Friday, June 29, 2018

Today in History for Friday, June 29, 2018

From: tulsaworld.com



1967: Actress Jayne Mansfield, 34, was killed along with her boyfriend, Sam Brody, and their driver, Ronnie Harrison, when their car slammed into the rear of a tractor-trailer rig on a highway in Slidell, Louisiana; three children riding in the back, including Mansfield’s 3-year-old daughter, Mariska Hargitay, survived.

Wednesday, June 27, 2018

From: tvinsider.com
By Jessica Napoli

Law & Order: SVU is heading into an unprecedented 20th season.
The procedural drama will be tying with the original Law & Order and Gunsmoke for longest-running primetime scripted drama series.

Many of the original cast members have come and gone except for boss lady Mariska Hargitay, who has stayed steady with the series since its premiere in September 1999.
In celebration of Season 20, let's take a look at how much the cast has changed.

 
 
 
 
 

 

 
 
 





 

 














 


Law & Order: SVU, two-hour Season 20 premiere, Thursday, September 27, 9/8c, NBC

4 successful women who overcame rejection

From: freemalaysiatoday.com


Despite being fired from their job, dropped from their recording label or told to undergo plastic surgery, these women followed their dreams to become successful


It’s a tough world out there for women, especially those who have big dreams and aspirations. Rejection is not uncommon to the average woman looking to make something of herself.
Many have the false idea that women belong in the house, cooking for their husbands and caring for the kids. While there is nothing wrong with being a reliable and responsible housewife, it is not wrong either to want something more out of life.
Some women gather the courage to face the world and show everyone that women can do more than just cook and change diapers.

Mariska Hargitay

 
Mariska Hargitay is one of the highest paid female television stars today. Most know her as the fierce and intimidating Detective Olivia Benson in the Law and Order series. It takes a lot of guts to play a detective in a movie or television show, let along the lead detective.
Her role as Olivia Benson shows that women can be smart, beautiful, and incredibly strong, all at the same time. Hopefully, her screen time has helped inspire more women to enter the entertainment business or possibly even the law enforcement career track.

How she overcame rejection: You would think that being beautiful, having famous and successful celebrity parents, and having a persevering personality would guarantee her a slot in Hollywood, but that was not the case.

Many agents suggested she change her name so it would be more appealing to her audience; if that was not enough, they even suggested she get plastic surgery done on her nose.
Thankfully Mariska opted to keep her name and natural features. We could never imagine Olivia Benson as anything other than the powerful and incredibly beautiful detective we know today.


J K Rowling
Anyone who loves books or movies has come across Harry Potter at some point in their lives. Who can forget the lovable and unforgettable escapades of our favourite wizards in J K Rowling’s magical masterpiece?

Her writing has brought her millions of readers (and dollars) and inspired others to look beyond the ordinary and chase the extraordinary, just like Harry Potter and his two best friends did.
Did I mention that one of the most important characters in the books, Hermione Granger, is also a strong and inspirational woman like her creator? While it’s easy to see Rowling as one of the most successful writers of our time, many people do not know what she went through to achieve her success.

How she overcame rejection: What most don’t know is that life wasn’t always fun and creative for Rowling. She was a secretary before she came up with her writing ideas. Who would have imagined her getting coffee and pushing papers all day before her breakout success?
Fortunately for us and every other book reader out there, she lost her job because she was too busy thinking and writing instead of photocopying itineraries for her boss.
Now she is one of the biggest names in the literary world thanks to her creativity and desire to follow her dreams.


Lady Gaga
Know the songs “Born This Way”, “Poker Face”, or “Bad Romance”? You have Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta, better known as Lady Gaga, to thank for it.
Lady Gaga has five albums and numerous hit songs under her belt, not to mention a few film and television roles like La Chameleon in Machete Kills and The Countess in American Horror Story: Hotel.

The eccentric singer and actor has also wowed the world with her fashion sense and wardrobe, often choosing designs that shock and inspire.

How she overcame rejection: Not many people know that in 2006, Lady Gaga was signed to DefJam records (responsible for popular artists like Iggy Azalea, Justin Bieber, and Kanye West).
However, she was dropped after only three months with them. This obviously affected her, but she chose to prove them wrong and later released the hit album The Fame in 2008. Apart from being one of the most successful artistes of her time, she is also one of the biggest advocates of LGBT rights in the world.

Marilyn Monroe

You might not have any idea who Marilyn Monroe is, but for many in the older generation, Marilyn was one of the biggest names in the US entertainment scene.

Starring in films like Some Like It Hot and How to Marry a Millionaire, she made a name for herself as one of the most beautiful and popular icons of her era.

How she overcame rejection: Would you believe it if someone told you Marilyn was too ugly to act in Hollywood or do modelling? That is exactly what she was told when she started her career in the entertainment industry.

