Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Turhan bey dies

Turhan bey dies, 1940s Hollywood actor dies in Austria - Turhan Bey, an actor whose exotic good looks earned him the nickname of "Turkish Delight" in films with Errol Flynn and Katherine Hepburn before he left Hollywood for a quieter life in Vienna, has died. He was 90.

Marita Ruiter, who exhibited Bey's photos in her Luxembourg gallery, told the Austria Press Agency on Tuesday that Bey died in the Austrian capital on Sept. 30 after a long struggle with Parkinson's disease and was cremated on Monday.

While celebrated for supporting roles alongside Flynn, Hepburn, John Wayne, Peter Lorre and other film greats of the 1940s, friends described Bey as a modest, unassuming man who never bragged of his ties with the stars of the era.

"He was a man brimming with humor, with plenty of aplomb and self-irony, and was very popular," Ruiter was quoted as saying. "He wasn't the kind who cared a lot about honors."

Born in Austria as Gilbert Selahettin Schultavey, the son of a Turkish diplomat, Bey assumed his stage name shortly after moving to the United States with his Jewish Czech mother from Vienna to escape the Nazis and being discovered by talent scouts from Warner Bros. studios.

His popular name was "Turkish Delight" - a reference to his suave good looks that made him an ideal partner to exotics like Maria Montez in escapist Technicolor adventure fantasies set in faraway places.

He starred or had major roles alongside the big stars of the era in films such as "A Night in Paradise," "Out of the Blue," and "The Amazing Mr. X" until the popularity of the genre faded in the 1950s.

Moving back to Vienna, he made living as a photographer and occasional stage director, again returning after a brief film and television comeback in the 1990s that earned him an Emmy nomination for his performance as the venerable Turval in the "Babylon 5" space fantasy TV series.

Kid Rock Paul Ryan

Kid Rock, Paul Ryan Take Jabs at Obama at Michigan Rally, Kid Rock gave vice presidential hopeful Paul Ryan a rock star introduction at a campaign rally in Michigan Monday evening. Rock, whose real name is Robert Ritchie, said he knows his support for Mitt Romney may "alienate a few fans" but he didn't care.

"I really believe strongly that it's okay to disagree on politics and the direction of our country without hating one another," he said.

During his introductory speech, Rock also expressed frustration over President Obama's job performance.

"I also want to be real clear that I am very proud to say that we had elected our first black president. I'm sorry, I'm sorry he didn't do a better job. I really wish he would have-I do."
Rock, 41, sounded impressed by how Romney performed during last week's debate with Obama.

Although he wanted for Obama to have done better, Rock said the debate speaks for itself, saying "the facts are the facts and we just saw them come to light in the last debate with no outside BS, no bias media involved, no interruptions and negative politics ads every five seconds and most importantly no damn teleprompters."

"Yeah, I enjoyed it so much I think I might throw a keg party for the Ryan-Biden debate."
Rock, a Michigan native, introduced Ryan to the crowd as a "fellow hunter, a fellow fan of rock and roll and a great Midwesterner.

Ryan focused his talk on the dismal jobs report and sluggish employment rate.

"(President Barack Obama) said that the economy would be growing at 4% this year. Well now it's growing at 1.3%. The economy is growing slower this year than it grew last year and last year it was slower than the year before," said Ryan.

"We need to make sure that people who are caught in between, who are slipping through the cracks, get the skills they need to get the careers they want so they can get back on their feet and get back on the path to prosperity, get back in the middle class, have higher take-home pay, go back to work."

Wes Welker Comments

Wes Welker Comments, New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick said on Monday that he “didn’t really see” the comments from Wes Welker following the team’s 31-21 win on Sunday, in which Welker seemed to take a good-natured jab at his coach.

“Yeah it’s kind of nice to stick it in Bill’s face once in a while,” Welker said jokingly and with a wink when asked during a Comcast Sportsnet interview how it felt to catch 13 balls in the game as compared to the three he snagged in Week 1. “So this is definitely a good one.”

Welker is playing under the $9.5 million franchise tag this season after he and the team could not come to terms on a long-term deal. A major storyline over the first few weeks of the season was his reduced role in the Patriots offense, a subplot that has faded in recent weeks thanks to injuries to receiver Julian Edelman and Aaron Hernandez.

After catching just eight passes over the first two weeks combined, Welker has averaged 10 catches per game since. He ranks second in the NFL with 38 catches on the season.

Upon being informed of Welker’s comment at his daily news conference Monday, Belichick said, “You should ask him about it then. What he meant by it, I don’t know.”

Car Sliced In Half

Car Sliced In Half, A car was cut in half after smashing into trees along a Long Island parkway Monday morning, killing four 18-year-old passengers, New York State Police said. The 17-year-old driver, who had a learner's permit, was taken to a hospital.

The accident on the westbound Southern State Parkway happened at about 4 a.m., closing the roadway for more than five hours on a quiet Columbus Day holiday. Backpacks and other personal items could be seen inside the wreckage.

Glass, debris and other car parts were strewn along a wooded area adjacent to a nearby neighborhood street, where one neighbor said she was awakened by the sound of a loud explosion.

"Just a loud boom," said Amy Buchanan, who lives on nearby Taylor Road. Her home is about 50 yards from where the late-model Subaru came to rest. She said other neighbors told her one apparent survivor of the crash was seen walking near the wreckage.

State Police identified the driver as 17-year-old Joseph Beer of Queens. His four passengers were not immediately identified. Police said those killed were thrown out of the vehicle after the driver failed to negotiate a curve in the road and crashed into the woods.

The front and rear parts of the vehicle were loaded separately onto a flatbed truck and carted away from the scene.

Buchanan said the area is the site of frequent accidents. "I've lived here for 10 years and there has been an accident almost in that exact spot every year, but never as one as horrific as this," she said.

The parkway was reopened shortly before 10 a.m.

QVC Host Faints

QVC Host Faints, QVC knows that in the world of live television, the show must go on. So when a QVC host fainted live on air, her co-host continued to hawk the products without skipping a beat. On Sunday night, host Dan Hughes welcomed QVC guest host Cassie Slane to sell a kid-friendly Android tablet, but in the middle of the segment something went awry. Slane began to pat her chest and appear disoriented. Then, the QVC host fainted live on air.

Although the camera cut to a shot of the product, Hughes, who did ask if Slane was okay, continued to pitch the FunTab Pro for children. QVC’s Carolyn Gracie replaced Slane and finished the segment with Hughes.

Slane, a mother of three, took to her Facebook page to address the fainting episode. “Thanks to everyone for your kind words,” she wrote. “I am feeling alot [sic] better today!”

A QVC spokesman said Slane suffered a “brief fainting spell” and has recovered, according to the New York Daily News.

Gracie responded to a Facebook fan who asked why Slane fainted, according to ABC News, saying: “She had a couple of fainting spells due to low blood sugar. Poor thing. She is such a nice girl.”

Kim Kardashian Kanye West Miami Mansion

Kim Kardashian Kanye West Miami Mansion, Grammy-winning rapper Kanye West and Kim Kardashian could not avoid paparazzi cameras this week, getting spotted in Miami, Florida doing a little bit of house hunting. While details are still slim, KimYe are reportedly on the prowl for their own permanent Miami getaway.

Are Kanye West and Kim Kardashian ready to take the next step in their relationship and buy property together? The famous couple was spotted house hunting in Miami on Monday. Yeezy, who was dressed in his gym clothes and red Balenciaga pleated high-tops, was a perfect gentleman, holding the umbrella for his girlfriend as they toured some pricey real estate in the rain. The paparazzi followed them throughout the day, winding up at Prime One Twelve where they had dinner. (Rap-Up)
Recently, Kardashian delved into her love for Yeezy and why their bond is everlasting.

“It’s so nice to have a best friend in this game who understands everything you’re going through. Being with someone I’ve known for so many years is comforting. He’s been there through so many different stages of my life and before I was famous, so this relationship is a different thing entirely. It’s good to be aware that he definitely doesn’t want anything from me too, because he understands the business,” she said. “I can’t even think about being with anyone else than the man I’m with.” (Tatler)
A few weeks ago, G.O.O.D. Music’s Big Sean revealed just how happy Kim makes Ye.

“Yeah, that’s the homie right there,” Sean said to DJ Whoo Kid, referring to Kim. “She’s a cool person all around. I think her and Ye, they really make each other happy. So it’s tight. I’ve never seen him so happy. I can’t even remember the last time I’ve seen him so happy. It’s tight. Yeah, she’s out here doing her thing. … And it don’t get much better than that. She’s doing her thing.” (Avenue A Soundcheck)
G.O.O.D. Music’s Common recently co-signed Ye’s current love life.

“Oh man, they are great — they are a great match,” said Common, one of Kanye’s best pals and musical partners, when asked about the famous romance during the Season 2 premiere of AMC’s Hell On Wheels. So what makes Kimye a match made in reality star-rapper heaven? Their love, of course. “Love is the biggest key to a good match,” he said. “I think they have that.” (Wet Paint)

Tammy Sytch Fourth Arrest

Tammy Sytch Fourth Arrest, Former WWE performer Tammy Sytch, famously known as Sunny, is entering a rehabilitation center again after being arrested three consecutive days this week in Connecticut for crimes related to domestic violence. According to WFSB Channel 3 in Connecticut, Sytch kept returning to her boyfriend’s home after police ordered her not to. During one of the incidents, she placed him in a headlock and pulled his hair. Later, she was intoxicated and entered the residence by climbing through a window. According to Branford Police, the 39-year-old was first arrested for disorderly conduct on Tuesday at 8:55 p.m. She was released on $500 bond and appeared in New Haven Superior Court on those charges. Sytch was arrested again on Wednesday at 4:49 p.m. for disorderly conduct and strangulation for an incident involving the same man. She was also charged with violating a restraining order. She was arraigned that day at Superior Court in New Haven and released on $25,000 bond. Sytch was arrested on Thursday 8:00 p.m. for once again violating a restraining order. She was released on $2,500 bond and appeared at Superior Court in New Haven Friday. Sytch was released into the care of her sister, who was taking her to a rehabilitation center in New Jersey. The website notes that WWE is expected to pay for her medical care. “There’s a bed waiting for her today,” said Sytch’s sister, Denise Stone in court Friday. According to F4WOnline.com, the incidents occurred at the home of independent wrestler Damien Darling, who is, or at least was as of earlier this week, Sytch’s boyfriend. She had recently moved to his house in Branford, Connecticut. The chain of events began with a major argument between the two. This will mark as at least Sytch’s fourth stint in rehab-WWE stated to TMZ.com that they had sponsored her on three occasions. The legendary Diva was admitted to an emergency room on July 13 for consuming a large amount of vodka and subsequently entered rehab a few days later. She claimed sobriety after completing the program in August.

Jennifer Aniston Engagement Ring

Jennifer Aniston Engagement Ring, Jennifer Aniston finally debuts enormous engagement ring. It's the rock the world has been waiting for. Nearly two months after getting engaged to boyfriend Justin Theroux, Jennifer Aniston has finally stepped out wearing her engagement ring. And it's a whopper!

The 43-year-old was spotted wearing a large diamond on the ring finger of her left hand as she vacationed in Santa Fe, New Mexico, with her fiancé over the weekend. The actress has been in nearby Albuquerque shooting scenes for her upcoming comedy "We're the Millers."

