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1992 - Shannen Doherty by Neal Preston for the November 9, 1992 issue of "People" magazine.
#shannen doherty#1992#Neal Preston#People November 9 1992#1992 photoshots#1990s photoshots#photoshots#1992 shannen doherty#1992 neal preston people magazine#1990s#1990s shannen doherty#1992 neal preston#people magazine#people#1992 people#1992 people magazine#1990s people#1990s prople magazine
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April 20th, 1992 - 'The Freddie Mercury Tribute'
âHey today itâs for Freddie, itâs for you, itâs to tell everybody around the world that Aids affects us allâŚthatâs what these red ribbons are all aboutâŚand cry as much as you likeâŚ
- Roger Taylor
âGood evening Wembley and the world! We are here tonight to celebrate the life and work and dreams of one Freddie Mercury! We are gonna give him the biggest send-off in history! â
- Brian May
âFirst of all, Brian Roger and myself would like to thank all the artists who are performing here today in London, and they are giving their time and energy to make this tribute to Freddie a reality to happen today.
First of all, the show must go on and weâll start with an American band three times Grammy Award winners, please welcome Metallica!
- John Deacon
đ¸ Photographer Neal Preston
#neal preston photographer#freddie mercury#queen band#london#zanzibar#legend#queen#brian may#john deacon#freddiebulsara#roger taylor#1992#freddie mercury tribute concert#freddie mercury tribute#uk
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Photo by Neal Preston. ââIf you try hard to do something, then often nothing happens,â said George. âAt other times you twitch your face, and thereâs the Wilbury. Iâm a great believer in destiny, or some creative support that comes from a higher source - even though itâs only pop music.â [âŚ] For Harrison, the experience was a welcome return to basics, âbecause the Wilburys remind you of good old Carl Perkins tunes or Bob Dylan tunes. Itâs like a pastiche, a montage of all the good bits you remember.â [âŚ] This, for him, was a way of hitting back at all he hates in Eighties pop, âwhich over the last ten years has got so computerized and so monotonous. Iâm amazed that people donât realize that theyâve heard the same drum sample on the last 59,000 records. People have got so far from the human element with their computers.â [âŚ] Now thereâs the major question â will Harrison and the Wilburys actually go on tour? He admitted that âI hate waking up in motels in Philadelphia, Iâd rather be at home,â but as a fan of the other members of the band heâd love to see them perform⌠âso Iâd be inclined to do something.â - The Guardian, November 5, 1988
âLive, I donât know... Tom Petty says, âWell, Iâm waitinâ, soon as I see the big W in the sky, Iâll be there!ââ - George Harrison, VOX, September 1992 âItâs kind of stupid what we didnât do more. I used to say, âJust flash the big W in the sky like the bat signal, and weâll all come.â We just thought we had all the time in the world.â - Tom Petty, Menâs Journal, August 2014 (x)
#George Harrison#Tom Petty#Roy Orbison#Jeff Lynne#Bob Dylan#The Traveling Wilburys#Traveling Wilburys#1980s#1990s#George and Tom Petty#<3#'we just thought we had all the time in the world' đ#fits queue like a glove
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David Bowie, Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert rehearsals, April 1992 đ¸ by Neal Preston.
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David Bowie during rehearsals for the Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert, 1992, by Neal Preston.
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George Michael with Brian and Roger at the Freddie Mercury tribute concert, Wembley Stadium. On this day 1992. Photo by Neal Preston.
#roger taylor#brian may#queen#queen band#george michael#'39#live#on stage#freddie mercury tribute concert#fmtc#wembley stadium#london#1992#90s#neal preston#my stuff
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Roger Waters, Long Island, 1992 Š Neal Preston
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Every Ichiro Suzuki Teammate
Orix BlueWave
Ebisu Noboyuki (1992-2000)
Yasuo Fujii (1992-2000)
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Hasegawa Shigetoshi (1992-96)
Hoshino Nobuyuki (1992-99)
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Ogawa Hirofumi (1992-2000)
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Yoshinori Sato (1992-98)
Don Schulze (1992)
Suguro Hironori (1992-96)
Taguchi So (1992-2000)
Kelvin Torve (1992-93)
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Kobayashi Hiroshi (1993-2000)
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Okada Akinobu (1994-95)
James Jennings (1995-97)
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Chris Donnels (1997-98)
Satake Manabu (1997-2000)
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Edwin Hurtado (1998-99)
Kida Masao (1998, 2000)
Harvey Pulliam (1998-99)
Aikawa Ryota (1999-2000)
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New York Yankees
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NPB All-Stars
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So Taguchi (1995-97, 2000)
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Koichiro Yoshinaga (1996)
Atsushi Kataoka (1996-98)
Koichi Oshima (1996-97, 2000)
Norihiro Nakamura (1996, 1999-2000)
Arihito Muramatsu (1996)
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Nigel Wilson (1998, 2000)
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Susumu Otomo (1998-99)
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Kenji Johjima (1999-2000)
Michihiro Ogasawara (1999-2000)
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Michael Young (2004-09)