She was rejected by a modelling agency who said she did not have the necessary qualities to make it big in entertainment. The agency suggested she pursue a career in typing and even had the guts to tell her to get married instead.

Little did they know every man and woman in the US would be craving for more of her in the coming years.

She would have been bigger and more famous, had she not suddenly passed away at the age of 36 in 1962. Even though her life was cut short, she was able to create a name for herself as one of the biggest sex symbols of the century.

Thursday, June 21, 2018

Available on News Stands Now!!!

 
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A salute to Mariska Hargitay, who survived The Love Guru

From: ew.com
By Darren Franich



Ten years ago, Mariska Hargitay was merely the popular star of a long-running TV series. She had won an Emmy a couple years earlier for her role as Detective Olivia Benson on Law & Order: SVU — the only Emmy win, in fact, for any lead performer in the Law & Order-verse, and an early indication that Hargitay’s persona was inextricably linked to the whole cultural idea of Law & Order more than the wry Orbachs and gravely Watersons from the franchise mothership.

In 2018, Mariska Hargitay is still a TV star, preparing to return for Year 20 of SVU. She’s also, like, an elemental force, a firmamental aspect of pop culture, meaningfully still here in a way that suggests she won’t leave. If she’s canceled or retired, she’ll still be here: SVU is making new episodes, but its tail grows longer in rerun perpetuity. Around 2011 was the first time friends started admitting they watched SVU as comfort food. In 2015, SVU fan Taylor Swift assembled a cast of hashtags for her “Bad Blood” music video, a parade of insta-models and millennial multihyphenates and the Delevingnes of yesteryear.

The event of the video, of course, was the climactic appearance of Hargitay herself, alongside fellow broadcast empress Ellen Pompeo — and Hargitay got the best alter ego, “Justice,” short, descriptive, accurate. Just a few years later, “Bad Blood” already feels ancient, a distant epoch when everything was #squadsomething. Hargitay’s still Hargitay.

And the whole time she’s been a TV deity, Hargitay’s had precisely one appearance in a major Hollywood movie. It was The Love Guru, one of the worst movies ever made but one of the best arguments in favor of total nuclear annihilation.

Released ten years ago Wednesday, The Love Guru marked the end of comedian Mike Myers’ era as a bankable Hollywood star. He had an enviable position in what Hollywood was becoming, the face of one successful franchise (Austin Powers) and the irreplaceable voice of another (Shrek).

And he threw it all away with The Love Guru, a self-immolating labor of terrible love. 2008 had already been a summer of calamity for some of the decade’s superstar figures. The Wachowskis’ Speed Racer sunk, and Shyamalan’s The Happening was sunker. But those directors didn’t appear on screen. Whereas Myers is all over The Love Guru: a public spectacle of loud failure. He stars as Guru Pitka, a new age-y self-helper living a charmed life in glorious cameo-strewn Hollywood. The plot of the film — sorry, the “plot” of the “film” — is that he’s got to fly up to Toronto to help the Maple Leafs’ star Darren (Romany Malco) get his mojo back. Hard to explain why, it involves mommy issues and Justin Timberlake’s giant, errr, hockey stick.

Now, no movie that features a main character named Darren can ever be completely terrible. Except for this movie, which becomes a misery carnival of gags that a fifth grader would describe as “immature.” The humor depends on the viewer assuming that everyone on screen is an alien who learned about human emotions from close study of that formless manthing from the IKEA instructions. Myers is doing a couple different accents, John Lennon by way of something racist, and at certain points falls back on the kind of prop work that first-week improv students love. Someone hands him a corn dog: “Is it made from dog? Is it a dog’s thing? Am I being Punk’d?” Punk’d went off the air in 2007, so even commenting on that reference being lame was lame by the time Love Guru came out.

There’s also a climactic scene where two elephants have sex on a hockey rink, but let’s not dwell on specifics. The badness of Love Guru became historic, and the karmic stain that reverberated through our decade. The story rotates around the Maple Leafs’ Stanley Cup series against the Los Angeles Kings. Myers is a Toronto native who loves the Leafs — and since 2008, the Leafs have continued their decades-long championshipless streak. Meanwhile, the Kings have won the Stanley Cup twice.

But not everyone in The Love Guru was a loser. One of the several horrible running jokes is that Guru Pitka uses the name “Mariska Hargitay” as an all-purpose phrase — greeting, farewell, thanks, space-filler. He greets the celebrity cameos thus: “Mariska Hargitay, Jessica Simpson. Mariska Hargitay, Val Kilmer.” There are more celebrities in Love Guru. The whole plot revolves around the Guru’s aspiration to appear on Oprah Winfrey’s TV show; his great nemesis is Deepak Chopra; when you least expect it, this happens.