So what was the reason for the delay in debuting the sparkler? It's unclear whether Aniston only recently got the ring or if her main squeeze gave it to her back when he popped the question on August 10, which also happened to be his 41st birthday. Perhaps she just held off on sporting it since she's been working on set so much?

In the film, she plays a woman hired by a drug smuggler to pretend to be his wife, and thus, spends many of her scenes wearing a simple gold wedding band. Some speculated that the band might actually belong to Aniston, but most of us were patiently waiting for her to debut some big bling.

And now that she finally has, no one within miles can miss it!

Marvin Mandel Sentenced To Jail

Marvin Mandel Sentenced To Jail, Oct. 7 will mark 30 years since Gov. Marvin Mandel was sentenced to jail after being convicted on 15 federal counts of mail fraud and one count of racketeering. Mandel, a native of Baltimore and a Democrat, was Maryland’s governor at the time.
But the October 1977 sentencing wasn’t the end of the saga. Mandel did serve time in prison, but was pardoned by President Ronald Reagan. His conviction was eventually overturned.

Mandel’s time in the public spotlight began when he was elected to the Maryland House of Delegates in 1952, representing Baltimore city. He was named speaker of the House of Delegates 11 years later and served in that position until 1969.

In 1969, Gov. Spiro Agnew (R) was sworn in as vice president of the United States, a post he won as Richard Nixon’s running mate in the 1968. There was no lieutenant governor in Maryland at that time, and so the Maryland General Assembly selected Mandel to be Agnew’s successor as governor.

In 1970, and again in 1974, Mandel was elected and re-elected to the job.

Three years into his first elected term in office, Mandel announced that he and his wife, Barbara, had separated. In making the announcement Mandel said he was ‘‘in love with another woman, Mrs. Jeanne Dorsey, and I intend to marry her.”

Jeanne Dorsey, whose maiden name was Blackistone, was a St. Mary’s native and was at the time married to Walter Dorsey, a once and future state’s attorney for St. Mary’s. From 1968 to 1972 Jeanne Dorsey served as a Leonardtown commissioner. In 1972 she chose to not run for re-election.

In 1974, Mandel divorced his first wife and he and Jeanne were married shortly thereafter.

In 1975, one year into Mandel’s second term in office, mail fraud and racketeering indictments were handed up against Mandel and five other men.

The indictments alleged that, in 1972, Mandel had used his office to give favored treatment to his co-defendants, who owned the Marlboro Race Track in Prince George’s County.

On New Year’s Eve 1971, the co-defendants purchased the race track. Marlboro, like all of Maryland’s race tracks, was state regulated. It was allotted 18 racing days a year. Wanting to expand their allowable race dates, the owners approached Mandel and asked for his help.

Mandel, who until then had been a staunch advocate of strict horse racing regulations, dropped his opposition to a bill pending in the Maryland General Assembly that would increase Marlboro’s racing days from 18 to 36. On Jan. 12, 1972, the bill passed. Two months later Mandel lobbied the Maryland General Assembly, urging them unsuccessfully to increase the number of racing days, this time from 36 to 94.

Behind the scenes, prosecutors said, Mandel was also helping the Marlboro owners acquire interests in other racetracks around the state.

In return for his help, Mandel was given cash and other valuables from his friends, including expensive clothes and jewelry that the track owners paid for, prosecutors said. They also charged that Mandel received interest in a new Maryland waterfront development called Ray’s Point, on Maryland’s Eastern Shore, and in an investment company.

Mandel and his co-defendants went on trial in Baltimore in September 1975. But in early December, U.S. District Court Judge John H. Pratt declared a mistrial. The jury, he said, had been contaminated by prejudicial publicity about two arrests that had been made that were related to attempted jury tampering.

Just hours after news of one arrest was made public, the jurors were sequestered. Two days later, while watching a movie on television, at least half the jury saw a news report that described the charges against the men.

Charles Edward Neiswender, 51, of Cinaminson, N.J. was arrested in early November but the arrest had been kept secret for nearly a month. Neiswender had allegedly approached Mandel’s attorney, Arnold M. Weiner, and told Weiner he could fix the jury to acquit the governor. His arrest was not made public until Dec. 2, two days after a 67-year-old Pikesville furniture salesman, Walter Weikers, was charged with attempting to bribe a juror.

The second Mandel trial began June 1, 1977, and lasted nearly three months. U.S. District Judge Robert Taylor presided over the second trial.

On Aug. 21, 1977, the jury found Mandel guilty. He was convicted of accepting more than $350,000 from his friends. During the trial testimony was offered alleging that said some of the money Mandel received was used in the divorce settlement he had negotiated with his first wife.

On Oct. 7, 1977, Mandel stood before Judge Taylor for sentencing. Jeanne Mandel sat quietly in the courtroom, as she had nearly every day since the trial began.

Earlier in the week Mandel and his wife had vacated the governor’s mansion in Annapolis and moved into a rented home near the state capital.

For nearly an hour Weiner argued for leniency for his client, referring to Mandel’s health problems, which his lawyer claimed were ‘‘a direct result of the intolerable pressures that this case presented.”

Mandel also suffered from having ‘‘every personal detail of his life opened up for the world to see,” the attorney added.

Federal prosecutor Barnet Skolnik remarked that there were some defendants in the courtroom who deserved leniency. ‘‘Unfortunately, Mr. Weiner does not represent one of those defendants.”

‘‘This case has troubled me, troubled me,” said Judge Taylor at the sentencing hearing. ‘‘I think about him as governor, I think about him losing his governorship. I think about how he started out as a struggling lawyer. I can’t tell you how much I am troubled by this case. I hope you will understand, I know you will understand my responsibility.”

Taylor dismissed two counts of mail fraud against Mandel and one count of racketeering, but upheld 15 counts of mail fraud and one charge of extortion. Taylor had already indicated he was not going to impose any monetary fines on Mandel.

He then sentenced Maryland’s governor to four years in prison. At the same moment, Mandel was stripped of the governorship, effectively ending his political career.

‘‘I’ve spent over half my life in public life while serving the state of Maryland and the people of Maryland I love,” Mandel said. ‘‘Now my whole life is in disarray and I must start anew.”

‘‘I have great sympathy for you,” said Taylor in response. ‘‘I feel sorry you’re in the position you’re in. You have many, many good qualities. I don’t say this harshly, but I think you made some serious mistakes.”

As Mandel walked out of the courtroom — he remained free on bond pending any appeals — Jeanne Mandel was by her husband’s side, gently rubbing his back as they walked, comforting him.

Mandel’s attorneys quickly appealed the conviction. They won a brief victory when the U.S. Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals overturned it. But the appeal was reheard and the court of appeals reversed its own decision and upheld the conviction.

During the appeal process Mandel remained free, but he eventually went to prison. He served 19 months of his sentence in a federal prison before being pardoned by President Ronald Reagan.

On Nov. 12, 1987, Judge Frederic N. Smalkin of the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland — the same court where Mandel had been tried — overturned Mandel’s conviction.

Although Smalkin did not dispute the evidence that had been presented at Mandel’s trial, he insisted the prosecutors at the time ‘‘had stretched their interpretation of federal mail fraud and racketeering laws past the breaking point to bring Mandel to trial for what were really state crimes,” said a 1987 Time Magazine report.

Today Mandel, now 88, lives in Anne Arundel County and practices law in Annapolis. He has been on the Board of Regents of the University System of Maryland since 2003. Jeanne Blackistone Dorsey Mandel died on Oct. 6, 2001.

Marvin Mandel Wife Jeanne Dies At 64

Marvin Mandel Wife Jeanne Dies At 64, Jeanne Blackistone Mandel, whose love affair with former Gov. Marvin Mandel sparked one of the most dramatic chapters in Maryland political history, died Saturday from heart failure at her Annapolis home. She was 64.

Known her entire life as a strong-willed woman, she waged in the final years of her life a battle against Lou Gehrig's disease, a fatal neuromuscular disorder.

FOR THE RECORD - An obituary in yesterday's editions of The Sun for Jeanne Mandel, wife of former Gov. Marvin Mandel, incorrectly stated that he was re-elected while facing federal mail fraud and racketeering charges. Maryland voters re-elected him in 1974, a year before he was indicted. The Sun regrets the error.

"She fought the entire time that she was ill," said son Philip H. Dorsey III of Leonardtown. "Her doctors were amazed with the way she fought."

While Mrs. Mandel accomplished much - preserving a historic Maryland island and being active politically in her home St. Mary's County - it was her relationship with the powerful, pipe-smoking governor that captured national headlines.

"The skeptics, and there were many, said Marvin's marriage to Jeanne wouldn't last, but they were wrong," said Frank DeFilippo, Mr. Mandel's press secretary for eight years.

"In a way it lasted forever," Mr. DeFilippo said yesterday. "Marvin remained extremely devoted to her to the end."

One of the most recognizable and glamorous figures in the state during the 1970s and 1980s, Mrs. Mandel stood defiantly by her husband after he was indicted on federal charges of political corruption, convicted and imprisoned for 19 months.

At the heart of the government's case was Mr. Mandel's need for cash to finance the divorce he wanted from his wife of 32 years, Barbara, so he could marry Jeanne.

Baltimore furniture dealer and political fund-raiser Irvin Kovens and several other businessmen were charged with Mr. Mandel with engineering a labyrinthine scheme to diminish the value of the old Marlboro Race Track by reducing the number of racing days.

After Mr. Kovens and the others bought the track, the days were restored and the value went up.

In exchange, the government contended, Mr. Kovens handled some of Mr. Mandel's divorce-related financial obligations and guaranteed the monthly alimony payments: Mr. Mandel's take-home pay then was about $17,000 a year - less than the alimony he had agreed to pay. As Mary McGrory of the Washington Post wrote: "He loved beyond his means."

Troubled times

On July 3, 1973, Mr. Mandel announced to Maryland "I am in love with another woman, and I intend to marry her."

Mr. Mandel's wife, Barbara, known as Bootsie, did not make it easy. She refused to leave the governor's mansion and suggested her husband consult a psychiatrist. Mr. Mandel moved into an Annapolis hotel and later to the state yacht, Maryland Lady. Five and a half months later a divorce agreement was reached.

Though they may have admired Barbara Mandel's pluck, voters endorsed their governor's determination to be with the woman he loved, re-electing him in 1976 - in spite of his indictment - with 64 percent of the vote.

A confident, smiling Jeanne Mandel's picture ran frequently in newspapers and TV news programs, as he endured two long trials.

"She was a very elegant, charismatic and strong partner," said Mr. Mandel's friend, Annapolis lobbyist Bruce C. Bereano.

She called her husband's conviction "the greatest travesty the American people will ever see."

After Mr. Mandel's sentence was commuted by President Ronald Reagan on Dec. 4, 1981, the couple was reunited.

Prominent background

Before meeting Mr. Mandel, Mrs. Mandel was the wife of Walter B. Dorsey, then a state senator and the son of a politically prominent family in St. Mary's County. Mr. Dorsey's father had been a Circuit Court judge.

She, too, carried impressive social bona fides, being from one of the families that settled St. Mary's County in the 17th century.

Born in Leonardtown, she attended Holy Angels Roman Catholic elementary school in Avenue, St. Mary's Academy high school and Strayer College.

She served two terms as a St. Mary's County commissioner during the late 1960s and later became the county's first female police commissioner.

After that government service, she worked in real estate.

In the 1970s, she led a crusade to help save St. Clement's Island in the Potomac River, site of the landing of the Ark and Dove in 1634.

