Sunday, July 19, 2009

Sectioned Mischa was acting 'suicidal'

FEARS for MISCHA BARTON'S mental health are growing amid reports she was acting suicidal prior to being sectioned.
The O.C. star was placed under an involuntary psychiatric hold last week after cops escorted her from her LA home.
And friends are now claiming the actress might have taken her own life if the law - the same one that sent BRITNEY SPEARS to hospital last year - hadn't intervened.
Website Perez Hilton reports a pal as saying: "She is a mess. She is a suicidal, uninsurable mess."
As a result of her meltdown, Mischa was forced to pull out of the New York premiere of her new movie Homecoming last week.
Another friend added: "She is a tortured and troubled person.
You can survive a bad review, but when you don't show up for the premiere of your new film, it's not a good sign of where your career is heading."
Meanwhile, production on the star's new TV series The Beautiful Life has been pushed back by a week while Mischa recuperates.
The show - produced by ASHTON KUTCHER - features Mischa as a model struggling to compete with her younger catwalk rivals.

Sectioned Mischa was acting 'suicidal'

FEARS for MISCHA BARTON'S mental health are growing amid reports she was acting suicidal prior to being sectioned.
The O.C. star was placed under an involuntary psychiatric hold last week after cops escorted her from her LA home.
And friends are now claiming the actress might have taken her own life if the law - the same one that sent BRITNEY SPEARS to hospital last year - hadn't intervened.
Website Perez Hilton reports a pal as saying: "She is a mess. She is a suicidal, uninsurable mess."
As a result of her meltdown, Mischa was forced to pull out of the New York premiere of her new movie Homecoming last week.
Another friend added: "She is a tortured and troubled person.
You can survive a bad review, but when you don't show up for the premiere of your new film, it's not a good sign of where your career is heading."
Meanwhile, production on the star's new TV series The Beautiful Life has been pushed back by a week while Mischa recuperates.
The show - produced by ASHTON KUTCHER - features Mischa as a model struggling to compete with her younger catwalk rivals.

Sectioned Mischa was acting 'suicidal'

FEARS for MISCHA BARTON'S mental health are growing amid reports she was acting suicidal prior to being sectioned.
The O.C. star was placed under an involuntary psychiatric hold last week after cops escorted her from her LA home.
And friends are now claiming the actress might have taken her own life if the law - the same one that sent BRITNEY SPEARS to hospital last year - hadn't intervened.
Website Perez Hilton reports a pal as saying: "She is a mess. She is a suicidal, uninsurable mess."
As a result of her meltdown, Mischa was forced to pull out of the New York premiere of her new movie Homecoming last week.
Another friend added: "She is a tortured and troubled person.
You can survive a bad review, but when you don't show up for the premiere of your new film, it's not a good sign of where your career is heading."
Meanwhile, production on the star's new TV series The Beautiful Life has been pushed back by a week while Mischa recuperates.
The show - produced by ASHTON KUTCHER - features Mischa as a model struggling to compete with her younger catwalk rivals.

Sectioned Mischa was acting 'suicidal'

FEARS for MISCHA BARTON'S mental health are growing amid reports she was acting suicidal prior to being sectioned.
The O.C. star was placed under an involuntary psychiatric hold last week after cops escorted her from her LA home.
And friends are now claiming the actress might have taken her own life if the law - the same one that sent BRITNEY SPEARS to hospital last year - hadn't intervened.
Website Perez Hilton reports a pal as saying: "She is a mess. She is a suicidal, uninsurable mess."
As a result of her meltdown, Mischa was forced to pull out of the New York premiere of her new movie Homecoming last week.
Another friend added: "She is a tortured and troubled person.
You can survive a bad review, but when you don't show up for the premiere of your new film, it's not a good sign of where your career is heading."
Meanwhile, production on the star's new TV series The Beautiful Life has been pushed back by a week while Mischa recuperates.
The show - produced by ASHTON KUTCHER - features Mischa as a model struggling to compete with her younger catwalk rivals.

Sectioned Mischa was acting 'suicidal'

FEARS for MISCHA BARTON'S mental health are growing amid reports she was acting suicidal prior to being sectioned.
The O.C. star was placed under an involuntary psychiatric hold last week after cops escorted her from her LA home.
And friends are now claiming the actress might have taken her own life if the law - the same one that sent BRITNEY SPEARS to hospital last year - hadn't intervened.
Website Perez Hilton reports a pal as saying: "She is a mess. She is a suicidal, uninsurable mess."
As a result of her meltdown, Mischa was forced to pull out of the New York premiere of her new movie Homecoming last week.
Another friend added: "She is a tortured and troubled person.
You can survive a bad review, but when you don't show up for the premiere of your new film, it's not a good sign of where your career is heading."
Meanwhile, production on the star's new TV series The Beautiful Life has been pushed back by a week while Mischa recuperates.
The show - produced by ASHTON KUTCHER - features Mischa as a model struggling to compete with her younger catwalk rivals.

Sectioned Mischa was acting 'suicidal'

FEARS for MISCHA BARTON'S mental health are growing amid reports she was acting suicidal prior to being sectioned.
The O.C. star was placed under an involuntary psychiatric hold last week after cops escorted her from her LA home.
And friends are now claiming the actress might have taken her own life if the law - the same one that sent BRITNEY SPEARS to hospital last year - hadn't intervened.
Website Perez Hilton reports a pal as saying: "She is a mess. She is a suicidal, uninsurable mess."
As a result of her meltdown, Mischa was forced to pull out of the New York premiere of her new movie Homecoming last week.
Another friend added: "She is a tortured and troubled person.
You can survive a bad review, but when you don't show up for the premiere of your new film, it's not a good sign of where your career is heading."
Meanwhile, production on the star's new TV series The Beautiful Life has been pushed back by a week while Mischa recuperates.
The show - produced by ASHTON KUTCHER - features Mischa as a model struggling to compete with her younger catwalk rivals.

Actress Mischa Barton still in hospital


US ACTRESS Mischa Barton, left, remained in hospital last night, two days after Los Angeles police escorted her from her home with an undisclosed medical problem.
The OC star’s publicist, Craig Schneider, said the 23-year-old remained under the care of medical staff. A source close to the situation also revealed to American TV that the former girlfriend of Kooks frontman Luke Prichard was being held under the same code which hospitalised Britney Spears twice in 2008.

Actress Mischa Barton still in hospital


US ACTRESS Mischa Barton, left, remained in hospital last night, two days after Los Angeles police escorted her from her home with an undisclosed medical problem.
The OC star’s publicist, Craig Schneider, said the 23-year-old remained under the care of medical staff. A source close to the situation also revealed to American TV that the former girlfriend of Kooks frontman Luke Prichard was being held under the same code which hospitalised Britney Spears twice in 2008.

Actress Mischa Barton still in hospital


US ACTRESS Mischa Barton, left, remained in hospital last night, two days after Los Angeles police escorted her from her home with an undisclosed medical problem.
The OC star’s publicist, Craig Schneider, said the 23-year-old remained under the care of medical staff. A source close to the situation also revealed to American TV that the former girlfriend of Kooks frontman Luke Prichard was being held under the same code which hospitalised Britney Spears twice in 2008.

Actress Mischa Barton still in hospital


US ACTRESS Mischa Barton, left, remained in hospital last night, two days after Los Angeles police escorted her from her home with an undisclosed medical problem.
The OC star’s publicist, Craig Schneider, said the 23-year-old remained under the care of medical staff. A source close to the situation also revealed to American TV that the former girlfriend of Kooks frontman Luke Prichard was being held under the same code which hospitalised Britney Spears twice in 2008.

Actress Mischa Barton still in hospital


US ACTRESS Mischa Barton, left, remained in hospital last night, two days after Los Angeles police escorted her from her home with an undisclosed medical problem.
The OC star’s publicist, Craig Schneider, said the 23-year-old remained under the care of medical staff. A source close to the situation also revealed to American TV that the former girlfriend of Kooks frontman Luke Prichard was being held under the same code which hospitalised Britney Spears twice in 2008.

Actress Mischa Barton still in hospital


US ACTRESS Mischa Barton, left, remained in hospital last night, two days after Los Angeles police escorted her from her home with an undisclosed medical problem.
The OC star’s publicist, Craig Schneider, said the 23-year-old remained under the care of medical staff. A source close to the situation also revealed to American TV that the former girlfriend of Kooks frontman Luke Prichard was being held under the same code which hospitalised Britney Spears twice in 2008.