And there’s Jessica Alba as the Maple Leafs owner, giving arguably the toughest performance of her career as the person who has to almost-convincingly laugh at Myers’ jokes. It’s a kind of trope of decadent stardom, that moment when you can get anyone on screen for a few moments at a time.

Myers could never have a lineup like this again, just like it’s hard to imagine Taylor Swift circa 2018 reassembling the “Bad Blood” cast (which included, hey, Jessica Alba!)

But there is one truly notable moment in The Love Guru, when Pitka meets one final celebrity:

Yes, it’s her! Hargitay herself! Looking happy to be here, honored, scared, disappointed, but above all, like someone who knows she’s got better things to do. Some stars burn bright into supernovas. The best will shine bright in the night sky long after our civilization is forgotten. The Love Guru is so dumb, but Pitka’s mantra is catchy, repeated 18 times throughout the movie. Say it to yourself morning, noon, and night: Mariska Hargitay, Mariska Hargitay, Mariska Hargitay…

Wednesday, June 20, 2018

Mariska Hargitay recalls life lessons she learned from her father after family tragedy

From: foxnews.com
By Stephanie Nolasco

 

Mariska Hargitay has made her mark in Hollywood as an Emmy-winning TV star, but the “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” actress admitted maintaining her success is not as easy as it sounds.

“I look at my life now and think, ‘I’m on a TV show, I run a foundation, I run a household, I’m a mom, I’m a wife, I’m a lot of things,’” the 54-year-old told Closer Weekly Wednesday. “I’m learning to be present with where I am. The truth is we have to live the journey, right? And that’s what I’ve learned.”
 
Hargitay credited her character, Detective Olivia Benson, for helping her analyze her own life even after cameras stop rolling. Hargitay has portrayed Benson in the NBC drama for the past 19 years.

“I’ve learned to lean into the sharp edges,” she explained. “There has been a lot of darkness. But on the other side, things can be so bright. What have I learned from Olivia? Having hope, you know? Stamina. Fierce protection. Never giving up no matter what.”

Before Hargitay found success in Hollywood, she endured a public tragedy.
When she was just three years old, her mother, Hollywood star Jayne Mansfield, was killed in a 1967 car crash in Louisiana that also took the lives of her lawyer Samuel S. Brody and driver Ronald B. Harrison.
While the adults in the vehicle met a sudden death, three of Mansfield’s children, including Hargitay, were sleeping on the rear seat and survived.

Rumors have existed for decades about the horrific accident, including that the famous blond bombshell was decapitated. Her undertaker Jim Roberts dismissed the myth to the New York Times in 1997.

Mansfield’s death also sparked gossip that she was reportedly the victim of a curse placed by Church of Satan founder, Anton LaVey.

Mansfield, who was reportedly struggling to find work in Hollywood after Marilyn Monroe’s death in 1962, had completed a nightclub tour at Biloxi’s Gus Stevens Restaurant & Supper Club when she later met her end.

Hargitay revealed it was her father, Mickey Hargitay, who taught her how to cope with life’s pain, as well as how to launch her career as an actress successfully.
The beloved patriarch and actor passed away in 2006 at age 80.

“The message I got from my father was that life is hard, but you just don’t quit,” she said. “I’d get an audition and he’d say, ‘How hard are you going to work for it?’

"So I pushed myself even when I didn’t feel like pushing myself. I acted confident even when I wasn’t. And slowly… I became more confident. [If you] kick fear to the side, the payoff is huge.”
But life for Hargitay today is blissful. She married fellow actor Peter Hermann in 2004 and the couple share three children.

“They are the answer to everything,” she said about her family. “[My character Olivia] really prepared me for motherhood, because as a cop, you are in charge of any emergency and you need to stay calm, take control. It’s the same thing with being a parent.”


Mariska Hargitay Dishes on Her Career and Family: "I'm Learning to Be Present With Where I Am" (EXCLUSIVE)

From:closerweekly.com
By: Julia Birkinbine


 
She's a a wife, a mom-of-three, and an Emmy-winning TV star, but not even Mariska Hargitay admits that she has life all figured out. In fact, during an exclusive new interview with Closer Weekly for the magazine's latest issue, on newsstands now, the 54-year-old actress confessed she's still learning every day.

"I look at my life now and think, I’m on a TV show, I run a foundation, I run a household, I’m a mom, I’m a wife, I’m a lot of things. I’m learning to be present with where I am. The truth is we have to live the journey, right? And that’s what I’ve learned," Mariska candidly revealed.


Mariska's job has also helped her grow both on and off-screen. For the past 19 years, she's portrayed Detective Olivia Benson on the NBC drama series Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. "I’ve learned to lean in to the sharp edges," she recently told Closer at the "Paley Center Presents Creating Great Characters: Dick Wolf and Mariska Hargitay" event. "There has been a lot of darkness. But on the other side, things can be so bright."

