Celebraties Biographies
Wednesday, May 9, 2012
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Rita and Dennis are going to get married on Jubilee Day
That's a bit unsuitable for a pensioner's wedding! Corrie's Sophie Webster attempts to upstage bride Rita in a tiny shorts suit
Spoiler alert!
Invited to her pensioner neighbour's wedding, you'd expect Weatherfield teen Sophie Webster to dress with decorum.
But it appeared the 18-year-old lesbian, played by Brooke Vincent, may be trying to upstage the bride Rita Sullivan given her tiny outfit.
Spotted on location at a Manchester church today, the actress wore an eye-catching jade shorts suit as she arrived with her on-screen parents Kevin (Michael Le Vell) and Sally (Sally Dynevor).
Is that appropriate for a pensioner's wedding?
Actress Brooke Vincent wears a shorts suit as she films scenes for
Coronation Street in Manchester today
Meanwhile, her parents Sally and Kevin were much more traditionally attired in a fuchsia dress and suit respectively.
Happy families: The fact that Sophie attends the
wedding with both parents Kevin (Michael Le Vell) and Sally (Sally
Dynevor) will fuel speculation the couple will reunite
She tweeted: 'Love abit of going on location because we all know what that means don't we @MichaelLeVell Buttie Wagon!!!!'
Also spotted on location were co-stars Bill Roache (Ken Barlow), Nigel Havers (Lewis Archer), Sue Nicholls (Audrey Roberts), Katy Cavanagh (Julie Carp) and the groom, Dennis Tanner (Philip Lowrie).
The scenes are being recorded for the special wedding episodes, which are scheduled to hit screens around the Queen's Jubilee weekend (2-5 June).
However, as expected with a soap wedding, things don't always go to plan.
Nervous? Ken Barlow (Bill Roache) and Julie Carp
(Katy Cavanagh) chat to the groom Dennis Tannes (Philip Lowrie) outside
the church
Swept up in the romance: Lewis Archer (Nigel Havers) and Audrey Roberts (Sue Nicholls) share a kiss
Corrie producer Phil Collinson said: 'It's very exciting - Rita and Dennis are going to get married on Jubilee Day. Or are they? There's lots of drama surrounding whether Rita's actually going to get to the church on time.
'We're doing a great big extravaganza, so we transmit two episodes on the Bank Holiday Monday. There's a great big street party, with the characters all dressed up as popstars through the 60 years of the Queen's reign.
'That's all happening at the same time as Rita's wedding, which is big and exciting. She gets kidnapped on her wedding day - I'll say no more than that.'
Will they or won't they? Rita Sullivan (Barbara Knox) is set to get kidnapped before her wedding to Dennis
Poor little Daddy's girl
Poor little Daddy's girl: Reality check for teenage beauty given £30,000 birthday party at 15 featuring Nicole Kidman and Tulisa, as her father goes bust and faces jail
- Family faces losing £500,000 home in Vale of Glamorgan
- Harbinder Panesar and his daughter Anysha made headlines in 2009 with Moulin Rouge-themed party that featured on MTV's Super Sweet 16
- Panesar and business partner named by insurers Templeton who claimed they were owed more than £2.3million for underwriting breakdown policies
Daddy always provided Anysha Panesar with the very best that money could buy – including a £30,000 15th birthday party featuring an X Factor judge and a personal video message from Nicole Kidman.
He also bankrolled her dream to become a beauty queen and model.
But the teenager may have to make do with a less extravagant lifestyle now that her father’s business has gone bust.
Scroll down for video
Beauty Queen: Harbinder Panesar bankrolled his daughter's dreams to become a beauty queen
The family's gated home in the Vale of Glamorgan, South Wales, which they are likely to lose after Mr Panesar became bankrupt
The full cost of her big day, which also included a helicopter ride and was featured on an MTV reality TV show, was reported to be up to £30,000.
The youngster’s father Harby, 45, said at the time that any parents planning a similar gathering should have ‘very long pockets and very long arms to reach into those pockets’.
Collapse: Harbinder Panesar is facing ruin and jail
Panesar owned insurance company Motorcare Warranties, but an investigation by the Financial Services Authority found the company had left a trail of victims whose policies were worthless.
A bankruptcy hearing in the High Court banned Panesar from setting up a new business and he was then found to be in contempt of court by launching a new insurance company. Mr Justice Eder ruled Panesar was in contempt for ‘wilful interference with the administration of justice’.
