Adrianne Palicki as Wonder Woman: First Look!

Giving a first look at her sexy superhero attire, Adrienne Palicki was decked out in her Wonder Woman gear in a newly released promo shot.

The Ohio native was previously announced as landing the lead role in the remake of the classic '70s series being produced by David E. Kelley.

A statement released by the studio told of the upcoming show: "Wonder Woman is a vigilante crime fighter in Los Angeles but also a successful corporate executive and a modern woman trying to balance all of the elements of her extraordinary life."

Also starring in "Wonder Woman" are Elizabeth Hurley and Cary Elwes.


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K-Stew & R-Pattz: Love at The First Sight

K-STEW & R-PATTZ: LOVE AT THE FIRST SIGHT
Kristen Stewart fell in ''love at first sight'' with Robert Pattinson.

The real life couple play Bella Swan and her vampire love Edward Cullen in the "Twilight Saga" movie series and Catherine Harwicke - who directed the first "Twilight" movie - said Kristen felt an instant attraction to her co-star.

Catherine said: "I looked at a couple pictures and was like, 'I'm not sure.' He had been fired from his last job, he was unemployed, he was in debt."

"I have footage of their first meeting at my dining-room table. Kristen was like, 'It's got to be Rob!' She felt connected to him from the first moment. That electricity, or love at first sight, or whatever it is."

While Kristen, 20, eventually managed to convince the director to hire Robert, Catherine revealed she made him promise not to get romantically involved with his co-star because she was only 17 at the time and he was four years older.

She explained to Newsweek: "I told him, 'You've got to realize that Kristen is 17 years old. She's underage. You've got to focus, dude, or you're going to be arrested.' I made him swear on a stack of Bibles."


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'American Idol' Reveals First Batch Of Top 24

In its 10th season, "American Idol" has already gone coast-to-coast (and, uh, Milwaukee), in search of the next pop superstar. So when it came time to whittle their list of hopefuls down to the top 24, a few additional miles probably weren't going to hurt anyone.

On Wednesday night's (February 23) show, "Idol" trekked from Hollywood to Las Vegas — where the 61 remaining contestants were hacked down to just 40 — and then back to the show's hometown of Los Angeles, where, at long last, the voyage came to a close with the unveiling of the 24 singers who will compete for this season's crown ... or, at least, that's what we were told.

But before we got to the cliffhanger climax, we had to make the trip from Hollywood to Las Vegas. The action on Wednesday's episode began immediately following the oft-treacherous Hollywood Week, which meant that those who had survived didn't have long to celebrate. Rather, they boarded buses and headed down to the Mirage Resort and Casino in Vegas, where they performed songs from the Beatles' legendary catalog.

And the results of those performances were mixed. Singing in pairs and trios, some "Idol" frontrunners kept up the pace — Jacob Lusk, Haley Reinhart and Naima Adedapo thrilled on "The Long and Winding Road"; Tim Halperin and Julie Zorilla turned in a sweet version of "Something"; and Paul McDonald and Kendra Chantelle wowed the judges with their soulful take on "Blackbird" ("So beautiful ... I really loved it," Jennifer Lopez raved) — while others fell off.

Those in the latter category included the trio of TaTynisa Wilson, Jerome Bell and Lakeisha Lewis, who puzzled the judges with their version of "I Saw Her Standing There," and (most notably) the duo of hotly-tipped teens Melinda Ademi and Thia Megia, who failed to wow with "Here Comes the Sun."

Others who stumbled in Vegas included the trio of Lauren Alaina, Scotty McCreery and Denise Jackson, who fumbled through "Hello, Goodbye" (first before a cadre of producers that included Interscope honcho Jimmy Iovine, Alex Da Kid and Jim Jonsin, and then on the Mirage stage), and quirky Ashley Sullivan, who decided to get hitched at Vegas' iconic Little White Chapel before her performance, and then whiffed on "We Can Work It Out."