Carl Crawford (2004, 2007, 2009-10)
Matt Lawton; Jr. (2004)
Gary Sheffield (2004-05)
Mark Teixeira (2005, 2009)
Brian Roberts (2005, 2007)
Danys Baez (2005)
Matt Clement (2005)
Bartolo Colon (2005)
Justin Duchscherer (2005, 2008)
Jon Garland (2005)
B.J. Ryan (2005-06)
Johan Santana (2005-07)
Bob Wickman (2005)
Scott Podsednik (2005)
Mark Loretta (2006)
Jose Contreras (2006)
Bobby Jenks (2006)
Scott Kazmir (2006, 2008)
Francisco Liriano (2006)
Jonathan Papelbon (2006-09)
Mark Redman (2006)
Joe Mauer (2006, 2008-10)
Robinson Cano (2006, 2010)
Jose Lopez (2006)
Jermaine Dye (2006)
Gary Matthews; Jr. (2006)
Alex Rios (2006-07)
Grady Sizemore (2006-08)
Placido Polanco (2006)
Josh Beckett (2007)
Dan Haren (2007)
Bobby Jenks (2007)
John Lackey (2007)
Gil Meche (2007)
Hideki Okajima (2007)
J.J. Putz (2007)
Justin Verlander (2007, 2010)
Justin Morneau (2007-09)
Mike Lowell (2007)
Kevin Youkilis (2008-09)
Dustin Pedroia (2008-09)
Josh Hamilton (2008-10)
Cliff Lee (2008, 2010)
Ervin Santana (2008)
Joe Saunders (2008)
George Sherrill (2008)
Joakim Soria (2008, 2010)
Dioner Navarro (2008)
Ian Kinsler (2008, 2010)
Joe Crede (2008)
Evan Longoria (2008-10)
J.D. Drew (2008)
Carlos Quentin (2008)
Milton Bradley; Jr. (2008)
Jason Bay (2009)
Zack Greinke (2009)
Felix Hernandez (2009)
Edwin Jackson (2009)
Aaron Hill (2009)
Ben Zobrist (2009)
Brandon Inge (2009)
Jason Bartlett (2009)
Curtis Granderson; Jr. (2009)
Adam Jones (2009)
Andrew Bailey (2010)
Clay Buchholz (2010)
Trevor Cahill (2010)
Roberto Hernandez (2010)
Neftali Feliz (2010)
Phil Hughes (2010)
Jon Lester (2010)
Andy Pettitte (2010)
David Price (2010)
Rafael Soriano (2010)
Matt Thornton (2010)
Jose Valverde (2010)
John Buck (2010)
Miguel Cabrera (2010)
Ty Wigginton (2010)
Adrian Beltre (2010)
Elvis Andrus (2010)
Jose Bautista (2010)
Nick Swisher (2010)
Team Japan
Shimizu Naoyuki (2006)
Fujita Soichi (2006)
Tomoyuki Kubota (2006)
Daisuke Matsuzaka (2006, 2009)
Koji Uehara (2006)
Yabuta Yasuhiko (2006)
Wada Tsuyoshi (2006)
Fujikawa Kyuji (2006, 2009)
Watanabe Shunsuke (2006, 2009)
Otsuka Akinori (2006)
Kobayashi Hiroyuki (2006)
Sugiuchi Toshiya (2006, 2009)
Hirotoshi Ishii (2006)
Mahara Takahiro (2006, 2009)
Satozaki Tomoya (2006)
Motonobu Tanishige (2006)
Aikawa Ryoji (2006)
Iwamura Akinori (2006, 2009)
Michihiro Ogasawara (2006, 2009)
Matsunaka Nobuhiko (2006)
Nishioka Tsuyoshi (2006)
Imae Toshiaki (2006)
Miyamoto Shinâya (2006)
Takahiro Arai (2006)
Kawasaki Munenori (2006, 2009)
Wada Kazuhiro (2006)
Hitoshi Tamura (2006)
Tatsuhiko Kinjoh (2006)
Fukudome Kosuke (2006, 2009)
Aoki Norichika (2006, 2009)
Yu Darvish (2009)
Iwakuma Hisashi (2009)
Minoru Iwata (2009)
Komatsu Satoshi (2009)
Masahiro Tanaka (2009)
Utsumi Tetsuya (2009)
Wakui Hideaki (2009)
Yamaguchi Tetsuya (2009)
Abe Shinnosuke (2009)
Yoshiyuki Ishihara (2009)
Johjima Kenji (2009)
Kataoka Yasuyuki (2009)
Kurihara Kenta (2009)
Murata Shuichi (2009)
Nakajima Hiroyuki (2009)
Atsunori Inaba (2009)
Kamei Yoshiyuki (2009)
Seiichi Uchikawa (2009)
#Tributes#Sports#Baseball#Japan#1990s#MLB#Seattle Mariners#New York Yankees#Miami Marlins#National Teams#Awesome
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Diahann Carroll
Diahann Carroll (born Carol Diahann Johnson, July 17, 1935) is an American television and stage actress and singer known for her performances in some of the earliest major studio films to feature black casts, including Carmen Jones (1954) and Porgy and Bess (1959) as well as on Broadway. Julia (1968) was one of the first series on American television to star a black woman in a nonstereotypical role and was followed by her portrayal of Dominique Deveraux in the primetime soap opera Dynasty over three seasons. She is the recipient of numerous stage and screen nominations and awards, including the Golden Globe Award for "Best Actress In A Television Series" in 1968. A breast cancer survivor and activist, Carroll was scheduled to return to the Broadway stage in the 2014 revival of A Raisin in the Sun as Mama, but withdrew prior to opening citing the demands of the rehearsal and performance schedule.
Background
Carroll was born in the Bronx, New York, to John Johnson, of Aiken, South Carolina, and Mabel (Faulk), of Bladenboro, North Carolina. When Carroll was an infant, the family moved to Harlem, where she grew up. She attended Music and Art High School, and was a classmate of Billy Dee Williams. In many interviews about her childhood, Diahann Carroll recalls her parents' support of her and that they enrolled her in dance, singing, and modeling classes. By the time Diahann Carroll was 15, she was modeling for Ebony. She was tall, with a lean model's build. After graduating from high school, Diahann Carroll attended New York University, majoring in sociology.
Career
At the age of 18, Carroll got her big break when she appeared as a contestant on the Dumont Television Network program, Chance of a Lifetime, hosted by Dennis James. On the show which aired January 8, 1954, Carroll took the $1,000 top prize for her rendition of the Jerome Kern/Oscar Hammerstein song, "Why Was I Born?" She went on to win the following four weeks. Engagements at Manhattan's CafÊ Society and Latin Quarter nightclubs soon followed.
Carroll's film debut was a supporting role in Carmen Jones (1954) as a rival to the sultry lead character played by Dorothy Dandridge. That same year, she starred in the Broadway musical, House of Flowers. In 1959, she played Clara in the film version of George Gershwin's Porgy and Bess, but her character's singing parts were dubbed by opera singer Loulie Jean Norman.
She made a guest appearance in the series Peter Gunn, in the 1960 episode "Sing a Song of Murder". She starred with Sidney Poitier, Paul Newman, and Joanne Woodward in the 1961 film Paris Blues.