Sentence was adjourned until next month but he warned Panesar: ‘It is important to state that in light of my conclusions, all options remain open including a sentence of imprisonment.’
Yesterday Anysha, who is 18 and lives with her parents, would not comment on the family’s altered circumstances, though a friend said she was supporting her father through the crisis.
It was three years ago that he threw the Moulin Rouge themed party for his daughter where she wore a £3,000 replica dress from the movie. She was also treated to a show by Tulisa Contostavlos and her group N-Dubz. The singer is now a judge on X Factor.
The party was featured on music channel MTV’s My Super Sweet 16 – even though she was only turning 15. The reality show documents the extravagant lives and parties of teenagers with wealthy parents.
Her mother Caroline was reported as saying at the time: ‘I’m really not sure of exactly how much this party cost, but it was absolutely worth it. I love organising Anysha’s parties and sit for hours thinking of themes.’
Superstar cameos: Nicole Kidman and Tulisa Contostavlos were both involved in Anysha's party
Miss Teen USA: Anysha Panesar entered and won the Perfect American Teen pageant in 2010
Jealous boyfriend 'strangled girlfriend, 17, in bed
The son of a wealthy jeweller
strangled his model girlfriend in bed during a jealous rage at his
parents’ home before they helped him cover up the murder, a court heard
yesterday.
Elliot Turner, 20, allegedly ‘flipped out’ and killed student Emily Longley, 17, after becoming suspicious that she had been having affairs during their four-month relationship.
Turner is said to have threatened to kill Miss Longley with a hammer and boasted: ‘I will go to prison for it and still be a millionaire when I come out.’
Winchester Crown Court heard that
after the alleged murder on May 7 last year Turner wrote a confession,
but it was destroyed with bleach by his 54-year-old father, Leigh.
Jurors were told a police bug of the family home in Bournemouth recorded the family talking about ‘fabricating evidence and lying to police’.
His mother, Anita, 51, and father, Leigh, 57, of Bournemouth, initially told police they had heard Emily talking in their son’s bedroom, even though the prosecution say she was already dead.
Turner said they had argued the night before and she had attacked him, and that when he woke up beside her she was dead.
When arrested he had his passport in his pocket and his bags packed, Winchester Crown Court was told.
Leigh and Anita Turner allegedly removed
their son’s jacket from the bedroom when the police were distracted by
Leigh Turner dropping his tablets on the floor, with Anita Turner taking
it.
In evidence read out to the court, Leigh Turner was alleged to have said: 'Elliot f****** strangled her.'
The court also heard that Leigh stated: 'I cannot tell them (the police) about the letter I destroyed by bleach saying he (Elliot Turner) killed her but he didn’t mean it.'
Earlier he had said: 'We have perverted the course of justice by destroying evidence.'
But Anita Turner was heard to say they had been right to do it.
Elliot Turner was heard to say: 'I just flipped. I went absolutely nuts... I just lost it. I grabbed her as hard as I could. I pushed her like that.'
Elliot Turner denies murder and perverting the course of justice, while Anita and Leigh Turner, who run a jewellers in the resort, both deny perverting the course of justice.
Tim Mousley QC, prosecuting, told the jury that Turner and Emily had a short volatile relationship which had included Turner being violent towards her in front of friends, and on several occasions saying he would kill her.
'However short their relationship
was, during it Elliot Turner showed himself to be threatening,
aggressive, violent, controlling and possessive towards Emily Longley.
'These aspects of Elliot Turner became more and more obsessive and culminated in killing Emily Longley in his bedroom in the middle of the night,' the barrister said.
He alleged that Turner
strangled her and that there were tell-tale haemorrhages under her
eyelids, consistent with neck compression.
He had suspected a month before the alleged murder in May last year that Emily had been unfaithful when she had returned to Auckland in New Zealand to visit her parents.
The student had been born in Britain but her family had emigrated when she was nine. She had returned to live with her grandparents in Bournemouth, Dorset, to study.
Turner had then become angry over a Facebook picture of her 'flirting with lads in a car' in New Zealand.
He hated the way she wore revealing clothes and called her a whore on the night the prosecution say he strangled her, the jury of one woman and 11 men were told.
Turner made previous threats to kill Emily using a lump hammer and even practised how to strangle her with his friend Tom Crowe, the court heard.
The pair argued and then made up several times in April and May with one minute Turner buying her flowers and a Twix but then Emily texting him to say: "Hit me with a mallet? Do what ever you want to me - I will never get back with you. I actually hate you."
