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Interview
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Articles in Dec 2006 issue of Interview
- Letter from the editor: December/January 2007
by Ingrid Sischy
- Stop
by Michael McGraw
- Tony Bennett: whether he actually left his heart in San Francisco remains debatable, but his commitment to making people swoon has never been in question
by Rob Marshall
- Willie Nelson
by Steven Stern
- The History Boys
by Michael Koresky
- Freedom wave
by Kelly Klein
- Eddie Redmayne: he was the subject of a whispering campaign on the set of Robert de Niro's CIA movie
by Daniel Torday
- Lea Michele: she grew up performing on broadway. Now she's rebelling against its formulas in a Risque new musical
by Brendan Lemon
- Jibbs
by Matt Diehl
- For Your Consideration
by Michael Koresky
- Lily Allen: she's got a pop star's charisma. A gangster rapper's bravado, a fast-exploding cult following, and the mouth of a spitballing truck driver. Angela McCluskey talks to the punky, spunky, funky new diva who has music fans buzzing
by Angela McCluskey
- Alice Smith: old-school torch with 21st-century scorch
by Dimitri Ehrlich
- Julianne Moore: artwork by prudence whittlesey: in the new play, the vertical hour, actress Julianne Moore tests the waters of broadway for the first timeand takes on a politically-charged story that asks some difficult questions about the world tod
by Sam Mendes
- The Good, The Bad, and The Queen
by Bill Vourvoulias
- Venus
by Mark Olsen
- A perfect day at Eothen: Andy Warhol once said: "beauty really has to do with the way a person carries it off. When you see 'beauty,' it has to do with the place, with what they're wearing, what they're standing next to …" we went to the s
by Bruce Weber
- Ana Claudia Talancon: she's played political orphans, drug addicts, and lost souls, but there's nothing unfocused about this actress's determination and drive
by Alex Abramovich
- Fast and loose: a hairstyle built for speed
by Annabel Tollman
- The Beatles
by Kim Taylor Bennett
- Shots in the dark: twelve months, seventeen highlightsa look back at the year in pictures
by Graham Fuller
- Head start
by Collier Schorr
- Sigmar Polke: the sorcerer strikes
by David Frankel
- Bon voyage: "to travel hopefully is a better thing than to arrive"Robert Louis Stevenson
by Annabel Tollman
- Emilie Simon
by Dimitri Ehrlich
- Emilio Estevez: a one-time Hollywood brat revisits when America's heart was broken a second time
by Christian Slater
- Ben Whishaw: the cult book perfume has sniffed its way into theaters, and the actor who gives the film its punch smells like a cult star in the making
by Stephen Mooallem
- A tail of two artists: a new book and exhibition celebrate the prophets of natural design, the Lalannes
by Sam Shahid
- Christian Oliver: he was all set to go into banking, but he made acting his business instead
by Carolyn Murnick
- A flurry of baubles: let it snow, let it snow, let it snow
by Joseph Errico
- Swan Lake
by Justin Conner
- About that night: revels with a cause
by Annabel Tollman
- Ashley Judd: she may be an actress, but she's also a warrior. For women. For kids. And for taking off the masks
by Joey Lauren Adams
- The change gang
by M. Rutchick
- Beau Garrett: sometimes the streets of Hollywood are paved with bedpans and body parts
by Matt Thompson
- Robin Wright Penn: she's one of a handful of actresses who consistently disappears into her roles, making Robin Wright Penn both versatile and a veritable enigma. Mark Ruffalo goes in for a close-up
by Mark Ruffalo
- Paolo Nutini
by Bill Vourvoulias
- Jennifer Connelly: they may have put her in a cage, but there's an actress who won't be tamed
by Ingrid Sischy
- Electric nights
by Patrick McMullan
- Come again?
by Marc Krasnow
- Shohreh Aghdashloo: nearly 30 years ago she fled her home in Iran in search of freedom and the opportunity to continue her work as an actress. What followed would be a lesson in perseverance, heart, and the power of holding on to your dreams
by Rita Wilson
- Walk on the wild side
- Dreamgirls
by Stephen Mooallem
- Packin' heat: the unforgettable women of volver have breathed new life into the old subjects of love, womanhood, hope, and death
by Brendan Lemon
- The reward of looking
by Michael Barson
- Eye see you: artists have long been drawn to shop windows as a space for their work. Now Olafur Eliasson takes the baton for Louis Vuitton
by Justin Conner
- All the dish: when dining out is a family affair
by Brad Goldfarb
- The Painted Veil
by Leslie Cafferty
- John Mayer: the breathy voice. The noodling guitar tricks. The softly pleasing, utterly ubiquitos ballads. Think you were tired of John Mayer? So was John Mayer
by Kiefer Sutherland
- Vote
by Paul Kazee
- Tippy: for this lightning-fast rhymer, learning to rap was a family affair
by Justin Conner
- Damien Rice
by Dimitri Ehrlich
- Notes on a Scandal
by Stephen Mooallem
- Jennifer Hudson: the old story of singers using their voices to overcome hardship has transfixed audiences for decades. Here's someone who lived it. Now, in the new movie version of Dreamgirls, she's ready to make ears pop
by Chaka Khan