In 1962, Diahann won the Tony Award for best actress (a first for a black woman) for the role of Barbara Woodruff in the Samuel A. Taylor and Richard Rodgers musical No Strings.
In 1974, she was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actress for the film Claudine.
Carroll is well known for her title role in the 1968 television series Julia, which made her the first African American actress to star in her own television series where she did not play a domestic worker. That role won her the Golden Globe Award for "Best Actress In A Television Series" in 1968, and a nomination for an Emmy Award in 1969.
Some of her earlier work also included appearances on shows hosted by Jack Paar, Merv Griffin, Johnny Carson, Judy Garland, and Ed Sullivan, and on The Hollywood Palace variety show.
In 1984, Carroll joined the nighttime soap opera Dynasty as the jetsetter Dominique Deveraux, half-sister of Blake Carrington. Her high-profile role on Dynasty also reunited her with schoolmate Billy Dee Williams, who briefly played her onscreen husband Brady Lloyd. Carroll remained on the show until 1987, simultaneously making several appearances on its short-lived spin-off, The Colbys. She received her third Emmy nomination in 1989 for the recurring role of Marion Gilbert in A Different World.
In 1991, Carrol played the role of Eleanor Potter, the wife of Jimmy Potter, portrayed by Chuck Patterson, in The Five Heartbeats, a musical drama film in which Jimmy manages a vocal group. In this role, Carroll was a doting, concerned, and protective wife alongside actor and musician Robert Townsend, Leon Michael Wright, and others. In a 1995 reunion with Billy Dee Williams in Lonesome Dove: The Series, she played Mrs. Greyson, the wife of Williams' character.
In 1996, Carroll starred as the self-loving and deluded silent movie star Norma Desmond in the Canadian production of Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical version of the classic film Sunset Boulevard. In 2001, Carroll made her animation dÊbut in The Legend of Tarzan, in which she voiced Queen La, an evil sorceress and ruler of the ancient city of Opar.
In 2006, she appeared in the television medical drama Grey's Anatomy as Jane Burke, the demanding mother of Dr. Preston Burke. In December 2008, Carroll was cast in USA Networkâs series White Collar as June, the savvy widow who rents out her guest room to Neal Caffrey.
In 2010, Carroll was featured in UniGlobe Entertainment's breast cancer docudrama entitled, 1 a Minute, and she appeared as Nana in two Lifetime movies: At Risk and The Front, movie adaptations of two Patricia Cornwell novels.
Diahann was present on stage for the 2013 Emmy Awards, to briefly speak about her retrospective of being the first African American nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award. She was quoted as saying, "talented Kerry Washington better win!" Washington erroneously stated that Carroll was the first black performer ever to be nominated for an Emmy. Actually, at least three black performers were nominated before Carroll, who was first nominated in 1963. These performers include: Ethel Waters for a guest appearance on Route 66, in 1962; Harry Belafonte, nominated in 1956 and 1961 and winning in 1960; and Sammy Davis, Jr., who was nominated in 1956 with Belafonte.
Personal life
Carroll married four times, first to record producer Monte Kay. The union produced a daughter, Suzanne Kay Bamford (born September 9, 1960), who became a freelance media journalist. In 1973, Carroll surprised the press by marrying Las Vegas boutique owner Fred Glusman. Several weeks later, she filed for divorce, charging Glusman with physical abuse. In 1975, Carroll married Robert DeLeon, a managing editor of Jet. She was widowed two years later when DeLeon was killed in a car crash. Carroll's fourth marriage was to singer Vic Damone in 1987. The union, which Carroll admitted was turbulent, had a legal separation in 1991, reconciliation, and divorce in 1996. Carroll dated and was engaged to British television host and producer David Frost from 1970 until 1973.
Charitable work
Carroll was a member of the Celebrity Action Council, a volunteer group of celebrity women who served the womenâs outreach of the Los Angeles Mission, working with women in rehabilitation from problems with drugs, alcohol or prostitution. She helped to form the group along with other female television personalities including Mary Frann, Donna Mills, Linda Gray and Joan Van Ark.
Work
TelevisionTheater
House of Flowers (1954)
No Strings (1962)
Same Time, Next Year (1977)
Black Broadway (1979) (benefit concert)
Agnes of God (1983) (replacement for Elizabeth Ashley)
Love Letters (1990)
Sunset Boulevard (1995)
Bubbling Brown Sugar (2004)
On Golden Pond (2004) (replaced by Leslie Uggams before opening)
A Raisin in the Sun (2014) (replaced by LaTanya Richardson before opening)
Awards and nominations
Awards
1962 Tony Award-Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical No Strings
1968 Golden Globe Award for Best TV Star â Female â Julia
2011 Inducted into the Television Academy Hall of Fame
Nominations
1969 Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Actress in a Comedy Series â Julia
1963 Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Single Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role â Naked City
1970 Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Comedy/Musical Television Series â Julia
1975 Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Comedy/Musical Motion Picture â Claudine
1975 Academy Award for Best Actress â Claudine
1989 Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series â A Different World
1992 Women in Film Crystal Award.
1998 Women in Film Lucy Award
1999 Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Performance in a Children's Special/Series â The Sweetest Gift
2000 NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Actress in a Mini-Series/Television Movie â Having a Say: The Delany Sisters' 1st 100 Years
2005 NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Television Drama Series â Soul Food
2008 Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series â Grey's Anatomy
Wikipedia
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Emma Samms (Fallon) photographed at home in 1992 by Neal Preston.Â
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I posted 360 times in 2021
213 posts created (59%)
147 posts reblogged (41%)
For every post I created, I reblogged 0.7 posts.
I added 1.604 tags in 2021
#shannen doherty - 354 posts
#acting - 221 posts
#acting career - 163 posts
#1990s shannen doherty - 150 posts
#brenda walsh - 128 posts
#beverly hills 90210 - 127 posts
#1990s - 121 posts
#1990s acting - 119 posts
#1990s acting career - 114 posts
#prue halliwell - 107 posts
My Top Posts in 2021
#5
#1992 BH90210 3x06See the full post
24 notes ⢠Posted 2021-07-06 09:01:03 GMT
#4
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27 notes ⢠Posted 2021-01-23 18:09:51 GMT
#3
People, November 9, 1992
Nobody's Pussycat
By Tom Gliatto. Photos by Neal Preston.