Later, she headed a group called St. Clement's One-Hundred, a state preservationist group for the site.

Family members said yesterday that Mrs. Mandel had a passionate love of the Chesapeake Bay and often enjoyed sitting on a boat or riverbank fishing. She was an accomplished gardener and was fond of local history.

Services will be held at 11 a.m. Thursday at Sol Levinson & Bros., 8900 Reisterstown Road in Pikesville. Burial will be at Lakemont Memorial Gardens in Davidsonville.

The family requests donations to ALS Research, in care of Dr. Daniel Drachman, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Department of Neurology, 600 N. Wolfe St., Baltimore 21287; or to the St. Clements One-Hundred, P.O. Box 54, Bushwood 20618.

In addition to her husband and son, survivors include three other children, Paul Dorsey of Annapolis, Helen Dorsey of Williamsburg, Va., and John Michael Dorsey of Green Bay, Wis.; two stepchildren, Ellen Maltz and Gary Mandel, both of Los Angeles; a sister, Virginia Duke of Leonardtown; eight grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.

Barbara Mandel Refused To Leave Governor's Mansion

Barbara Mandel Refused To Leave Governor's Mansion, Marvin Mandel sentenced to jail, Marvin Mandel wife Jeanne dies at 64: Jeanne Blackistone Mandel, whose love affair with former Gov. Marvin Mandel sparked one of the most dramatic chapters in Maryland political history, died Saturday from heart failure at her Annapolis home. She was 64.

Known her entire life as a strong-willed woman, she waged in the final years of her life a battle against Lou Gehrig's disease, a fatal neuromuscular disorder.

An obituary in yesterday's editions of The Sun for Jeanne Mandel, wife of former Gov. Marvin Mandel, incorrectly stated that he was re-elected while facing federal mail fraud and racketeering charges. Maryland voters re-elected him in 1974, a year before he was indicted. The Sun regrets the error.

"She fought the entire time that she was ill," said son Philip H. Dorsey III of Leonardtown. "Her doctors were amazed with the way she fought."

While Mrs. Mandel accomplished much - preserving a historic Maryland island and being active politically in her home St. Mary's County - it was her relationship with the powerful, pipe-smoking governor that captured national headlines.

"The skeptics, and there were many, said Marvin's marriage to Jeanne wouldn't last, but they were wrong," said Frank DeFilippo, Mr. Mandel's press secretary for eight years.

"In a way it lasted forever," Mr. DeFilippo said yesterday. "Marvin remained extremely devoted to her to the end."

One of the most recognizable and glamorous figures in the state during the 1970s and 1980s, Mrs. Mandel stood defiantly by her husband after he was indicted on federal charges of political corruption, convicted and imprisoned for 19 months.

At the heart of the government's case was Mr. Mandel's need for cash to finance the divorce he wanted from his wife of 32 years, Barbara, so he could marry Jeanne.

Baltimore furniture dealer and political fund-raiser Irvin Kovens and several other businessmen were charged with Mr. Mandel with engineering a labyrinthine scheme to diminish the value of the old Marlboro Race Track by reducing the number of racing days.

After Mr. Kovens and the others bought the track, the days were restored and the value went up.

In exchange, the government contended, Mr. Kovens handled some of Mr. Mandel's divorce-related financial obligations and guaranteed the monthly alimony payments: Mr. Mandel's take-home pay then was about $17,000 a year - less than the alimony he had agreed to pay. As Mary McGrory of the Washington Post wrote: "He loved beyond his means."

Troubled times

On July 3, 1973, Mr. Mandel announced to Maryland "I am in love with another woman, and I intend to marry her."

Mr. Mandel's wife, Barbara, known as Bootsie, did not make it easy. She refused to leave the governor's mansion and suggested her husband consult a psychiatrist. Mr. Mandel moved into an Annapolis hotel and later to the state yacht, Maryland Lady. Five and a half months later a divorce agreement was reached.

Though they may have admired Barbara Mandel's pluck, voters endorsed their governor's determination to be with the woman he loved, re-electing him in 1976 - in spite of his indictment - with 64 percent of the vote.

A confident, smiling Jeanne Mandel's picture ran frequently in newspapers and TV news programs, as he endured two long trials.

"She was a very elegant, charismatic and strong partner," said Mr. Mandel's friend, Annapolis lobbyist Bruce C. Bereano.

She called her husband's conviction "the greatest travesty the American people will ever see."

After Mr. Mandel's sentence was commuted by President Ronald Reagan on Dec. 4, 1981, the couple was reunited.

British Royal Maid of Honour

British Royal Maid of Honour, Prince William and Kate Middleton announced the lineup for part of their wedding procession on Twitter Monday morning in a series of Tweets from the Clarence House account:

Prince William and Miss Catherine Middleton have announced the Maid of Honour, Bridesmaids, Best Man and Page Boys for their wedding.
Miss Catherine Middleton has asked her sister, Miss Philippa Middleton, to be her Maid of Honour.
Prince William has asked his brother, Prince Harry, to be his Best Man.
Bridesmaid: The Lady Louise Windsor (Aged 7 - daughter of The Earl and Countess of Wessex)
Bridesmaid: The Hon. Margarita Armstrong-Jones (Aged 8 - daughter of Viscount and Viscountess Linley)
Bridesmaid: Miss Grace van Cutsem (Aged 3 - daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh van Cutsem)
Bridesmaid: Miss Eliza Lopes (Aged 3 - daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lopes)
Page Boy: Master William (Billy) Lowther-Pinkerton (Aged 10 - son of Mr. and Mrs. Jamie Lowther-Pinkerton)
Page Boy: Master William (Billy) Lowther-Pinkerton (Aged 10 - son of Mr. and Mrs. Jamie Lowther-Pinkerton)
Page Boy: Master Tom Pettifer (Aged 8 - son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pettifer )
Miss Grace van Cutsem and Master Tom Pettifer are godchildren of Prince William.
Details about the Bridesmaids' dresses and the Page Boys' uniforms will be made available on the Wedding Day.

Key supporting roles in what is expected to be the royal wedding of the year - if not the decade - were handed out Monday, with Prince Harry named as his brother's best man and Kate Middleton's sister Pippa chosen as her maid of honor.
Prince William and his fiancee, Kate Middleton, also named bridesmaids and page boys for the big event, including a 3-year-old who will be asked to be on her best behavior during the globally televised ceremony. The Valentine's Day announcement also names two of Prince William's godchildren as page boys.
The announcements made by St. James' Palace officials acting on behalf of Prince William make clear that the April 29 wedding at Westminister Abbey will be a family affair that emphasizes the tight bonds between Britain's youthful princes and between Kate Middleton and her younger sister, the stylish, 27-year-old Pippa Middleton, whose formal name is Philippa.
In the past, royal grooms have chosen more than one best man, or supporter as it is sometimes called, but Prince William, 28, has made clear that Prince Harry, 26, offers all the support he needs. That means both children of the late Princess Diana will have integral roles in the ceremony.
"It's unusual to have only just one man," said Joe Little, managing editor of Majesty magazine. "All of the queen's sons - Charles, Andrew, Edward - had two supporters at their wedding. But obviously William doesn't feel the need to have more than one supporter and it's by no means a hard and fast rule."
The recognition of Prince Harry's important role in his brother's life is one more step in the redemption of his once tattered public image.
Derided as a carrot-topped party boy with questionable taste after he was photographed in 2005 wearing Nazi paraphernalia at a costume party, and disciplined by his father, Prince Charles, for smoking marijuana, Harry has recently gained a measure of respect with his military deployment in Afghanistan.
His on-again, off-again relationship with Chelsy Davy has also sparked speculation about a possible second royal wedding in the not-too-distant future. The official wedding guest list - still a secret - will be closely scrutinized to see if Davy is invited, which would be widely taken as an indication that the relationship is flourishing once again.
Kate Middleton's choice of her sister Pippa as maid of honor was seen as slightly surprising because bridesmaids and maids of honor at royal weddings are typically younger than Pippa Middleton, who is 27, said royal historian Hugo Vickers.
But he said the choice makes sense because the sisters, both raised in the posh suburb of Bucklebury in horse country west of London, are so close.
The younger Middleton shares some of her sister's style, including a taste for wraparound dresses, and she has played a contributing role in her parents' successful party supplies business.
She has carefully stayed out of the limelight, only rarely agreeing to interviews, although she and her mother Carole Middleton were recently photographed with dressmaker Bruce Oldfield, a favorite of Princess Diana, who is seen as a contender in the wedding dress designer sweepstakes.
When it came to naming youthful bridesmaids and page boys - expected to provide unbelievably cute photogenic fodder on the big day - it seems that Prince William may have exercised his royal prerogatives, Vickers said.
"Most of the bridesmaids and pages are very much from William's side, although that's not surprising," he said. "It was very much the same at Charles and Diana's wedding."
The kiddy contingent will range in age from three to 10, posing a logistical challenge familiar to any parents. A tantrum on international TV? It's possible, but hopefully not.
"I'm sure the bridesmaids will be kept in line and not allowed to run amok," Little said.

Henry VIII Ruled 1509-1547

Henry VIII Ruled 1509-1547, One of England's strongest and least popular monarchs was the second son of Henry VII and Elizabeth of York. - He was born at Greenwich on June 28, 1491. The first ruler to be educated under the influence of the Renaissance, he was a gifted scholar, linguist, composer, and musician.

He was gay and handsome, skilled in all manner of athletic games as a youth, but in later life he became fat.- In 1502, when his elder brother, Arthur, died, he became heir apparent.- Soon after he succeeded his father on the throne, he married Arthur's young widow, Catherine of Aragon.

During the first twenty years of his reign he left the shaping of policies largely in the hands of his great counselor, Cardinal Wolsey.- Henry had made up his mind to get rid of his wife. -The only one of Catherine's six who survived infancy was a sickly girl, the princess Mary, and it was doubtful whether a woman could succeed to the English throne.- Then too, Henry had fallen in love with Anne Boleyn, a lady of the court.

When pope Clement VII would not annul his marriage, Henry deprived Wolsey of his office of chancellor and had him arrested on a charge of treason.- He then obtained a divorce through Thomas Cranmer, whom he had made archbishop of Canterbury, and it was soon announced that he had married Anne Boleyn. Thus the pope was defied and all ties that bound the English church to Rome were broken.- Appeals to the pope's court were forbidden, all payments to Rome

were stopped, and the pope's authority in England was abolished.- The Act of Supremacy in 1534 declared Henry to be Supreme Head of the Church of England, and anyone who denied this title was guilty of an act of...

Ethan Hawke "Black Years"

Ethan Hawke "Black Years", Ethan Hawke opened up to British newspaper The Guardian Wednesday about his 2004 divorce from Uma Thurman -- and the vulnerable period that followed.

Hawke's seven year marriage to Thurman ended amid rumors of his affair with the couple's then-nanny Ryan Shawhughes, whom he later married. The actor described the period between his two marriages as "the black years" of his life.

"It was difficult in ways I couldn't even see at the time. There was the obvious way in which it was difficult -- the death of a dream, the inability to parent in the way that you want to," he said. "But for me it was -- what's that Dante quote? 'At the midpoint of my life, I've come to the part of the forest where the straight way is lost."

"Nothing teaches you like getting leveled," he continued. "And I got leveled in my early 30s. Nothing went exactly the way I thought it would. Wait a second: love isn't real and, holy shit, I put all this energy into not making the same mistake my parents did and I just re-enacted them all! I thought I was so much smarter than everybody. And I'm not."

