INTERNATIONAL EDITION ENTERTAINMENT AND FASHION SPECIAL ISSUE
LONDON HERALD MAGAZINE




THE OSCARS: THE GREAT WINNERS
The Beginning of a Civil War in Iraq. World Fashion 2004. The 20 Best Women Artists in the Middle East.
Most Admired TV and Media Personalities in the United States.
LONDON HERALD MAGAZINE
Editorial
Staff: Editor-in-Chief: Ruth Coen-Sielberg.
Managing Editor: Jayson Meynard. Senior
Editors: Harold Clea Darby, Arthur Chase, Marion Dombrow, Elvin Frankel.
Staff Writers: Jean Mason, Maynor Osborne, Vanessa Marks, Charles
Richardson, Alvin Miller, Nat Horrowitz, Rachel Rosenstein, Rebecca Adams.
Correspondents: Edward Myers, Dawn Hatfield, Paul Starr, Eve Goodman,
May Santiago. Film: Trevor Montgomery, Alvine Adler, Roy Helmsley. Fashion:
Melanie Arnorld, Harvey Blair, Bernard Bloom, Lisa Mitchell.
Entertainment: Bernadette Crowley, Isabella Fortini, Umberto Granata,
Yves Gaillard, Nigel Hamilton, Marie-Louise Odell. Middle East: Taleb
Al-Maghribi, Ismael Arnaaout, Abdel Raman Atiyah. Americana: Timothy
Atkinson, Harry Levine, Ashley Rosenthal, Eve Starr. World Politics:
Neil Stewart, Gerardo Caprese, Emilio Santiago, Arnold Stevenson, Pamela
Peters, Gail Gavin, Karen Day. People in the News: William Sorento,
Carmelita Capobianco, Irma Audet, Alison Brotherton, Fred Brickman.
Television: Agnes Armstrong, Barbara Davidson, Edward Fletcher.
Science: Julie Miles, Nicholas Webster, Spencer Mearsheimer.
Ballet: Norman McPheron, Christine Kendall. Theater: Nicole
Lerner, Jeffrey Markow. Society: Murray Lieberman, David Estrada,
Clara Mackey, Joyce Clinton, Jay Gibson, Andrea Jacobson. Education:
Henry Hamilton, Frank Dobson. Painting: E. Leroux, Maria
Lorens. Graphics, Art and Layout: Reba McIntosh, Eva Sterling,
Marjorie Goldsmith. Archives: Rita Jennings. Jim Bowes, Bernadette
Crowley, Benjamin Thompson. Adrian Lambert. Esther Rozsa. Photography:
Cindy Morgan, Fritz Herschman. Advertising: Barry Francis, Janice
Houghton, Rosalyn Hertz, Frieda Greenbalt, Nancy Hines, Norah Greenberger,
Grace Greer, Max Finkelstein. Readers' Mail: Doris-Mae Griffith,
Donald Grano. Hot Line: Chaz Gertner, D. Gordon, Herbert Markovicchi,
Aaron Jennings. Production Manager: Roger Sanders.
The MONTHLY HERALD MAGAZINE is published by THE MONTHLY HERALD/MONTHLY HERALD PUBLISHING HOUSE in London. Please send your stories and inquiries to newsdesk@monthlyherad.com
© Copyright of Monthly Herald-20048 London. Paris. All Rights Are Reserved Monthly Herald© Herald Publishing House 2004
2
TABLE OF CONTENTS
THE OSCARS