Ever Outspoken, Shannen Doherty Defends Family Values, Her Turf on Beverly Hills, 90210âand Her Rowdy Reputation in Hollywood.
THERE ARE TWO ISSUES TO BE CLEARED UP HERE. Both of them are dear to the heart of Shannen Doherty, 21-year-old star of Fox's Beverly Hills, 90210, the Aaron Spelling high school hit that is now in its third season, one in which Doherty's character, Brenda Walshâwho might be described as Gidget with attitudeâwill break up with that lean-hipped rebel, Dylan (Luke Perry). First issue: Why has Dohertyâalone among 90210 costars and teen idols Perry, Jason Priestley, Jennie Garth, Tori Spelling, Ian Ziering, Gabrielle Carteris and Brian Austin Greenâcome to be regarded as "difficult"? Like, is she, in contrast to the feisty but fairly civilized Brenda, one of those women who rhyme with rich? Is she, as the tabloids have gleefully reported, impossible on the set? Is she a prima donna? Also: After hours, does she party too much? And where was she being driven, in those recent tabloid photos, by rapper Marky Mark?
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29 notes ⢠Posted 2021-03-08 14:35:36 GMT
#2
HAPPY BIRTHDAY QUEEN
Today, for Shannen's birthday, I will post why I love her.
It was in the early 1990s, on Fridays evenings my sis and I went to our granny's house because on Saturday mornings our parents worked. So we spent Fridays nights and Satudays there. On Fridays nights she watched a show that in Spanish it was called "SensaciĂłn de Vivir" (Feeling of a Life, sort of). It was no other than "Beverly Hills, 90210", of course!
I was around 7 or 9, the show was maybe aired only a year later than in the US, and my favourite character was Brenda. Maybe because she was a twin herself like me? Sure also because she was brunette, like me, and petite, also like me (although I was like Andrea as well, as I was wearing glasses, I studied a lot, etc).
Many people loved her, I remember she was my cousins' favorite too, and my classmates'. I remember, though, once a classmate told me she didn't like her anymore because she was "bad". I have many friends who bought "Bravo" magazine and other teen magazines but I didn't, so I think I never knew her off-screen problems until I had internet.
Like Drew Barrymore, who was my other childhood idol, Shannen started her acting career when she was just a girl, and she was just a teen when all this fame came suddenly changing her life forever, being chased by paparazzi just when she went to town to have some beers with her friends, also she was struggling because of her dad's health. She herself said she made mistakes, as everyone does. But I think she was mostly hated because she was a young, strong and independent woman, and some people don't like that.
I'm glad she was (and till is!) this strong. Other women would have fallen to pieces. She kept acting, showing what she did best, with all her talent and many roles.
So after I had internet at home I started saving pics of her, and then I wanted to share them, of course. My favourite era it will always be the early/mid 1990s because it was my childhood and when I first knew about her, about this sweet beautiful girl named Brenda. I love that now she fights for the animals and against her cancer. She is an example to me as I'm sure is to many.
Have an amazing day with your beloved ones, dear Shando, we love you!
31 notes ⢠Posted 2021-04-12 10:38:17 GMT
#1
199See the full post
40 notes ⢠Posted 2021-03-13 15:12:15 GMT
Get your Tumblr 2021 Year in Review â
#my 2021 tumblr year in review#your tumblr year in review#Shannen Doherty#1990s Shannen Doherty#1990s#1992 BH90210 3x06#1992 Shannen Doherty#1990s acting#1991 Shannen Doherty#1991 events#1992 article#People November 9 1992#1992 photoshots#1992 Neal Preston#1992 events#1990s events#Jason Priestley#Duran Duran#Simon Le Bon#Nick Rhodes#Luke Perry#Dean Cain#Brian Austin Green#Jennie Garth#Tori Spelling#my tumblr blog#tumblr blog#tumblr#shannen doherty#1990s shannen doherty
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Top 200 Books 1990-2000
Infinite Jest (1996) by David Foster Wallace
American Psycho (1991) by Bret Easton Ellis
Harry Potter (1997) by J.K. Rowling
A Song of Ice and Fire (1996) by George R.R. Martin
Blindness (1995) by Jose Saramago
The Perks of Being a Wallflower (1999) by Stephen Chbosky
House of Leaves (2000) by Mark Z. Danielewski
A Fine Balance (1995) by Rohinton Mistry
Fight Club (1996) by Chuck Palahniuk
Giver (1993) by Lois Lowry
Good Omens (1990) by Terry Pratchett
The God of Small Things (1997) by Arundhati Roy
The Green Mile (1996) by Stephen King
The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle (1994) by Haruki Murakami
Trainspotting (1993) by Irvine Welsh
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay (2000) by Michael Chabon
Holes (1998) by Louis Sachar
Cryptonomicon (1999) by Neil Stephenson
Memoirs of a Geisha (1997) by Arthur Golden
Jurassic Park (1990) by Michael Crichton
The Book of the New Sun (1994) by Gene Wolfe
The Secret History (1992) by Donna Tartt
Birdsong (1993) by Sebastian Faulks
Calvin and Hobbes (1993) by Bill Watterson
Tuesdays With Morrie (1997) by Mitch Albom
Angela's Ashes (1996) by Frank McCourt
High Fidelity (1995) by Nick Hornby
Snow Crash (1992) by Neal Stephenson
Oh, the Places You'll Go! (1990) by Dr. Seuss
The Virgin Suicides (1993) by Jeffrey Eugenides
Redeeming Love (1991) by Francine Rivers
The Shipping News (1993) by E. Annie Proulx
Underworld (1997) by Don DeLillo