The barrister explained that Turner was suspicious Emily had been seeing three men in the Bournemouth area in addition to his fears she had been unfaithful while in New Zealand.
Turner’s fears were written down by Emily after they went away to the Isle of Man.
In a note on hotel paper Emily wrote:
'I love you. Don’t say you will kill me. Stop talking about your
ex-girlfriend and stop being so constantly aggressive.
'Be more cool because that’s so much more hot.'
On one occasion in the weeks before Emily died Turner had told friends he had killed her using the hammer in a nightclub car park but then said he was joking.
Mr Mousley said that his fears and anger led to the alleged murder in the early hours of May 7, after Emily agreed to stay at his home despite a series of rows and violence, but the ambulance was not called until 9.45 that morning after several phone calls between parents and son.
When Turner was arrested he said: 'I never meant to harm her, I just defended myself.' He then made no comment in police interviews.
Police examined his computer and found searches about death by strangulation, the court heard.
The jury was told Leigh Turner admitted destroying the letter and distracting police so the jacket could be removed. He said he had returned home from the jewellery shop to find Elliot Turner with his bags packed.
Anita Turner admitted taking the jacket but could not account for the delay in calling for an ambulance, the court heard.
Turner denies murder. He and his parents deny perverting the course of justice.
Elliot Turner, 20, allegedly ‘flipped out’ and killed student Emily Longley, 17, after becoming suspicious that she had been having affairs during their four-month relationship.
Turner is said to have threatened to kill Miss Longley with a hammer and boasted: ‘I will go to prison for it and still be a millionaire when I come out.’
Victim: Emily Longley was 17 when she died, allegedly at the hands of boyfriend Elliot Turner
On trial: Elliot Turner is charged with the murder of girlfriend Emily Longley
Jurors were told a police bug of the family home in Bournemouth recorded the family talking about ‘fabricating evidence and lying to police’.
His mother, Anita, 51, and father, Leigh, 57, of Bournemouth, initially told police they had heard Emily talking in their son’s bedroom, even though the prosecution say she was already dead.
Turner said they had argued the night before and she had attacked him, and that when he woke up beside her she was dead.
When arrested he had his passport in his pocket and his bags packed, Winchester Crown Court was told.
Accused: Leigh Turner, 53, and his wife Anita are charged with obstructing the course of justice
In evidence read out to the court, Leigh Turner was alleged to have said: 'Elliot f****** strangled her.'
The court also heard that Leigh stated: 'I cannot tell them (the police) about the letter I destroyed by bleach saying he (Elliot Turner) killed her but he didn’t mean it.'
Earlier he had said: 'We have perverted the course of justice by destroying evidence.'
But Anita Turner was heard to say they had been right to do it.
Elliot Turner was heard to say: 'I just flipped. I went absolutely nuts... I just lost it. I grabbed her as hard as I could. I pushed her like that.'
Elliot Turner denies murder and perverting the course of justice, while Anita and Leigh Turner, who run a jewellers in the resort, both deny perverting the course of justice.
Tim Mousley QC, prosecuting, told the jury that Turner and Emily had a short volatile relationship which had included Turner being violent towards her in front of friends, and on several occasions saying he would kill her.
On the beach: Emily spent long periods of her life in New Zealand
Pictured together: Elliot Turner and Emily Longley, pictured in the days before her death
'These aspects of Elliot Turner became more and more obsessive and culminated in killing Emily Longley in his bedroom in the middle of the night,' the barrister said.
He had suspected a month before the alleged murder in May last year that Emily had been unfaithful when she had returned to Auckland in New Zealand to visit her parents.
The student had been born in Britain but her family had emigrated when she was nine. She had returned to live with her grandparents in Bournemouth, Dorset, to study.
Investigation: Emiily was found dead at Elliot Turner's £300,000 family home
He hated the way she wore revealing clothes and called her a whore on the night the prosecution say he strangled her, the jury of one woman and 11 men were told.
Turner made previous threats to kill Emily using a lump hammer and even practised how to strangle her with his friend Tom Crowe, the court heard.
The pair argued and then made up several times in April and May with one minute Turner buying her flowers and a Twix but then Emily texting him to say: "Hit me with a mallet? Do what ever you want to me - I will never get back with you. I actually hate you."
The barrister explained that Turner was suspicious Emily had been seeing three men in the Bournemouth area in addition to his fears she had been unfaithful while in New Zealand.