Editorial Staff:..................................................................................................................................................................1
Contents:.........................................................................................................................................................................2
Glamour for Oscar: Many of the stars nominated for this year's Oscars were not what you'd call household names. But what really kept us glued to our sets was who would win Best Frock. ...........................................................................................3
More Glamour: Julia Roberts never seems to get it completely right. A pale coffee-coloured satin plunge dress clasped with jewels at the waist draped across a boyish figure. Her hair is a mass of tumbling streaked curls. Yes, she has the widest smile in the business but will someone instill some hair and fashion sense into her? But as for Catherine Zeta Jones - she looked predictably chocolate-box beautiful in a tight red clinging dress with lots of intricate design detail in the material.......................4
Photos: More photos from the OSCAR ceremony and red carpet..........................................................................................................................5
Glamour Photos:.................................................................................................................................................................................................6
Great Winners: The great winners....................................................................................................................................................................7
MEDIA
Jayson
Blair: Trouble just seems to follow Jayson Blair around. The disgraced
New York Times reporter, sacked for making up stories last year, is at the
centre of a new scandal as his tell-all memoir is about to hit bookshops.
Advance copies of the book have been leaked to newspapers, including the New
York Times itself,
prompting...............................................................................................................................8
Revolution Day: At noon I was on the lower roof of the Palestine hotel with Paul Danahar and Killa, preparing to do a live broadcast from our satellite position. Malek and Duncan were on the balcony of our suite on the 13th floor filming the American Abrams tanks on the Joumhouriya bridge. The BBC studio in London could already see me on ................................................................................8-9
Alistair: The 95-year-old joined the BBC in 1934 as a film critic before starting up US current affairs and historical programme Letter From America in 1946. The show is the world's longest-running speech radio programme. Cooke, who was absent from the show last week due to illness, will not record any new shows but Radio 4 will air archive shows for several weeks. The BBC said Cooke had decided to sign off following advice from doctors Cooke said: "I can no longer continue my Letter From America. "Throughout 58 years I have had much enjoyment in doing these talks and hope that some of it has passed over to the listeners, to all of whom I now say thank you for your loyalty and goodbye." Since Letter From America began, Cooke has presented 2,869 shows, making up more than 717 hours of broadcasting time. This does .......................10
POLITICS
US/Haiti: The exiled former President of
Haiti, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, has said that the Americans forced him to leave
his country.
In
interviews with US television and news agencies, he said he had been the
victim of a "coup d'etat". He said he had signed documents relinquishing power
because of fears that violence would erupt if he did not comply with the
demands of US agents. But he repeatedly refused to answer direct questions
about whether he had been kidnapped. Earlier, friends of Mr. Aristide in the
US alleged that the former president was abducted by American
agents.......................11
Bush/Aristide: The Bush administration insisted Monday that Haiti's exiled president was not kidnapped or strong-armed into fleeing, despite Jean-Bertrand Aristide's claims that the U.S. military forced him to leave. The Pentagon said as many as 2,000 U.S. troops could go to Haiti to help to curb violence that culminated Sunday in Aristide's departure. White House officials said Aristide left willingly and that the United States aided his safe departure. But in a telephone interview with The Associated Press, Aristide said: "No. I was forced to leave. "Agents were telling me that if I don't leave they would start shooting and killing in a matter of time," Aristide said during the interview, which was interrupted at times by static. Asked to identify the "agents," Aristide said: "White American, white military. "They came at night. . . . There were too many. I couldn't count them." ..........................................................................12
AMERICANA
American Sex Warfare: Standing beneath the dome of San Francisco's City Hall last week, amid floral bouquets and wide-eyed onlookers, Josephine and Gieseppina made their vows and were married; they have been together for eight years. Josephine works for the electricity company and Gieseppina works in a store. But their union is more than just an act of love. It is also a political statement. 'How come I live in the land of the free, yet am not free to spend the rest of my life in my own country with the woman I love?' said Josephine. .............................................................................................13-14
MIDDLE EAST
Iraq:
The Beginning of a Civil War in Iraq. Explosions hit
Iraq Shia festival. At least 30 people have been killed in Karbala and many
hundreds wounded, and as many as 75 killed in Baghdad. BBC correspondents in
Karbala said there were scenes of panic with victims being carried on
makeshift stretchers and women trying to get children away. Security had been
tight for fear the festival of Ashura would be targeted. This was the first
time in decades that Iraq's majority Shia community had been able to freely
observe the holy day. More than a million people had flocked to Karbala....................................................................................................................................................15-18
US/Iraq: Arabs accusing the US. Iraq's leading Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Husseini al-Sistani, blamed U.S. soldiers for the attacks, saying they were responsible for the security. Sheik Hamed Khafaf said U.S. officials ignored repeated requests to bolster security for the pilgrims. Shiite cleric Sheik Sayyed Akeel al-Khatib said the explosions, "especially those at Kazimiya,".......................................................................................................................................................................19-20
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FILM
Entertainment1: Mel Gibson's gamble on The Passion of the Christ paid off enormously, riding a storm of religious debate to a $117.5 million US haul in its first five days, according to studio estimates Sunday. The Passion, which debuted on Ash Wednesday, rocketed to the No.1 box-office slot for the weekend with $76.2 million from Friday to Sunday. It was the seventh-best three-day opening ever, behind Spider-Man at $114.8 million and such Hollywood franchises as The Matrix Reloaded and the first two Harry Potter movies. The Passion put up the second-best five-day figures for a movie opening on Wednesday, behind last year's The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King at $124.1 million..................................................................22
ART/PAINTING