Battle Royale (1999) by Koushun Takami
Bridget Jones's Diary (1996) by Helen Fielding
The Poisonwood Bible (1998) by Barbara Kingsolver
Guns, Germs, and Steel (1997) by Jared Diamond
The Blind Assassin (2000) by Margaret Atwood
A Suitable Boy (1993) by Vikram Seth
Notebook (1996) by Nicholas Sparks
A Walk to Remember (1999) by Nicholas Sparks
The Sandman (1996) by Neil Gaiman
Speak (1999) by Laurie Halse Anderson
The Beach (1996) by Alex Garland
Cold Mountain (1997) by Charles Frazier
The English Patient (1992) by Michael Ondaatje
Outlander (1991) by Diana Gabaldon
Possession: A Romance (1990) by A.S. Byatt
Neverwhere (1996) by Neil Gaiman
We (1993) by Yevgeny Zamyatin
Stardust (1999) by Neil Gaiman
The Red Tent (1997) by Anita Diamant
The Dresden Files (2000) by Jim Butcher
The Diamond Age (1995) by Neal Stephenson
Kingdom Come (1996) by Mark Waid
Into Thin Air (1997) by Jon Krakauer
White Teeth (2000) by Zadie Smith
Guess How Much I Love You (1994) by Sam McBratney
Interpreter of Maladies (1999) by Jhumpa Lahiri
Into the Wild (1996) by Jon Krakauer
Ender's Shadow (1999) by Orson Scott Card
The Reader (1995) by Benhardq Schlink
Ella Enchanted (1997) by Gail Carson Levine
Disgrace (1999) by J.M. Coetzee
American Pastoral (1997) by Philip Roth
Firm (1991) by John Grisham
On Writing (2000) by Stephen King
The Tipping Point (2000) by Malcolm Gladwell
I Know This Much Is True (1998) by Wally Lamb
A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again (1997) by David Foster Wallace
The Demon-Haunted World (1997) by Carl Sagan
Pelican Brief (1992) by John Grisham
Sophie's World (1991) by Jostein Gaarder
The Coldest Winter Ever (1999) by Sister Souljah
In the Time of the Butterflies (1994) by Julia Alvarez
Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil (1994) by John Berendt
Invisible Monsters (1999) by Chuck Palahniuk
Long Walk to Freedom (1995) by Nelson Mandela
Falling Up (1996) by Shel Silverstein
The Human Stain (2000) by Philip Roth
Me Talk Pretty One Day (2000) by David Sedaris
Motherless Brooklyn (1999) by Jonathan Lethem
The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (1997) by Jean-Dominique Bauby
A Walk in the Woods (1998) by Bill Bryson
Kitchen Confidential (2000) by Anthony Bourdain
Perfect Storm (1997) by Sebastian Junger
Bag of Bones (1998) by Stephen King
The Hot Zone (1997) by Richard Preston
Naked (1997) by David Sedaris
Runaway Jury (1996) by John Grisham
Captain Corelli's Mandolin (1994) by Louis de Bernieres
Ishmael (1992) by Daniel Quinn
Thousand Acres (1991) by Jane Smiley
The Pact (1998) by Jodi Picoult
Client (1993) by John Grisham
The Savage Detectives (1998) by Roberto Bolano
The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down (1998) by Anne Fadiman
All the Pretty Horses (1992) by Cormac McCarthy
Timeline (1999) by Michael Crichton
Walk Two Moons (1994) by Sharon Creech
Girl, Interrupted (1993) by Susanna Kaysen
The Sparrow (1996) by Mary Doria Russell
Dolores Claiborne (1992) by Stephen King
Under the Skin (2000) by Michel Faber
Message in a Bottle (1998) by Nicholas Sparks
Because of Winn-Dixie (2000) by Kate DiCamillo
Push (1996) by Sapphire
Rich Dad Poor Dad (2000) by Robert Kiyosaki
White Oleander (1999) by Janet Fitch
Stargirl (2000) by Jerry Spinelli
Snow Falling on Cedars (1994) by David Guterson
Fatherland (1992) by Robert Harris
The Rum Diary (1998) by Hunter S. Thompson
Liar's Poker (1990) by Michael Lewis
Without Remorse (1993) by Tom Clancy
Rainmaker (1995) by John Grisham
The Hours (1998) by Michael Cunningham
Survivor (1999) by Chuck Palahniuk
The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle (1990) by Avi
Who Moved My Cheese? (1998) by Spencer Johnson
The Children of Men (1992) by P.D. James
Behind the Scenes at the Museum (1995) by Kate Atkinson
The Prestige (1995) by Christopher Priest
A Fire Upon the Deep (1992) by Vernor Vinge
Gates of Fire (1998) by Steven Pressfield
Resident Evil (1998) by S.D. Perry
Lesson Before Dying (1993) by Ernest J. Gaines
LA Confidential (1990) by James Ellroy
Freak the Mighty (1993) by Rodman Philbrick
Angels & Demons (2000) by Dan Brown
300 (1998) by Frank Miller
Flags of Our Fathers (2000) by James Bradley
The Watsons Go to Birmingham - 1963 (1995) by Christopher Paul Curtis
Kitchen God's Wife (1991) by Amy Tan
Enduring Love (1997) by Ian McEwan
Veronika Decides to Die (1998) by Paulo Coelho
Needful Things (1991) by Stephen King
Girl with a Pearl Earring (1999) by Tracy Chevalier
My Name is Red (1998) by Orhan Pamuk
Understanding Comics (1993) by Scott McCloud
Lost World (1995) by Michael Crichton
Revelation Space (2000) by Alastair Reynolds
Someone Like You (1998) by Sarah Dessen
The Mythical Man-Month (1995) by Frederick Brooks
About a Boy (1998) by Nick Hornby
Cirque du Freak (2000) by Darren Shan
Doomsday Book (1992) by Connie Willis
Sin City (2000) by
Street Lawyer (1998) by John Grisham
DC vs. Marvel (1996) by
Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West (1995) by Gregory Maguire
King Leopold's Ghost (1998) by Adam Hochschild
Alias Grace (1996) by Margaret Atwood
Haroun and the Sea of Stories (1990) by Salman Rushdie
Bastard Out of Carolina (1992) by Dorothy Allison
Pale Blue Dot (1994) by Carl Sagan
Standing for Something (2000) by Gordon B. Hinckley
Insomnia (1994) by Stephen King
Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood (1996) by Rebecca Wells
Dance Dance Dance (1994) by Haruki Murakami
The Thief of Always (1992) by Clive Barker
Chinese Cinderella (1999) by Adeline Yen Mah
