The new Las Vegas resident marked the latest addition to his local portfolio Monday with a launch party for the latest Wahlburgers.
Movies
Mark Wahlberg’s ‘Hollywood 2.0’ plan for Vegas is moving forward.
A funny thing happened to actress Diane Lane as she hit her midlife stride: She got busy looking for the positives. Really, really busy.
“Mum spent her life saying to me, ‘Keira, scream and shout until people hear you,’ ” recalls the 37-year-old British actress, star of the new Hulu movie “Boston Strangler.”
Pauly Shore, playing with his rock-cover band the Crustys on Tuesdays, says, “My cell phone started blowing up,” during the Oscars.
“Every experience I go through — marriage, my public life, my personal life — I’m learning as I go,” says Jason Sudeikis, whose hit series “Ted Lasso” returns Wednesday on Apple TV+.
Hollywood star Jake Gyllenhaal filmed scenes for the upcoming “reimagining” of the 1989 movie “Road House” during a break in the action Saturday at UFC 285 at T-Mobile Arena.
“Meditation is my escape from a world where there is a lot going on,” says Jordan, who added directing duties to his starring role in the boxing sequel “Creed III.”
“The bottom line is you can’t hide from your past,” actress Alison Brie says, by way of explaining the creative spark for her new romantic comedy, “Somebody I Used to Know.”
Nevada Ballet Theatre will honor actress and classically trained ballet dancer Lea Thompson on April 1.
A week after filiming scenes in Las Vegas, the Hollywood A-lister has sold his L.A. home.
The Plaza CEO said of Mark Wahlberg, “Obviously we love having Mark there, and the energy he brings.”
She surprised many critics — and won positive reviews — when she starred in the 1981 musical “Woman of the Year” on Broadway
Mark Wahlberg has said he wants to make Las Vegas “Hollywood 2.0.” And he’s filming a hit movie here now.
At 53, ageless Paul Rudd looks the part of a chiseled superhero in real life as much as he embodies Ant-Man on the big screen. But it wasn’t always that way.