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- James Dean: 11 Things You (Probably) Didn't Know About the 'Rebel' Icon
- 8 Times James Spader Was the Baddest Bad Boy of Them All
- 23 Times Kelso Was the Best Part of 'That '70s Show'
| James Dean: 11 Things You (Probably) Didn't Know About the 'Rebel' Icon Posted: Eighty-five years after his birth (on February 8, 1931) and 60 years after the release of his final film ("Giant"), Dean is still our top poster boy for teen angst. And it didn't hurt his legend that his death in a car crash at age 24 meant we never had to watch him grow old, lose his looks, sell out, or make a bad film. As iconic and familiar as Dean has remained for six decades, there's still plenty of mystery behind this lost-too-soon idol. In honor of his 85th, here are 10 things you need to know about the "Rebel Without a Cause" star. 1. Though he typically played the brooding outsider, Dean was a jock and a team player as a teen. He excelled at baseball, basketball, and pole vaulting in high school and took up fencing in college. 2. Dean lost his two front teeth in a trapeze accident in the barn on his aunt and uncle's Indiana farm, where he spent much of his youth. He supposedly liked to remove his false teeth at parties to unnerve other guests. 4. Dean's first professional acting gig was a Pepsi commercial. He'd landed a stage role in a production of "Macbeth" at UCLA, and a well-connected classmate brought him along to the ad shoot, where Dean served as an extra and earned $30. He soon dropped out of college to become a full-time actor. 6. In an episode of anthology drama series "General Electric Theater," Dean's co-star was Ronald Reagan. Called "The Dark, Dark Hours," the half-hour filmed play starred the then-unknown Dean as a hoodlum who invades the home of a doctor (Reagan) and forces him to treat his friend's gunshot wound. Like many of Dean's non-Method-trained co-stars, the future President reportedly clashed with Dean over the latter's improvisations, which resulted in his performing each rehearsal of a scene in a different way. The episode aired live in December 1954, a few months before "East of Eden" made Dean famous. You can see a condensed version of it here. 8. Dean's name appears in the screen credits of only the three films he starred in, but he can also be seen as an extra in at least four other films: Sam Fuller combat drama "Fixed Bayonets," Dean Martin-Jerry Lewis comedy "Sailor Beware," "Has Anybody Seen My Gal" (starring Dean's future "Giant" co-star Rock Hudson), and the John Wayne football drama "Trouble Along the Way." 10. Dean became the first actor to earn a posthumous Oscar nomination and the only actor to date who's earned two posthumous nods. The first came in 1956 for "East of Eden," the second a year later for "Giant." He lost both times. This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
| 8 Times James Spader Was the Baddest Bad Boy of Them All Posted: James Spader has been playing Hollywood's baddest bad boys since the '80s, and we can't get enough. Whether he's popping up on TV or in a movie, we find ourselves drawn in to his deliciously smirky ways. We're just a pair of star-crossed lovers, it seems. Here are 8 of Spader's baddest bad-boy moments that we'll never forget. This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
| 23 Times Kelso Was the Best Part of 'That '70s Show' Posted: Call him a "dumbass," call him a bimbo (or is it mimbo?), call him what you will... but don't you dare deny the fact that Michael Kelso is quite possibly the best part of "That '70s Show." Ashton Kutcher's lovable lunkheaded teen has some of the best lines of series, rocks those feathered locks like a dream, and knows an epic burn when he hears one. He may not come off as the brightest bulb, but do you really need brains if you're that adorable? Here are 23 times Kelso was the funniest "pretty-boy moron" we've ever laid eyes on. This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
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