Mischa Barton Removed From Home Due To ‘Medical Issue’

Mischa Barton, former star of the TV show “The O.C.” was removed from her L.A. home by the Los Angeles Police Department on Wednesday.
LAPD spokesperson Richard French told MTV News on Thursday (July 16): “It was apparently yesterday a little after 3 in the afternoon, and one of the patrol units in West L.A. division responded to her home for a medical issue.”
Craig Schneider, the actresses rep told People in a statement, “Police were involved due to Ms. Barton’s celebrity status, to safely transfer her to medical treatment as per doctor’s orders,” Schneider said, adding that the actress is now “OK and resting.”
These “medical issues” are preventing Barton from attending the premiere for her latest film, “Homecoming.” Producer Austin Stark said to People, “There were some medical problems. She’s not able to travel, as far as I know.”
Homecoming” director Morgan J. Freeman also responded to the news that the 23-year-old actress won’t be attending the movie’s premiere, through a statement issued to Access Hollywood. “I along with everyone on the ‘Homecoming’ team are saddened to hear that Mischa Barton will not be able to attend the film’s premiere tonight in New York,” he said. “Her performance in ‘Homecoming’ is fantastic, and she will be missed at

Mischa Barton Removed From Home Due To ‘Medical Issue’

Mischa Barton, former star of the TV show “The O.C.” was removed from her L.A. home by the Los Angeles Police Department on Wednesday.
LAPD spokesperson Richard French told MTV News on Thursday (July 16): “It was apparently yesterday a little after 3 in the afternoon, and one of the patrol units in West L.A. division responded to her home for a medical issue.”
Craig Schneider, the actresses rep told People in a statement, “Police were involved due to Ms. Barton’s celebrity status, to safely transfer her to medical treatment as per doctor’s orders,” Schneider said, adding that the actress is now “OK and resting.”
These “medical issues” are preventing Barton from attending the premiere for her latest film, “Homecoming.” Producer Austin Stark said to People, “There were some medical problems. She’s not able to travel, as far as I know.”
Homecoming” director Morgan J. Freeman also responded to the news that the 23-year-old actress won’t be attending the movie’s premiere, through a statement issued to Access Hollywood. “I along with everyone on the ‘Homecoming’ team are saddened to hear that Mischa Barton will not be able to attend the film’s premiere tonight in New York,” he said. “Her performance in ‘Homecoming’ is fantastic, and she will be missed at

Mischa Barton Removed From Home Due To ‘Medical Issue’

Mischa Barton, former star of the TV show “The O.C.” was removed from her L.A. home by the Los Angeles Police Department on Wednesday.
LAPD spokesperson Richard French told MTV News on Thursday (July 16): “It was apparently yesterday a little after 3 in the afternoon, and one of the patrol units in West L.A. division responded to her home for a medical issue.”
Craig Schneider, the actresses rep told People in a statement, “Police were involved due to Ms. Barton’s celebrity status, to safely transfer her to medical treatment as per doctor’s orders,” Schneider said, adding that the actress is now “OK and resting.”
These “medical issues” are preventing Barton from attending the premiere for her latest film, “Homecoming.” Producer Austin Stark said to People, “There were some medical problems. She’s not able to travel, as far as I know.”
Homecoming” director Morgan J. Freeman also responded to the news that the 23-year-old actress won’t be attending the movie’s premiere, through a statement issued to Access Hollywood. “I along with everyone on the ‘Homecoming’ team are saddened to hear that Mischa Barton will not be able to attend the film’s premiere tonight in New York,” he said. “Her performance in ‘Homecoming’ is fantastic, and she will be missed at

Mischa Barton Removed From Home Due To ‘Medical Issue’

Mischa Barton, former star of the TV show “The O.C.” was removed from her L.A. home by the Los Angeles Police Department on Wednesday.
LAPD spokesperson Richard French told MTV News on Thursday (July 16): “It was apparently yesterday a little after 3 in the afternoon, and one of the patrol units in West L.A. division responded to her home for a medical issue.”
Craig Schneider, the actresses rep told People in a statement, “Police were involved due to Ms. Barton’s celebrity status, to safely transfer her to medical treatment as per doctor’s orders,” Schneider said, adding that the actress is now “OK and resting.”
These “medical issues” are preventing Barton from attending the premiere for her latest film, “Homecoming.” Producer Austin Stark said to People, “There were some medical problems. She’s not able to travel, as far as I know.”
Homecoming” director Morgan J. Freeman also responded to the news that the 23-year-old actress won’t be attending the movie’s premiere, through a statement issued to Access Hollywood. “I along with everyone on the ‘Homecoming’ team are saddened to hear that Mischa Barton will not be able to attend the film’s premiere tonight in New York,” he said. “Her performance in ‘Homecoming’ is fantastic, and she will be missed at

Mischa Barton Removed From Home Due To ‘Medical Issue’

Mischa Barton, former star of the TV show “The O.C.” was removed from her L.A. home by the Los Angeles Police Department on Wednesday.
LAPD spokesperson Richard French told MTV News on Thursday (July 16): “It was apparently yesterday a little after 3 in the afternoon, and one of the patrol units in West L.A. division responded to her home for a medical issue.”
Craig Schneider, the actresses rep told People in a statement, “Police were involved due to Ms. Barton’s celebrity status, to safely transfer her to medical treatment as per doctor’s orders,” Schneider said, adding that the actress is now “OK and resting.”
These “medical issues” are preventing Barton from attending the premiere for her latest film, “Homecoming.” Producer Austin Stark said to People, “There were some medical problems. She’s not able to travel, as far as I know.”
Homecoming” director Morgan J. Freeman also responded to the news that the 23-year-old actress won’t be attending the movie’s premiere, through a statement issued to Access Hollywood. “I along with everyone on the ‘Homecoming’ team are saddened to hear that Mischa Barton will not be able to attend the film’s premiere tonight in New York,” he said. “Her performance in ‘Homecoming’ is fantastic, and she will be missed at

Mischa Barton Removed From Home Due To ‘Medical Issue’

Mischa Barton, former star of the TV show “The O.C.” was removed from her L.A. home by the Los Angeles Police Department on Wednesday.
LAPD spokesperson Richard French told MTV News on Thursday (July 16): “It was apparently yesterday a little after 3 in the afternoon, and one of the patrol units in West L.A. division responded to her home for a medical issue.”
Craig Schneider, the actresses rep told People in a statement, “Police were involved due to Ms. Barton’s celebrity status, to safely transfer her to medical treatment as per doctor’s orders,” Schneider said, adding that the actress is now “OK and resting.”
These “medical issues” are preventing Barton from attending the premiere for her latest film, “Homecoming.” Producer Austin Stark said to People, “There were some medical problems. She’s not able to travel, as far as I know.”
Homecoming” director Morgan J. Freeman also responded to the news that the 23-year-old actress won’t be attending the movie’s premiere, through a statement issued to Access Hollywood. “I along with everyone on the ‘Homecoming’ team are saddened to hear that Mischa Barton will not be able to attend the film’s premiere tonight in New York,” he said. “Her performance in ‘Homecoming’ is fantastic, and she will be missed at

MISCHA 'LOSES IT'

MISCHA Barton was allegedly so frazzled after a three-day party that friends called police fearing she would kill herself.
The O.C. star was taken to the Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre, LA, on Wednesday and put under an involuntary psychiatric hold.
The troubled 23-year-old actress had been due to fly to New York for the premiere of her latest movie Homecoming.
An insider said: “She’s a troubled and tortured person. She’s running out of money and can’t find love.”

MISCHA 'LOSES IT'

MISCHA Barton was allegedly so frazzled after a three-day party that friends called police fearing she would kill herself.
The O.C. star was taken to the Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre, LA, on Wednesday and put under an involuntary psychiatric hold.
The troubled 23-year-old actress had been due to fly to New York for the premiere of her latest movie Homecoming.
An insider said: “She’s a troubled and tortured person. She’s running out of money and can’t find love.”

MISCHA 'LOSES IT'

MISCHA Barton was allegedly so frazzled after a three-day party that friends called police fearing she would kill herself.
The O.C. star was taken to the Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre, LA, on Wednesday and put under an involuntary psychiatric hold.
The troubled 23-year-old actress had been due to fly to New York for the premiere of her latest movie Homecoming.
An insider said: “She’s a troubled and tortured person. She’s running out of money and can’t find love.”

MISCHA 'LOSES IT'

MISCHA Barton was allegedly so frazzled after a three-day party that friends called police fearing she would kill herself.
The O.C. star was taken to the Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre, LA, on Wednesday and put under an involuntary psychiatric hold.
The troubled 23-year-old actress had been due to fly to New York for the premiere of her latest movie Homecoming.
An insider said: “She’s a troubled and tortured person. She’s running out of money and can’t find love.”

