Indie film territory as a drugged out abusive mother in Lori Petty's feature debut, The Poker House, a tough and damaged character. Blair talked to Paul Fischer in this exclusive interview.


QUESTION: So, clearly this was a character that must have spoken to you when you read your script.

SELMA BLAIR: I did. I read the script, and I thought it was beautifully written. And I thought-I love playing characters that have really fallen apart. You know, in ways. I really enjoy that. That's what I think is kind of one of my strengths. [LAUGHTER] And my weakness, you know? As an actress. But-so, this is a woman that fully lost her way, and was so filled with-you know, rage and hate and victim-complex, that there was no way she was probably going to be likable. But, you know, I don't think, really, one is, when they're so gone with drugs and alcohol. I think this is a very honest look at it.


QUESTION: Very strung out, very intense character. What do you do to - or, how difficult is it for you to identify with a woman like this? I don't think you've played a Mom before. I don't even remember if you've played a mother before.

SELMA BLAIR: I might have played a Mom, little bits and pieces where the kid wasn't much of a focus, and as a young Mom, or who knows, you know? But this is the first time playing a Mom who is, essentially, not a Mom at all. I mean, there was nothing maternal about the woman. It was too painful for my character to look at her children, after how damaged she was, and how far she had already come with-with being such a painful experience in their lives. So, my character really-I was just always trying to push the pain away, and numb out and numb out. And it just left me spewing more hate. And wanting to be sexy to make money, and to feel good about myself. It was really refreshing to get to play a character that walks differently, and is really, really ugly at that period in her life.


QUESTION: How important is it for you to take risks as an actress?

SELMA BLAIR: I think it's always important. To stretch your mind and your muscles, and how people perceive you. I mean, people might not agree with me. You know, I think some people think, "Oh, God, couldn't you have stuck to one thing so we'd know who you are? You know, and ever decide if we like you or dislike you. But I don't even know what kind of films you're doing. It's all over the place. But that's important to me. You know, I'm an actress. I'm not a personality. And I want to be a really good actress. So, I think all these experiences-and ones that people don't want to take, because they don't want to be so unlikeable. Well, you know, my hand's up. I'll take it. You know? It's the role. I don't-I'm not in this to be liked. I mean, it's to tell people stories.


QUESTION: Did you try to do any research on this woman? I mean, did you try to meet any recovering addicts?

SELMA BLAIR: No. I mean, God knows, I have enough of that in my life. You know. I mean, my life is filled with people that have completely screwed up and gotten back together and haven't, and-you know, everyone has had such major screw-ups. Almost everyone that I know. So it was easy to go to that place. And I know plenty of people, you know, that are in the midst of major, major drug use, that have abandoned their lives. And it's heartbreaking. But, you know, I didn't meet Lori's mother, who it's based on. And so I was a little nervous, but Lori kept me in check. And - but her mother-she has a great relationship with her mother now. You know, her mother's one of the biggest supporters of this film, and as a fan, and loves it, and wishes she had a bigger part in the movie. You know, she can really look out of this-- you know, a time in life that everything went wrong. So, they've all recovered now.


QUESTION: Now, what's happening with you next? I mean, I take it Kath and Kim is gone.

SELMA BLAIR: Yeah. Kath and Kim is buried. Although you can get it on DVD, I hear.


QUESTION: Was that a learning experience for you?

SELMA BLAIR: It was a real learning experience, and I'm glad we got our season out of it. And it was kind of, in a lot of ways, my goodbye to playing a teenager. You know, it was this arrested development, vapid young woman I'm playing. And for me, that role was a real stretch. To let go of my vanity, to play Kim on this Technicolor show on a network, where you have so many cooks in the kitchen kind of messing with a creative process, if you're not used to that medium. It was a real challenge for me, and I'm glad I had that experience. And I'm glad I'm getting to flit around on film again.


QUESTION: What are you doing next?

SELMA BLAIR: I'm shooting a film called Columbus Circle, that George Gallo wrote and is directing. He wrote Middlemen, and directed Middlemen, that was just at Cannes with Luke Wilson and Giovanni Ribisi, and that's an amazing film. I loved it. So I saw that film, and was very eager to do this one. And so we're shooting it right now, in LA. I play an heiress who's a shut-in. A complete shut-in, in her apartment.


QUESTION: And do you think there'll be another Hellboy?

SELMA BLAIR: I wish there would be another Hellboy, but I don't know. I don't see it, and Guillermo's busy for the next four years doing hobbit movies. And-you know, I just don't know. But I would love to. You know, the second Hellboy really paved the way for an amazing third one, and I feel like the characters are owed it. But, you know, that's not how this world works.


QUESTION: What else would you like to do besides acting? I mean, do you want to direct or produce?

SELMA BLAIR: I would love to produce, I would love to direct. But honestly, I don't know if I have the confidence right yet. I really would love to get a place where I feel safe with my career. But maybe one never feels safe until you take a chance, and break out of the mold, and make things happen. But I really want to write. Writing is the one that I feel a calling for the most.


The Poker House
Starring: Selma Blair, Bokeem Woodbine, David Alan Grier
Director: Lori Petty