Hawke told he told Details magazine in 2004 that the difficult split caused him to lose 15 pounds.

Thurman filed for divorce in 2004, six years after their May 1998 nuptials. The pair have two children together, 13-year-old Maya and 10-year-old son Levon.

In July 2008, the actor married Shawhughes, with whom he has two children: Clementine, 3, and six-month-old Indiana.

Hawke stars as a newly divorced man seeking child custody in his latest film, "The Woman in the Fifth." Watch the trailer here:

Ethan Hawke And Ryan Shawhughes Baby Two

Ethan Hawke And Ryan Shawhughes Baby Two, Ethan Hawke and his wife, Ryan Hawke (nee Shawhughes), welcomed their second child together two weeks ago, a girl named Indiana!

She's the fourth child for the actor, who also has two kids with ex-wife Uma Thurman. News of this pregnancy was first reported in April.

Ethan, 40, and Ryan married in June 2008. Their daughter, Clementine Jane, is 3. Hawke's kids with Thurman are Maya, 13, and Levon, 9.

In 2006, Ethan Hawke said parenting has brought him the greatest joy in life and was "the only role that, if I fail, I will consider my life a failure."

Well put. We wish Ethan and Ryan nothing but the best in that endeavor, and congratulate the happy, growing family on this most joyous occasion.

Rudy Giuliani Second Cousin Regina Peruggi

Rudy Giuliani Second Cousin Regina Peruggi, Rudy Giuliani's father was a plumber and bartender who had been arrested for petty crimes before marriage straightened him out. His mother was a bookkeeper who had a keen interest in the news, reading up to half a dozen newspapers daily. As a boy, young Giuliani considered becoming a priest, but instead studied law.

He first gained national prominence as a U.S. Attorney, prosecuting the insider trading trials of Ivan Boesky and Michael Milken and other high-profile cases. In one of his most infamous assignments, Giuliani argued in an immigration case -- preposterously but successfully -- that repression in Haiti "simply does not exist", and that there had been "no political repression" in Haiti under President Jean-Claude Duvalier.

As U.S. Attorney, he oversaw more than 4,000 convictions, enabling him to run for mayor as the candidate who'd be "tough on crime". He lost the 1989 mayoral election to David Dinkins by a narrow margin, but defeated him in 1993, and as mayor immediately pursued aggressive policies against the kind of street crime New York had become famous for. Giuliani backed the police ferociously, and in what had been a crime-infested metropolis, it became reasonably safe to ride the subway or stroll city parks. Fewer tourists returned to their hometowns with tales of being mugged, and more left with pleasant memories.

Of course, police crackdowns have certain distasteful side effects, and blacks and other minorities often spoke of feeling harassed, "presumed guilty". Many complained that Giuliani's gung-ho support for the police department led to an atmosphere where troubled cops knew they could get away with almost anything. Under Giuliani's administration, some of the city's widely-reported cases of police brutality included the death of Amadou Diallo, a black, unarmed man walking near his apartment who was shot 19 times by four plainclothes cops, and the Duvalier-esque beating and plunger-rape of Abner Louima, a Haitian immigrant. When a 16-year-old black teenager was shot and wounded by police as he was walking home from the city's "midnight basketball" games (a program designed to keep kids out of trouble), Giuliani's public response was that the boy "should have been home at that hour".

Street artists and political protesters also complained of police harassment. Almost 70,000 people filed lawsuits against New York Police during Giuliani's two terms as mayor, claiming they were strip-searched for minor offences like jaywalking and fare-dodging. Giuliani's zero-tolerance for scum saw the traditional porn shops and lap dancers of Times Square redeveloped away, and replaced by family-friendly stores and theaters, including the MTV studios and an enormous Disney store and cinema. While championing a voucher system as an alternative to public education, Giuliani described New York's schools as "dysfunctional", "just plain terrible", and said "the whole system should be blown up".

When the World Trade Center was hit by hijacked jets on September 11, Giuliani rushed to Ground Zero -- because, even after the World Trade Center was first struck by terrorists in 1993, he had placed the city's terrorist response center inside the WTC. That decision undoubtedly cost lives on 9/11, but Giuliani's take-charge and take-no-crap demeanor was exactly what most New Yorkers wanted in the aftermath of disaster, and across the nation, millions saw Giuliani's stalwart response as genuine leadership. He was named Time's Person of the Year for 2001, dubbed "America's Mayor" by the media, and given an honorary knighthood by Queen Elizabeth II in 2002.

In October 2001, as anthrax-by-mail subjected New York to further drama, Giuliani publicly urged all New Yorkers to get flu shots. Flu symptoms are similar to early anthrax symptoms, so Giuliani's reasoning was that minimizing the flu would lead to less confusion and less public panic. But he neglected to run the idea past health experts, who pointed out that there's nowhere near enough flu vaccine for everyone in New York.

Giuliani's first marriage was to his second cousin, Regina Peruggi. They were married for 14 years, before Giuliani had their marriage annulled by the Catholic church. His second marriage was to Donna Hanover, a reporter and sometimes soap-opera actress. Havover was the city's First Lady while Giuliani was mayor, but she stayed farther and farther out of the public spotlight as Giuliani was widely whispered to be swiving his press secretary, Cristyne Lategano. After Lategano left City Hall, Giuliani took up with a divorced nurse, Judith Nathan, paying her $10,000 per month as his speechwriter. Never one for subtlety, Giuliani and Nathan marched side-by-side in the St. Patrick's Day parade, where the city's mayor traditionally walks with his wife.

Term limits prevented Giuliani from seeking a third term as mayor in 2001. He was expected to run for the Senate against Hillary Clinton, but he backed out of the race to undergo prostate surgery. And also, perhaps not coincidentally, because his marital infidelities were all over the newspapers around that time. Shortly after Giuliani left office, he filed for divorce, accusing Hanover of "cruel and inhuman treatment." In her response, Hanover blamed the ex-mayor's "open and notorious adultery." When their divorce was finalized, she got a million dollars a year in alimony. In May of 2003, Giuliani returned to Gracie Mansion, the official residence of New York's mayor, for a lavish ceremony to marry his former paramour, Judith Nathan. The city's new mayor, Michael Bloomberg, officiated.

Newt Gingrich Presidential Campaign

Newt Gingrich Presidential Campaign, Newt Gingrich will officially suspend his presidential campaign on Tuesday, ABC News confirmed today. The former House speaker will make the announcement from Washington D.C., where he will be in town for the White House Correspondents Association dinner this weekend.

It is "highly likely" Gingrich will endorse Mitt Romney during Tuesday's announcement, a source close to the campaign said.

After big losses in each of the five states that held their GOP primaries Tuesday night, Newt Gingrich said this morning that he thinks Mitt Romney is "ultimately going to be the nominee."

"I do think it's pretty clear that Gov. Romney is ultimately going to be the nominee," Gingrich said during a campaign stop at Georgio's restaurant in Cramerton, North Carolina. "And we're going to do everything we can make sure that he is in fact effective, and that we as a team are effective both in winning this Fall and then, frankly, in governing."

Gingrich would not respond to questions about the future of his campaign during the event, but said that he would be campaigning "as a citizen" over the next week, possibly hinting that he intends to officially suspend while still holding events in North Carolina.

"I want you to know that I've been coming here a long time as a citizen, I'm going to keep coming as a citizen, I have a schedule through the rest of the week as a citizen," Gingrich said, adding, as he often does, that he is "committed to going to Tampa" and "committed to campaigning all fall."

But after losing to Romney by a 29-point margin in the Delaware primary Tuesday night, Gingrich said that he is "going to look realistically at where we are at."

"You have to at some point be honest about what's happening in the real world as opposed to what you would like to have happen," Gingrich reiterated during his early morning stop today. "I think obviously that I would be a better candidate. But the objective fact is the voters didn't think that."

The trailing candidate insisted that he would follow through with the 23 events he has scheduled in North Carolina over the next week, a state that breathed new life into Ronald Reagan's dwindling campaign during the 1976 election.

Gingrich was looking to pull off a Reagan-style upset in North Carolina's May 8 primary and, like the conservative hero did 40 years ago, make the Republican primary competitive all the way to the GOP convention in Tampa this August.

"We're going to stay very, very active," Gingrich said today. "We're working out the details of our transition and will have information for the press over the next couple of days."

"I am committed to this party," he added. "I am committed to defeating Obama. We're will try to find ways to be helpful."

In the meantime, Gingrich is still receiving taxpayer-funded Secret Service protection, an expense the other remaining GOP hopeful Ron Paul has rejected. Paul has not won a single state in the GOP primary season and Gingrich has been on an 18-state losing streak, not having picked up a single win since Georgia, his home state, held its primary March 6.

Newt And Callista Gingrich

Newt And Callista Gingrich, Eight days before Christmas, on the last non-holiday weekend before the Iowa caucuses, the Republican candidates for President darted across the state, dropping in at factories and shopping malls and pizza parlors, like birds surveying a beach and swooping down for food. But not Newt Gingrich. He was sitting in front of a portrait of George Washington and his horse in the gift shop at Mount Vernon, drinking a Diet Coke next to his wife and a man in an elephant costume.

“I’m Callista, and this is Ellis the Elephant,” Mrs. Gingrich told one person after another. About two hundred people had lined up to have the wife of the former Speaker of the House sign a copy of “Sweet Land of Liberty,” a children’s book she wrote about a patriotic elephant who travels through American history, delivering lessons in rhyming couplets: “Independence was not so easily won. / It would take years of fighting and fighting’s not fun.”

Even for Newt Gingrich, who thrives on conflict, the fighting this primary season has not been that much fun. In December, forty-five per cent of the political ads in Iowa were Gingrich takedowns; the Super PAC Restore Our Future, which supports Mitt Romney, spent nearly three million dollars on such ads, and in one month Gingrich went from top horse to underdog. Until recently, Gingrich was fond of citing what he called Ronald Reagan’s eleventh commandment—“Thou shall not speak ill of fellow-Republicans”—and he often told audiences, “Barack Obama is my only opponent.” But since January 3rd, when he came in a distant fourth in the Iowa caucuses, he has found denigrating other Republicans considerably more palatable.

“If there’s a clear distinction with Santorum, it is that I actually know how to build a nationwide campaign,” Gingrich said, on his campaign’s press bus in New Hampshire last week. He reserves his real disgust for Romney: at a debate in Concord, Gingrich snarled, “Mitt, I realize the red light doesn’t mean anything to you because you’re the front-runner,” and then suggested that Romney “drop a little bit of the pious baloney.” A video released earlier this month by the pro-Gingrich Super PAC Winning Our Future depicts Romney as a heartless corporate raider, to whom “nothing mattered but greed.”

At Mount Vernon, though, Gingrich was still at the top of the polls, and his smiling, grandfatherly aspect was on display. Newt, who is sixty-eight, wore a suit with a red tie and a blue lapel pin depicting Washington’s Commander-in-Chief flag. Callista, who is forty-five, was dressed in a black skirt and a cherry-red Armani jacket and wore a triple strand of pearls around her neck. As a couple, the Gingriches are a bit like Jack Sprat and his wife in reverse: he is pudgy and soft-featured, with droopy jowls and hooded eyes, while she is slender, with a sharply angled nose and bright-blue eyes that are always wide open. Her hair is platinum blond and very stiff, with one remarkable lock styled into an immobile, upward swoosh.