Turner’s fears were written down by Emily after they went away to the Isle of Man.
Family loss: Emily with her mother Caroline Longley
Flowers were left at the scene following the death of Emily Longley, pictured on a night out
Strangled: Emily Longley who was allegedly killed after Elliot Turner, 20, became suspicious that she was having affairs
'Be more cool because that’s so much more hot.'
On one occasion in the weeks before Emily died Turner had told friends he had killed her using the hammer in a nightclub car park but then said he was joking.
Mr Mousley said that his fears and anger led to the alleged murder in the early hours of May 7, after Emily agreed to stay at his home despite a series of rows and violence, but the ambulance was not called until 9.45 that morning after several phone calls between parents and son.
When Turner was arrested he said: 'I never meant to harm her, I just defended myself.' He then made no comment in police interviews.
Police examined his computer and found searches about death by strangulation, the court heard.
The jury was told Leigh Turner admitted destroying the letter and distracting police so the jacket could be removed. He said he had returned home from the jewellery shop to find Elliot Turner with his bags packed.
Anita Turner admitted taking the jacket but could not account for the delay in calling for an ambulance, the court heard.
Turner denies murder. He and his parents deny perverting the course of justice.
: William and Kate
The echoes of a royal wedding from an earlier era are difficult to ignore.
The backdrop is the same: the opulent red-and-gold decor of the grand Throne Room at Buckingham Palace. And the mischievous smiles on the faces of some of the bridesmaids and page boys – and endearingly bewildered expressions on the others – are strikingly similar.
But, 30 years after the wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer, the official wedding picture of Prince William and Kate Middleton also reflects the differences between the two couples' relationships.
The photograph of Charles and Diana,
taken by Patrick Lichfield, seemed to capture a moment of spontaneous
informality, with the wedding party collapsing in a fit of giggles. But,
as we now know, the warmth was not reflected in the marriage itself.
By contrast, Kate and William's picture, by photographer Hugo Burnand, appears more formal, despite little Tom Pettifer's insistence on leaning in as close to the bride as possible.
Yet it is the small touches that are
most telling. In Lichfield's picture, Charles looks curiously detached,
but Kate and William's togetherness is plain to see.
Despite the organised nature of their shot, they look relaxed, their smiles unforced, and her hand rests on his knee.
Mario Testino may have received praise for his engagement portraits of William and Kate, but their choice of Hugo Burnand to take their official wedding pictures has cemented the latter's status as the Royal Family's favourite photographer.
Mr Burnand, 47, has been entrusted with capturing many of the royals' most important occasions in recent years, including Prince Charles's 60th birthday and his marriage to Camilla. He has also won the respect of the Queen and Princes William and Harry after taking their pictures on previous occasions.
An Old Harrovian and seasoned society photographer known for his charm and discretion, as well as his talent for portraits, Mr Burnand represents a more traditional choice than Mr Testino, who is famed for his glossy celebrity and fashion photoshoots.
However, Mr Burnand has photographed his share of A-listers, including Bill Clinton, President Mikhail Gorbachev, Baroness Thatcher, Victoria Beckham and Michael Jackson. He was also responsible for taking the pictures at the 1996 wedding of David and Samantha Cameron.
The Royal Wedding commission was a major coup for the London-based father of four, who has worked at Tatler magazine since 1993.
Yesterday, he described it as 'the gig of the century', adding: 'It was amazing, incredible, and there were a couple of moments where I did pinch myself.'
Of the mood in the Throne Room, he said: 'From where I was, and from their point of view, it was two families coming together and that was the feeling – the sense of family and love going between everyone.'
He described the happy couple as 'just so nice as individuals and as a pair', and revealed that Kate, who has worked as a photographer for her parents' company Party Pieces, had contributed her own ideas for the pictures.
Mr Burnand got to know Prince William when he photographed him on his polo pony and at Windsor Castle as part of the wedding party for his father's second marriage in 2005.
He shares with the prince a tragedy in his past: he, too, lost his mother in a car accident. Susan Gordon died in 1964, the year after he was born.
His stepmother Ursy Burnand, whom his father Peter married in 1967, is also a photographer – and was one of his assistants on the Royal Wedding shoot.
Born in Cannes, France, Mr Burnand won his first photography competition at the age of seven, at Cheam School, which was also attended by Prince Philip and Prince Charles.
During his time at Harrow, he became the school's unofficial photographer, taking portraits of school-leavers.