"What have I learned from Olivia? Having hope, you know? Stamina. Fierce protection. Never giving up no matter what," she added of her TV character.


The actress' childhood was tumultuous as well. When Mariska was just three years old, her famous mother, Jayne Mansfield, was tragically killed in a car wreck while Mariska slept in the back seat. Following her mom's passing, the future star was raised by her father, Mickey Hargitay, and his third wife, Ellen.

Mariska actually credits her late father — Mickey died in 2006 — for teaching her how to cope with life's pain. "The message I got from my father was that life is hard, but you just don’t quit," she has said. Her dad additionally helped Mariska launch her career as an actress. "I’d get an audition and he’d say, 'How hard are you going to work for it?' So I pushed myself even when I didn’t feel like pushing myself. I acted confident even when I wasn’t. And slowly… I became more confident," she explained, adding that she realized if you "kick fear to the side the payoff is huge."


Today, Mariska couldn't be happier. She married fellow actor Peter Hermann, 50, in 2004 — "I was never so sure and happy," Mariska has said of their wedding day — and the couple are now parents to three kids, sons August, 11, and Andrew, 6, and daughter Amaya, 7. "They are the answer to everything," Mariska has said of her family, adding that her children are her "joy." She continued, "[My character, Olivia], really prepared me for motherhood, because as a cop, you are in charge of any emergency and you need to stay calm, take control. It’s the same thing with being a parent."

For more on Mariska Hargitay, pick up the new issue of Closer Weekly, on newsstands now

Tuesday, June 19, 2018

Dick Wolf on What’s Next After His NBC Deal Expires and Why He’ll Never Retire

From: variety.com
By


Casting is an area of television production that is of great importance to uber-producer Dick Wolf, and he makes sure that he has the last word on that, he tells Variety at the Monte Carlo TV Festival, which is paying tribute to the career of “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” star Mariska Hargitay, and also hosting “Chicago P.D.’s” Jon Seda, “Chicago Med’s” S. Epatha Merkerson, and “Law & Order: SVU’s” Philip Winchester.

“Casting is the most subjective area of TV production — one man’s meat is another man’s poison — and frankly, if I’m going to go all in on a new member of an ensemble, or when you are starting a show, if it is not the right choice I want it to be my wrong choice [than for me to say] to a third party, a showrunner or a network, ‘OK, so you choose,’” Wolf says.

He adds: “It’s the one thing that I’ve managed to maintain my independence on for 35 years. You have got to trust somebody’s gut and I’d prefer to trust mine than other people’s.”

Another skill that Wolf values very highly, of course, is writing, but he doesn’t feel the industry values it enough when it comes to judging procedurals. He says the thing “that has made me craziest over the years” is that “Law & Order” still has the record for 11 best drama Emmy nominations in a row, but the show’s writers only picked up one nomination in that time. “How do you think [the show] got that good?” he asks. “It’s the writing, stupid,” he adds, referring to a message on a card he once delivered to all the network chiefs.

Wolf is comfortable with his relationship with NBCUniversal, but he’ll be open to all options, including going it alone without a studio deal, when his present pact with the studio ends in 2020. “It’s always a free-floating decision,” he says.

Wolf has strong relationships all over Hollywood, of course, a fact emphasized when CBS gave Wolf’s drama “FBI” a 13-episode order back in September. “I’ve known [CBS CEO] Leslie Moonves for 35 years or so, and it is very comfortable,” he says.

He concedes that Amazon Studios, where former NBC Entertainment president Jennifer Salke has made her home, is one potential partner for his new shows, but, he adds: “I would be much happier if somebody came along and bought the entire library of all the ‘Law & Order’ and ‘Chicago’ shows, and there are several companies that can do that, and I hope one of them does.”

He underscores the importance of creative independence to him when he decides where to place his shingle, but he says NBCU has always respected that. “They’ve never interfered on any story we’ve wanted to do, on any show. There is no censorship. There is no feeling that ‘oh, you are not listening to us,” he says.

Whatever he decides to do in 2020 there is one option that is off the table: retirement. When asked if he wouldn’t want to spend the rest of his life relaxing and enjoying his money, he retorts: “Yeah, that sounds pretty boring.” He says that he had “a moment of insight” at a school reunion when he noticed a “five to seven year visual difference between the retirees and the people who were still working.” So, work keeps him young? “Oh, I hope so,” he says, with a laugh.