Testament (1999) by John Grisham
Celestine Prophecy (1993) by James Redfield
The Bell Curve (1994) by Charles Murray
Hearts in Atlantis (1999) by Stephen King
A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius (2000) by Dave Eggers
Tigana (1990) by Guy Gavriel Kay
Lies My Teacher Told Me (1995) by James Loewen
Rainbow Six (1998) by Tom Clancy
Mars trilogy (1993) by Kim Stanley Robinson
Miss Smilla's Feeling for Snow (1992) by Peter Hoeg
True History of the Ned Kelly Gang (2000) by Peter Carey
Batman: Knightfall (1994) by
Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six (1998) by Tom Clancy
Sum of All Fears (1991) by Tom Clancy
The Clash of Civilizations (1996) by Samuel P. Huntington
Debt of Honor (1994) by Tom Clancy
The Crow Road (1992) by Iain Banks
Northern Lights (1995) by Philip Pullman
Desperation (1996) by Stephen King
Dark Visions Trilogy (1995) by L.J. Smith
The Eye of the World (1990) by Robert Jordan
Fever 1793 (2000) by Laurie Halse Anderson
Black Hawk Down (1999) by Mark Bowden
The Story of Tracy Beaker (1991) by Jacqueline Wilson
Digital Fortress (1998) by Dan Brown
Vineland (1990) by Thomas Pynchon
Hogfather (1996) by Terry Pratchett
Hannibal (1999) by Thomas Harris
Nightfall (1990) by Isaac Asimov
Sputnik Sweetheart (1999) by Haruki Murakami
Stormbreaker (2000) by Anthony Horowitz
The Freedom Writers Diary (1999) by Erin Gruwell
The Rings of Saturn (1995) by WG Sebald
Esperanza Rising (2000) by Pam Munoz Ryan
A Course in Miracles (1996) by Helen Schucman
Imajica (1991) by Clive Barker
Independence Day (1995) by Richard Ford
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âI just loved playing with the Traveling Wilburys. It was such fun doing that.â - George Harrison, Guitar World, 1992
âI think we were all just as happy as five boys could be. [Laughs] [...] [Softly] We really were [having fun]. We were having as much fun as you can have. I canât even impart to you how much fun those days were.â - Tom Petty, Conversations With Tom Petty (2005)
âWe wanted to keep it light, and we wanted it to be something that warmed the heart. We wanted to make something good in a world that seemed to get uglier and uglier and meaner and meaner. The Wilburys was this nice friendly thing. And Iâm really proud that I was part of it. Because I do think that it brought a little sunshine into the world.â - Tom Petty, ibid (x)
#George Harrison#Tom Petty#Roy Orbison#Jeff Lynne#Bob Dylan#The Traveling Wilburys#Wilburys35#quote#quotes about George#quotes by George#1988#1980s#<3#(that's a wrap on this 35th anniversary special)#George and Tom Petty#George and Jeff Lynne#George and Roy Orbison#George and Bob Dylan#fits queue like a glove
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Photo by Neal Preston.
âItâs so hard doing a solo album â all that ego gets involved. It's much easier being a Wilbury.â - George Harrison, Rolling Stone, June 1, 1989 âThe Wilburys was fun. I think we should do some more again, because it is relatively simple. It's not like a solo album, in which the responsibility is on you. You can hide behind each other's backs and maybe write lyrics that you maybe wouldn't write on your own. I thought that was fun. I like that last album we did. The first one, we did in 10 days, to write it and do the basic tracks, and then Jeff Lynne and I spent a bit more time with Tom puttin' it together. The last one, the second one we did, it took six weeks to write it, record it and mix it, everything. It's really good because you tend to get bogged down doin' solo albums. You get used to doin' it over and over until you lose the point. So, it's a little rough bug. It's got that more natural feeling.â - George Harrison, The Blacklisted Journalist, 1992 (x)
#George Harrison#Tom Petty#Roy Orbison#Jeff Lynne#Bob Dylan#The Traveling Wilburys#Traveling Wilburys#quote#quotes by George#George and Tom Petty#George and Jeff Lynne#George and Roy Orbison#George and Bob Dylan#1980s#1988#1990#1990s#fits queue like a glove
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Celebrating the 35th anniversary of The Traveling Wilburys, part 1.
âI just loved playing with the Traveling Wilburys. It was such fun doing that. Oddly enough, with a band that included, besides myself, Bob Dylan, Jeff Lynne, Roy Orbison, and Tom Petty and Jim Keltner on drums, I felt less pressure than I had on many smaller projects, because none of us had to worry about the solo performance thing so much. There was so much input from everybody, and we were all relieved to be in a band of equals where no one had to worry about doing all the lead vocals or all the writing.â - George Harrison, Guitar World, 1992
âItâs more fun to just hang out with your friends, sod it, you know, just do something. I had to shake The Beatles off from around my neck. I had to do something other than being âBeatles Georgeâ⌠Now Iâve come full circle, Iâm free of it, and Iâm liberated. I can go on and be a Wilbury.â - George Harrison, Genesis Publications microsite for The Traveling Wilburys limited edition book (x)
#George Harrison#Tom Petty#Roy Orbison#Jeff Lynne#Bob Dylan#Jim Keltner#The Traveling Wilburys#Traveling Wilburys#quote#quotes by George#1988#1980s#Wilburys35#fits queue like a glove
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People, November 9, 1992
Nobody's Pussycat
By Tom Gliatto. Photos by Neal Preston.
Ever Outspoken, Shannen Doherty Defends Family Values, Her Turf on Beverly Hills, 90210âand Her Rowdy Reputation in Hollywood.