At the end of the two-day Vegas performances, most of those who stumbled were sent packing — not to mention memorable contestants like White House intern Molly DeWolf Swensen, goofy Carson Higgins and rocker dude Caleb Hawley — as the "Idol" judges cut the remaining 60 down to 40 ... and then put them back on the bus for Los Angeles, where the Top 24 was revealed in dramatic fashion.

Or, part of it was anyway.

Because though "Idol" producers had spent most of the two-hour episode touting that big reveal, in the end, we only learned the identities of a handful of the 24 finalists: Adedapo, Reinhart and McDonald plus Clint Jun Gamboa and Ashthon Jones. And while that swerve was somewhat shocking, it was the news of who didn't make the final cut that really caused jaws to drop.

Namely, breakout star Chris Medina, who won over viewers — and the "Idol" judges — with his dedication to his fiancée (who was seriously injured in a car accident. And when Lopez broke the news that his "Idol" journey was over— "It honestly breaks my heart to say this," Lopez said — she broke down and needed to be consoled by her fellow judges.

And with that (and Lopez's sobbed admission that she didn't know if she could continue on as a judge), Wednesday night's episode came to a dramatic close. The remainder of the Top 24 will be revealed on Thursday ... and who knows what will happen then.

Get your "Idol" fix on MTV News' "American Idol" page, where you'll find all the latest news, interviews and opinions.


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FIRST LOOK: Daniel Radcliffe Sings & Dances on Broadway!

By Stephen M. Silverman

Wednesday February 23, 2011 04:00 PM EST

FIRST LOOK: Daniel Radcliffe Sings & Dances on Broadway! Daniel Radcliffe (front and center), rehearsing How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, with John Larroquette behind him

Ari Mintz

Jon Hamm, move over. The latest looker to leap back into the 1960s: Daniel Radcliffe, who is assuming the musical role of quintessential company man J. Pierrepont Finch in the new Broadway revival of the 1961 classic How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying.

As shown in these exclusive-to-PEOPLE rehearsal shots, Radcliife is already off and running ahead of the chorus. As Finch, he starts in the mailroom of Manhattan's World Wide Wicket and works his way up the corporate ladder.

En route, he meets the adoring secretary Rosemary Pilkington – played by Philadelphia-born Rose Hemingway, in her Broadway debut after touring nationally in Mamma Mia. She's also appeared in Donmar Warehouse's U.S. production of Parade at Los Angeles's Mark Taper Forum. FIRST LOOK: Daniel Radcliffe Sings & Dances on Broadway!| First Look, Daniel Radcliffe

In the production, which marks Radcliffe's return to the Great White Way for the first time since starring in a 2008 revival of Equus – Anderson Cooper narrates Finch's meteoric rise ... and fall.

"Anderson Cooper just always stood out for me," the Harry Potter star, 21, says on the How to Succeed Web site about the CNN anchor. "He always had this kind of really cool ... playful glint behind his eye, I think, which I always found quite funny."

Also in the cast: John Larroquette, as J.B. Biggley, the boss of the World Wide Wicket Company, who admires Finch's fortitude. Previews begin Feb. 26 at the Al Hirschfeld Theatre, with the opening night set for March 27.

Coincidentally, Radcliffe's role made a star of Robert Morse when he originated J. Pierrepont Finch in the original How to … 50 years ago (and in the 1967 movie) – and, today, Morse, 79, memorably stars on Mad Men, as the advertising company's founder, Bertram Cooper. FIRST LOOK: Daniel Radcliffe Sings & Dances on Broadway!| First Look, Daniel Radcliffe Rose Hemingway and Daniel Radcliffe

Ari Mintz

Please note: Comments have been suspended temporarily as we explore better ways to serve you. Your opinion is important to us; you can find current discussions at facebook.com/peoplemag.


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Britney Spears Tweets First Snippet Of New Single 'Inside Out'

Just two days after Britney Spears released her highly anticipated video for "Hold It Against Me," the 29-year-old diva is back to give fans another treat with a brief snippet from her next single, "Inside Out."

"C'mon! Won't you give me something to remember," Spears sings in the barely 10-second clip, revealed by the singer and her producer, Dr. Luke, on Twitter.