Monday, June 18, 2018

Pictures of Mariska at the 2018 Monte Carlo Film Festival 2018









































Mariska Hargitay praises MeToo movement in Monte Carlo TV Festival speech

From: pagesix.com
By Leo Barraclough, Variety






“Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” star Mariska Hargitay praised those in the MeToo movement who had spoken out against sexual assault when she spoke Friday on stage at the opening ceremony of the 58th Monte Carlo Television Festival. The Emmy and Golden Globe-winning actress was in the Principality of Monaco to receive the festival’s Crystal Nymph Award, given to an actor each year in recognition of an outstanding career.


Hargitay’s honor was awarded in part due to her advocacy work for victims of sexual assault, domestic violence and child abuse through the Joyful Heart Foundation, which she founded in 2004. In presenting her the award, Prince Albert II of Monaco, who opened the festival as its honorary president, described her as a “brilliant actress and an outstanding personality.”


Hargitay thanked Dick Wolf, creator and executive producer of “Law & Order: SVU” and Honorary Consul to Monaco, for having “made so much possible for me.” Wolf later joined her on stage.


Hargitay said: “What I am most grateful for is that I have been given a platform and a voice to speak about the things that are important to me, and a platform and a voice that have allowed me to contribute to bringing positive change into the world, and my goodness what a changed world this is since I started the show.”


Referring to the MeToo movement, she said: “I express my deepest thanks to the many women and the many men alongside who I have worked, and especially those whose extraordinary acts of courage have brought the recent seismic shifts in the way that our society addresses and understands sexual violence.”


With a faltering voice, struggling to keep her emotions in check, Hargitay referred to Prince Albert II’s mother, American actress Grace Kelly, who became Princess of Monaco after marrying Prince Rainier III. She used the reference to deliver a stinging rebuke to the crude tone of certain elements of public and political discourse in the U.S.


“There are probably few places in the world where the word ‘grace’ has more resonance than it does here in Monaco,” she said. “Much of what is being said in the world today, and especially much of what currently comes out of the country that I call home, is notable for its utter lack of grace, so I am especially honored and especially pleased to be here with you in this place where, as I have said, grace lives so deeply in all of you here.” The reference to Kelly elicited loud applause from the Monegasque audience.


Hargitay added: “Going forward I want to challenge myself and all of us to speak with grace – to use the platforms and the voices that we have been given to elevate the voices of those who might not otherwise be heard. To speak with courage and conviction and confidence about what is most important to us, and, perhaps most importantly, to listen. Simply to listen. I think the gift of letting someone tell their story may be the most grace-filled gift that we can give.”


Also on stage at the ceremony was Anne Sweeney, a director on Netflix’s board, and former president of Disney/ABC Television Group, who is president of the fest’s fiction jury.


The evening ended with the world premiere screening of the first episode of Amazon Prime Original’s “Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan” in the presence of cast members John Krasinski (who also serves as executive producer), Dina Shihabi and Wendell Pierce, alongside series creators, showrunners and executive producers Carlton Cuse and Graham Roland.

Sunday, June 17, 2018

Mariska Hargitay Praises #MeToo in Monte-Carlo TV Honors

From:thehollywoodreporter.com
by Rhonda Richford


The ceremony also hosted the world premiere of 'Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan' with John Krasinski and Carlton Cuse.

Mariska Hargitay reflected on the way sexual harassment and assault has changed in the 20 years she’s been playing tough cop Olivia Benson on Law & Order: Special Victims Unit when accepting a career award at the Monte-Carlo Television Festival.

“What a changed world it is since I started the show,” she said, making a nod to #MeToo and other social movements since the Harvey Weinstein scandal surfaced.

“I express my deepest thanks to the many women and the many men, some of whom I’ve worked alongside, especially those whose extraordinary acts of courage have brought about the recent seismic shifts in the way that our society addresses and understands sexual violence,” she said.

She turned to honor the late Princess Grace after being presented the trophy by her son, the reigning Prince Albert.

“There are probably few places in the world where the word ‘grace’ has more resonance than it does here in Monaco,” she said. “Much of what is being said in the world today and especially much of what currently comes out of the country I call home is notable for its utter lack of grace, so I am especially honored to be here in this place where grace lives so deeply in all of you.”

The Law & Order: SVU star also thanked prolific producer and creator Dick Wolf for giving her the role that has defined her career. “You have given me so much and made so much possible for me,” she said, citing her public voice and platform on issues of sexual violence.

Prince Albert also cited her work on those issues and her Joyful Heart Foundation in praising her pursuits. He called her a “brilliant actress and an outstanding person.”

Hargitay called on the audience to take on a spirit of activism. “I want to challenge myself and challenge all of us to speak with grace to use the platforms and the voices we have been given to elevate the voices of those that might not otherwise be heard,” she said.

The opening ceremony also hosted the world premiere of Amazon’s Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan with stars John Krasinski, Wendell Pierce and Dina Shihabi presenting the first episode of the spy thriller alongside creators Carlton Cuse and Graham Roland.