THERE ARE TWO ISSUES TO BE CLEARED UP HERE. Both of them are dear to the heart of Shannen Doherty, 21-year-old star of Fox's Beverly Hills, 90210, the Aaron Spelling high school hit that is now in its third season, one in which Doherty's character, Brenda Walshâwho might be described as Gidget with attitudeâwill break up with that lean-hipped rebel, Dylan (Luke Perry). First issue: Why has Dohertyâalone among 90210 costars and teen idols Perry, Jason Priestley, Jennie Garth, Tori Spelling, Ian Ziering, Gabrielle Carteris and Brian Austin Greenâcome to be regarded as "difficult"? Like, is she, in contrast to the feisty but fairly civilized Brenda, one of those women who rhyme with rich? Is she, as the tabloids have gleefully reported, impossible on the set? Is she a prima donna? Also: After hours, does she party too much? And where was she being driven, in those recent tabloid photos, by rapper Marky Mark?
Second issue: What has become of the youngest of her dogs, a rottweiler named Jake? Doherty has arrived home, at her three-bedroom house in Beverly Hills, expecting to find golden retriever Sally gone (her dad was going to slop by to take her to the vet's), but now only black Lab Penelope is here to greet her. And why is there blood around the hack patio? Unnerved, Doherty phones her parents. No luck. She calls the vet. Gets the machine. Perhaps this is not the ideal moment for Doherty to sit down with a visitor and size up that delicate first issue. She chooses an armless chair in the living room and takes out a cigarette. She smiles, but it is not a happy smile, and her fingers shake as the match reaches the cigarette. "Yeah," she says, exhaling smoke with her sigh, "you've really caught me on a good day."
"People think I'm a bitch," she says with a shrug. "There was a group of four girls at Torrance High, when; we film the show, and they walked by and said, 'Oh, what a bitch!' You can walk away from that, but you really want to turn around and say, 'Why?' " She can give you a couple of whys, actually. "The tabloids make up stuff," she says. "Somebody will call [the tabs] up and say, They're yelling at each other on the [90210] set,' and they will turn around and make it 10 times worse," Doherty says. And maybe, she reasons, the tabloids pick on her. specifically, because "I'm a strong woman. There are still some people out there who can't deal with that."
Aaron Spelling, whose company produces 90210, describes her as "the best young actress I've seen in a long time," and has no problem with Doherty or her manner. "She is a very honest person who wears her emotions on her sleeve," he says. "If you ask her a direct question, she'll give you a direct answer." For instance, Doherty isn't afraid to tell friend, costar and daughter-of-the-boss Tori Spelling if she's wearing the wrong blouse. "Of all my friends, Shannen is the really honest one," says Tori, one of the few 90210ers who talked about her. Doherty's comments are "all meant in the best way," she adds. "But I can see [her reputation] hurts her feelings a bit." If so, Doherty is not about to expose her wounded heart in public. And why should she? Her image hasn't hurt her endorsement power (she does ads for Gitano jeans). "I'm not saying I don't have my moments of bitchiness," Doherty says, not defensively at all, "because everybody has them. But it's never for no reason. I think that life is short, you should live it and be happy. I've always been a ballsy kid," she adds. "I know it pisses some people off, but isn't the end result much better?"
In fact, Doherty, who won her first series role when she was 11 (she played Jenny Wilder on Little House: A New Beginning), thinks her "bitch" reputation started with 1989's cull black-comedy movie Heathers (in which she was one of the three nasty title teens). Doherty says she let a behind-the-cameras player on that film know, in no uncertain terms, that she didn't approve of an extramarital affair he was conducting with an extra. "It was the first time I actually saw somebody take advantage of the extras," she says. "He knew I disliked him, and he was the first person to call me a bitch." In the past year, though, she also earned the enmity of prince of sarcasm Dennis Miller when she appeared on his short-lived talk show and embarrassed him by teasing him for not being at ease. (Her photo, tacked up backstage, was subsequently defaced with a devil's horn and goatee.) And would Peter Duchow, who produced her recent TV movie Obsessed, like to work with Doherty again? "How much are you going to pay me?" he asks. He notes that she was late to the set several times ("Professionals," he says, "make an absolute effort to be on time") but then clarifies: "Like a lot of talented people, she has mood swings. Hers are perhaps a lot more exaggerated than others. And any 21-year-old is difficult to work with. She has to learn some lessons that everybody has to learn." Then there was the headline-grabbing flap at this year's Emmys show. The day before the ceremony, Doherty dropped out of presenting an award with John Stamos of Full House and 90210 costar Jennie Garth. "She was a colossal pain in the ass," says Walter Miller, who produced and directed the program. There have been numerous explanations of that pain. Initially a spokesperson said that she was suffering from bronchitis. Miller, who refers to Doherty as "a barracuda," thinks she was unhappy that Garth was given the opening line of Emmy dialogueâeven though Doherty would have announced the winning name. But Doherty says she was upset that the entire 90210 cast was not given tickets to the ceremonies. "I just said, "This is ridiculous, our cast can't go,' " she explains. " 'I just don't understand that.' " Doherty's manager, Mike Gursey, says he yanked her from the telecast because "tiny" promises about her role, including what category she would present in, went unfulfilled.
Having offended the gods of Hollywood, though, the young "barracuda" arrived in tears al a luncheon the day of the Emmys, reports Aaron Spelling, "afraid even one would be mad at her." If so, it was a rare display of public insecurity from a young woman who, says her father, Tom, 48, "has always been self-assured." Shannen was born in Memphis, the younger of two children (her brother, Sean, 25, is a USC law student) and, on her mother Rosa's side, the latest in a long line of Southern Baptists. Shannen's conservative upbringing may have something to do with her public displeasure over 90210's Brenda's losing her virginity last year ("We have a whole cast that is sexually active," she complained in one interview); her disgust with that unnamed. womanizing Heathers crew member; and her August appearance at that feast of family values, the Republican National Convention, at which she led the Pledge of Allegiance. ("I don't think Clinton would be any different than Bush," says Doherty, a Jack Kemp supporter, "except maybe he'd do a hell of a lot worse.") Growing up in the male-dominated South, though, had its drawbacks. "I saw how women were treated," she says, "and I wasn't going to be treated like that." In fact, she seems to have a Scarlett O'Hara, I'll-never-go-hungry-again tenacity, developed after her family moved to the comfortable Palos Verdes neighborhood of Los Angeles when she was 6. Her father had bought a trucking firm, but within a few years the business collapsed. "Shannen has seen both sides of the coin," says her dad, now a mortgage consultant. "We lived in a prestigious area, with an ocean view. Then we had the rug pulled out from under us. There was a time when the doorbell would ring and it might be the utility man there to cut off the power." The experience seared Doherty. "People think, 'She's sitting up there in a nice house and has money,' " Shannen says of herself, suddenly irritated. "Somebody said that to me last night, and I got really pissed off. My parents went from having money to having nothing, to eating rice every single day."