"Baby shut your mouth and turn me inside," she crescendos.

For fans, the brief snippet is a welcome treat, but hardly a surprising one, considering that Spears teased "Hold It Against Me" in similar fashion for several weeks.

In an interview with MTV News, Spears' longtime manager himself, Larry Rudolph, indicated that fans were likely to hear another song before the March 29 release of Femme Fatale, the Mississippi native's first album in three years.

Of the song itself, which he would only speak of obliquely on Thursday, Rudolph had high praise.

"I don't think I've been this excited about releasing a Britney single in many, many years," he said. "It's that good. That's all I'm gonna say about it at the moment. I haven't heard a final mix of it, but I should get it in the next day or two. So far, what I've heard is just extraordinary. It really is amazing. Her fans will be very happy with it. I'm trying hard to get it out before the album comes out."

What do you think of the new snippet? Will "Inside Out" be another Britney hit? Share your thoughts in the comments below!


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Liam Neeson Opens Up For the First Time About Natasha Richardson's Death

Feb 15th 2011 04:41PMEmail ThisNearly two years after his wife, Tony-winning actress Natasha Richardson, passed away following a skiing accident, Liam Neeson is opening up for the first time about that terrible night in March 2009.

"I walked into the emergency [room] -- it's like seventy, eighty people, broken arms, black eyes, all that -- and for the first time in years, nobody recognizes me," the 'Taken' star told Esquire. "Not the nurses. The patients. No one. And I've come all this way, and they won't let me see her. And I'm looking past them, starting to push -- I'm like, 'F**k, I know my wife's back there someplace.'"

Neeson rarely speaks about his private life, and was initially hesitant to talk about Richardson with Esquire writer Tom Chiarella. However, while recounting a motorcycle accident that put him in the hospital in 2000, the Oscar-nominated star of 'Schindler's List' began to discuss the tragic parallels between the accident he survived and the one that took the life of his wife.
After striking a deer, Neeson lost control of his motorcycle and crashed into a ditch, breaking his pelvis in two places. He was transferred to New York City's Lenox Hill Hospital, and Richardson, who was filming in Canada, rushed to be by his side. "I found out later they'd told her I wouldn't last the night," Neeson said. "Well, they never f**king told me that."

The scene would be repeated nine years later, only in reverse, with Neeson rushing from the Canadian set of the film 'Chloe' to be with Richardson, who had hit her head in a skiing accident.

After the fall, Richardson was initially lucid and simply asked to be taken back to her room, dismissing the ambulances that reported to the scene. Three hours later, however, the actress was taken to a small Canadian hospital after complaining of a headache. Within a few hours she was transferred to a larger hospital in Montreal. Neeson rushed from the set of 'Chloe' to be with Richardson, who had fallen into a coma as a result of a brain hemorrhage sustained during the fall.

The day after Richardson's accident, she was flown to Lenox Hill Hospital, where she died on March 18, 2009. On March 19, theater lights on Broadway and in London's West End were dimmed in honor of the respected actress and dedicated AIDS research activist.

"What am I gonna do? How am I going to get past the security?" Neeson told Chiarella, recounting what was going through his mind when he arrived at the hospital. "And I see two nurses, ladies, having a cigarette. I walk up, and luckily one of them recognizes me. And I'll tell you, I was so f**king grateful -- for the first time in I don't know how long -- to be recognized. And this one, she says, 'Go in that back door there.' She points me to it. 'Make a left. She's in a room there.' So I get there, just in time. And all these young doctors, who look all of eighteen years of age, they tell me the worst."

According to Chiarella, Neeson stopped the interview briefly while discussing Richardson, blinking back tears while gazing across the eatery at members of the late actress's extended family, who were coincidentally at the restaurant -- a favorite of Neeson and Richardson's -- the day of his interview with Esquire.

The actor returned to the set of 'Chloe' immediately after Richardson's funeral. "I just think I was still in a bit of shock," he said. "But it's kind of a no-brainer to go back to that work. It's a wee bit of a blur, but I know the tragedy hadn't just really smacked me yet."