MISCHA 'LOSES IT'

MISCHA Barton was allegedly so frazzled after a three-day party that friends called police fearing she would kill herself.
The O.C. star was taken to the Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre, LA, on Wednesday and put under an involuntary psychiatric hold.
The troubled 23-year-old actress had been due to fly to New York for the premiere of her latest movie Homecoming.
An insider said: “She’s a troubled and tortured person. She’s running out of money and can’t find love.”

MISCHA 'LOSES IT'

MISCHA Barton was allegedly so frazzled after a three-day party that friends called police fearing she would kill herself.
The O.C. star was taken to the Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre, LA, on Wednesday and put under an involuntary psychiatric hold.
The troubled 23-year-old actress had been due to fly to New York for the premiere of her latest movie Homecoming.
An insider said: “She’s a troubled and tortured person. She’s running out of money and can’t find love.”

Mischa Barton Hospital Release?

Actress put on psychiatric hold.
Updated: Saturday, 18 Jul 2009, 9:49 PM PDT
Published : Saturday, 18 Jul 2009, 1:02 PM PDT
Text Story by: CNS
Posted by: Scott Coppersmith
West Hollywood (myFOXla.com) - Actress Mischa Barton, taken to a hospital Wednesday on a 72-hour psychiatric hold, was up for release as that hold period expired on Saturday unless her doctors felt she needed further care.
Barton, 23, called police about 3 p.m. Wednesday and, after talking to her at her Westside home, officers decided to take her to a hospital -- reportedly Cedars-Sinai Medical Center -- under Section 5150 of the state's health and welfare code.
Barton's publicist, Craig Schneider, issued a statement that said Barton "was safely transferred to medical treatment for which she remains hospitalized, as per the recommendation of her doctor."
Barton could have been discharged as early as Saturday afternoon unless decided her mental state had not improved. In that case, they could request a 14-day hold.
It's unknown whether Barton was actually released on Saturday or if she remains under doctors' care.
Barton missed the Thursday night premiere of her latest movie, "Homecoming," in New York City.
The actress, probably best known as Marissa Cooper on "The O.C.," is set to appear in the upcoming series "The Beautiful Life," which is scheduled to start production Wednesday.
Barton's representative told the Los Angeles Times her participation "will ultimately be contingent on her progress and doctor's orders." The show premieres Sept. 16.
She pleaded no contest to a driving while intoxicated charge and was given probation after an arrest in December 2007.
In May 2007, Barton was taken from a Malibu beach party to a hospital because of what was reported to be a reaction to cold medicine, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Mischa Barton Hospital Release?

Actress put on psychiatric hold.
Updated: Saturday, 18 Jul 2009, 9:49 PM PDT
Published : Saturday, 18 Jul 2009, 1:02 PM PDT
Text Story by: CNS
Posted by: Scott Coppersmith
West Hollywood (myFOXla.com) - Actress Mischa Barton, taken to a hospital Wednesday on a 72-hour psychiatric hold, was up for release as that hold period expired on Saturday unless her doctors felt she needed further care.
Barton, 23, called police about 3 p.m. Wednesday and, after talking to her at her Westside home, officers decided to take her to a hospital -- reportedly Cedars-Sinai Medical Center -- under Section 5150 of the state's health and welfare code.
Barton's publicist, Craig Schneider, issued a statement that said Barton "was safely transferred to medical treatment for which she remains hospitalized, as per the recommendation of her doctor."
Barton could have been discharged as early as Saturday afternoon unless decided her mental state had not improved. In that case, they could request a 14-day hold.
It's unknown whether Barton was actually released on Saturday or if she remains under doctors' care.
Barton missed the Thursday night premiere of her latest movie, "Homecoming," in New York City.
The actress, probably best known as Marissa Cooper on "The O.C.," is set to appear in the upcoming series "The Beautiful Life," which is scheduled to start production Wednesday.
Barton's representative told the Los Angeles Times her participation "will ultimately be contingent on her progress and doctor's orders." The show premieres Sept. 16.
She pleaded no contest to a driving while intoxicated charge and was given probation after an arrest in December 2007.
In May 2007, Barton was taken from a Malibu beach party to a hospital because of what was reported to be a reaction to cold medicine, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Mischa Barton Hospital Release?

Actress put on psychiatric hold.
Updated: Saturday, 18 Jul 2009, 9:49 PM PDT
Published : Saturday, 18 Jul 2009, 1:02 PM PDT
Text Story by: CNS
Posted by: Scott Coppersmith
West Hollywood (myFOXla.com) - Actress Mischa Barton, taken to a hospital Wednesday on a 72-hour psychiatric hold, was up for release as that hold period expired on Saturday unless her doctors felt she needed further care.
Barton, 23, called police about 3 p.m. Wednesday and, after talking to her at her Westside home, officers decided to take her to a hospital -- reportedly Cedars-Sinai Medical Center -- under Section 5150 of the state's health and welfare code.
Barton's publicist, Craig Schneider, issued a statement that said Barton "was safely transferred to medical treatment for which she remains hospitalized, as per the recommendation of her doctor."
Barton could have been discharged as early as Saturday afternoon unless decided her mental state had not improved. In that case, they could request a 14-day hold.
It's unknown whether Barton was actually released on Saturday or if she remains under doctors' care.
Barton missed the Thursday night premiere of her latest movie, "Homecoming," in New York City.
The actress, probably best known as Marissa Cooper on "The O.C.," is set to appear in the upcoming series "The Beautiful Life," which is scheduled to start production Wednesday.
Barton's representative told the Los Angeles Times her participation "will ultimately be contingent on her progress and doctor's orders." The show premieres Sept. 16.
She pleaded no contest to a driving while intoxicated charge and was given probation after an arrest in December 2007.
In May 2007, Barton was taken from a Malibu beach party to a hospital because of what was reported to be a reaction to cold medicine, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Mischa Barton Hospital Release?

Actress put on psychiatric hold.
Updated: Saturday, 18 Jul 2009, 9:49 PM PDT
Published : Saturday, 18 Jul 2009, 1:02 PM PDT
Text Story by: CNS
Posted by: Scott Coppersmith
West Hollywood (myFOXla.com) - Actress Mischa Barton, taken to a hospital Wednesday on a 72-hour psychiatric hold, was up for release as that hold period expired on Saturday unless her doctors felt she needed further care.
Barton, 23, called police about 3 p.m. Wednesday and, after talking to her at her Westside home, officers decided to take her to a hospital -- reportedly Cedars-Sinai Medical Center -- under Section 5150 of the state's health and welfare code.
Barton's publicist, Craig Schneider, issued a statement that said Barton "was safely transferred to medical treatment for which she remains hospitalized, as per the recommendation of her doctor."
Barton could have been discharged as early as Saturday afternoon unless decided her mental state had not improved. In that case, they could request a 14-day hold.
It's unknown whether Barton was actually released on Saturday or if she remains under doctors' care.
Barton missed the Thursday night premiere of her latest movie, "Homecoming," in New York City.
The actress, probably best known as Marissa Cooper on "The O.C.," is set to appear in the upcoming series "The Beautiful Life," which is scheduled to start production Wednesday.
Barton's representative told the Los Angeles Times her participation "will ultimately be contingent on her progress and doctor's orders." The show premieres Sept. 16.
She pleaded no contest to a driving while intoxicated charge and was given probation after an arrest in December 2007.
In May 2007, Barton was taken from a Malibu beach party to a hospital because of what was reported to be a reaction to cold medicine, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Mischa Barton Hospital Release?

Actress put on psychiatric hold.
Updated: Saturday, 18 Jul 2009, 9:49 PM PDT
Published : Saturday, 18 Jul 2009, 1:02 PM PDT
Text Story by: CNS
Posted by: Scott Coppersmith
West Hollywood (myFOXla.com) - Actress Mischa Barton, taken to a hospital Wednesday on a 72-hour psychiatric hold, was up for release as that hold period expired on Saturday unless her doctors felt she needed further care.
Barton, 23, called police about 3 p.m. Wednesday and, after talking to her at her Westside home, officers decided to take her to a hospital -- reportedly Cedars-Sinai Medical Center -- under Section 5150 of the state's health and welfare code.
Barton's publicist, Craig Schneider, issued a statement that said Barton "was safely transferred to medical treatment for which she remains hospitalized, as per the recommendation of her doctor."
Barton could have been discharged as early as Saturday afternoon unless decided her mental state had not improved. In that case, they could request a 14-day hold.
It's unknown whether Barton was actually released on Saturday or if she remains under doctors' care.
Barton missed the Thursday night premiere of her latest movie, "Homecoming," in New York City.
The actress, probably best known as Marissa Cooper on "The O.C.," is set to appear in the upcoming series "The Beautiful Life," which is scheduled to start production Wednesday.
Barton's representative told the Los Angeles Times her participation "will ultimately be contingent on her progress and doctor's orders." The show premieres Sept. 16.
She pleaded no contest to a driving while intoxicated charge and was given probation after an arrest in December 2007.
In May 2007, Barton was taken from a Malibu beach party to a hospital because of what was reported to be a reaction to cold medicine, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Mischa Barton Hospital Release?

