Jenna and Stuart Walker of The Reklaws hit the 2023 CCMAs red carpet on Saturday in Hamilton, Ontario, as they prepare to step up to the event’s hosting podium for the evening of country music celebration.
“We’re trying to take in every moment because we know how special it would’ve been to our 10-year-ago selves.”
While donning royally blue fits, the Ontario-born siblings stopped for a chat on the bustling carpet with Et Canada’s Carlos Bustamante.
The night is a full-circle moment for the country music duo as they’ve been fans of the CCMAs for years.
Read More: The Reklaws’ Stuart Walker Gets Engaged To Lindsay Couture
“It’s pretty wild. We’re trying to take in every moment because we know how special it would’ve been to our 10-year-ago selves,” reflected Jenna. “We’ve worked really hard to be here and those younger selves...
“We’re trying to take in every moment because we know how special it would’ve been to our 10-year-ago selves.”
While donning royally blue fits, the Ontario-born siblings stopped for a chat on the bustling carpet with Et Canada’s Carlos Bustamante.
The night is a full-circle moment for the country music duo as they’ve been fans of the CCMAs for years.
Read More: The Reklaws’ Stuart Walker Gets Engaged To Lindsay Couture
“It’s pretty wild. We’re trying to take in every moment because we know how special it would’ve been to our 10-year-ago selves,” reflected Jenna. “We’ve worked really hard to be here and those younger selves...
- 9/17/2023
- by Emerson Pearson
- ET Canada
The Reklaws family is growing!
On Sunday, country singer Stuart Walker, of the Canadian sibling duo, shared the exciting news that he and girlfriend Lindsay Couture are engaged.
Read More: The Reklaws’ Jenna Walker Marries Childhood Sweetheart In Stunning Beach Ceremony
The couple made the announcement with a post on Instagram, writing, “here’s to forever and then some,” and sharing photos of the propsal.
View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Lindsay Couture (@lindscouture)
In a statement to Et Canada, the couple said, “We’ve held each other through beautiful moments as well as hard times in the past two years, and feel like we can take on anything now. We found each other at the perfect time and knew right away we were soulmates, and now get to share with the world the endless love we have.”
Photo: Mike Kozelj Photo: Mike Kozelj Photo: Mike Kozelj...
On Sunday, country singer Stuart Walker, of the Canadian sibling duo, shared the exciting news that he and girlfriend Lindsay Couture are engaged.
Read More: The Reklaws’ Jenna Walker Marries Childhood Sweetheart In Stunning Beach Ceremony
The couple made the announcement with a post on Instagram, writing, “here’s to forever and then some,” and sharing photos of the propsal.
View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Lindsay Couture (@lindscouture)
In a statement to Et Canada, the couple said, “We’ve held each other through beautiful moments as well as hard times in the past two years, and feel like we can take on anything now. We found each other at the perfect time and knew right away we were soulmates, and now get to share with the world the endless love we have.”
Photo: Mike Kozelj Photo: Mike Kozelj Photo: Mike Kozelj...
- 11/21/2022
- by Corey Atad
- ET Canada
Before Universal introduced their own “official” werewolf legend in 1941’s The Wolf Man, the studio produced this trial run, directed by Stuart Walker and starring Henry Hull as a proto-Larry Talbot—he plays an unlucky explorer who changes into a snarling beast. Unlike Lon Chaney’s full-body transformation, Hull remains close to human form with only a hint of the monster—fangs, snout and sinister widow’s peak. It’s enough to terrify his ethereal wife played by Valerie Hobson. Warner Oland makes for a memorable adversary, himself afflicted by the moonlight curse—he and Hull have a standoff worthy of Karloff and Lugosi. Jack Pierce designed the stripped down but still frightening make up.
The post Werewolf of London appeared first on Trailers From Hell.
The post Werewolf of London appeared first on Trailers From Hell.
- 10/27/2021
- by Charlie Largent
- Trailers from Hell
'Saint Joan': Constance Cummings as the George Bernard Shaw heroine. Constance Cummings on stage: From sex-change farce and Emma Bovary to Juliet and 'Saint Joan' (See previous post: “Constance Cummings: Frank Capra, Mae West and Columbia Lawsuit.”) In the mid-1930s, Constance Cummings landed the title roles in two of husband Benn W. Levy's stage adaptations: Levy and Hubert Griffith's Young Madame Conti (1936), starring Cummings as a demimondaine who falls in love with a villainous character. She ends up killing him – or does she? Adapted from Bruno Frank's German-language original, Young Madame Conti was presented on both sides of the Atlantic; on Broadway, it had a brief run in spring 1937 at the Music Box Theatre. Based on the Gustave Flaubert novel, the Theatre Guild-produced Madame Bovary (1937) was staged in late fall at Broadway's Broadhurst Theatre. Referring to the London production of Young Madame Conti, The...