Krasinski said that having the world premiere in Monaco demonstrated what an international show Jack Ryan is, and a reflection of the world today. “It not only goes all around the world, I think it appeals to a lot of the politics and geopolitical stuff that is going on in the world,” he said.

That was before French comedian Armelle seemingly mixed up the Jack Ryan castmembers, leaving those onstage and in the audience equally confused if it was a bit or she was simply starstruck.

Prince Albert also introduced the jury, including Netflix board member and former Disney/ABC Group president Anne Sweeney, The OA star Jason Isaacs, Deutschland 83 creator Joerg Winger, Narcos actress Ana de la Reguera and Heroes Reborn actor Jimmy Jean-Louis.

 



‘Law & Order: SVU’ Star Mariska Hargitay Praises MeToo Movement in Monte Carlo TV Festival Speech

From: variety.com




“Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” star Mariska Hargitay praised those in the MeToo movement who had spoken out against sexual assault when she spoke Friday on stage at the opening ceremony of the 58th Monte Carlo Television Festival. The Emmy and Golden Globe-winning actress was in the Principality of Monaco to receive the festival’s Crystal Nymph Award, given to an actor each year in recognition of an outstanding career.

Hargitay’s honor was awarded in part due to her advocacy work for victims of sexual assault, domestic violence and child abuse through the Joyful Heart Foundation, which she founded in 2004. In presenting her the award, Prince Albert II of Monaco, who opened the festival as its honorary president, described her as a “brilliant actress and an outstanding personality.”

Hargitay thanked Dick Wolf, creator and executive producer of “Law & Order: SVU” and Honorary Consul to Monaco, for having “made so much possible for me.” Wolf later joined her on stage.

Hargitay said: “What I am most grateful for is that I have been given a platform and a voice to speak about the things that are important to me, and a platform and a voice that have allowed me to contribute to bringing positive change into the world, and my goodness what a changed world this is since I started the show.”

Referring to the MeToo movement, she said: “I express my deepest thanks to the many women and the many men alongside who I have worked, and especially those whose extraordinary acts of courage have brought the recent seismic shifts in the way that our society addresses and understands sexual violence.”

With a faltering voice, struggling to keep her emotions in check, Hargitay referred to Prince Albert II’s mother, American actress Grace Kelly, who became Princess of Monaco after marrying Prince Rainier III. She used the reference to deliver a stinging rebuke to the crude tone of certain elements of public and political discourse in the U.S.

“There are probably few places in the world where the word ‘grace’ has more resonance than it does here in Monaco,” she said. “Much of what is being said in the world today, and especially much of what currently comes out of the country that I call home, is notable for its utter lack of grace, so I am especially honored and especially pleased to be here with you in this place where, as I have said, grace lives so deeply in all of you here.” The reference to Kelly elicited loud applause from the Monegasque audience.

Hargitay added: “Going forward I want to challenge myself and all of us to speak with grace – to use the platforms and the voices that we have been given to elevate the voices of those who might not otherwise be heard. To speak with courage and conviction and confidence about what is most important to us, and, perhaps most importantly, to listen. Simply to listen. I think the gift of letting someone tell their story may be the most grace-filled gift that we can give.”

Also on stage at the ceremony was Anne Sweeney, a director on Netflix’s board, and former president of Disney/ABC Television Group, who is president of the fest’s fiction jury.

The evening ended with the world premiere screening of the first episode of Amazon Prime Original’s “Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan” in the presence of cast members John Krasinski (who also serves as executive producer), Dina Shihabi and Wendell Pierce, alongside series creators, showrunners and executive producers Carlton Cuse and Graham Roland.

Thursday, June 14, 2018

‘Law & Order: SVU’ Star Mariska Hargitay to Be Honored at Monte Carlo TV Festival

From: variety.com
By




Following in the footsteps of recipients such as Helen Mirren and Donald Sutherland, “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” star Mariska Hargitay will be presented with the Monte Carlo Television Festival’s top award — the Crystal Nymph — at its opening ceremony on June 15.

Hargitay, who plays Lt. Olivia Benson in the long-running NBC series, has won the lead drama actress Emmy and a Golden Globe along the way, as well as grabbing seven other Emmy nominations and six SAG noms. She is also an exec producer of the show and has directed multiple episodes.

According to the festival, the Golden Nymph award recognizes a “stellar body of work by a major international actor or actress.” As such, it’s one that Hargitay deserves, says Dick Wolf, the creator and executive producer of the “Law & Order” franchise.

“This is a long overdue award for Mariska. She is an Emmy and Golden Globe-winning actress but she has also become an advocate for victims of sexual assault,” he says.

Wolf cites her work for the Joyful Heart Foundation, which she founded in 2004, having become aware through her role on “Law & Order” of the challenges facing survivors of trauma.