Actress put on psychiatric hold.
Updated: Saturday, 18 Jul 2009, 9:49 PM PDT
Published : Saturday, 18 Jul 2009, 1:02 PM PDT
Text Story by: CNS
Posted by: Scott Coppersmith
West Hollywood (myFOXla.com) - Actress Mischa Barton, taken to a hospital Wednesday on a 72-hour psychiatric hold, was up for release as that hold period expired on Saturday unless her doctors felt she needed further care.
Barton, 23, called police about 3 p.m. Wednesday and, after talking to her at her Westside home, officers decided to take her to a hospital -- reportedly Cedars-Sinai Medical Center -- under Section 5150 of the state's health and welfare code.
Barton's publicist, Craig Schneider, issued a statement that said Barton "was safely transferred to medical treatment for which she remains hospitalized, as per the recommendation of her doctor."
Barton could have been discharged as early as Saturday afternoon unless decided her mental state had not improved. In that case, they could request a 14-day hold.
It's unknown whether Barton was actually released on Saturday or if she remains under doctors' care.
Barton missed the Thursday night premiere of her latest movie, "Homecoming," in New York City.
The actress, probably best known as Marissa Cooper on "The O.C.," is set to appear in the upcoming series "The Beautiful Life," which is scheduled to start production Wednesday.
Barton's representative told the Los Angeles Times her participation "will ultimately be contingent on her progress and doctor's orders." The show premieres Sept. 16.
She pleaded no contest to a driving while intoxicated charge and was given probation after an arrest in December 2007.
In May 2007, Barton was taken from a Malibu beach party to a hospital because of what was reported to be a reaction to cold medicine, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Miranda Kerr's steamy Victoria's Secret photoshoot

Australian News.Net
Sunday 19th July, 2009 (ANI)
Melbourne, July 19 : After posing for her first nude photo shoot a couple of months ago, Miranda Kerr is still continuing to shed her clothes in almost every opportunity she gets.
The hottie flashed barely-there underwear in the latest campaign for American lingerie brand Victoria's Secret.
The 26-year-old appeared in her first nude shoot on the cover of last month's Australian Rolling Stone magazine. Since then, erotic shots have been published of her posing nude for the latest Pirelli calendar.
Kerr is currently dating actor Orlando Bloom and lives with him in Hollywood.
However, she has avoided marriage till now.
He has told her he wants to marry her and will propose again this summer,'' the Daily Telegraph quoted a source close to the couple telling London's Daily Mail.
Bloom apparently has decided to try his luck for the last time.
The insider added: "If she says no, he has said it will be over.
Orlando discussed marriage with her in New York last year and again in Sydney earlier this year, but she kept saying she was too young.''

Miranda Kerr's steamy Victoria's Secret photoshoot

Australian News.Net
Sunday 19th July, 2009 (ANI)
Melbourne, July 19 : After posing for her first nude photo shoot a couple of months ago, Miranda Kerr is still continuing to shed her clothes in almost every opportunity she gets.
The hottie flashed barely-there underwear in the latest campaign for American lingerie brand Victoria's Secret.
The 26-year-old appeared in her first nude shoot on the cover of last month's Australian Rolling Stone magazine. Since then, erotic shots have been published of her posing nude for the latest Pirelli calendar.
Kerr is currently dating actor Orlando Bloom and lives with him in Hollywood.
However, she has avoided marriage till now.
He has told her he wants to marry her and will propose again this summer,'' the Daily Telegraph quoted a source close to the couple telling London's Daily Mail.
Bloom apparently has decided to try his luck for the last time.
The insider added: "If she says no, he has said it will be over.
Orlando discussed marriage with her in New York last year and again in Sydney earlier this year, but she kept saying she was too young.''

Miranda Kerr's steamy Victoria's Secret photoshoot

Australian News.Net
Sunday 19th July, 2009 (ANI)
Melbourne, July 19 : After posing for her first nude photo shoot a couple of months ago, Miranda Kerr is still continuing to shed her clothes in almost every opportunity she gets.
The hottie flashed barely-there underwear in the latest campaign for American lingerie brand Victoria's Secret.
The 26-year-old appeared in her first nude shoot on the cover of last month's Australian Rolling Stone magazine. Since then, erotic shots have been published of her posing nude for the latest Pirelli calendar.
Kerr is currently dating actor Orlando Bloom and lives with him in Hollywood.
However, she has avoided marriage till now.
He has told her he wants to marry her and will propose again this summer,'' the Daily Telegraph quoted a source close to the couple telling London's Daily Mail.
Bloom apparently has decided to try his luck for the last time.
The insider added: "If she says no, he has said it will be over.
Orlando discussed marriage with her in New York last year and again in Sydney earlier this year, but she kept saying she was too young.''

Miranda Kerr's steamy Victoria's Secret photoshoot

Australian News.Net
Sunday 19th July, 2009 (ANI)
Melbourne, July 19 : After posing for her first nude photo shoot a couple of months ago, Miranda Kerr is still continuing to shed her clothes in almost every opportunity she gets.
The hottie flashed barely-there underwear in the latest campaign for American lingerie brand Victoria's Secret.
The 26-year-old appeared in her first nude shoot on the cover of last month's Australian Rolling Stone magazine. Since then, erotic shots have been published of her posing nude for the latest Pirelli calendar.
Kerr is currently dating actor Orlando Bloom and lives with him in Hollywood.
However, she has avoided marriage till now.
He has told her he wants to marry her and will propose again this summer,'' the Daily Telegraph quoted a source close to the couple telling London's Daily Mail.
Bloom apparently has decided to try his luck for the last time.
The insider added: "If she says no, he has said it will be over.
Orlando discussed marriage with her in New York last year and again in Sydney earlier this year, but she kept saying she was too young.''

Miranda Kerr's steamy Victoria's Secret photoshoot

Australian News.Net
Sunday 19th July, 2009 (ANI)
Melbourne, July 19 : After posing for her first nude photo shoot a couple of months ago, Miranda Kerr is still continuing to shed her clothes in almost every opportunity she gets.
The hottie flashed barely-there underwear in the latest campaign for American lingerie brand Victoria's Secret.
The 26-year-old appeared in her first nude shoot on the cover of last month's Australian Rolling Stone magazine. Since then, erotic shots have been published of her posing nude for the latest Pirelli calendar.
Kerr is currently dating actor Orlando Bloom and lives with him in Hollywood.
However, she has avoided marriage till now.
He has told her he wants to marry her and will propose again this summer,'' the Daily Telegraph quoted a source close to the couple telling London's Daily Mail.
Bloom apparently has decided to try his luck for the last time.
The insider added: "If she says no, he has said it will be over.
Orlando discussed marriage with her in New York last year and again in Sydney earlier this year, but she kept saying she was too young.''

Miranda Kerr's steamy Victoria's Secret photoshoot

Australian News.Net
Sunday 19th July, 2009 (ANI)
Melbourne, July 19 : After posing for her first nude photo shoot a couple of months ago, Miranda Kerr is still continuing to shed her clothes in almost every opportunity she gets.
The hottie flashed barely-there underwear in the latest campaign for American lingerie brand Victoria's Secret.
The 26-year-old appeared in her first nude shoot on the cover of last month's Australian Rolling Stone magazine. Since then, erotic shots have been published of her posing nude for the latest Pirelli calendar.
Kerr is currently dating actor Orlando Bloom and lives with him in Hollywood.
However, she has avoided marriage till now.
He has told her he wants to marry her and will propose again this summer,'' the Daily Telegraph quoted a source close to the couple telling London's Daily Mail.
Bloom apparently has decided to try his luck for the last time.
The insider added: "If she says no, he has said it will be over.
Orlando discussed marriage with her in New York last year and again in Sydney earlier this year, but she kept saying she was too young.''