- 11/10/2015
- by Andre Soares
- Alt Film Guide
Above: Us three-sheet poster for The Private Life of Henry VIII (Alexander Korda, UK, 1933).
The great Charles Laughton may not have been the prettiest of movie stars, but he had a presence that many matinee idols would have killed for (as the current retrospective running at Film Forum will attest). In an era in which glamor was everything, studio marketers may have struggled with how to present Laughton’s unconventional looks and his larger-than-life portrayals of larger-than-life characters (so many monsters, murderers, tyrants, or simply overbearing fathers) to the public. In most of the posters for his most famous film, The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1939), he is all but a silhouette, a spoiler alert to his monstrous transformation as Quasimodo. And in some posters for The Private Life of Henry VIII (1933), the film for which he won his first Oscar, Henry is made to look more like the Hans Holbein...
The great Charles Laughton may not have been the prettiest of movie stars, but he had a presence that many matinee idols would have killed for (as the current retrospective running at Film Forum will attest). In an era in which glamor was everything, studio marketers may have struggled with how to present Laughton’s unconventional looks and his larger-than-life portrayals of larger-than-life characters (so many monsters, murderers, tyrants, or simply overbearing fathers) to the public. In most of the posters for his most famous film, The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1939), he is all but a silhouette, a spoiler alert to his monstrous transformation as Quasimodo. And in some posters for The Private Life of Henry VIII (1933), the film for which he won his first Oscar, Henry is made to look more like the Hans Holbein...
- 2/21/2015
- by Adrian Curry
- MUBI
Tony Awards 2013: Stage-Movie connection ranges from Breakfast at Tiffany’s and Kinky Boots to Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (photo: Emilia Clarke, Cory Michael Smith in Breakfast at Tiffany’s) [See previous post: "Tony Awards 2013 Nominations: Tom Hanks, Sigourney Weaver Among Potential Contenders."] Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, possibly up for a 2013 Tony Award in the Best Revival of a Play category, was made into an Academy Award-nominated movie in 1966. Mike Nichols directed Richard Burton, Elizabeth Taylor, George Segal, and Sandy Dennis, from a screenplay by Ernest Lehman. Taylor and Dennis won Oscars as, respectively, Best Actress and Best Supporting Actress. In this latest Broadway revival of Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, the stars are Tracy Letts, Amy Morton, Madison Dirks and Carrie Coon. Peter Masterson’s 1985 film version of Horton Foote’s The Trip to Bountiful, another possible Best Revival nominee, earned Geraldine Page a Best Actress Academy...
- 4/30/2013
- by Andre Soares
- Alt Film Guide
Chief executive of Film London, Adrian Wootton will give one of his Illustrated Film Talks focusing on Charles Dickens in film. The talk is part of Melbourne Celebrates Dickens in association with the Melbourne International Film Festival, held on Saturday 18 and Sunday 19 of August.
The announcement:
Former British Film Institute and London Film Festival Director Adrian Wootton returns to Melbourne for another series of his acclaimed Illustrated Film Talks, this year focusing on Charles Dickens and Film to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the author’s birthday.
The Illustrated Film Talks kick-off a wider Melbourne Celebrates Dickens season running from 17-26 August, as part of the global Dickens 2012 initiative, that combines events from the Melbourne International Film Festival, Miff 37ºSouth Market & Accelerator and The Wheeler Centre, as well as Australian Centre for the Moving Image (Acmi) and the Melbourne Writers Festival.
Presented exclusively in Melbourne by the Melbourne International Film...
The announcement:
Former British Film Institute and London Film Festival Director Adrian Wootton returns to Melbourne for another series of his acclaimed Illustrated Film Talks, this year focusing on Charles Dickens and Film to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the author’s birthday.
The Illustrated Film Talks kick-off a wider Melbourne Celebrates Dickens season running from 17-26 August, as part of the global Dickens 2012 initiative, that combines events from the Melbourne International Film Festival, Miff 37ºSouth Market & Accelerator and The Wheeler Centre, as well as Australian Centre for the Moving Image (Acmi) and the Melbourne Writers Festival.
Presented exclusively in Melbourne by the Melbourne International Film...
- 4/19/2012
- by Colin Delaney
- Encore Magazine
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