anymore

Diane Ladd dead: ‘Wild at Heart’ actor, Laura Dern’s mom was 89

Diane Ladd, the Oscar-nominated actor who received acclaim for her work in films including “Rambling Rose,” “Wild at Heart” and “Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore,” has died. She was 89.

Oscar winner Laura Dern, Ladd’s daughter with Oscar-nominated actor Bruce Dern, announced her mother’s death in a statement shared Monday. “My amazing hero and my profound gift of a mother, Diane Ladd, passed with me beside her this morning, at her home in Ojai,” Dern wrote. A cause of death was not revealed.

“She was the greatest daughter, mother, grandmother, actress, artist and empathetic spirit that only dreams could have seemingly created,” “Marriage Story” star Dern said in her statement. “We were blessed to have her.”

This is a developing story and will be updated.

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BBC Michael McIntyre’s The Wheel sparks complaints as fans ‘can’t watch’ anymore

The Wheel returned to screens on Saturday night with comedian Michael McIntyre back at the helm

The Wheel
BBC Michael McIntyre’s The Wheel sparks complaints as fans ‘can’t watch’ anymore

Viewers of Michael McIntyre‘s The Wheel were left underwhelmed by the latest episode of the BBC quiz show.

Saturday night (July 19) saw the return of the gameshow with comedian Michael McIntyre once again steering the ship.

A new group of celebrity experts, including Harry Redknapp, Carol Vorderman, Nick Grimshaw, Andi Oliver, Tom Read Wilson, Angela Scanlon, and Chunkz, joined him to assist contestants in their quest for a substantial cash prize.

READ MORE: Michael McIntyre pictured with rarely seen wife Kitty as he leads stars at Wimbledon

READ MORE: Holly Willoughby red-faced as ex-boyfriend’s steamy texts read out on-air

Despite the star-studded lineup, fans quickly voiced their displeasure upon realising they were watching a repeat. One viewer vented on social media: “@BBCOne really going for it this Saturday night with 5 (FIVE) game shows back to back.”

BBC viewers left moaning just minutes into Michael McIntyre's The Wheel airing
The show returned to screens this weekend(Image: BBC)

Another expressed confusion: “Don’t understand why they repeat quiz shows.”, reports the Daily Record.

A third remarked: “As soon as we saw Angela’s topic we knew it was a repeat,” alluding to Angela’s speciality subject of ‘redheads’. Yet another commented: “Love the show even if it is a repeat.”

Some viewers also reported feeling queasy while tuning in. One person wrote: “Has anyone every got motion sickness on The Wheel whilst it’s spinning?” Another shared: “Can’t watch The Wheel on the BBC. It makes me feel dizzy and sick.”

The Wheel
Fans were not happy

However, there’s a silver lining for fans of the show, as a brand-new sixth series of Michael McIntyre’s The Wheel is set to air later this year.

In April, the BBC announced that it had commissioned two more series each of Michael McIntyre’s Big Show and Michael McIntyre’s The Wheel.

Michael McIntyre has expressed his delight over the success of his hit shows, stating: “I’m so proud of the success of both The Big Show and The Wheel. This will take the Big Show up to its 10th series, which is an amazing achievement for everyone involved.”

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A new series is coming later this year (Image: (Image: BBC/Hungry Bear/Gary Moyes))

The comedian went on to say: “The Wheel was a show we made in lockdown while we couldn’t film the Big Show, but it’s become equally beloved.”

He also shared a humorous anecdote: “Someone came up to me recently while I was walking the dog and said they “loved The Big Wheel”, I have no idea whether they meant The Big Show, The Wheel or both shows, they may have just come from The London Eye”.

Watch Michael McIntyre’s The Wheel on BBC One and iPlayer.

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‘Marlee Matlin: Not Alone Anymore’ review: An actor’s battle for dignity

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Marlee Matlin has a word tattooed on each of her wrists. On the left is “perseverance,” on the right is “warrior.”

“After 37 years, I’m still hustling,” she says by way of explanation in “Marlee Matlin: Not Alone Anymore.” Referring to the ink on her left wrist, she adds, “I look at this all the time. Every day.”