The Joyful Heart Foundation provides support to survivors of sexual assault, domestic violence and child abuse. At the heart of its advocacy work is the End the Backlog campaign, which aims to eliminate the backlog of hundreds of thousands of untested rape kits sitting in storage across America. Hargitay produced “I am Evidence,” an HBO documentary film on the topic that premiered in April.

“I’m thrilled Laurent [Puons, Monte Carlo Television Festival chief executive] and the festival have selected Mariska for this prestigious honor,” says Wolf, who is also an honorary consul of Monaco.

Given Hargitay’s long association with “Law & Order: SVU,” the award is also a recognition of the show, which has run for 19 seasons. Wolf points out that it is the second-longest-running drama in U.S. television history, after “Law & Order” and “Gunsmoke,” which are tied at 20 seasons apiece.

“We have been very lucky. We have Mariska and incredibly talented actors, including Ice-T, who has been on the show for 18 years. And our writers, including current showrunner Michael Chernuchin, have continually created stories that reflect these very serious issues and have made a positive impact on our society,” Wolf says.

Hargitay will be presented with the Crystal Nymph by Prince Albert II, honorary president of the festival, as part of the opening ceremony.

“It will be a great moment of the festival,” says Puons. “Mariska has been successfully making ‘Law & Order: Special Victims Unit’ for the past 19 years and she very much deserves to receive this Nymph in honor of her wonderful career.”

Wolf adds: “Her commitment to her craft, as well as her tireless work for victims’ rights, puts her in a class by herself. I am thrilled that she is being acknowledged as one of television’s most iconic performers.”

Friday, June 8, 2018

Mariska Hargitay opens up about work-life balance: 'There are days I go home and just cry'

From: foxnews.com
By Morgan M. Evans | Fox News


 
 
Long-time "SVU" star Mariska Hargitay confesses to the difficulty of maintaining a normal work-life while working on her famous TV series.  (NBC)
 
"Law and Order: Special Victim Unit" icon Mariska Hargitay has starred in more than 400 episodes of the popular NBC show for nearly 20 years. But the actress recently opened up about the difficulty of maintaining a healthy work-life balance.
 
“It’s hard. I’m not going to say it’s easy, it’s hard. I’m learning to [balance]. I try to be super present with where I am,” Hargitay, who plays Lieutenant Olivia Benson on the hit series told Us Weekly at the Beverly Hills Paley Center on Monday. “When I’m at work, I’m at work. When I’m with my kids, I’m with my kids.”
 
But the Emmy-winning actress admitted that things are easier said than done.
“There are days I go home and just cry," she confessed. "There have been days when I didn’t see my kids. Those are the days I’m, like, ‘Maybe I’m done. But now, this is a gift of doing something for 20 years. We’re such a well-oiled machine. I go in there and I’m like, Guys, I’ve got a kids thing. I’m out.’ They’re like, ‘Got it, boom.’”
 
And though times can be tough for Hargitay, the 54-year-old TV star said she gets a lot of help and support from her husband, Peter Hermann.
 
“I have an incredible support system with my husband. He’s an actor so he also understands,” she said. “I try to keep it organic. The kids come to set all the time. I've worked out my schedule a bit that I have a little more flexibility. I have a great time behind me.”
  
Hargitay, who rose to fame playing a sex victims detective on the NBC show, recently showed her support for real-life assault victims after Bill Cosby was convicted on sexual assault charges in April.
 
Letting the Cosby accusers know that she was on their side, the actress tweeted on April 26, "To the survivors of his abuse, and to all survivors — whether you receive justice swiftly or many years down the road, know that we see you, we hear you, and we believe you. You matter and what happened to you matters.”


Though Hargitay has no personal connection to the Cosby trial, the long-time "Law & Order" actress is an active advocate for victims of sexual assault, like her famed NBC character.

Wednesday, June 6, 2018

Will Stabler & Barba Return to 'Law & Order: SVU'? Mariska Hargitay Weighs In

From: tvinsider.com



 
Next season, Law & Order: SVU is going to tie both Gunsmoke and Law & Order as the longest running primetime television drama, but the venerable NBC crime series isn’t sticking around to tie (and break) records. The show’s creative team is heavily invested in continuing to tell compelling stories, advocating for sexual assault victims everywhere.

On Monday, Bob Greenblatt, Chairman, NBC Entertainment, moderated a panel at the Paley Center for Media in Beverly Hills with program creator Dick Wolf and series star Mariska Hargitay (Lt. Olivia Benson), who also serves as the show’s executive producer.

The Emmy-winning actress spoke to TV Insider prior to the panel about why Olivia stays in the field, who might be coming back for a guest appearance next season, and more!

