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Interview
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Articles in Nov 2007 issue of Interview
- Out in New York City
by Brigitte Lacombe
- Lil Mama: how a fiery teenage rhyme-slinger discovered a muse inside her makeup bag
by Justin Conner
- Scout Niblett: This Fool Can Die Now
by Jonathan Durbin
- Walter De Maria: long before the environment was a lightning-rod issue, Walter De Maria's The Lightning Field electrified earth art
by Germano Celant
- American Gangster
by Stephen Mooallem
- Correction
- Thom Browne: he may be the guy famous for making men's suits shorter and snugger, but as Elvis Mitchell discovers, Tom Browne's philosophy is the antithesis of one-size-fits-all
by Elvis Mitchell
- Kate Nash: a take-no-prisoners debut fueled by bad luck, big attitude, and a broken ankle
by Matt Diehl
- Serj Tankian: Elect the Dead
by Stephen Mooallem
- Mr. Untouchable
by Stephen Mooallem
- The brave ones with Nicole Kidman and Jennifer Jason Leigh
by Michael Cunningham
- Letter from the editor: November 2007
by Ingrid Sischy
- Super surprised
by G. Robinson
- A conversation between Michael Caine and Jude Law: the fellow Englishmen, actors, and alfies on dodgy remakes, blimey moments, and why playing the cad is bollocks
- George Carlin: the man famous for spilling "the seven dirty words" on the airwaves is marking his 50th anniversary in showbiz by doing what he does bestpoking fun and busting taboos
by Anita Sarko
- Before the Devil Knows You're Dead
by Michael Koresky
- Interview magazine presents ultimate fighters
by Allen Barra
- Javier Bardem: despite his affinity for the anti-formulaic anti-heroes of life, Javier Bardem has everything that Hollywood could ever ask for in a leading man. A boxer's mug, a poet's soul, and an ability to leap off the screen that just might win him an
by Elvis Mitchell
- Our readers Carey on
by Scott P. Campbell
- Hotel Chelsea: as those who are interested in matters of Bohemia know, there's been a change in management at New York's Hotel Chelsea. What will that mean to its decades-long tradition of providing a climate conducive to the growth of artists, writers, a
by Brendan Lemon
- All the dish: New York's Spanish uprising
by Brad Goldfarb
- The Kite Runner
by Michael Koresky
- Emmy Rossum: the actress talks about posing half-naked for her new album cover, leaving opera behind, and surviving a high school full of mean girls
by Sinead O'Connor
- Andrew Garfield: frat parties and Xbox tournaments: not a bad way to prepare for your bigscreen debut
by Henry Cabot Beck
- Christo and Jeanne-Claude: they slept here: some for only a night or two, others for almost a lifetime
by Anita Sarko
- Shots in the dark: why so many filmmakers are zooming in on "an eye for an eye"
by Graham Fuller
- Things We Lost in the Fire
by Mark Olsen
- Josh Brolin: he may have a famous name and a Hollywood pedigree, but it's a youth marked by mucking stalls and 5 a.m. horse feedings that's the secret of his success
by Lyle Lovett
- Nicole Scherzinger: with a surprising new solo album, the chief Pussycat Doll purrs alone
by Matt Diehl
- Betsey Johnson
by Anita Sarko
- Elephant dancing: in his new Bob Dylan biopic starring Cate Blanchett and equally surprising others as the music legend, Todd Haynes throws the rules out the window and opens the curtains on the man
by Greil Marcus
- Wristcutters: A Love Story
by Stephen Mooallem
- Out in print …
by Patrick McMullan
- Amy Ryan: it's not often that an actress's profanity-laced rages and teary episodes have directors smiling
by Ben Affleck
- Berlin Alexanderplatz: a new exhibition on the groundbreaking, obsessive work of director Rainer Werner Fassbinder brings into stark relief what's missing from filmmaking now
by Brendan Lemon
- Chris Brown: Exclusive
by Stephen Mooallem
- Age of innocence
by Gavin Bond
- … In with Pollack …
by Julie Skarratt
- Mathew Cerletty: why this blazing young gun of the New York art world prefers watching the Colbert report and fast times at ridgemont High to looking at masterpieces at the met
by Carlo McCormick
- Khalid Abdalla: an actor who is the embodiment of a 21st-century melting pot builds a career by battling stereotypes
by Carolyn Murnick
- Fiery Furnaces: Widow City
by Jonathan Durbin
- Patrick Wolf: how a tall, introspective kid who struggled to fit in with the pack wound up making music that's as cacophonous, wild, and dramatic as a howl at the moon
by Stephen Mooallem
- Milk Fed: a hairdo that says yodel-ay-hee-hoo
by Annabel Tollman
- Lymari Nadal: she ditched her career as a chemist, but she still knows how to get reactions
by Julia Cosgrove
- Band of Horses: Cease to Begin
by Matt Diehl
- Thrown to the wolves! four other musical acts that are baring their teethand not just in name only
- Fine specimens: for fall, accessories take flight
by Brendan Lemon
- Doveman: an antsy sideman takes center stage
by Martha Tuber
- Siouxsie: Mantaray
by Matt Diehl
- Kristen Stewart: these days is it even possible for a young woman in Hollywood to have a hard-driving career and still avoid the speed traps? If the road map offered by Kristen Stewartso faris any indication, the answer is "yes!"
by A.M. Homes