Hollywood legend Elizabeth Taylor dies at 79

(source: L.A.Times)



LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Legendary actress Elizabeth Taylor, whose violet eyes, tumultuous love life and passion for diamonds became a byword for Hollywood glamour, died on Wednesday at age 79.

The star of "Cleopatra" and "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" died at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles surrounded by her four children after a long battle with congestive heart failure, her spokeswoman said. She had been hospitalized six weeks ago.

In a career spanning seven decades, Taylor first gained fame in 1944's "National Velvet" at age 12 and was nominated for five Oscars. She won the best actress award for "BUtterfield 8" (1960) and "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" (1966) with actor Richard Burton, whom she would marry twice.

But Taylor's eight marriages, health problems, prescription medication addiction and ballooning weight often overshadowed her career and her fund-raising efforts for AIDS research.

Her death triggered an outpouring of tributes. "My mother was an extraordinary woman who lived life to the fullest, with great passion, humor, and love," Taylor's son Michael Wilding said.

"We have just lost a Hollywood giant. More importantly we have lost an incredible human being," British singer Elton John said in a statement.

Taylor was born on February 27, 1932, in London to American parents. She moved to the United States as a child and soon after her 10th birthday landed the lead in 1942 film "Lassie Come Home," followed by her turn as a young girl who tames the fury of a wild horse in "National Velvet."

She confirmed her star power in 1958 in Tennessee Williams' "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" and cemented her reputation as among the greatest actresses of her generation playing a foul-mouthed alcoholic in "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?"

GLAMOROUS HOLLYWOOD LIFE

But Taylor's fame went far beyond her screen life. After marriages to hotel magnate Conrad Hilton, British actor Michael Wilding and film producer Mike Todd in 1958, she found herself in a scandalous 1950s love triangle with singer Eddie Fisher Fisher and his wife actress Debbie Reynolds, before marrying Fisher.

While filming the lavish "Cleopatra" in Rome in 1961, she started a torrid affair with her married co-star Burton. The pair first wed in 1964 and Burton lavished her with furs and diamonds, including a $1 million pear-shaped jewel.

The actors also were famous for hurling invective at one another. "We enjoy fighting," Taylor once said. "Having an out-and-out, outrageous, ridiculous fight is one of the greatest exercises in marital togetherness."

As she grew older, the actress began drinking heavily and grew addicted to prescription drugs. Her weight ballooned and she was lampooned by comedians. In 1983 she entered the Betty Ford Center in California for treatment.

In the last few years, the once legendary beauty took to using a wheelchair in public to cope with crippling back pain. Her last movie was the 1994 live action comedy "The Flintstones" but she was still making appearances at charity events before being hospitalized in February.

Yet her White Diamonds perfume remains a best seller almost 20 years after its 1991 introduction, cosmetics company Elizabeth Arden said on Wednesday.

She was first diagnosed with congestive heart failure in 2004. She also had three hip replacement operations, a benign brain tumor, skin cancer, pneumonia and heart surgery.

Flowers will be laid at her star on Hollywood's Walk of Fame later on Wednesday.

The American Foundation for AIDS Research (amFAR), of which Taylor was founding national chairman, said she was "without doubt one of the most inspirational figures in the fight against AIDS. She was among the first to speak out on behalf of people living with HIV when others reacted with fear and often outright hostility."

Among Taylor's close friends was pop star Michael Jackson, whom she befriended while he was growing up and whom she staunchly defended as he was tried and acquitted on child molestation charges.

In May 2000, Taylor received the title "Dame," the female equivalent of a knighthood, from Queen Elizabeth.

She died surrounded by her children, Michael Wilding, Christopher Wilding, Liza Todd, and Maria Burton. In addition to her children, she is survived by 10 grandchildren and 4 great-grandchildren.