He did not become a professional photographer until 1991, after a string of jobs including stable hand and insurance broker.
Mr Burnand spent months preparing for the wedding.
He was accompanied by assistants including his stepmother, photographer Ursy Burnand, 71, who he says is an invaluable member of the team.
As well as cameras, spares and spares of spares, the team were carrying extensive lighting and computing equipment.
They were also using stopwatches to ensure perfect timing.
Mr Burnand has photographed everyone from Spike Milligan to Michael Jackson and former prime minister Lady Thatcher.
He was commissioned to photograph the marriage of the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall in 2005 and the wedding of David and Samantha Cameron in 1996.
Charles also asked him to take the birthday image which marked his 60th year in 2008.
Mr Burnand, 47, who has four children with wife Louisa, has also taken pictures of William and Prince Harry and the Queen.
He has been a photographer for Tatler magazine since 1993.
He has had an interest in cameras since he was a young boy and learned to develop his films and make prints using a makeshift darkroom in his family's kitchen.
The old Harrovian, based in Notting Hill, west London, said: 'I never really got nervous. You almost go into another zone when it's happening.'
The backdrop is the same: the opulent red-and-gold decor of the grand Throne Room at Buckingham Palace. And the mischievous smiles on the faces of some of the bridesmaids and page boys – and endearingly bewildered expressions on the others – are strikingly similar.
But, 30 years after the wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer, the official wedding picture of Prince William and Kate Middleton also reflects the differences between the two couples' relationships.
Happy: William and Kate surrounded by, clockwise
bottom right, The Hon. Margarita Armstrong-Jones, Miss Eliza Lopes,
Miss Grace van Cutsem, Lady Louise Windsor, Master Tom Pettifer, Master
William Lowther-Pinkerton
The 1981 wedding party. From back, Prince
Andrew, Prince Edward, Diana and Charles, Edward van Cutsem; front: Lord
Nicholas Windsor, Clementine Hambro, Catherine Cameron, India Hicks,
Sarah-Jane Gaselee and Lady Sarah Armstrong-Jones
By contrast, Kate and William's picture, by photographer Hugo Burnand, appears more formal, despite little Tom Pettifer's insistence on leaning in as close to the bride as possible.
Full of joy and not a care in the world: William and Kate smile broadly as they stand arm-in-arm in the official wedding album
Despite the organised nature of their shot, they look relaxed, their smiles unforced, and her hand rests on his knee.
Mario Testino may have received praise for his engagement portraits of William and Kate, but their choice of Hugo Burnand to take their official wedding pictures has cemented the latter's status as the Royal Family's favourite photographer.
Mr Burnand, 47, has been entrusted with capturing many of the royals' most important occasions in recent years, including Prince Charles's 60th birthday and his marriage to Camilla. He has also won the respect of the Queen and Princes William and Harry after taking their pictures on previous occasions.
The family photo: Front row left to right, Grace
van Cutsem, Eliza Lopes, The Duke of Edinburgh, The Queen, Margarita
Armstrong-Jones, Louise Windsor, William Lowther-Pinkerton. Back Row
left to right, Tom Pettifer, Camilla, Charles, Prince Harry, Prince
William and Kate, Michael Middleton, Carole Middleton, James Middleton
and Philippa Middleton
The noise and crowds were a bit too much for Grace van Cutsem on the
balcony, but the photographer said she was adorable and knew how to pose
for pictures (pictured right with Eliza Lopes)
An Old Harrovian and seasoned society photographer known for his charm and discretion, as well as his talent for portraits, Mr Burnand represents a more traditional choice than Mr Testino, who is famed for his glossy celebrity and fashion photoshoots.
However, Mr Burnand has photographed his share of A-listers, including Bill Clinton, President Mikhail Gorbachev, Baroness Thatcher, Victoria Beckham and Michael Jackson. He was also responsible for taking the pictures at the 1996 wedding of David and Samantha Cameron.
The Royal Wedding commission was a major coup for the London-based father of four, who has worked at Tatler magazine since 1993.
Yesterday, he described it as 'the gig of the century', adding: 'It was amazing, incredible, and there were a couple of moments where I did pinch myself.'
Of the mood in the Throne Room, he said: 'From where I was, and from their point of view, it was two families coming together and that was the feeling – the sense of family and love going between everyone.'
He described the happy couple as 'just so nice as individuals and as a pair', and revealed that Kate, who has worked as a photographer for her parents' company Party Pieces, had contributed her own ideas for the pictures.