“Not Alone Anymore” is hardly the first celebrity documentary to salute its subject’s tenacity. But if the contours of this story are familiar — the rise, the fall, then the rise again of an Oscar winner — director Shoshannah Stern’s affectionate portrait is all the richer for the layers it reveals about both Matlin and the larger struggles of the Deaf community she embodies. The 59-year-old actor’s legacy may indeed be one of perseverance, but “Not Alone Anymore” touchingly details just how much more challenging her battles with addiction and sexual abuse have been than those of other famous people.

The film’s inventiveness starts with its opening frames, in which closed captioning describes the sounds that accompany the production companies’ logos: “[low humming],” “[dramatic, echoey flutters].” These descriptions occur throughout the documentary, as do subtitles for every talking head, including the Deaf participants. Obviously, these creative decisions allow Deaf and hard-of-hearing viewers to more easily experience “Not Alone Anymore.”

But it’s also a subtle acknowledgement of Matlin’s trailblazing work in the late 1980s, when she used her newfound fame to convince lawmakers to require televisions to include closed captioning — a groundbreaking development for a community who had been deprived of a fuller engagement with the media they were watching.

This wasn’t the only way in which Matlin has left her mark. In “Not Alone Anymore,” she breezily recounts how, at 19, she was plucked from relative obscurity to star in her first film, the 1986 adaptation of “Children of a Lesser God,” based on Mark Medoff’s acclaimed play, about a love affair between Sarah, a Deaf janitor, and James, a hearing teacher. Matlin won the Oscar, becoming the first Deaf actor to do so. (Nearly 40 years later, she remains the youngest lead actress recipient.) At the time, her victory was hailed not just as a coronation of a promising talent but also a triumph for the Deaf, who too often feel marginalized and underestimated. But, as the documentary reveals, real progress would prove trickier to achieve.

Matlin and Stern, who is also a Deaf actor, have been friends for decades, and their interviews are mostly conducted sitting together on a couch, the conversations exuding the cozy intimacy of old chums chatting. Making her directorial debut, Stern deftly draws out her subject. Audiences will learn about Matlin’s past history of drug abuse and her fraught romantic relationship with her “Lesser God” costar William Hurt, whom she has accused of sexual and physical abuse. (Hurt died in 2022.)

But “Not Alone Anymore” gently probes the unique difficulties Matlin’s deafness created as she navigated those traumas. When she went to rehab, the facility was ill-equipped to treat a Deaf patient. And during a poignant discussion about Matlin’s sexual abuse, she explains growing up with no understanding of the phrase “domestic violence.”

“Deaf people only have their eyes to rely on for information,” she tells Stern. It’s an illuminating illustration of the dangers of what the Deaf community refers to as language deprivation.

Despite her Oscar win, Matlin would repeatedly have to advocate for herself in an industry seemingly uninterested in Deaf characters. Stern uses 2021’s best-picture-winning “CODA,” which costarred Matlin, as a happy ending of sorts for her film, without denying the ongoing movement for greater Deaf visibility. But if “Not Alone Anymore” can sometimes lean too heavily on uplifting sentiment, Matlin’s story possesses a bittersweet aftertaste.

As evidenced by Matlin’s years of striking, engaging performances, she is a winning presence in the documentary — funny, charming and open — even while we sense the lingering wounds from a difficult upbringing exacerbated by sexual abuse she endured in childhood. Beyond being a spokesperson for the Deaf, Matlin has also emerged as a voice for survivors, even when the world wasn’t receptive to what she had to say. “Not Alone Anymore” notes, with pointed irony, that Matlin published her candid memoir “I’ll Scream Later” in 2009, years before #MeToo, so her accusations against Hurt didn’t carry the same weight in the media as the ones that would later stop powerful predators such as Harvey Weinstein.

It was hardly the first time Matlin waited for society to catch up with her. When she first arrived in Hollywood, she couldn’t have possibly imagined how much of a warrior spirit she would need. “Not Alone Anymore” honors a woman who learned how to fight.

‘Marlee Matlin: Not Alone Anymore’

In English and American Sign Language, with subtitles

Not rated

Running time: 1 hour, 38 minutes

Playing: Opens Friday, at Landmark Nuart Theatre, Laemmle Noho 7

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