“Where do you get your hair done?” a red-haired woman asked as she got her book signed.
“At Sugar House in Old Town,” Mrs. Gingrich said quietly, referring to a salon in Alexandria. (Her stylist, Tatjana Belajic, told me she has yet to get a request for “the Callista,” though that would surely change if Mrs. Gingrich became First Lady.)
“You and I have such beautiful natural color,” the redhead said, chuckling conspiratorially. “Yeah, right!”

Mrs. Gingrich kept her face frozen in a smile, but she did not really look amused. “Have you met Ellis the Elephant?”

Callista Gingrich has a firm formality that can be very effective in curtailing conversations she does not wish to engage in. In April, 2010, she appeared with her husband on “Hannity” to promote a documentary they made about Pope John Paul II. (The two of them are partners in a film company, Gingrich Productions, but Callista holds the title of president. “I’m just talent—she does all the hard work,” Newt told Sean Hannity.) At the end of the interview, Hannity said to Mrs. Gingrich, who was dressed in a crisp violet suit, “He won’t answer this. How do you feel about him running for President?”

She replied, “We haven’t talked about that yet.”
“Not once? Not even over dinner?” Hannity persisted. “Are you planning on a long discussion about it, maybe in the near future?”

Callista Gingrich raised her eyebrows slightly and replied in the implacable tone of a kindergarten teacher scolding a six-year-old, “We’ll discuss it early next year.”

Gingrich announced his candidacy in May, and his wife’s role in the campaign has been controversial ever since. At the end of the month, Gingrich outraged his staffers by refusing to cancel a cruise through the Greek isles that he and Callista had planned. The campaign had suffered a series of embarrassing reports—that he and his wife had a half-million-dollar line of credit at Tiffany, that he’d been paid nearly two million dollars for consulting work with Freddie Mac—and the staffers were concerned that a luxury cruise to Mykonos would not help make Gingrich seem like a regular guy, or like a serious candidate.

Virtually all of them quit. Gingrich has called the months of June and July “the hardest in my career” and credited both his wife and her elephant with keeping him in the race. “One of the things that actually saved us, in addition to Callista’s stubbornness, was Ellis the Elephant,” Gingrich recently told the Times. He might have been speaking of his wife when he described Ellis as “happy, positive, interesting, creative.”

Newt Gingrich Affair With Marianne Ginther 1980

Newt Gingrich Affair With Marianne Ginther 1980, A former aide to GOP presidential hopeful Newt Gingrich claims she had an affair with him, in an effort to “let voters know” about the candidate.

Anne Manning claims the affair took place back in 1977, when Gingrich was married to his first wife and running for congress, reports the UK Daily Mail. The self-described “ex-mistress” claims she performed a sex act on him in his Washington D.C. hotel room, and the two never had intercourse because then “he could say he had not slept with me.”

A similar charge was made against arch-Gingrich foe, former US President Bill Clinton, in his own sex scandals during the 1990s.

Gingrich “always talks about being big on family values but he doesn’t practice what he preaches,” Manning told the National Enquirer.

“I wasn’t planning to say a word about him, but voters need to know what sort of man they’re being asked to support,” the businesswoman added.

It is already known that the thrice-married Gingrich has cheated on his wives. He married his first wife Jackie Battley, his former high school geometry teacher, in 1962 when he was 19 years old and she was 26.

In the spring of 1980, they split after he had an affair with Marianne Ginther. Gingrich is said to have demanded a divorce from Battley while she was in hospital for cancer treatment, but has always disputed this.

Ginther went on to become his second wife in 1981, six months after his divorce with Battley was finalised.

In the mid-1990s, he began an affair with House of Representatives staffer Callista Bisek, who is 23 years his junior. They married in 2000.

Because it’s been so long since the new allegations took place, they are likely to have little effect on Gingrich’s reborn bid for the Republican nomination. But, several therapists that spoke with the UK Daily Mail claim his pattern indicates a sexual addiction.

Newt Gingrich Clinton Impeachment

Newt Gingrich Clinton Impeachment, Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich was having an extramarital affair even as he led the charge against President Clinton over the Monica Lewinsky affair, he acknowledged in an interview with a conservative Christian group.

"The honest answer is yes," Gingrich, a potential 2008 Republican presidential candidate, said in an interview with Focus on the Family founder James Dobson to be aired Friday, according to a transcript provided to The Associated Press.

"There are times that I have fallen short of my own standards. There's certainly times when I've fallen short of God's standards." Gingrich argued in the interview, however, that he should not be viewed as a hypocrite for pursuing Clinton's infidelity.

"The president of the United States got in trouble for committing a felony in front of a sitting federal judge," the former Georgia congressman said of Clinton's 1998 House impeachment on perjury and obstruction of justice charges. "I drew a line in my mind that said, 'Even though I run the risk of being deeply embarrassed, and even though at a purely personal level I am not rendering judgment on another human being, as a leader of the government trying to uphold the rule of law, I have no choice except to move forward and say that you cannot accept ... perjury in your highest officials."

Widely considered a mastermind of the Republican revolution that swept Congress in the 1994 elections, Gingrich remains wildly popular among many conservatives. He has repeatedly placed near the top of Republican presidential polls recently, even though he has not formed a campaign. Gingrich has said he is waiting to see how the Republican field shapes up before deciding in the fall whether to run.

Reports of extramarital affairs have dogged him for years as a result of two messy divorces, but he has refused to discuss them publicly. Gingrich, who frequently campaigned on family values issues, divorced his second wife, Marianne, in 2000 after his attorneys acknowledged Gingrich's relationship with his current wife, Callista Bisek, a former congressional aide more than 20 years younger than he is.

His first marriage, to his former high school geometry teacher, Jackie Battley, ended in divorce in 1981. Although Gingrich has said he doesn't remember it, Battley has said Gingrich discussed divorce terms with her while she was recuperating in the hospital from cancer surgery.

Gingrich married Marianne months after the divorce.

"There were times when I was praying and when I felt I was doing things that were wrong. But I was still doing them," he said in the interview. "I look back on those as periods of weakness and periods that I'm ... not proud of."

Gingrich's congressional career ended in 1998 when he abruptly resigned from Congress after poor showings from Republicans in elections and after being reprimanded by the House ethics panel over charges that he used tax-exempt funding to advance his political goals.

Debbie Reynolds Forgave Elizabeth Taylor

Debbie Reynolds Forgave Elizabeth Taylor, When Debbie Reynolds reflects on her friend and former foe Elizabeth Taylor, her words are often brushed with bittersweet strokes. Speaking a day after the film icon's death, Reynolds calls Taylor "the most glamorous star of our generation" and notes that "women liked her and men adored her, including my husband."

As the story goes, back in 1959 Reynolds' husband Eddie Fisher fell under Taylor's intoxicating spell and left her and their two young kids. To make matters worse, it was all done in full view of the public.

"She went through her younger years of just obtaining what she wanted," Reynolds tells PopEater. "Later in life she became a little more aware of other people's feelings."

Reynolds tells us about forgiving her old friend, working with Taylor in her final starring role in 2001 and how she feels Jane Russell was given the short shrift when she died earlier this month.

Tell me how you forgave Elizabeth.
It was after many years. I'd remarried and she'd remarried. I was going to London on the Queen Elizabeth ship and I looked up and I saw tons of luggage going by me and birdcages and dog cages and nurses and I realized Elizabeth was on the same ship as me. I almost changed my mind about going but my husband said, 'Don't be silly, we won't be on the same floor. Of course we were so I sent a note to her room and she sent a note back to mine saying that we should have dinner and get this over with and have a good time. Because we were very good friends when we were 17 and went to school together on the MGM lot. And we had a wonderful evening with a lot of laughs.

Was it cathartic making the 2001 TV movie, 'These Old Broads,' with Liz?
Yes it was. I got her view point and she got mine. I had already warned Eddie when he left that she would throw him out after a year and a half because he wasn't nearly exciting enough for her which I knew and which I'm sure she knew at the time. He answered her call and she took the call. Eddie was crazy about Elizabeth. He loved her very much. So it was one of those things that happen in life and you just have to get through it.

I always thought it was unfair that they compared Jennifer Aniston to you. She didn't have kids with Brad Pitt. You had two babies.

Well they just compared it because it was scandalous and every generation has their scandal and that was as close as they could come up with. It's just something that passes over my back like water. I've been in this business for 65 years. My birthday is April fool's Day. I'll be 79 so nothing really surprises me. I'm very sorry for Elizabeth's passing. She was the most glamorous star of our generation and women liked her and men adored her including my husband. She was a symbol of stardom and her legacy will go on forever.

Elizabeth Taylor Left Eddie Fisher For Richard Burton

Elizabeth Taylor Left Eddie Fisher For Richard Burton, Eddie Fisher was the golden boychik of mainstream pop, the dimpled troubadour from Philadelphia. Pretty and poised, he had the packaging and the product: a clear, confident tenor that could turn powerful or intimate at will.

In the 1950-54 prerock period — the most tepid five years in the history of 20th century music — he had 19 songs reach the Top 10, including four ("Wish You Were Here," "I'm Walking Behind You," "Oh! My Pa-Pa," "I Need You Now") that went to No. 1. When he was drafted into the Army during the Korean War, President Harry Truman proclaimed him "my favorite PFC." He transferred his vinyl popularity to a TV variety show and then to movies. Fisher's covenant with Hollywood mythology was sealed with his 1955 marriage to Debbie Reynolds, Hollywood's princess of pert. It marked the perfect merger of adorable and adorabler.

Show-business legend-making is dreams plus lies. Sometimes the truth slithers out from under the parade float, sometimes not — more frequently now than in that sedate stretch between World War II and Vietnam. Fisher was an agent of one of those shocks to propriety in 1959, when he divorced Reynolds to marry Elizabeth Taylor. Liz could wed early and often (this was her fourth marriage, at 27); the public saw her as a creature of exotic allure and mercurial passions.

But Eddie, promoted as the boy next door, was declared a war criminal of domesticity for deserting Debbie's dollhouse. Fisher was the victim of another, larger jolt in 1962, when Taylor left him for her Cleopatra co-star Richard Burton. Biter bit, America thought; serves him right. The one-two punch of infidelity and cuckoldry left an instant, perpetual brand on Fisher's résumé. From platinum recording artist to Johnny Carson punch line, he dwelled in oldies purgatory for nearly 50 years, dying Sept. 22 in Berkeley, Calif., of complications from a hip fracture. He was 82.

"By the time I was 33 years old," he proclaimed in his 1999 autobiography Been There, Done That (penned with celebrity ghostwriter David Fisher), "I'd been married to America's sweetheart and America's femme fatale, and both marriages had ended in scandal; I'd been one of the most popular singers in America and had given up my career for love; I had fathered two children and adopted two children and rarely saw any of them; I was addicted to methamphetamines, and I couldn't sleep at night without a huge dose of Librium. And from all this I had learned one very important lesson: There were no rules for me.

I could get away with anything so long as that sound came out of my throat." By the 1980s, the drugs were choking the sound; Fisher was often unable to perform. "It was either quit cocaine or quit performing," he says in the book. New paragraph. "So much for my career."