As Tom Doherty's company was sinking, his daughter was getting into another businessâacting. Initially, Shannen tagged along when Sean tried out for a church production. In short order, she went on to play Sneezy the dwarf in Snow White, also at church ("I hammed it up"), and by age 10 she was doing commercials for Pepsi. Her big break came in 1982, when she did a voice for the animated feature The Secret of NIMH. Then Michael Landon hired her for Little House. "That show changed my life," says Doherty. "Michael Landon was the one who said to me, 'Always slick up for yourself. Never let anybody walk all over you. Be a strong woman.' " The principal of the Baptist school she attended after her stint on Little House paid the price for Landon's advice. "I hated that school," says Doherty, her voice turning sharp again. "It was very repressed. They thought that dancing was evil, and I disagreed. I organized a big dance, and the principal called me in. He wasn't pleased. He had his Bible out there on his desk and told me how God would punish me. I flipped through his Bible and found references to people dancing and rejoicing. I said to him, 'It clearly shows they danced and rejoiced. Just what the fâis wrong with you?' " Her father had reservations about Shannen and show business, but he supported her in her fight at the school, which she left alter a year. She finished her studies at the LycĂŠe Français, a private school in L.A. (by then, the family was back on its feet financially). "Shannen believed in something," says her dad, who didn't know beforehand about the prohibition on happy feet. "She did nothing wrong." The family was less approving when she left home at 18 and moved in with a 31-year-old boyfriend (who had told her he was 28). "I wanted so much to be on my own," she says now. "I wanted to prove I could do things myself". But the boy friend turned out to be involved with drugs. "And I tried drugs and drinking," says Doherty softly. "I was drinking up a storm. Cocaine was something that I tried and didn't really like. It was more the lifestyle I was into. Every single night I was out clubbing and drinking. It was a bad scene." This went on, she estimates, for six months and endedâwith a shockâthe night her boy-friend struck her. "I just remember one slap across the lace." she says, "and I was out of there." She went across the street to a convenience store, phoned her parents and went home. She has since bought and moved into her own place, but remains close lo her parents. She was there for her father in 1983 and again in 1990 when he suffered strokes (his right side is now slightly paralyzed). "She has done the single most important thing lo help my recovery," he says. "She makes me laugh." It was in 1986. while playing Kris Witherspoon on her second NBC series, Our House, that Doherty first caught the attention of an influential member of the viewing audience named Tori Spelling. Tori also liked Doherty in Heathers and recommended her to her father. Doherty got the 90210 job on a Wednesday, started work on a Monday, and now she's so famous she needs a dog to protect her when she goes jogging.
(The dogs! What about those dogs? Every time the phone rings, Doherty hops up and runs off to answer, only to return with a look of dejectionâno news.) Doherty doesn't deny that she may have earned her reputation for being tough in the early days of 90210. "I always stood up for the right causes, but I don't think I was always diplomatic," she says. "But recently I have learned lo be diplomatic." That hasn't prevented the occasional on-set misunderstandingâlike the time recently when the day's shoot ran past midnight and Doherty announced (with the producers' permission, she says) that it was time to go home. She suspects Jennie Garth may have resented that show of authority. "I don't think Jennie was very happy," she says. At any rate, she adds, their friendship has sufferedâand the Emmy business didn't help. "There's some weird tension there," she says. "We haven't really talked about what happened. But Jennie is a great girl, and this is something that can be worked on." There are no complaints from Jason Priestley, who plays Doherty's brother, Brandon. "All of the stories about Shannen are so blown out of proportion," he says. "She's a very intelligent young woman who isn't afraid to speak her mind. I really enjoy working with her. We have a good relationship on-and offscreen."
For the past year, Doherty's primary offscreen relationship has been with Chris Foufas, 25, a Chicago-based real estate manager. They met through a friend of Foufas's (in fact, she was dating the friend at the time). They announced their engagement earlier this year, but now it has been called off. "He is a wonderful man whom I love very much," says Doherty, "but I'm 21, and it's not exactly the right time to gel married. Friendship has taken over the romance.' " Marriage hasn't been completely ruled out, she says. And "if he goes out with another girl, it's [only] because he's bored." Now as to the famous night on the town with Marky Mark. Doherty maintains that they were not on a dateâit was just a friendly foursome that included 90210 costars Green and Spelling. Someday, Doherty may have her own rock-and-roll groupies to distract her. A big fan of U2, Guns N' Roses and Pearl Jam (she would love to meet lead singer Eddie Vedder), she enjoys toying with the idea of having her own band. The basic career plan, of course, is to land some movie roles alter 90210, but Doherty says, "I gel into these modes of sitting in my house writing poetry that could be converted into songs."
She pauses to light another cigarette and inhales, turning her head toward the sound of a car door slamming and the scuttle of approaching paws. Sally comes bounding in, and Tom Doherty enters carrying Jake, the dog's back paws wrapped in bandages. Shannen's father explains that when he arrived to take Sally to the vet, he found Jake in the pool. The pup had fallen in and was frantically clawing the pool trying to get out. "He looks so funny," Shannen says. "I'm so relieved!" She pats him on the head, and he regards her contentedly. You will never hear a bad word from Jake about Shannen Doherty.
*** đâď¸International Women's Dayâď¸đ
#Shannen Doherty#Article#People magazine#People 1992#1992 article#1992 magazine#1992#1992 magazine cover#People November 9 1992#1992 Quotes#Neal Preston#1992 Neal Preston#International Women's Day#Tom Doherty#Beverly Hills 90210#Aaron Spelling#Michael Landon#Chris Foufas#Tori Spelling#Jason Priestley#Jennie Garth#1992 personal life#1990s personal life#personal life#1992 neal preston people magazine#covergirl
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