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Interview
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Articles in Oct 2006 issue of Interview
- Rachel Weisz: after years of being touted as acting's next big thing, Rachel Weisz is suddenly exactly that, teaming up with some of the most interesting directors and starring in some of their most thoughtful films. We predict she's just getting warmed u
by Mike Myers
- Topsy-turvy: how to turn makeup on its head
by Maureen Dempsey
- Terrell Owens: the most outspoken man in football
by Dave Hollander
- Little Children
by Jarret McNeill
- Taking on taboos
by Brad Goldfarb
- Correction
- Keith Urban: torch and twang's unlikely troubador is rewriting the rules of the country club
by Elton John
- Seung-Min Lee: how a postcollegiate lark proved a premonition of things to come
by Carolyn Murnick
- Elton's tip sheet
by Ingrid Sischy
- Riding Alone for Thousands of Miles
by Michael Koresky
- Zach Braff: he doesn't sing, he doesn't dance, and he's not hitting Broadway anytime soon. But with a new film that has him laying it on the line as a leading manand another, surprising on that he's preparing to directJersey boy Zach Braff is
by Kevin Smith
- Charlotte Gainsbourg: since she was a child, this French actress-singer has made a habit of popping onto the cultural radar in provocative contexts, alongside her famous father, Serge. Now she's the love interest in this season's smartest film, Michel Gon
by Brendan Lemon
- Alicia Keys: everybody knows she can sing. It's how she's using her voice now, though, that shows what she's made of
by Gladys Knight
- Rick Ross: with a blend of streetwise flair and no-holds-barred reportage, he's putting the fire into Miami's red-hot hip-hop scene
by Evelyn McDonnell
- Elephant dancing: the who, the what, the wow, and the why
by Greil Marcus
- Mutual Appreciation
by Michael Koresky
- From sunshine to night shine
by Patrick McMullan
- Alex Pettyfer: how an English shy kid became an onscreen spy kid
by Jarret McNeill
- Emily Haines: she used to share her bathroom with eight musiciansno wonder going solo seemed appealing
by Emma Cooper
- Lady Sovereign: Public Warning
by Matt Diehl
- Infamous
by Mark Olsen
- James McAvoy: a journey that began on the streets of Glasgow, and almost headed to the high seas, is about to take a new twist
by Leslie Cafferty
- Ray LaMontagne: how does a former carpenter score one of the most talked-about debut albums in music? By nailing basic human emotion
by Matt Diehl
- Justin Timberlake: FutureSex/LoveSounds
by Justin Conner
- Ethan Hawke: he may be affable, approachable and determined to fly under the radar, but look outEthan Hawke is spreading his wings again and ready to soar
by Julie Delpy
- Dancin' in the wind: it took Twyla Tharp to find the song-and-dance man in Bob Dylan
by Robert Greskovic
- Red alert: a new initiative called project red upends some old ideas about pitching in
by Matt Diehl
- Lily Allen: Alright, Still
by Stephen Mooallem
- Catalina: so how does an actress from Colombia whose name means "pure" make her mark in a business that's anything but? By being a breath of fresh air
by Walter Salles
- Ka-ching, ka-ching
by D. Teaneck Mazzano
- Be Your Own Pet: they're cute and mostly housebroken, but this precocious punk band is never tame
by Justin Conner
- Is the medium the message? A new exhibition takes on the world
by Stephen Mooallem
- The Rapture: Pieces of the People We Love
by Matt Diehl
- Peaches: why does this former schoolteacher make people so nervous? Is it the fact that she sings about sex and body parts? Because she gender-bends? Because she manages to be sexy, witty, and danceable at the same time? Or because she throws down gauntle
by Deborah Harry
- Bunny business
by Heidi Parker
- James Ellroy: "write what you know," they tell you in creative writing seminars, and with a life that seems taken straight from film noir, that's exactly what James Ellroy has done. Now, as the film version of his novel, The Black Dahlia, is set
by Dana Delany
- Eliot Spitzer: he's taken on Wall Street, two-timing insurance companies, and environmental abusers, fueling his image as a crusader for the little guy. Now he's gunning to become the next governor of New Yorkand he's just getting started. Edward No
by Edward Norton
- Short and tweet: fall's just-hatched proportion would make a chick feel right up-to-date
by Annabel Tollman
- !Forward, Russia! Give Me a Wall
by Sarah Wilson
- His & hers: enough talk about the differences between us what the world needs now is more discussion about the things we have in common. Lets start with the clothes we wear
by Luke Smalley
- All the dish: the joy of vegging out
by Brad Goldfarb
- Over the rainbow
by Rebecca Stanton
- Shots in the dark: diving into the fantastical world of Michel Gondry
by Graham Fuller
- Shia LaBeouf: with an often absent Vietnam vet father and a mother who worked endless hours just to keep her head above water, he imagined acting as a way to get the material things that his family couldn't afford. But it has wound up bringing him much, m
by John Turturro
- Gimme shelter: pitching a tent for fall
by Frank E. de Jesus
- Teddybears: Soft Machine
by Justin Conner
- The Killers: they say what happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas. But for chart-busting, arena-packing, world-touring rock band the Killers, that couldn't be further from the truth. Here, singer Brandon Flowers talks with the original showman about his group's
by Elton John
- The times they are a-changin'
by Greil Marcus
- What becomes a legend?
by T.S. Daniel
- All the King's Men
by Bill Vourvoulias
- The Departed
by Stephen Mooallem
- In your clutches: what a handful
by Annabel Tollman
- Kasabian: Empire
by Matt Diehl
- Hey you
by Jules De Balincourt
- Great Scott
by Karl Lagerfeld
- Split decision
by Anne-Marie Santoro
- Letter from the editor: October 2006
by Ingrid Sischy