As a kid, Edwin Jack Fisher didn't have much to sing about. He described his father Joseph, a Jewish immigrant from Russia (where the family name was either Tisch or Fisch) as "a nasty, abusive man, a tyrant." Joseph's side of the family thought that his wife, the long-suffering Kate, was beneath them. ("The only time I ever heard the Fishers say anything kind about my mother was in the limousine on the way to her funeral.") The boy's ticket out of this unhappy family was his voice; by his teens it had gotten him regular jobs on three Philadelphia radio shows. Eddie Cantor heard him sing at Grossinger's in the Catskills and put Fisher on his national radio show, and the 21-year-old secured a recording contract with RCA Victor. His skein of hits began with "Any Time," which became his signature song, and abated around the time RCA signed Elvis Presley, another young heartthrob with the voice of rebellion, sexuality and the future.

Fisher co-starred in two movies: with Reynolds in the 1956 Bundle of Joy, and with Taylor in Butterfield 8 in 1960. His presence, so genial on TV, looked skulking on the big screen, and that wrote finis to his film career. He admitted he was no great shakes as a dramatic performer — except for a few times on the concert stage. His father, now proud of his famous boy, would sit in the front row, gazing up as Eddie sang the Euro-plaint "Oh! My Pa-Pa" ("To me he was so wonderful ..."), and Eddie would look down, seemingly misting up at the sight of the man who had made his family miserable. Now that, Fisher said, was acting.

In his memoir, Fisher was incapable of acting the gentleman to his first wife. "I've often been asked what I learned from that marriage," he writes. "That's simple: Don't marry Debbie Reynolds." They had two children, Carrie (the writer and actress) and Todd (who in the 1990s managed Debbie's Las Vegas showplace). He would soon have little time for them.

While consoling Taylor over the plane-crash death of her husband, producer Mike Todd, Fisher fell hard for the reigning movie queen. "Sexually she was every man's dream," he recalled. "She had the face of an angel and the morals of a truck driver." Decades after Taylor left him, he says, he still carried the torch with the blue flame. His third marriage, to actress Connie Stevens — "the nicest ex-wife I've ever had" — spawned two daughters, Tricia Leigh and Joely, and ended in the usual rancor. "I wish you good luck, good health and wealth and happiness in your own time on your own terms," Stevens wrote him in a farewell note. "I do not wish you love as you wouldn't know what to do with it."

Love replaced lust in the Fisher hierarchy; then cocaine and methamphetamines took over. He got hooked in 1953, backstage at the Paramount Theater in Times Square, by the notorious Dr. Feelgood, Max Jacobson, who, Fisher claimed, also treated President John F. Kennedy. ("Jack Kennedy and I shared drugs and women.") Fisher's memoir details affairs with Ann-Margret, Edie Adams, Carol Lynley, Stefanie Powers and many others, some of whom have denied the liaisons. He asserted that Taylor was also addicted to pills and booze and that he once borrowed a gun with the intention of shooting Burton.

As the stories get wilder, in a book that may be more acute in its writing than in its veracity, the reader may think Fisher is channeling the other Richard Burton, the 19th century translator of the fanciful Mideast tales in One Thousand and One Nights. But we don't doubt that Fisher lived, as he insisted, "the thousand nights of pleasure and the thousand nights of drug-addicted hell." In 1990 he checked into the Betty Ford Clinic; apparently he was clean for his last 20 years. Fisher did not divorce his final wife, Betty Lin; she died nine years before he did.

A gift of song, an early success, a gash of notoriety; a host of fractured hearts, only one of them his. Sometimes show-business truth can be more instructive than Tinseltown fable. Can we say that Eddie Fisher lived an exemplarily misspent life?

Bacall Married 12 Years Until Bogart's Death

Bacall Married 12 Years Until Bogart's Death, Lauren Bacall, born Betty Perske in New York in 1924. Originally a model, she made the transition to acting after appearing on the cover of Harper's Bazarre at the age of 19.

Humphrey Bogart was born into an upper class New York family in 1899. After he was expelled from school he joined the navy. After acting on Broadway, he got his film break in the 1930 movie Broadway's Like That.

What they've been in: To Have and Have Not, The Big Sleep, Dark Passage, Key Largo, Two Guys From Milwaukee

Memorable lines: Bacall to Bogart when they appeared as Marie and Morgan in To Have and Have Not: 'You don't have to say anything and you don't have to do anything. Not a thing. Oh maybe, just whistle. You know how to whistle, don't you Steve? You just put your lips together and blow.'

As Vivian and Marlowe in The Big Sleep:
Bacall: 'So you do get up, I was beginning to think you worked in bed like Marcel Proust.'
Bogart: 'Who's he?'

Bacall: 'You wouldn't know him, a French writer.'
Bogart: 'Come into my boudoir.'

Why they sparked: Bogart and Bacall fell in love making To Have and Have Not and it shows in that and every other film they made. The couple were married for 12 years until Bogart's death from cancer in 1957. Their scenes in To Have and Have Not in particular still rivet romantics everywhere.

What she said about him: 'I learned a lot from him. He was a very intelligent man, who had incredible integrity. I have a similar approach, but I don't think I'm as good a human being as he was.'

What he said to her: 'She's a real Joe. You'll fall in love with her like everyone else.'

Ingrid Bergman Scandal

Ingrid Bergman Scandal, The Birth of Tabloid Journalism: The Ingrid Bergman - Roberto Rossellini Scandal. Tabloid accounts of celebrity drug and sex foibles flood the media today, feeding a national obsession with sleaze. This phenomenon arguably got rolling in the early 1950's with a sex scandal that horrified the staid moral climate of the times, the blatant extramarital affair and subsequent illegitimate pregnancy of Ingrid Bergman and Roberto Rossellini.

Ingrid Bergman dazzled Americans early in her career. She found a fast track to international success after starring in the Swedish version of Intermezzo in 1936. David O. Selznick was captivated by her talent and charm, and brought her to America to do an English language remake.

Audiences found her to be luminous and magnetic. Her natural beauty was far removed from the dramatically made up faces of familiar European imports like Garbo and Dietrich.

Ingrid Bergman wisely selected her film roles. Intelligent and savvy, she followed one picture after another paired with the biggest co-stars of the day, such as Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca and Gary Cooper in For Whom the Bell Tolls. In 1945, she won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her role in Gaslight.

The American public's adoration of Ingrid Bergman solidified in 1945 when she played a nun opposite Bing Crosby in The Bells of St. Mary's.

Studio publicists generated and controlled star images in those days and Ingrid Bergman was projected as the perfect, wholesome beauty with an admirable personal life to match her unquestioned talent. The audience was fed a picture of family bliss for Bergman and her doctor husband, Peter Lindstrom, and their daughter, Pia. In truth, Ingrid Bergman had affairs with photographer Robert Capa, several directors and leading men over the years, but in the pre-paparazzi days, no one knew. Bergman herself was rather open and kept extensive personal papers.

The trouble that banished Ingrid Bergman from America's affection began in 1948, when she saw Open City, a movie directed by Roberto Rossellini. Bergman was smitten and immediately decided she must work with him. Bergman and her husband met Rossellini and he was a guest in their home for a time.

Rossellini was a reckless Italian playboy. In his book Notorious, The Life of Ingrid Bergman, Donald Spoto relates how Rossellini, in 1931, desired an affair with a comedienne, Assia Noris. Noris refused to have sex before marriage, so Rossellini consented and arranged a huge church wedding, complete with an archbishop, priests and gala celebration. After a year of marriage, Noris and Rossellini drifted apart and she asked for a divorce to marry someone else, at which point he told her to go ahead, as the whole ceremony had been a staged fake! At the time he met Ingrid Bergman, Rossellini was known to be dallying with five other women, including actress Anna Magnani.

The affair began with the filming of Stromboli in Italy in 1949. Ingrid Bergman became pregnant with Rossellini's child, left her husband and daughter and began living openly with the director. Their son was born in February, 1950. Bergman later got a quickie Mexican divorce and they married.

NPR's On Point with Tom Ashbrook, and guests movie critic Garen Daly and Jeanine Basinger, Professor of Movie Studies at Wesleyan University, provides a comprehensive look at Ingrid Bergman's career and the Rossellini scandal. Daly labels the firestorm of disapproval "the beginning of tabloid journalism".

When the scandal broke in the newspapers, it scorched America's heart and the fervor with which the public once idolized Bergman turned to its polar opposite. Trivia-Library.com excerpted an article by David Wallechinsky & Irving Wallace, reproduced with permission from "The People's Almanac" series of books, which recounts the hatred and condemnation Bergman faced in the country where she once could do no wrong. The public denunciation even extended to the floor of the U.S. Senate. The article states, "On Mar. 14, 1950, Sen. Edwin C. Johnson of Colorado took to the floor of the U.S. Senate and delivered an extraordinary and impassioned harangue...during Johnson's blistering tirade she was labeled a "free-love cultist" and a "powerful influence for evil."'

Her movies were picketed; countless ministers denounced her from pulpits. The gossip columnists, foremost of which was Louella Parsons, raved against the woman they once adored. America got caught up in celebrity tabloid journalism.

With her name synonymous with evil and immorality, Bergman could not make a film in America for years. The subsequent work she did with Rossellini was not popular. When the furor finally began to fade, she came back to the U.S. and won the Academy Award for Best Actress in 1957 for Anastasia, but did not accept the award in person. Her career picked up again, but the stigma remained.

Ingrid Bergman and Roberto Rossellini later had twins, one of whom is the actress Isabella Rossellini. Their marriage was finally annulled and she later married a wealthy Swede. Bergman died of cancer on her birthday in 1982.

Robertino, Isabella And Ingrid Rossellini

Robertino, Isabella And Ingrid Rossellini, In "My Dad Is 100 Years Old," a short film that Isabella Rossellini wrote about her father, Roberto Rossellini, for his centennial, she describes how upset she was as a child when critics attacked his work. "I always felt like protecting my dad," she says to the camera.

It's an instinct she shares with her siblings. The film, which will be screened next week at the Tribeca Film Festival along with Roberto Rossellini's "Flowers of St. Francis," has aroused the equally strong filial protectiveness of Ms. Rossellini's fraternal twin, Ingrid, who asserts that it desecrates their father's artistic legacy. And the conflict shows the sisters' differing memories - or fantasies - of their famous father. Rosselli ni was a founder of the neorealist movement. His films include "Rome: Open City," about the final days of the Nazi occupation, which he shot very soon after the events, in the real locations and with a mostly nonprofessional cast.

Isabella Rossellini collaborated on her 17-minute film about her father with the Canadian director Guy Maddin, who had previously directed her in his movie "The Saddest Music in the World." Like Mr. Maddin's other works, "My Dad Is 100 Years Old" is avantgarde and quirky. Rossellini is represented throughout by a naked, rotund stomach. The stomach ripples when he talks, as though his voice were emerging from the navel. The ventriloquist is Ms. Rossellini, who also plays all the other roles in the film, including Fellini, Alfred Hitchcock, Charlie Chaplin, David O. Selznick, and her mother, Ingrid Bergman.The character of Bergman materializes to discuss, among other things, the international furor that erupted when she and Rossellini had an affair in 1949 and then a child out of wedlock - the twins' older brother, Roberto. The scandal damaged both of their careers. Bergman was denounced on the floor of the U.S. Senate as an "apostle of degradation," and she was not cast in a Hollywood film for seven years.

"My Dad Is 100 Years Old" includes madeup dialogue between Rossellini and the other characters about his cinematic philosophy - his ideas, for instance, that film should not be distraction and that reality is more powerful than what comes from the artist's imagination. But the film strikes a viewer less as a statement about Rossellini's art than as a daughter's very personal, dreamlike monologue about her father.