Comics just want to be taken seriously

Since Charlie Chaplin's day, comedians have yearned to do drama -- with varying results. Judd Apatow is the latest, with his dramedy 'Funny People
As a director, John "Sully" Sullivan was no stranger to success. His "Ants in Your Plants of 1939" was an enormous comedy hit, and the studio was eager for a follow-up: "Ants in Your Plants of 1940," anyone? Sullivan, however, had different plans for his next effort. He yearned to travel around America, see the real country, and come back with a hard-hitting picture about big issues called "O Brother, Where Art Thou?"
Sully, as you may remember, is only a figment of Preston Sturges' imagination, the protagonist of his 1941 film "Sullivan's Travels," but his predicament is an ever-recurring one in Hollywood. Comic actors and directors, feeling the desire to be taken more seriously, hanker to try their hand at drama, dreaming Sully Sullivan's dream of going deeper than laughs -- and not coincidentally, reaping the benefits in increased prestige.
Comedy doesn't win Oscars. Just ask Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, W.C. Fields, Groucho Marx, Cary Grant or Jerry Lewis, none of whom ever won competitive Academy Awards. The pull of gravity for comedians dates at least to Chaplin, whose 1921 film "The Kid" offered the promise of "a picture with a smile -- and perhaps, a tear." The backlash to same is every bit as enduring; it is not just the space aliens from Woody Allen's "Stardust Memories" that prefer "the early, funny ones" to the later, artistic experiments.
Now, the latest comedic titan has volunteered to navigate the rocky shoals of drama: Judd Apatow, omnipresent purveyor of raunchy male bonding comedies, is about to release "Funny People" (July 31), a dramedy about an extremely successful comic-turned-movie star (Adam Sandler) who is diagnosed with a terminal illness. He hires an up-and-coming comedian (Seth Rogen) to write jokes for him, and the initial hero worship he receives transmutes into a more complex set of emotions as he deals with his sickness. The film is stocked almost exclusively with stand-up comedians, whose coping mechanism for dealing with painful issues is a certain type of gallows humor. Their response to turmoil -- much like Apatow's -- is to tell a joke.
Dramedy," that awkward hybrid of a word, is perhaps the wrong description for "Funny People." It would be more accurate to describe the film as a stand-up drama, whose emotional core is leavened by a steady stream of jokes, asides and routines. Its characters are themselves comedians, more comfortable with laughter than other, less predictable emotions, grounding Apatow's distinct preference for levity in the sensibilities of its protagonists. It is the kind of film where Sandler's character, awaiting potentially life-changing news, finds the energy to jest with his Scandinavian doctor that "I keep thinking you're going to be torturing James Bond later." In his own fumbling, joshing fashion, though, Apatow is stretching for something just beyond his reach -- something nakedly poignant.
He is hardly the first to feel the tug of the dramatic. Chaplin was in search of respect when he made "The Kid," no longer interested in settling for being the world's greatest comedian but seeking the title of world's foremost tragedian as well.
Later, when Chaplin turned explicitly political with "The Great Dictator," "Monsieur Verdoux" and "A King in New York," it stemmed from an overwhelming desire to speak out on the threats posed by fascism and the atomic bomb. Told by film salesmen that his final speech in 1940's "The Great Dictator -- a humanist plea for peace and internationalism -- would cost him $1 million in box office, Chaplin was unruffled: "I don't care if it's 5 million. I'm gonna do it."
Some comedians' attempts at drama were doomed from the outset. Lewis' never-released "The Day the Clown Cried" (1972), about a German clown who accompanies a train of Jewish children to the Nazi gas chambers, has achieved a cult notoriety in inverse relation to the number of people who have actually seen the film. Lewis had been accused of mawkishness before, but a Holocaust comedy, with Lewis combating the Nazis with clown routines? The very idea seemed the height of narcissistic chutzpah -- that is, until Italian comedian Roberto Benigni essentially remade the film as "Life Is Beautiful" (1997). Opinions were split on "Life," with some objecting to Benigni's exploitation of his material and others saluting his Chaplinesque approach. Either way, the formula was nonrenewable; Robin Williams' strikingly similar "Jakob the Liar" (1999) was a notorious flop.
There's no question that comedy is harder to do than serious stuff," Allen said in 1972. "There's also no question in my mind that comedy is less valuable than serious stuff." He was filming "Sleeper," one of the most successful of his freewheeling early comedies, but Allen was already growing restless. Bob Hope had been the primary influence on early efforts such as "Sleeper" and "Bananas," but Ingmar Bergman now beckoned. "Annie Hall" (1977), which won best picture, was Allen's triumphant first attempt at mingling comedy and drama, but its follow-up, "Interiors" (1978), was straight Bergman: morose, moody and intense. Allen would return, every few years, to unadorned dramas, but even his comedy work had been affected: Never again would he make comedies as weightless as those first few. Space aliens and other Allen buffs would see fit to complain.
Recent years have seen yet more prominent comedians insistent on stretching into drama. Some, like Tom Hanks and Jamie Foxx, have managed to escape comedy entirely and recast themselves as dramatic actors. Others have found only moderate success. Jim Carrey played a genial buffoon unaware of his own television-mediated existence in "The Truman Show" (1998) and offered a somber Andy Kaufman for Milos Forman's "Man on the Moon" (1999). Both were modest successes, with Carrey translating his genial zaniness into dramatic roles demanding a certain unhinged vigor. Will Ferrell turned in a surprisingly deft performance in "Stranger Than Fiction" (2006) as an IRS agent who belatedly discovers he is a character in a novelist's new book. Ferrell's range, like Carrey's, is limited, their yen for drama constrained by their own talents and the preferences of their audience. Given the choice, most moviegoers would probably prefer to see Ferrell in "Old School 2" or Carrey revisiting Ace Ventura, than to watch them mope on-screen.
For advice and perhaps a word of caution, Apatow would have had to look no further than the end of his lens. Sandler, perhaps the pre-eminent comic star of the last decade, has been down this road before. In three prior dramatic experiments, he ran the gamut of potential responses: "Punch-Drunk Love" (2002) was an unqualified critical success, "Reign Over Me" (2007) a qualified one, and James L. Brooks' "Spanglish" (2004) generally considered a well-intentioned calamity. None had had even a fraction of the box-office impact of any of Sandler's straightforward comedies. Like Carrey and Ferrell, Sandler is not a dramatic natural, but his serious outings -- "Punch-Drunk Love" and "Funny People" in particular -- have had the benefit of being honed to suit his bratty, shambling persona.
Funny People" is simultaneously a comedy wrestling with serious issues and a film whose characters are comedians struggling with problems far beyond the ken of their stand-up. As such, it marks a turning point in the evolution of this now-80-plus-year-old trend: the self-aware stab at drama. "I'm trying to make a very serious movie that is twice as funny as my other movies," Apatow has said of his film. "Wish me luck."