Neeson and Richardson have two teenage sons, Michael and Daniel.

"I think I survived by running away some. Running away to work. Listen, I know how old I am and that I'm just a shoulder injury from losing roles like the one in 'Taken,'" the actor told Esquire. "So I stay with the training, I stay with the work. It's easy enough to plan jobs, to plan a lot of work. That's effective. But that's the weird thing about grief. You can't prepare for it. You think you're gonna cry and get it over with. You make those plans, but they never work."

Neeson's full interview is featured in Esquire's latest issue, on newsstands Feb. 22.

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Muse Bask In First Grammy Win, Make Plans For Kid-Friendly Album

LOS ANGELES — Minutes after winning their first-ever Grammy Award (for Best Rock Album, in case you're keeping score at home), Muse's Matthew Bellamy and Dominic Howard stood backstage at the Staples Center, holding a replica of their brand-new Golden Gramophone — "the real one's in the mail," Bellamy laughed — and looking very much like their heads might explode at any second.

Because, really, after a year in which they finally, totally conquered U.S. audiences with their Resistance album and singles like "Uprising" and "Undisclosed Desires," winning a Grammy is pretty much the capper on a thoroughly amazing year for the trio.

"I never expected to win something like this in America," Bellamy beamed. "It's probably the biggest, most important music award in the world, and it's a great honor. Especially since it's an award for the album we made. We've won quite a lot of awards for our live show, but we've never quite won an award for the actual album, so it's amazing."

So now, the next logical step is the follow-up to The Resistance. Muse's short-term plans include a quick run of South American shows and a much-deserved break, but that doesn't mean they're not already making recording plans — which at this point, basically, include "all being based in the same city, London, which, for us, will definitely be a different approach." And Bellamy, who is expecting his first child with actress Kate Hudson, already has an idea or two about how Muse's new songs will sound. And, yes, his impending fatherhood is weighing heavily on his mind.

"Yeah, I'm definitely going to bring out the Vibraphone, [maybe write] a lullaby, things like that," he laughed. "I'll definitely get a lullaby on there."

For Grammy Awards winners list, analysis, interviews, fashion and more, stick with MTV News during the big show and beyond.


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Cake Boss Star Reveals First Photo of Son Carlo Salvatore


Our365 Newborn Photography

On Monday morning, Buddy Valastro was ready to accompany his then-pregnant wife Lisa to one of her last doctor’s appointments, but at the last minute, she told him not to come.

“She says, ‘If you go it’s going to be nothing! If anything happens, I’ll call you,’ ” he recalls. “I get to the Lincoln Tunnel and she calls me and she’s like, ‘It’s time.’ We did a U-turn, went right home and went to the hospital. We got here at 10 o’clock [in the morning] and at 5:11 p.m. she gave birth. It was pretty perfect.”

So was the ‘lovely’ timing. “What a perfect Valentine’s Day gift,” he says. “What kind of a Valentine’s Day gift do you and [your] wife want [more] than a new baby?”

Tuesday, Valastro was on cloud nine, snuggling with his newborn son, Carlo Salvatore, and introducing the baby to his two older brothers, Buddy, Jr. and Marco, and older sister Sofia.

“I said, ‘Carlo, welcome to the jungle,’ ” Valastro laughs. “My oldest, Sofia, is really, really gentle and wants to help, [but] the boys are going to make him rough at a young age!”

“They don’t want to let him go,” he continues. “They want to hold him and kiss him and hug him.”

The baby, whom Valastro and his wife named in honor of their family bakery, Carlo’s, and for former colleague Sal Picinich, who died of cancer two weeks ago, should be coming home soon. And Valastro is even taking a rare vacation to spend time at home with his ever-expanding family.

“I just feel so blessed and so happy,” he gushes. “I came from a big family of five so I believe in having a lot of children and I think it’s really nice, especially when a family grows up tight and together like me and my family did. I’m carrying those values on to my kids.”

So will there be another Valastro baby joining the clan in a few years? Not so fast, he chuckles. “Like we say in the bakery, the kitchen’s closed!”

— Lesley Messer


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