April 10, 2007 (Press Release) --
GLARE checked in recently with her angel buddy Jaclyn Smith, who told us, "Farrah is in great shape now. She's totally cured. I do talk to her all the time. I've been there with her through her treatment."
Smith said the original Angels (including Kate Jackson) haven't ruled out working together again. "We're thinking about it. It would be fun if we got the right project together," she said. "It all depends how we would do it and if it's a movie or not."
Meanwhile, her reality hair series "Shear Genius" debuts at 10 p.m. Wednesday on Bravo. Smith hosts the series, which looks at the competitive world of high-end stylists. As for her own luscious locks, she admits to a few bad hair days. "I had a ducktail as a teen," she said. "At the time, I had really short hair and it didn't feel like me."
In retrospect, though, what distinguished them was that they were done on the cheap and by the time they appeared at urban movie palaces that had seen better days, scenes were missing, there were pops on the soundtrack and scratches on the celluloid.
"When I was in film school everyone else was waxing on and on about the importance of Jean Renoir and Godard, and while I respect those directors, I spent all my spare time watching Andy Sidaris and John Carpenter films," Roth says. "I'd put on `Maniac' or `Malibu Express' over `Rules of the Game' any day, and there are a lot more people out there who feel the way I do."
Source: http://www.msn.com
Smith said the original Angels (including Kate Jackson) haven't ruled out working together again. "We're thinking about it. It would be fun if we got the right project together," she said. "It all depends how we would do it and if it's a movie or not."
Meanwhile, her reality hair series "Shear Genius" debuts at 10 p.m. Wednesday on Bravo. Smith hosts the series, which looks at the competitive world of high-end stylists. As for her own luscious locks, she admits to a few bad hair days. "I had a ducktail as a teen," she said. "At the time, I had really short hair and it didn't feel like me."
In retrospect, though, what distinguished them was that they were done on the cheap and by the time they appeared at urban movie palaces that had seen better days, scenes were missing, there were pops on the soundtrack and scratches on the celluloid.
"When I was in film school everyone else was waxing on and on about the importance of Jean Renoir and Godard, and while I respect those directors, I spent all my spare time watching Andy Sidaris and John Carpenter films," Roth says. "I'd put on `Maniac' or `Malibu Express' over `Rules of the Game' any day, and there are a lot more people out there who feel the way I do."
Source: http://www.msn.com

Now for some angelic news: Cancer victim Farrah Fawcett is doing well.
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