Mr. Rossellini is represented by a stomach because, when she was little, Ms. Rossellini imagined he was pregnant because he was so fat. "You always said you regretted not being about to nurse us, your seven children," she says at the beginning of the film, as the camera shows an image of hundreds of glistening fish or amphibian eggs. "Our favorite game was throwing ourselves on your belly like piglets, and you pretending to be the sow," Ms. Rossellini continues. "I would embrace your enormous belly, soft, round, warm, cuddly."

She talks about her father's genius and her sadness that his films are now being forgotten. Her dialogue reveals her preoccupations and questions about her father. Rossellini, though a sexual adventurer, nonetheless denounced other directors' use of sex in their films. In a book that Ms. Rossellini is promoting along with the film, called "In the Name of the Father, the Daughter, and the Holy Spirits," she discusses the fact that she named her daughter Elettra (the Italian version of Electra) and admits: "I had the Elettra complex, I may still have it. I loved my dad exaggeratedly."

To Ingrid Rossellini, Isabella is free to "interpret her dreams," but not in the form of a centennial tribute to their father. An adjunct professor of Italian literature at NYU, Ingrid Rossellini says she didn't know anything about the film until her sister showed it to her the day before its premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival. She was shocked and horrified and thought the film's playful, irreverent images made a joke of their father's work and betrayed his principles.

"I mean, you start laughing: It's a ridiculous thing, this naked belly," she said. "I think Father would be very upset to be represented like that. When he came to his work,he had such profound moral values...

[A]nd the camera in his movies was so discreet. It's there just to listen and to portray, just to be there at the service of others. Father, as a director, almost erases himself. Instead, here, it's all about Isabella."

The film includes a clip from "Rome: Open City," in which a woman, played by the Italian actress Anna Magnani, is shot by a German soldier. According to Ingrid Rossellini, the image is so iconic in Italy that it has appeared on a postage stamp. In "My Dad Is 100 Years Old," the scene is at first projected on the naked stomach. To Ms. Rossellini, this is sacrilege. "That moment is so symbolically charged in Italy," she said. "It means suffering, war, horror, that [whole] historical moment ... It's like you're playing with the image of the twin towers. In Europe, that specific image means so much."

What Ms. Rossellini objects to, she emphasizes, is not her sister's showing the film at all, but including it as part of the current tributes to Rossellini, and as an introduction to his films. She says she asked her not to, but her sister ignored her. (Isabella Rossellini's representative said she was not available to comment for this article.) "If she had shown it by itself, that would be fine; she can say whatever she wants," Ingrid Rossellini said. "What I resent and oppose is the fact that she is presenting it in the events in honor of Father, and it is followed by his work." She is angry that her sister did not ask for her and her siblings' approval. (Their father had six children; Isabella, Ingrid, and Roberto also have a half-sister on their mother's side.) "Excuse me. She is not the daughter," she said, referring to her sister's book title. "We have many brothers and sisters, and she has to respect the fact that she is hurting my feelings. I'm her twin sister. Don't I exist?"

She is angry and incredulous that film festivals, including Toronto and Tribeca, have agreed to show it. "I'm surprised that serious people who review these things accepted something like that ... I wish I could talk to them and say, 'Did you see that, did you personally approve it?' I would like to hear an explanation."

According to her, "My Dad Is 100 Years Old" is not an accurate picture of the siblings' childhood, or of their relationship to their father. "I never, nor she, had any very close contact with Father," she said. "Father and Mother divorced when we were 4 years old. Father went to live with a new wife with other children; Mama went to live in Paris." She and Isabella and Roberto, she said, lived in an apartment in Rome with a nanny."We saw Mama once in a while when she came to visit us, and Father we saw for lunch on Sunday."

Like any children who saw their father rarely, she explains, they didn't know how to act. "We were all so intimidated that we were very quiet. We adored him, yes, that's true, because he was a myth." But she never spent time "lying on his stomach ... I mean, I wish, but no."

She interprets Isabella's film as a projection of her desire for what she didn't have. "We wanted him to love us and we wanted to impress him, but I remember being so paralyzed, because I didn't know what I could say that would be intelligent so he would like me," she said. "The love, yes, love and admiration - we all had that. When Father died"- of a heart attack, on June 3, 1977 - "I thought, how can the world go on? I had the feeling he carried [it] on his shoulders," she said. (Isabella Rossellini described the disruption of their childhood and their upbringing by a housekeeper in her 1997 memoir, "Some of Me." But her memoir also included the story about Rossellini pretending to be a sow.)

Ingrid doesn't resent her parents for how little time they spent with their children. "It was not an easy childhood," she said, "but I think we understood: Both Mama and Father had a very special life." She would have felt much guiltier if her mother had stopped acting in order to be with them. "I know that she did her best with us," she said, "and also, she pursued her interests, her career, and she was happy. We did not ruin her life."

She also has warm feelings toward her twin sister and admires her intelligence and sense of humor. But she thinks she has made "a big mistake," and she feels it is her duty to object. "I'm really sad to say [this], and to say it in papers, because I'm a really private person," she said. "But I'm not doing it for my own sake. My own feelings, that I'm hurt, have no value whatsoever. The focus is those movies. To me, you can't touch those movies: 'Rome: Open City,' 'Paisan,' 'St. Francis' ... They really marked an important moment in history."

Ingrid Bergman And Roberto Rossellini

Ingrid Bergman And Roberto Rossellini, abloid accounts of celebrity drug and sex foibles flood the media today, feeding a national obsession with sleaze. This phenomenon arguably got rolling in the early 1950's with a sex scandal that horrified the staid moral climate of the times, the blatant extramarital affair and subsequent illegitimate pregnancy of Ingrid Bergman and Roberto Rossellini.

Ingrid Bergman dazzled Americans early in her career. She found a fast track to international success after starring in the Swedish version of Intermezzo in 1936. David O. Selznick was captivated by her talent and charm, and brought her to America to do an English language remake.

Audiences found her to be luminous and magnetic. Her natural beauty was far removed from the dramatically made up faces of familiar European imports like Garbo and Dietrich.

Ingrid Bergman wisely selected her film roles. Intelligent and savvy, she followed one picture after another paired with the biggest co-stars of the day, such as Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca and Gary Cooper in For Whom the Bell Tolls. In 1945, she won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her role in Gaslight.

The American public's adoration of Ingrid Bergman solidified in 1945 when she played a nun opposite Bing Crosby in The Bells of St. Mary's.

Studio publicists generated and controlled star images in those days and Ingrid Bergman was projected as the perfect, wholesome beauty with an admirable personal life to match her unquestioned talent. The audience was fed a picture of family bliss for Bergman and her doctor husband, Peter Lindstrom, and their daughter, Pia. In truth, Ingrid Bergman had affairs with photographer Robert Capa, several directors and leading men over the years, but in the pre-paparazzi days, no one knew. Bergman herself was rather open and kept extensive personal papers.

The trouble that banished Ingrid Bergman from America's affection began in 1948, when she saw Open City, a movie directed by Roberto Rossellini. Bergman was smitten and immediately decided she must work with him. Bergman and her husband met Rossellini and he was a guest in their home for a time.

Rossellini was a reckless Italian playboy. In his book Notorious, The Life of Ingrid Bergman, Donald Spoto relates how Rossellini, in 1931, desired an affair with a comedienne, Assia Noris. Noris refused to have sex before marriage, so Rossellini consented and arranged a huge church wedding, complete with an archbishop, priests and gala celebration. After a year of marriage, Noris and Rossellini drifted apart and she asked for a divorce to marry someone else, at which point he told her to go ahead, as the whole ceremony had been a staged fake! At the time he met Ingrid Bergman, Rossellini was known to be dallying with five other women, including actress Anna Magnani.

The affair began with the filming of Stromboli in Italy in 1949. Ingrid Bergman became pregnant with Rossellini's child, left her husband and daughter and began living openly with the director. Their son was born in February, 1950. Bergman later got a quickie Mexican divorce and they married.

NPR's On Point with Tom Ashbrook, and guests movie critic Garen Daly and Jeanine Basinger, Professor of Movie Studies at Wesleyan University, provides a comprehensive look at Ingrid Bergman's career and the Rossellini scandal. Daly labels the firestorm of disapproval "the beginning of tabloid journalism".

When the scandal broke in the newspapers, it scorched America's heart and the fervor with which the public once idolized Bergman turned to its polar opposite. Trivia-Library.com excerpted an article by David Wallechinsky & Irving Wallace, reproduced with permission from "The People's Almanac" series of books, which recounts the hatred and condemnation Bergman faced in the country where she once could do no wrong. The public denunciation even extended to the floor of the U.S. Senate. The article states, "On Mar. 14, 1950, Sen. Edwin C. Johnson of Colorado took to the floor of the U.S. Senate and delivered an extraordinary and impassioned harangue...during Johnson's blistering tirade she was labeled a "free-love cultist" and a "powerful influence for evil."'

Her movies were picketed; countless ministers denounced her from pulpits. The gossip columnists, foremost of which was Louella Parsons, raved against the woman they once adored. America got caught up in celebrity tabloid journalism.

With her name synonymous with evil and immorality, Bergman could not make a film in America for years. The subsequent work she did with Rossellini was not popular. When the furor finally began to fade, she came back to the U.S. and won the Academy Award for Best Actress in 1957 for Anastasia, but did not accept the award in person. Her career picked up again, but the stigma remained.

Ingrid Bergman and Roberto Rossellini later had twins, one of whom is the actress Isabella Rossellini. Their marriage was finally annulled and she later married a wealthy Swede. Bergman died of cancer on her birthday in 1982.

In Donald Spoto's book, he quotes Bergman as saying. "I've had a wonderful life. I have never regretted what I did. I regret the things I didn't do."

Ingrid Bergman Petter Lindström

Ingrid Bergman Petter Lindström, Dr. Petter Lindstrom, a Swedish-born neurosurgeon respected in his field for his pioneering work in so-called bloodless brain surgery, died on May 24 at his home in Sonoma, Calif. He was 93.

Dr. Lindstrom had the misfortune of being better known to the rest of the world as the husband Ingrid Bergman deserted for Roberto Rossellini, who directed her in the movie ''Stromboli.'' The Lindstrom-Bergman marriage lasted 13 years and ended in scandal and a bitterly contested divorce in 1950.

Dr. Lindstrom went on to a long, distinguished career as a teacher and a practitioner who contributed to the technical advances in brain surgery.

Ingrid Bergman wed Mr. Rossellini, but the marriage was annulled in 1960. She later married Lars Schmidt, a Swedish businessman and theatrical producer. She died in 1982.

Dr. Lindstrom's forte was surgery of the deep brain using ultrasound, carried out to leave no lesions or permanent changes in brain function. He performed the procedure on patients with intractable pain; psychoneuroses like obsessive-compulsive disorders, anxiety and depression; and certain types of epilepsy.

Petter Lindstrom was born in Stode, Sweden. He studied dentistry in Heidelberg, Stockholm and Leipzig, where he received a doctorate in dental surgery in 1931. He went into private practice in Stockholm and held an associate professorship at the Karolinska Institute there.

He and Miss Bergman married in 1937. Two years later, her acting career took her from Sweden to Hollywood. After Dr. Lindstrom received his medical degree from the University of Rochester in 1943, he joined her on the West Coast and completed three years of residency in neurosurgery at Los Angeles County Hospital in 1947.

Going into private practice in his specialty, he also held teaching and clinical appointments at the University of Southern California and the University of California at Los Angeles.