Mr Burnand got to know Prince William when he photographed him on his polo pony and at Windsor Castle as part of the wedding party for his father's second marriage in 2005.
He shares with the prince a tragedy in his past: he, too, lost his mother in a car accident. Susan Gordon died in 1964, the year after he was born.
His stepmother Ursy Burnand, whom his father Peter married in 1967, is also a photographer – and was one of his assistants on the Royal Wedding shoot.
Born in Cannes, France, Mr Burnand won his first photography competition at the age of seven, at Cheam School, which was also attended by Prince Philip and Prince Charles.
During his time at Harrow, he became the school's unofficial photographer, taking portraits of school-leavers.
He did not become a professional photographer until 1991, after a string of jobs including stable hand and insurance broker.
THE PHOTOGRAPHER AND HOW HE PREPARED FOR THE BIG DAY
Hugo Burnand, the official wedding photographer
He was accompanied by assistants including his stepmother, photographer Ursy Burnand, 71, who he says is an invaluable member of the team.
As well as cameras, spares and spares of spares, the team were carrying extensive lighting and computing equipment.
They were also using stopwatches to ensure perfect timing.
Mr Burnand has photographed everyone from Spike Milligan to Michael Jackson and former prime minister Lady Thatcher.
He was commissioned to photograph the marriage of the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall in 2005 and the wedding of David and Samantha Cameron in 1996.
Charles also asked him to take the birthday image which marked his 60th year in 2008.
Mr Burnand, 47, who has four children with wife Louisa, has also taken pictures of William and Prince Harry and the Queen.
He has been a photographer for Tatler magazine since 1993.
He has had an interest in cameras since he was a young boy and learned to develop his films and make prints using a makeshift darkroom in his family's kitchen.
The old Harrovian, based in Notting Hill, west London, said: 'I never really got nervous. You almost go into another zone when it's happening.'
First day as husband and wife: Newlyweds
William and Kate emerged holding hands into the morning sunshine at
Buckingham Palace before they left by helicopter for a mini honeymoon at
a mystery location
Up, up and away: The couple walked across a
gravel path in the palace gardens to a waiting maroon helicopter which
whisked them away for the weekend
Monday, April 23, 2012
10 Super Weird Celebrity Diets!
Wednesday 3:10 PM, 18/04/2012
Being a Victoria's Secret Angel seems like a tough job. Adriana Lima revealed that nine days before the annual fashion show
she sticks to liquids and 12 hours before she stops drinking water just
to purge water weight. Eh, we sure hope she doesn't sweat a lot.
Madonna is sometimes
on a diet called The Air Diet. It involves holding food but resisting
from eating it. We think you missed the point of eating, Madonna!
Jennifer Aniston
sometimes skips breakfast and drink a glass of freshly-squeezed lemon
juice instead. She swears it's the best way of getting rid of fat.
Sounds like a bad way to start the morning.
Beyonce was asked to
lose weight when she filmed the movie Dreamgirls, so she went on the
"Master Cleanse Diet" for 14 days: "I lived on water, cayenne pepper and
maple syrup for 14 days. I was just shrinking and shrinking. People
were like: “Are you OK?” I didn’t feel good," she said.
When Snooki didn't like
what she saw in the mirror she started following Dr. Siegal's cookie
diet. It consists of eating one meal a day and six cookies to suppress
hunger. It doesn't sound healthy to us!
Reese Witherspoon
is known for being a fan of baby food. Her diet involves eating baby
food instead of breakfast and lunch, but in the evening she eat a proper
meal.
Megan Fox has said that the only way for her to get into shape is to drink a combo if apple-cider vinegar and water before every meal.
Nicole Kidman
was on a hardboiled egg diet while filming Cold Mountain. She simply had
one egg in the morning and two eggs for dinner. Three if she was extra
hungry. It must have been boring.
Katie Holmes once
decided to lose weight by strictly eating carrot soup for breakfast and
raw broccoli for lunch and dinner. We'd starve to death!
Source: WENN.com
Ashley Greene accidently starved herself during filming "Twilight Saga: New Moon". She worked 12 hour days and had no time to eat so she lost a lot of weight.
Celebrities like Adriana Lima and Megan Fox
are known for their super hot bodies. But did you know that they've
been on tons of super weird (and bad!) diets to get there? Well, we
wouldn't recommend you to try them at home. So who eats just three eggs a
day and who doesn't eat at all? Click on the pics and find out!
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