Balsamo:
He mastered the sacred hidden language of lights and shadows. Balsamo's
palette is an Iliad of transmigrated visions of an unexplored melodic,
intellectual and lyrical dimension. Although, structural compositions define
a solid platform, Balsamo's lyricism transcends the frontiers of his canvases.
His forms are free of conceptualism, yet, each piece tells the tale of
conceptual visualization of esthetics, romanticism and freedom of evolutionary
artistic expression.
..................................................................................................................23
Zeidan:
Ms. Zeidan is a Lebanese artist with a cosmopolitan
education and understanding of European illustrative arts. Thus, her artistic
creativity emanates from an explosion and infusion of convergent and divergent
blend of innovative artistic visions. The strokes are limpid, yet powerful in
their fragile and delicate elegance. Partially spiritual, globally
intellectual and sensitively lyrical, Zeidan's artistic evocation is sublime.
Her soul and struggles are part of her work. It was not easy for this Lebanese
artist living and working in tumultuous Lebanon to make her mark on the
international art
landscape..........................................................................................................................................................24
CABARET
Rebecca Spencer: Ms. Spencer succeeded in establishing herself as a most talented and striking vedette. Although, she is traditional in the form, shape and selection of her repertoire, Ms. Spencer managed to enlarge and innovate the perimeter of illustrative cabaret for she added class, finesse and lyrical interpretational intimacy to the ambiance of traditional cabaret. In that context, Ms. Spencer has earned our admiration and respect. Indeed, she is a world-class artist. Her recent CD "Wide Awake and Dreaming" redefined romanticism, vocal virtuosity............................................................................25



Divas:
Would we ever see real cabaret if we hit Broadway or
venture in cosmopolitan cities in the United States? Affirmative. America has
become the world stage for cabaret. The fascinating aspect of this American
art and musical platform resides in the variety of styles of the artists,
rather than in the rendered repertoire. Back in the 20s, 30s and 40s, France
defined the prototype of a cabaret vedette and the persona of a chanteuse. In
the United States, categorizing and indexing chanteuses is a hard task. For,
each American star and starlet, the aura of her presence on stage and artistic
quality are defined by a personal charisma and powerful artistic performance,
rather than by artistic quality. It would be impossible to establish an
analogy between traditional French cabaret artistes such as Mistinguet and the
popular American ...................................................26-28
SCIENCE: SPACE
Mars: Mars was once soaked with water, enough to support life in a "good, habitable environment," NASA scientists said Tuesday after reviewing data from the Mars rover Opportunity, although they said the finding doesn't prove that life existed. "Opportunity has landed in an area of Mars where liquid water once drenched the surface," said Edward Weiler, associate NASA administrator for space science, at a news conference. "This area would have been a good, habitable environment." .....................................................................................................................................................................................29-34
BALLET
Ballet:
One of the hottest issues facing the
future of ballet is striking the elusive balance between traditional movement
and innovation. For Harris that means keeping the classical genre visible, in
the arabesques and the pointe work. But he wants to see those elements
choreographed so the work looks fresh, quirky, extraordinary and athletic. It
has worked, in Harris' book, if the audience is on the edge of their seats
saying, "Wow! Just look at what these people can do with their bodies".
Saltarello has already proved its "wow" worth, bursting on stage for its 2001
premiere in Wellington dressed in slinky black and silver, and punching out a
near perfect blend of edgy, contemporary originality in fine classical
technique, set to a medieval musical score. Choreographer Christopher Hampson.......................................................................................................................................................35-37
TELEVISION
Reality TV: Reality TV has burst upon the Arab world, drawing huge audiences but firing up conservative outrage over the spectacle of young men and women flirting, hugging and dancing under one roof. Young people from Iraq and Syria to Egypt, Kuwait and Yemen love these variations on ''Big Brother'' and ''American Idol.'' Some religious scholars and politicians say they're sacrilegious. Things got so heated this week that Saudi-owned MBC TV bowed to pressure from Islamic fundamentalists and the Bahrain Information Ministry and said it will suspend ''Al-Rayes,'' its version of ''Big Brother,'' less than two weeks into the show. ''Al-Rayes'' featured...............................................................................................................................................................38
Jon
Stewart: Tom Brokaw, Peter Jennings, Dan Rather ... and Jon Stewart?
Readers over 30 might scoff at Stewart's inclusion - assuming they know who he
is. For many under 30, the host of Comedy Central's "The Daily Show" is,
improbably, an important news source. A poll released earlier this year by the
Pew Research Center for the People and the Press found that 21 percent of
people aged 18 to 29 cited "The Daily Show" and "Saturday Night Live" as a
place where they regularly learned presidential campaign news. By contrast, 23
percent of the young people mentioned ABC, CBS or NBC's nightly news
broadcasts as a source. Even more startling is the change from just four years
ago. When the same question was asked in 2000, Pew found only 9 percent of
young people pointing to the comedy shows and 39 percent to the network news
shows. The people at "The Daily Show" ridicule the idea of people looking to
their show as a primary news
source.".............................................................................................................................................40-41