Star Smile mad

Complete Integration Of Google Voice And 50 Million Sprint Customers, Plus 4G Nexus S

(source: TechCrunch)

This is the biggest news about Google Voice since the company behind it, previously called Grand Central, was acquired by Google in 2007. They’ve integrated with Sprint. What that means is you are one of Sprint’s 50 million U.S. customers, your Sprint phone number is now also a Google Voice number. And If you’re already a Google Voice subscriber, you can use that number on your Sprint phone without the need for any software. Details are at google.com/voice/sprint.

Here’s how it works. If you are currently a Sprint customer, you can opt in to make that Sprint phone number your Google Voice phone number. This isn’t number porting, Sprint retains control of your number. They simply tell Google when you make or receive calls, and forward that call to other phones if you’ve chosen those options. Google also takes over the voicemail for the phone, and long distance calls are completed by Google at Google’s very low international rates.
In other words, if you have a Sprint phone you can choose to make that a Google Voice phone as well. And get all the benefits of Google Voice, like having it ring to any phone you control, initiating and receiving calls from Gmail, hilarious voicemail transcriptions, etc.

And the partnership is two way as well. If you already have a Google Voice phone number, you can have your Sprint mobile phone make outbound calls using that number as well. Previously you had to use a Google Voice app, or initiate phone calls through a mobile web browser, to make that happen.
This kind of integration is far more useful to users, and far less painful to set up, than number porting, which Google launched earlier this year.
And if that’s not enough, Google is also announcing today the availability of its first 4G and CDMA version of the Nexus S Android phone, available with Sprint.
This Is Meaningful
This is a meaningful partnership. Not just for Sprint users, who can now have the benefits of Google Voice and use their phone number anywhere they want. The carriers have rarely done much that makes sense for their users. The fact that Sprint is willing to give up control of the phone number for those who want to use Google Voice shows that there is actual competition breaking out in the U.S. mobile world, and a willingness to try bold new things to differentiate products. I’ve had my issues with Sprint in the past, but this is a brilliant move by them.



Star Smile mad

Fresh Rumors: iPhone 5 To Have Metal Back, NFC?

(source: Mashable)

More scuttlebutt about the iPhone 5 just surfaced, with rumors of a metal back and near-field communication capabilities heading the list.
No more glass back? If rumors are true, the iPhone 5′s dorsal side will evolve into a metal back similar to the very first iPhone (that’s not a picture of the iPhone 5 above — it’s an iPhone 4 with a metal sticker on the back — update: I’m told it’s a metal backing, thanks, commenters!). That’s according to a reliable source at Foxconn, the Chinese manufacturer that builds iPhones and such, who tattled the tantalizing tidbit to 9 to 5 Mac.
Notice we’re not saying what kind of metal it is. It could be aluminum, but there’s also talk of Liquidmetal, that futuristic substance that’s as easy to work with (and as lightweight) as plastic, but strong as aluminum. A few weeks ago we gave Liquidmetal a 10% chance of appearing in the MacBook Pro, and we’re still thinking it’s a little soon for it to appear on the iPhone. We’re betting on aluminum for the iPhone 5, with Liquidmetal making its appearance in a later version.
Incidentally, 9 to 5 Mac is again hearing those rumors about a larger screen on the iPhone 5, but its sources are not as specific about the size of the screen as those who reported to DigiTimes that the iPhone 5 would have a 4-inch screen. Given all the chatter about a larger screen — and the increasing screen size of the iPhone’s competitors — we’re thinking it’s likely that the iPhone 5 will have a significantly larger screen that probably stretches out from one edge of the iPhone 5 to the other.
What about NFC? An on-again/off-again rumor of the iPhone 5 containing near-field communication (otherwise known as “wave and pay” chips) has now returned. Earlier in the week, the scuttlebutt was that Apple decided against including NFC in the iPhone 5 because of worries about the lack of a clear standard for NFC.
Now we’re hearing something different from Elizabeth Woyke of Forbes magazine, who says an Apple employee leaked information about how the iPhone 5 will have NFC. If it does, it will probably link its payments through iTunes, and given Apple’s reluctance to jump into the NFC fold because of a lack of standards, embrace some sort of proprietary technology that the company hopes all others will follow.

Star Smile mad

Tag Cloud