Comics just want to be taken seriously

Since Charlie Chaplin's day, comedians have yearned to do drama -- with varying results. Judd Apatow is the latest, with his dramedy 'Funny People
As a director, John "Sully" Sullivan was no stranger to success. His "Ants in Your Plants of 1939" was an enormous comedy hit, and the studio was eager for a follow-up: "Ants in Your Plants of 1940," anyone? Sullivan, however, had different plans for his next effort. He yearned to travel around America, see the real country, and come back with a hard-hitting picture about big issues called "O Brother, Where Art Thou?"
Sully, as you may remember, is only a figment of Preston Sturges' imagination, the protagonist of his 1941 film "Sullivan's Travels," but his predicament is an ever-recurring one in Hollywood. Comic actors and directors, feeling the desire to be taken more seriously, hanker to try their hand at drama, dreaming Sully Sullivan's dream of going deeper than laughs -- and not coincidentally, reaping the benefits in increased prestige.
Comedy doesn't win Oscars. Just ask Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, W.C. Fields, Groucho Marx, Cary Grant or Jerry Lewis, none of whom ever won competitive Academy Awards. The pull of gravity for comedians dates at least to Chaplin, whose 1921 film "The Kid" offered the promise of "a picture with a smile -- and perhaps, a tear." The backlash to same is every bit as enduring; it is not just the space aliens from Woody Allen's "Stardust Memories" that prefer "the early, funny ones" to the later, artistic experiments.
Now, the latest comedic titan has volunteered to navigate the rocky shoals of drama: Judd Apatow, omnipresent purveyor of raunchy male bonding comedies, is about to release "Funny People" (July 31), a dramedy about an extremely successful comic-turned-movie star (Adam Sandler) who is diagnosed with a terminal illness. He hires an up-and-coming comedian (Seth Rogen) to write jokes for him, and the initial hero worship he receives transmutes into a more complex set of emotions as he deals with his sickness. The film is stocked almost exclusively with stand-up comedians, whose coping mechanism for dealing with painful issues is a certain type of gallows humor. Their response to turmoil -- much like Apatow's -- is to tell a joke.
Dramedy," that awkward hybrid of a word, is perhaps the wrong description for "Funny People." It would be more accurate to describe the film as a stand-up drama, whose emotional core is leavened by a steady stream of jokes, asides and routines. Its characters are themselves comedians, more comfortable with laughter than other, less predictable emotions, grounding Apatow's distinct preference for levity in the sensibilities of its protagonists. It is the kind of film where Sandler's character, awaiting potentially life-changing news, finds the energy to jest with his Scandinavian doctor that "I keep thinking you're going to be torturing James Bond later." In his own fumbling, joshing fashion, though, Apatow is stretching for something just beyond his reach -- something nakedly poignant.
He is hardly the first to feel the tug of the dramatic. Chaplin was in search of respect when he made "The Kid," no longer interested in settling for being the world's greatest comedian but seeking the title of world's foremost tragedian as well.
Later, when Chaplin turned explicitly political with "The Great Dictator," "Monsieur Verdoux" and "A King in New York," it stemmed from an overwhelming desire to speak out on the threats posed by fascism and the atomic bomb. Told by film salesmen that his final speech in 1940's "The Great Dictator -- a humanist plea for peace and internationalism -- would cost him $1 million in box office, Chaplin was unruffled: "I don't care if it's 5 million. I'm gonna do it."
Some comedians' attempts at drama were doomed from the outset. Lewis' never-released "The Day the Clown Cried" (1972), about a German clown who accompanies a train of Jewish children to the Nazi gas chambers, has achieved a cult notoriety in inverse relation to the number of people who have actually seen the film. Lewis had been accused of mawkishness before, but a Holocaust comedy, with Lewis combating the Nazis with clown routines? The very idea seemed the height of narcissistic chutzpah -- that is, until Italian comedian Roberto Benigni essentially remade the film as "Life Is Beautiful" (1997). Opinions were split on "Life," with some objecting to Benigni's exploitation of his material and others saluting his Chaplinesque approach. Either way, the formula was nonrenewable; Robin Williams' strikingly similar "Jakob the Liar" (1999) was a notorious flop.
There's no question that comedy is harder to do than serious stuff," Allen said in 1972. "There's also no question in my mind that comedy is less valuable than serious stuff." He was filming "Sleeper," one of the most successful of his freewheeling early comedies, but Allen was already growing restless. Bob Hope had been the primary influence on early efforts such as "Sleeper" and "Bananas," but Ingmar Bergman now beckoned. "Annie Hall" (1977), which won best picture, was Allen's triumphant first attempt at mingling comedy and drama, but its follow-up, "Interiors" (1978), was straight Bergman: morose, moody and intense. Allen would return, every few years, to unadorned dramas, but even his comedy work had been affected: Never again would he make comedies as weightless as those first few. Space aliens and other Allen buffs would see fit to complain.
Recent years have seen yet more prominent comedians insistent on stretching into drama. Some, like Tom Hanks and Jamie Foxx, have managed to escape comedy entirely and recast themselves as dramatic actors. Others have found only moderate success. Jim Carrey played a genial buffoon unaware of his own television-mediated existence in "The Truman Show" (1998) and offered a somber Andy Kaufman for Milos Forman's "Man on the Moon" (1999). Both were modest successes, with Carrey translating his genial zaniness into dramatic roles demanding a certain unhinged vigor. Will Ferrell turned in a surprisingly deft performance in "Stranger Than Fiction" (2006) as an IRS agent who belatedly discovers he is a character in a novelist's new book. Ferrell's range, like Carrey's, is limited, their yen for drama constrained by their own talents and the preferences of their audience. Given the choice, most moviegoers would probably prefer to see Ferrell in "Old School 2" or Carrey revisiting Ace Ventura, than to watch them mope on-screen.
For advice and perhaps a word of caution, Apatow would have had to look no further than the end of his lens. Sandler, perhaps the pre-eminent comic star of the last decade, has been down this road before. In three prior dramatic experiments, he ran the gamut of potential responses: "Punch-Drunk Love" (2002) was an unqualified critical success, "Reign Over Me" (2007) a qualified one, and James L. Brooks' "Spanglish" (2004) generally considered a well-intentioned calamity. None had had even a fraction of the box-office impact of any of Sandler's straightforward comedies. Like Carrey and Ferrell, Sandler is not a dramatic natural, but his serious outings -- "Punch-Drunk Love" and "Funny People" in particular -- have had the benefit of being honed to suit his bratty, shambling persona.
Funny People" is simultaneously a comedy wrestling with serious issues and a film whose characters are comedians struggling with problems far beyond the ken of their stand-up. As such, it marks a turning point in the evolution of this now-80-plus-year-old trend: the self-aware stab at drama. "I'm trying to make a very serious movie that is twice as funny as my other movies," Apatow has said of his film. "Wish me luck."