How important is it to you that Olivia, despite being the squad’s leader, is out in their in the field, tracking down perpetrators?

Mariska Hargitay: Very. I think she can’t help herself. She is so invested — like I am! I always like to fix everything because I’ve been there the longest. Also, as a producer and a mother, that’s our job. I’ve been doing it so long and I feel protective. [Olivia] needs to make sure her guys are safe, but there’s something in her you that makes her feel she can do it better. [Olivia] needs to be in the field. She needs get through to the victim because she thinks there’s a direct line with the survivor and herself.


The compassionate support that the detectives brought and continue to bring victims on SVU likely played a role in #MeToo. What do you think?

I’ve had many survivors say, 'I wish Olivia had been the detective on my case.' That’s something I’ve heard for 20 years.

How quickly can a headline in the real world make its way to air in an SVU episode?

That’s a good question. I believe within three months. We write it and we do it.

Has there been something that’s occurred in the real world that you haven’t gotten onto the show yet?

Yeah. But I can’t tell you yet because we’re doing it. We’re just doing it! And there’s nothing that we can’t talk about now because the culture has changed.



What’s the value of bringing back past favorite characters? It’s always an added bonus when viewers see a promo that will indicate, for example, Stephanie March is returning as Alex Cabot.

People have grown up on the show. This is three generations now. I’ll see a 13-year-old, a 23-year-old, and a 33-year-old who have all grown up on the show. There’s a familiarity with characters they know and trust. They know our relationships are still intact. They know that we’re still fighting the fight. There’s still so much value. It’s soothing for an audience’s soul to know that the guys are still fighting the good fight. And they’re all fantastic and great actors. We all have chemistry. We just do.

Will Raúl Esparza (Assistant D.A. Rafael Barba), who exited last season, be back?

Yes. I can promise you that.



What about Chris Meloni (Happy) returning for a guest spot as Elliot Stabler for the 20th anniversary season? Fans have loved you two together since day one. 

I don’t know anything, but I think SVU is going to go on for a while. He’s on a show right now and he’s super 'happy' — literally — he’s happy, I’m happy. I’ll speak for myself: I think it would be fun to have 'one last hurrah.'

And what about also seeing, as Elliot often referred to his family, 'Kathy and the kids'?
I would love to see Kathy and the kids! Let me thank you [for that suggestion]. I’m going to work on Kathy and the kids! In real-life, [Isabel Gillies, who plays Kathy] is one of my best friends.



Dick Wolf: ‘Law & Order: SVU’ opened door for #MeToo movement

From: pagesix.com

Dick Wolf, Mariska Hargitay and Robert Greenblatt
Brian To/Paley Center for Media
 
“Law & Order: SVU” frequently grabs its storylines from news headlines. But show creator Dick Wolf says the long-running NBC drama has also made a difference in real life by helping to give victims of sex crimes the courage to come forward.

“I think it’s opened the door into a multitude of conversations over the years. If you look at the #MeToo movement, she [pointing to series star Mariska Hargitay] founded it, a long time ago,” Wolf said Monday night during a panel discussion at the Paley Center for Media in Beverly Hills.

Wolf and Hargitay, who is also an executive producer on the series, sat down for a Q&A led by Robert Greenblatt, chairman of NBC Entertainment. The three discussed how the drama about a specially trained squad of NYPD detectives who investigate sexually related crimes has helped convey the message to survivors that rape is “not their fault.”

“We got to take the onus off the survivor and put it where it belongs, on the perpetrator,” Hargitay said. “It did change and it did give people the courage to come forward and realize, ‘Guess what, you’re not alone.’”

The series premiered in 1999 and has been on the air for nearly two decades. Last month, NBC renewed it for a 20th season, tying the record for longest-running drama series currently shared by Wolf’s original “Law & Order” and “Gunsmoke.”

“I’ve learned so much on the show in 19 years,” said Hargitay, whose character Olivia Benson has risen through the ranks from a detective to lieutenant.

Wolf revealed Hargitay landed the part after competing with about 100 other actresses. At the time, the actress had a development deal with NBC and had planned to do a sitcom for the network, but when she read the script for “SVU,” she was hooked.

“I said, ‘Get me out of my development deal.’ I’ve never loved anything more,” she said.
“SVU” currently airs in syndication on USA Network, Ion Television and Hulu. “It’s literally on all the time,” Greenblatt said to laughter. He also admitted those constant airings continue to introduce the show to younger viewers.

So what can viewers expect next season? Hargitay said she wants to delve deeper into the challenges of being a police lieutenant and single mother.

As for whether there will be one of those famous crossovers “SVU” does with Wolf’s Chicago-set series — “Chicago Med,” “Chicago Fire” and “Chicago P.D.?” After the event ended, Wolf said in an interview, “It’s much too early to tell.”

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