Media-Poll:
Most Admired TV Personalities in the United States: Anchors-Female: The
results of the Monthly Herald recent international poll on the most admired
and popular American television personalities (Anchors, Commentators and
Hosts) are as
follows...........................................................................................................42-44
Media-Polls2: Most Admired TV Personalities in the United States: Anchors-Male: The results of the Monthly Herald recent international poll on the most admired and popular American television personalities (Anchors, Commentators and Hosts) are as follows.......................................................................................................................................45-46
PEOPLE IN THE NEWS
Princess:
Tapes secretly recorded by Diana, Princess of Wales,
in which she talks about the breakdown of her marriage,
are due to be shown on US television.
"Diana will tell her story beginning with her life before becoming a princess,
through her battle with bulimia and her suicide attempts, to intimate details
of Prince Charles's long-time affair with Camilla Parker Bowles that haunted
their marriage." NBC. The princess speaks of Prince Charles's affair with
Camilla Parker Bowles, her relationships with other members of the Royal
Family and her suicide attempts. Network NBC is airing the video and audio
tapes on Thursday evening (Friday in the UK). Andrew Morton used the audio
tapes for his 1992 book, Diana: Her True
Story........................................................................................................49-50

US
broadcasters could face fines of $500,000 (£273,000) for indecency after
politicians overwhelmingly recommended a steep increase in penalties.
The move comes after widespread outrage following Janet Jackson's infamous
breast-baring incident. A new law had already proposed to raise fines from
$27,500 (£15,000) to $275,000 - but a Congress committee has now voted 49-1
to change that to $500,000. Full Congress and Senate must approve the law
before it comes into force. The vote to increase the proposed fines was
taken by the Congress' House Energy and
...................................................................................51-52
Stewart:
THE CONVICTION OF MARTHA STEWART.
Domestic Diva or Greed and Corruption Diva?
Stewart found guilty
on all counts. Jury finds the style maven guilty on
all four counts against her in obstruction of justice trial.
The jury deliberated for three
days after a five-week trial before reaching its verdict. The panel of eight
women and four men began deliberating Wednesday on whether Stewart and her
ex-broker, Peter Bacanovic, obstructed justice and lied to the government
about her sale of ImClone stock in December 2001. Stewart, 62, was charged
with conspiracy, obstruction of justice and two counts of making false
statements – charges that together carry a penalty of up to 20 years in
prison. Bacanovic, 41, had been charged with making false statements, making
and using false documents, conspiracy, perjury and obstruction of justice –
with a maximum prison term of 25 years. He was acquitted on the
TOPICS
Breast Surgery: Almost six out of 10 women have had, or would have, surgery on their breasts, a survey has suggested. Men were most likely to opt for a nose job, with a third saying they had already had the operation or were considering doing so. The findings emerged from a survey of 2,000 people for the financial group Abbey. It found people were prepared to borrow an average of £4,000 to pay for cosmetic surgery. In the survey, 58% women said they had already had, or would consider having a breast augmentation or reduction, or an operation to raise or reshape breasts. Overall, women were three times more likely to opt to go under the knife than men..................................................................................................................................55
Profile:
Martha Stewart. For millions of US consumers, she is the
high priestess of lifestyle advice. For
investors, she was a successful chief executive, sitting on the board of the
New York Stock Exchange. Her company, Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, is a
business powerhouse, with revenues of $295m in 2002. Ms. Stewart stepped down
as chairwoman and chief executive after being indicted but remains a board
member and the most influential shareholder. While her refined offerings may
not sit well with the Texas lifestyle popularised by President George W Bush,
she is as American as apple pie. The
62-year-old's............................................................................................................................................................................56
FASHION