Comics just want to be taken seriously

Since Charlie Chaplin's day, comedians have yearned to do drama -- with varying results. Judd Apatow is the latest, with his dramedy 'Funny People
As a director, John "Sully" Sullivan was no stranger to success. His "Ants in Your Plants of 1939" was an enormous comedy hit, and the studio was eager for a follow-up: "Ants in Your Plants of 1940," anyone? Sullivan, however, had different plans for his next effort. He yearned to travel around America, see the real country, and come back with a hard-hitting picture about big issues called "O Brother, Where Art Thou?"
Sully, as you may remember, is only a figment of Preston Sturges' imagination, the protagonist of his 1941 film "Sullivan's Travels," but his predicament is an ever-recurring one in Hollywood. Comic actors and directors, feeling the desire to be taken more seriously, hanker to try their hand at drama, dreaming Sully Sullivan's dream of going deeper than laughs -- and not coincidentally, reaping the benefits in increased prestige.
Comedy doesn't win Oscars. Just ask Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, W.C. Fields, Groucho Marx, Cary Grant or Jerry Lewis, none of whom ever won competitive Academy Awards. The pull of gravity for comedians dates at least to Chaplin, whose 1921 film "The Kid" offered the promise of "a picture with a smile -- and perhaps, a tear." The backlash to same is every bit as enduring; it is not just the space aliens from Woody Allen's "Stardust Memories" that prefer "the early, funny ones" to the later, artistic experiments.
Now, the latest comedic titan has volunteered to navigate the rocky shoals of drama: Judd Apatow, omnipresent purveyor of raunchy male bonding comedies, is about to release "Funny People" (July 31), a dramedy about an extremely successful comic-turned-movie star (Adam Sandler) who is diagnosed with a terminal illness. He hires an up-and-coming comedian (Seth Rogen) to write jokes for him, and the initial hero worship he receives transmutes into a more complex set of emotions as he deals with his sickness. The film is stocked almost exclusively with stand-up comedians, whose coping mechanism for dealing with painful issues is a certain type of gallows humor. Their response to turmoil -- much like Apatow's -- is to tell a joke.
Dramedy," that awkward hybrid of a word, is perhaps the wrong description for "Funny People." It would be more accurate to describe the film as a stand-up drama, whose emotional core is leavened by a steady stream of jokes, asides and routines. Its characters are themselves comedians, more comfortable with laughter than other, less predictable emotions, grounding Apatow's distinct preference for levity in the sensibilities of its protagonists. It is the kind of film where Sandler's character, awaiting potentially life-changing news, finds the energy to jest with his Scandinavian doctor that "I keep thinking you're going to be torturing James Bond later." In his own fumbling, joshing fashion, though, Apatow is stretching for something just beyond his reach -- something nakedly poignant.
He is hardly the first to feel the tug of the dramatic. Chaplin was in search of respect when he made "The Kid," no longer interested in settling for being the world's greatest comedian but seeking the title of world's foremost tragedian as well.
Later, when Chaplin turned explicitly political with "The Great Dictator," "Monsieur Verdoux" and "A King in New York," it stemmed from an overwhelming desire to speak out on the threats posed by fascism and the atomic bomb. Told by film salesmen that his final speech in 1940's "The Great Dictator -- a humanist plea for peace and internationalism -- would cost him $1 million in box office, Chaplin was unruffled: "I don't care if it's 5 million. I'm gonna do it."
Some comedians' attempts at drama were doomed from the outset. Lewis' never-released "The Day the Clown Cried" (1972), about a German clown who accompanies a train of Jewish children to the Nazi gas chambers, has achieved a cult notoriety in inverse relation to the number of people who have actually seen the film. Lewis had been accused of mawkishness before, but a Holocaust comedy, with Lewis combating the Nazis with clown routines? The very idea seemed the height of narcissistic chutzpah -- that is, until Italian comedian Roberto Benigni essentially remade the film as "Life Is Beautiful" (1997). Opinions were split on "Life," with some objecting to Benigni's exploitation of his material and others saluting his Chaplinesque approach. Either way, the formula was nonrenewable; Robin Williams' strikingly similar "Jakob the Liar" (1999) was a notorious flop.
There's no question that comedy is harder to do than serious stuff," Allen said in 1972. "There's also no question in my mind that comedy is less valuable than serious stuff." He was filming "Sleeper," one of the most successful of his freewheeling early comedies, but Allen was already growing restless. Bob Hope had been the primary influence on early efforts such as "Sleeper" and "Bananas," but Ingmar Bergman now beckoned. "Annie Hall" (1977), which won best picture, was Allen's triumphant first attempt at mingling comedy and drama, but its follow-up, "Interiors" (1978), was straight Bergman: morose, moody and intense. Allen would return, every few years, to unadorned dramas, but even his comedy work had been affected: Never again would he make comedies as weightless as those first few. Space aliens and other Allen buffs would see fit to complain.
Recent years have seen yet more prominent comedians insistent on stretching into drama. Some, like Tom Hanks and Jamie Foxx, have managed to escape comedy entirely and recast themselves as dramatic actors. Others have found only moderate success. Jim Carrey played a genial buffoon unaware of his own television-mediated existence in "The Truman Show" (1998) and offered a somber Andy Kaufman for Milos Forman's "Man on the Moon" (1999). Both were modest successes, with Carrey translating his genial zaniness into dramatic roles demanding a certain unhinged vigor. Will Ferrell turned in a surprisingly deft performance in "Stranger Than Fiction" (2006) as an IRS agent who belatedly discovers he is a character in a novelist's new book. Ferrell's range, like Carrey's, is limited, their yen for drama constrained by their own talents and the preferences of their audience. Given the choice, most moviegoers would probably prefer to see Ferrell in "Old School 2" or Carrey revisiting Ace Ventura, than to watch them mope on-screen.
For advice and perhaps a word of caution, Apatow would have had to look no further than the end of his lens. Sandler, perhaps the pre-eminent comic star of the last decade, has been down this road before. In three prior dramatic experiments, he ran the gamut of potential responses: "Punch-Drunk Love" (2002) was an unqualified critical success, "Reign Over Me" (2007) a qualified one, and James L. Brooks' "Spanglish" (2004) generally considered a well-intentioned calamity. None had had even a fraction of the box-office impact of any of Sandler's straightforward comedies. Like Carrey and Ferrell, Sandler is not a dramatic natural, but his serious outings -- "Punch-Drunk Love" and "Funny People" in particular -- have had the benefit of being honed to suit his bratty, shambling persona.
Funny People" is simultaneously a comedy wrestling with serious issues and a film whose characters are comedians struggling with problems far beyond the ken of their stand-up. As such, it marks a turning point in the evolution of this now-80-plus-year-old trend: the self-aware stab at drama. "I'm trying to make a very serious movie that is twice as funny as my other movies," Apatow has said of his film. "Wish me luck."

Comics just want to be taken seriously

Since Charlie Chaplin's day, comedians have yearned to do drama -- with varying results. Judd Apatow is the latest, with his dramedy 'Funny People
As a director, John "Sully" Sullivan was no stranger to success. His "Ants in Your Plants of 1939" was an enormous comedy hit, and the studio was eager for a follow-up: "Ants in Your Plants of 1940," anyone? Sullivan, however, had different plans for his next effort. He yearned to travel around America, see the real country, and come back with a hard-hitting picture about big issues called "O Brother, Where Art Thou?"
Sully, as you may remember, is only a figment of Preston Sturges' imagination, the protagonist of his 1941 film "Sullivan's Travels," but his predicament is an ever-recurring one in Hollywood. Comic actors and directors, feeling the desire to be taken more seriously, hanker to try their hand at drama, dreaming Sully Sullivan's dream of going deeper than laughs -- and not coincidentally, reaping the benefits in increased prestige.
Comedy doesn't win Oscars. Just ask Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, W.C. Fields, Groucho Marx, Cary Grant or Jerry Lewis, none of whom ever won competitive Academy Awards. The pull of gravity for comedians dates at least to Chaplin, whose 1921 film "The Kid" offered the promise of "a picture with a smile -- and perhaps, a tear." The backlash to same is every bit as enduring; it is not just the space aliens from Woody Allen's "Stardust Memories" that prefer "the early, funny ones" to the later, artistic experiments.
Now, the latest comedic titan has volunteered to navigate the rocky shoals of drama: Judd Apatow, omnipresent purveyor of raunchy male bonding comedies, is about to release "Funny People" (July 31), a dramedy about an extremely successful comic-turned-movie star (Adam Sandler) who is diagnosed with a terminal illness. He hires an up-and-coming comedian (Seth Rogen) to write jokes for him, and the initial hero worship he receives transmutes into a more complex set of emotions as he deals with his sickness. The film is stocked almost exclusively with stand-up comedians, whose coping mechanism for dealing with painful issues is a certain type of gallows humor. Their response to turmoil -- much like Apatow's -- is to tell a joke.
Dramedy," that awkward hybrid of a word, is perhaps the wrong description for "Funny People." It would be more accurate to describe the film as a stand-up drama, whose emotional core is leavened by a steady stream of jokes, asides and routines. Its characters are themselves comedians, more comfortable with laughter than other, less predictable emotions, grounding Apatow's distinct preference for levity in the sensibilities of its protagonists. It is the kind of film where Sandler's character, awaiting potentially life-changing news, finds the energy to jest with his Scandinavian doctor that "I keep thinking you're going to be torturing James Bond later." In his own fumbling, joshing fashion, though, Apatow is stretching for something just beyond his reach -- something nakedly poignant.
He is hardly the first to feel the tug of the dramatic. Chaplin was in search of respect when he made "The Kid," no longer interested in settling for being the world's greatest comedian but seeking the title of world's foremost tragedian as well.
Later, when Chaplin turned explicitly political with "The Great Dictator," "Monsieur Verdoux" and "A King in New York," it stemmed from an overwhelming desire to speak out on the threats posed by fascism and the atomic bomb. Told by film salesmen that his final speech in 1940's "The Great Dictator -- a humanist plea for peace and internationalism -- would cost him $1 million in box office, Chaplin was unruffled: "I don't care if it's 5 million. I'm gonna do it."
Some comedians' attempts at drama were doomed from the outset. Lewis' never-released "The Day the Clown Cried" (1972), about a German clown who accompanies a train of Jewish children to the Nazi gas chambers, has achieved a cult notoriety in inverse relation to the number of people who have actually seen the film. Lewis had been accused of mawkishness before, but a Holocaust comedy, with Lewis combating the Nazis with clown routines? The very idea seemed the height of narcissistic chutzpah -- that is, until Italian comedian Roberto Benigni essentially remade the film as "Life Is Beautiful" (1997). Opinions were split on "Life," with some objecting to Benigni's exploitation of his material and others saluting his Chaplinesque approach. Either way, the formula was nonrenewable; Robin Williams' strikingly similar "Jakob the Liar" (1999) was a notorious flop.
There's no question that comedy is harder to do than serious stuff," Allen said in 1972. "There's also no question in my mind that comedy is less valuable than serious stuff." He was filming "Sleeper," one of the most successful of his freewheeling early comedies, but Allen was already growing restless. Bob Hope had been the primary influence on early efforts such as "Sleeper" and "Bananas," but Ingmar Bergman now beckoned. "Annie Hall" (1977), which won best picture, was Allen's triumphant first attempt at mingling comedy and drama, but its follow-up, "Interiors" (1978), was straight Bergman: morose, moody and intense. Allen would return, every few years, to unadorned dramas, but even his comedy work had been affected: Never again would he make comedies as weightless as those first few. Space aliens and other Allen buffs would see fit to complain.
Recent years have seen yet more prominent comedians insistent on stretching into drama. Some, like Tom Hanks and Jamie Foxx, have managed to escape comedy entirely and recast themselves as dramatic actors. Others have found only moderate success. Jim Carrey played a genial buffoon unaware of his own television-mediated existence in "The Truman Show" (1998) and offered a somber Andy Kaufman for Milos Forman's "Man on the Moon" (1999). Both were modest successes, with Carrey translating his genial zaniness into dramatic roles demanding a certain unhinged vigor. Will Ferrell turned in a surprisingly deft performance in "Stranger Than Fiction" (2006) as an IRS agent who belatedly discovers he is a character in a novelist's new book. Ferrell's range, like Carrey's, is limited, their yen for drama constrained by their own talents and the preferences of their audience. Given the choice, most moviegoers would probably prefer to see Ferrell in "Old School 2" or Carrey revisiting Ace Ventura, than to watch them mope on-screen.
For advice and perhaps a word of caution, Apatow would have had to look no further than the end of his lens. Sandler, perhaps the pre-eminent comic star of the last decade, has been down this road before. In three prior dramatic experiments, he ran the gamut of potential responses: "Punch-Drunk Love" (2002) was an unqualified critical success, "Reign Over Me" (2007) a qualified one, and James L. Brooks' "Spanglish" (2004) generally considered a well-intentioned calamity. None had had even a fraction of the box-office impact of any of Sandler's straightforward comedies. Like Carrey and Ferrell, Sandler is not a dramatic natural, but his serious outings -- "Punch-Drunk Love" and "Funny People" in particular -- have had the benefit of being honed to suit his bratty, shambling persona.
Funny People" is simultaneously a comedy wrestling with serious issues and a film whose characters are comedians struggling with problems far beyond the ken of their stand-up. As such, it marks a turning point in the evolution of this now-80-plus-year-old trend: the self-aware stab at drama. "I'm trying to make a very serious movie that is twice as funny as my other movies," Apatow has said of his film. "Wish me luck."