He was on the staff of several hospitals in the area and had risen to chief of neurosurgery at Los Angeles County Harbor Hospital by 1949.

Moving east in 1952, Dr. Lindstrom took the same position at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Pittsburgh and continued his research at the University of Pittsburgh. From 1955 to 1964 he was chief of neurosurgery at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Salt Lake City and, as of 1961, a full professor of neurosurgery at the University of Utah. It was in Pittsburgh and Utah that he introduced his ultrasound surgery.

Dr. Lindstrom returned to California in 1964 and filled academic and hospital appointments in San Francisco and San Diego. He retired as a clinical professor from the University of California at San Diego in 1987, and from private practice in 1988.

Dr. Lindstrom is survived by his wife of 45 years, Dr. Agnes Rovnanek Lindstrom; a daughter from his first marriage, Pia Lindstrom of Manhattan, a former film and theater critic for WNBC-TV in New York; three sons and a daughter from his second marriage, Peter, of Ridgecrest, Calif., Michael, of Boise, Idaho, Karl, of Sonoma, Calif., and Brita Lindstrom of San Diego; and eight grandchildren.

Ingrid Bergman Three Oscars

Ingrid Bergman Three Oscars, Ingrid Bergman, the three-time Academy Award-winning actress who exemplified wholesome beauty and nobility to countless moviegoers, died of cancer Sunday at her home in London on her 67th birthday.

Miss Bergman had been ill for eight years. Despite this, she played two of her most demanding roles in this period, a concert pianist in Ingmar Bergman's ''Autumn Sonata'' and Golda Meir, the Israeli Prime Minister in ''A Woman Called Golda.'' her last role.

Miss Bergman said in an interview earlier this year that she was determined not to let her illness prevent her from enjoying the remainder of her life.

''Cancer victims who don't accept their fate, who don't learn to live with it, will only destroy what little time they have left,'' she said. Miss Bergman added that she had to push herself to play the role of Golda Meir: ''I honestly didn't think I had it in me. But it has been a wonderful experience, as an actress and as a human being who is getting more out of life than expected.''

Lars Schmidt, a Swedish producer from whom Miss Bergman was divorced in 1975, was with her at the time of her death. Incandescent, the critics called Ingrid Bergman. Or radiant. Or luminous. They said her performances were sincere, natural. Sometimes a single adjective was not enough. One enraptured writer saw her as ''a breeze whipping over a Scandinavian peak.'' Kenneth Tynan needed an essay before he distilled her quality down to a sort of electric transmission of ''I need you'' that registered instantly upon yearning audiences.

At the heart of the Swedish star's monumental box-office magnetism was the kind of rare beauty that Hollywood cameramen call ''bulletproof angles,'' meaning it can be shot from any angle.

Her beauty was so remarkable that it sometimes seemed to overshadow her considerable acting talent. The expressive blue eyes, wide, fulllipped mouth, high cheekbones, soft chin and broad forehead projected a quality that combined vulnerability and courage; sensitivity and earthiness, and an unending flow of compassion.

It all seemed so natural that not until she was well into middle age, in Ingmar Bergman's taxing ''Autumn Sonata'' in 1978, did many of her fans fully realize the talent, work and intelligence that were behind the performances that won her three Academy Awards.

She was honored as best actress for her roles in ''Gaslight'' in 1944 and ''Anastasia'' in 1956, and as best supporting actress in ''Murder on the Orient Express'' in 1974.

Different in Temperament
In temperament, Miss Bergman was different from most Hollywood superstars. She did not indulge in tantrums or engage in harangues with directors. If she had a question about a script, she asked it without fuss. She could be counted on to be letter perfect in her lines before she faced the camera. And during the intervals between scenes, her relaxing smile and hearty laugh were as unaffected as her low-heeled shoes, long walking stride and minimal makeup.

Yet this even-tempered and successful actress, who was apparently happily married, became involved in a scandal that rocked the movie industry, forced her to stay out of the United States for seven years and made her life as tempestuous as many of her roles. In a sense, she became a barometer of changing moral values in the United States.

In 1949 she fell in love with Roberto Rossellini, the Italian film director, and had a child by him before she could obtain a divorce from her husband, Dr. Peter Lindstrom, and marry the director.

Symbol of Moral Perfection
Before the scandal, millions of Americans had been moved by her performances in such box-office successes as ''Intermezzo,'' ''For Whom the Bell Tolls,'' ''Gaslight,'' ''Spellbound,'' ''The Bells of St. Mary's,'' ''Notorious'' and ''Casablanca,'' roles that had made her, somewhat to her annoyance, a symbol of moral perfection.

''I cannot understand,'' she said, long before the scandal, ''why people think I'm pure and full of nobleness. Every human being has shades of bad and good.''

Suddenly, in 1949, the American public that had elevated her to the point of idolatry cast her down, vilified her and boycotted her films. She was even condemned on the floor of the United States Senate.

Then, seven years after she had fallen from grace in this country, she returned to gather new acclaim and honors for her acting, and she never again suffered any noticeable loss of favor as an actress or as a person. But she spent nearly all of her remaining working life in Europe, sometimes for American movie companies.

So complete was Miss Bergman's victory that Senator Charles H. Percy, Republican of Illinois, entered into the Congressional Record, in 1972, an apology for the attack made on her 22 years earlier in the Senate by Edwin C. Johnson, Democrat of Colorado.

'Had a Wonderful Life'
By this time Miss Bergman had already expressed publicly her feelings and philosophy. Upon her return to the United States in 1956, for the first time since her departure, she told a jammed airport press conference, in English, Swedish, German, French and Italian:

''I have had a wonderful life. I have never regretted what I did. I regret things I didn't do. All my life I've done things at a moment's notice. Those are the things I remember. I was given courage, a sense of adventure and a little bit of humor. I don't think anyone has the right to intrude in your life, but they do. I would like people to separate the actress and the woman.''

Though her marriage to Mr. Rossellini fell apart less than two years later, she won custody of their three children Robertino, Isabella and Ingrid ; she never changed her attitude. And Miss Bergman continued to defend the films she made for him, though all were financial failures and received poor reviews in this country. The Rossellini debacles created a myth that before she worked for him she had only successes. Among her pre-Rossellini failures were ''Arch of Triumph,'' ''Joan of Arc'' and ''Under Capricorn,'' all of which came immediately before she went to work for Mr. Rossellini.

Desire for Artistic Growth
It was Miss Bergman's lifelong desire for artistic growth that drew her to Mr. Rossellini. She had been deeply moved by his films ''Open City'' and ''Paisan,'' which established him as a major force in neorealism. Money had never been enough for Miss Bergman. ''You don't act for money,'' she said. ''You do it because you love it, because you must.''

Even the Oscars she had won were not enough. On Broadway, her portrayal of Joan of Arc, in Maxwell Anderson's ''Joan of Lorraine,'' won her an Antoinette Perry award, the highest honor in the American theater. Audiences and critics could adore her love scenes with Humphrey Bogart in ''Casablanca'' and with Cary Grant in ''Notorious.'' But praise, too, was not enough.

''There is a kind of acting in the United States,'' she said many years later, ''especially in the movies, where the personality remains the same in every part. I like changing as much as possible.''

Sought Out Rossellini
This artistic need prompted her to write to Mr. Rossellini: ''I would make any sacrifice to appear in a film under your direction.'' He leaped at the opportunity, rewrote a script he had intended for Anna Magnani, and went with Miss Bergman to the Italian island of Stromboli to make the film of that name.

While this movie was being made, she asked her husband for a divorce so she could marry Mr. Rossellini. He tried to block it, even after learning she was pregnant with the director's child.

The first of her three children with the director was born, under a media siege, in Italy, seven days before she was remarried. Dr. Lindstrom, a neurosurgeon, won custody of their daughter, Pia, who subsequently became a well-known television reporter.

By 1957, she and Mr. Rossellini were separated, but before that Miss Bergman had begun a new phase in her career. She made ''Anastasia'' for 20th Century-Fox and won her second Oscar in 1956, playing the mysterious woman who might or might not be the surviving daughter of Czar Nicholas II. She then won a television Emmy award for her performance of the tormented governess in a dramatization of Henry James's ''The Turn of the Screw.'' In 1958 she married Lars Schmidt, a successful Swedish theatrical producer.

Enjoyed All 3 Media
Miss Bergman refused to be drawn into arguments about acting in movies, the theater and television. She enjoyed all three. In the movies, she said, one acted for one eye, the camera. In the theater, for a thousand eyes, the theater audience. Television was ''wonderful,'' she said, allowing for the frenzied schedule.

Maturity strengthened her determination to be more selective in roles. This was one of the main reasons she returned to Broadway in 1967, after a 21-year absence, in the role of a mother disliked by her son in Eugene O'Neill's ''More Stately Mansions.''

She had met the playwright in her Hollywood years, when, during a vacation from films, she played the prostitute in his ''Anna Christie'' in theaters in New Jersey and on the West Coast. During another sabbatical from Hollywood, in 1940, she had made her Broadway stage debut as Julie in ''Liliom,'' opposite Burgess Meredith.

Miss Bergman's next growth period, which included stage performances of works by George Bernard Shaw and Henrik Ibsen and the role of the vengeful millionaire in the film version of ''The Visit,'' was climaxed by the fulfillment of a 13-year effort to persuade Ingmar Bergman, the director, to let her work for him.

In his ''Autumn Sonata,'' she gave what she considered her finest performance, as a middle-aged concert pianist who, during a brief visit to her married daughter, played by Liv Ullmann, engages in prolonged and tearful confrontations that reveal a complex and searing love-hate relationship. She was nominated for her fourth Oscar for this 1978 movie, and she said it might be her last role.

''I don't want to go down and play little parts,'' she said. ''This should be the end.'' Miss Bergman always refused to play any part that required her to be nude or seminude. Although she was opposed to movie censorship, she considered nudity, particularly in love scenes, ugly, saying: ''Since the beginning of time, good theater has existed without nudity. Why change now?''

Born in Stockholm
Miss Bergman was born in Stockholm on Aug. 29, 1915. Her mother, who was from Hamburg, Germany, died when Ingrid was three years old. As an only child, she learned to create imaginary friends. Her father, who had a camera shop, adored her and photographed her constantly, often in costume. He died when she was 13. She lived briefly with an unmarried aunt and then with an uncle and aunt who had five children.

At 17, although she was tall and somewhat ungainly - she was 5 feet 9 inches and weighed about 135 pounds - she auditioned successfully for the government-sponsored Royal Dramatic School.

Within seven years she was one of the leading movie stars in Sweden and had refused several offers from Hollywood. Finally, in 1939, at the age of 24, Miss Bergman agreed to do a film for David O. Selznick. It was ''Intermezzo,'' with Leslie Howard. She returned to Sweden to her husband, who was then a dentist, and their daughter, Pia.

The film was so successful that Mr. Selznick, convinced he had found ''another Garbo,'' persuaded her to return to Hollywood. Looking back on her career many years later, particularly on her feeling of youthful shyness and awkwardness, the actress said: ''I can do everything with ease on the stage, whereas in real life I feel too big and clumsy. So I didn't choose acting. It chose me.'' Miss Bergman is survived by her four children, who were reported to be flying to London yesterday for the funeral. The funeral will be ''a very quiet, family affair,'' said Alfred Jackman, funeral director at Harrods, the London department store that is handling the arrangements. Mr. Jackman added, ''After cremation, her ashes may be taken back to Sweden.''