Fashion:
2004 World Fashion. Other luxury houses have hit lean times, but at
Christian Dior sales and profits have climbed steadily this decade, without a
single wearable dress appearing on a catwalk. There has always been an air of
fairytale to the John Galliano story. However, even by the standards of
fashion's finest showman, Monday's haute couture spring/summer 2004 show in
Paris was jaw-dropping. The show was conservatively valued at more than £1
million ($2.4 million). Each season, Galliano travels abroad in search of
inspiration. Two months ago he visited Egypt, where he was struck by how the
elongated shapes and exaggerated poses of the figures in ancient Egyptian art
echoed the 1950s fashion portraits...................................57-68
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Mail: Letters to the Editor.............................................................................................................................................................................70--76
CARTOONS
Cartoons: .......................................................................................................................................................................................................76
Comics: Comics against the French and funny photos by Americans to illustrate their disdain and hate for of the French........................................77-80
Stewart Comics: A la Martha Stewart...........................................................................................................................................................81
WOMEN ARTISTS

Women
Artists: The visionary women artists of the Middle and Near East. The
Middle East gave to the world an avalanche of remarkable women artists who
produced exquisite abstract, modern, figurative, illustrative and futuristic
artworks. The list of distinguished artists is endless. Among the most
illustrious female artists of the Middle and Near East are those who are
studied and listed on these pages. A considerable number of Arab women have
already made their mark on the international scene of contemporary art. Many
of them became wealthy and famous, for they have cultivated efficient rapports
and contacts with the West. Arab female artists who never left the Arab
homeland succeeded in their career within a limited geographical perimeter.
The quality of their work rival the beauty and excellence of the work of their
compatriots who managed to exhibit their paintings in the United States and
Europe. Although, modern Arab societies provided Middle and Near Eastern
women artists with autonomy and ample opportunities to exhibit their work, the
socio-cultural traditions refrained them from expanding their career as a
"legitimate and serious" profession. A considerable number of the Middle
Eastern female artists studied on the hands of well-known European artists in
ateliers and academies dispersed in the major cities and capitals of
Europe......................................82-88
ESSAY
| Essay: What Local Stations Don't Want You to Know! An essay on the state of local news |

Local
Television News has become less important to Americans--in part because we're
catching on to their scam. More and more of us are realizing how little
journalism local news gives us because they'd rather reap profits than provide
public service. Station promotion
departments spend more than a few dollars to lead you to quite the opposite
impression. Even so, newscasts are rarely news anymore--they're mostly 'info-tainment
to build ratings." Below are the strategies they use to keep you watching.
After you read them, you'll never see local news the same way again. TV people
can easily be caught up in the glamour of it all. In stations all over the
country, there are those who work in TV who are well meaning, dedicated
professionals. They have little control over the way stations now staff and
define news. The 'real journalists' working in stations aren't happy their
bosses shamelessly maximize ratings and profits. They do the best they can
under the circumstances. A great number eventually leave after a few
years--disillusioned over the pressure, superficiality, and nomadic
lifestyle. Greg found TV work exciting, even intoxicating and occasionally
personally rewarding......................91-127
BOOKS
Books: The 12 Best Books in the US. The 12 Best Books in Great Britain. The readers choice (The International List).....................................128
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