Comics just want to be taken seriously

Since Charlie Chaplin's day, comedians have yearned to do drama -- with varying results. Judd Apatow is the latest, with his dramedy 'Funny People
As a director, John "Sully" Sullivan was no stranger to success. His "Ants in Your Plants of 1939" was an enormous comedy hit, and the studio was eager for a follow-up: "Ants in Your Plants of 1940," anyone? Sullivan, however, had different plans for his next effort. He yearned to travel around America, see the real country, and come back with a hard-hitting picture about big issues called "O Brother, Where Art Thou?"
Sully, as you may remember, is only a figment of Preston Sturges' imagination, the protagonist of his 1941 film "Sullivan's Travels," but his predicament is an ever-recurring one in Hollywood. Comic actors and directors, feeling the desire to be taken more seriously, hanker to try their hand at drama, dreaming Sully Sullivan's dream of going deeper than laughs -- and not coincidentally, reaping the benefits in increased prestige.
Comedy doesn't win Oscars. Just ask Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, W.C. Fields, Groucho Marx, Cary Grant or Jerry Lewis, none of whom ever won competitive Academy Awards. The pull of gravity for comedians dates at least to Chaplin, whose 1921 film "The Kid" offered the promise of "a picture with a smile -- and perhaps, a tear." The backlash to same is every bit as enduring; it is not just the space aliens from Woody Allen's "Stardust Memories" that prefer "the early, funny ones" to the later, artistic experiments.
Now, the latest comedic titan has volunteered to navigate the rocky shoals of drama: Judd Apatow, omnipresent purveyor of raunchy male bonding comedies, is about to release "Funny People" (July 31), a dramedy about an extremely successful comic-turned-movie star (Adam Sandler) who is diagnosed with a terminal illness. He hires an up-and-coming comedian (Seth Rogen) to write jokes for him, and the initial hero worship he receives transmutes into a more complex set of emotions as he deals with his sickness. The film is stocked almost exclusively with stand-up comedians, whose coping mechanism for dealing with painful issues is a certain type of gallows humor. Their response to turmoil -- much like Apatow's -- is to tell a joke.
Dramedy," that awkward hybrid of a word, is perhaps the wrong description for "Funny People." It would be more accurate to describe the film as a stand-up drama, whose emotional core is leavened by a steady stream of jokes, asides and routines. Its characters are themselves comedians, more comfortable with laughter than other, less predictable emotions, grounding Apatow's distinct preference for levity in the sensibilities of its protagonists. It is the kind of film where Sandler's character, awaiting potentially life-changing news, finds the energy to jest with his Scandinavian doctor that "I keep thinking you're going to be torturing James Bond later." In his own fumbling, joshing fashion, though, Apatow is stretching for something just beyond his reach -- something nakedly poignant.
He is hardly the first to feel the tug of the dramatic. Chaplin was in search of respect when he made "The Kid," no longer interested in settling for being the world's greatest comedian but seeking the title of world's foremost tragedian as well.
Later, when Chaplin turned explicitly political with "The Great Dictator," "Monsieur Verdoux" and "A King in New York," it stemmed from an overwhelming desire to speak out on the threats posed by fascism and the atomic bomb. Told by film salesmen that his final speech in 1940's "The Great Dictator -- a humanist plea for peace and internationalism -- would cost him $1 million in box office, Chaplin was unruffled: "I don't care if it's 5 million. I'm gonna do it."
Some comedians' attempts at drama were doomed from the outset. Lewis' never-released "The Day the Clown Cried" (1972), about a German clown who accompanies a train of Jewish children to the Nazi gas chambers, has achieved a cult notoriety in inverse relation to the number of people who have actually seen the film. Lewis had been accused of mawkishness before, but a Holocaust comedy, with Lewis combating the Nazis with clown routines? The very idea seemed the height of narcissistic chutzpah -- that is, until Italian comedian Roberto Benigni essentially remade the film as "Life Is Beautiful" (1997). Opinions were split on "Life," with some objecting to Benigni's exploitation of his material and others saluting his Chaplinesque approach. Either way, the formula was nonrenewable; Robin Williams' strikingly similar "Jakob the Liar" (1999) was a notorious flop.
There's no question that comedy is harder to do than serious stuff," Allen said in 1972. "There's also no question in my mind that comedy is less valuable than serious stuff." He was filming "Sleeper," one of the most successful of his freewheeling early comedies, but Allen was already growing restless. Bob Hope had been the primary influence on early efforts such as "Sleeper" and "Bananas," but Ingmar Bergman now beckoned. "Annie Hall" (1977), which won best picture, was Allen's triumphant first attempt at mingling comedy and drama, but its follow-up, "Interiors" (1978), was straight Bergman: morose, moody and intense. Allen would return, every few years, to unadorned dramas, but even his comedy work had been affected: Never again would he make comedies as weightless as those first few. Space aliens and other Allen buffs would see fit to complain.
Recent years have seen yet more prominent comedians insistent on stretching into drama. Some, like Tom Hanks and Jamie Foxx, have managed to escape comedy entirely and recast themselves as dramatic actors. Others have found only moderate success. Jim Carrey played a genial buffoon unaware of his own television-mediated existence in "The Truman Show" (1998) and offered a somber Andy Kaufman for Milos Forman's "Man on the Moon" (1999). Both were modest successes, with Carrey translating his genial zaniness into dramatic roles demanding a certain unhinged vigor. Will Ferrell turned in a surprisingly deft performance in "Stranger Than Fiction" (2006) as an IRS agent who belatedly discovers he is a character in a novelist's new book. Ferrell's range, like Carrey's, is limited, their yen for drama constrained by their own talents and the preferences of their audience. Given the choice, most moviegoers would probably prefer to see Ferrell in "Old School 2" or Carrey revisiting Ace Ventura, than to watch them mope on-screen.
For advice and perhaps a word of caution, Apatow would have had to look no further than the end of his lens. Sandler, perhaps the pre-eminent comic star of the last decade, has been down this road before. In three prior dramatic experiments, he ran the gamut of potential responses: "Punch-Drunk Love" (2002) was an unqualified critical success, "Reign Over Me" (2007) a qualified one, and James L. Brooks' "Spanglish" (2004) generally considered a well-intentioned calamity. None had had even a fraction of the box-office impact of any of Sandler's straightforward comedies. Like Carrey and Ferrell, Sandler is not a dramatic natural, but his serious outings -- "Punch-Drunk Love" and "Funny People" in particular -- have had the benefit of being honed to suit his bratty, shambling persona.
Funny People" is simultaneously a comedy wrestling with serious issues and a film whose characters are comedians struggling with problems far beyond the ken of their stand-up. As such, it marks a turning point in the evolution of this now-80-plus-year-old trend: the self-aware stab at drama. "I'm trying to make a very serious movie that is twice as funny as my other movies," Apatow has said of his film. "Wish me luck."
 
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