
‘General Hospital's' Jack Wagner says keeping separate homes with new wife ‘works' for them
Wagner and Wolf agreed not to 'rock the boat' and stick to the routine they formed while dating as they take on marriage.
'It's an adjustment in terms of my schedule, for sure, right? And Michelle's a singer, and she has an R&B rock band, so she's just a monster singer. We're able to make it work,' Wagner said in an interview with Parade.
The soap opera star admitted that neither party has 'really changed anything' in their relationship.
'It's kind of cool, you know? She has her place. I still have mine. We're both super comfortable in our places and going back and forth, and so we've decided, let's not rock the boat and sell this and sell that and try to find something,' he said.
'The Bold and the Beautiful' actor continued, 'We take a couple nights off, and then we trade off who's going to be where because I think we both know that the older we are, it's nice to have a little space. Not too much, but it's okay! It works.'
Wagner and Wolf began dating in 2021, according to People.
The outlet reported that Wolf shared an image from their wedding day on her Instagram account, which is now private.
4 Newlyweds Jack Wagner and Michelle Wolf don't plan on moving in together.
AFF-USA / Shutterstock
4 Wagner is a three-time Daytime Emmy Award nominee.
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'We did it!!!!!! MARRIED in front of our little family!! #MrAndMrs,' Wolf wrote, per People. In the photo was herself with her new husband, Wagner's son, Peter, and her daughter, Ornella.
Wagner and his ex-wife Kristina shared two sons.
Their son, Harrison, died in 2022 from 'fentanyl and alprazolam intoxication,' the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner-Coroner told Fox News Digital at the time.
4 Wagner and his ex-wife Kristina shared two sons. Their youngest, Harrison, died in 2022 from 'fentanyl and alprazolam intoxication.'
WireImage
4 The cast of 'The Bold and the Beautiful' smiled for a photo while on set in Naples.
IPA / SplashNews.com
He was 27.
His death in June 2022 was listed as an 'accident' in the coroner's report. Xanax is a common brand name for alprazolam.
Jack and Kristina were married for 13 years before their divorce was finalized in 2006.
Following Jack's divorce, he was in a longtime romance with Heather Locklear beginning in 2007.
The couple, who worked together on 'Melrose Place' in the '90s, became engaged in 2011 but called off their nuptials only three months later.
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Scarlett Johansson Always Wanted to Star in a ‘Jurassic' Movie. Her Dream Has Finally Come True
"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." 1984–present Scarlett Johansson is finally fulfilling a lifelong dream. The Oscar-nominated actor stars in Jurassic World Rebirth—a gig she's been after for over a decade. Picking up after the events of 2022's Jurassic World Dominion, the new installment arrived to theaters July 2 and sees Johansson portray a covert operations expert tasked with obtaining dinosaur DNA for a potential medical breakthrough. A lifelong Jurassic fan, the 40-year-old told The Hollywood Reporter it feels 'unbelievable' to be involved in the franchise after all this time. 'I've been trying to get into a Jurassic movie for, I don't know, 15 years or something. I was so stoked that it all came together,' she said. Being such a superfan, however, did pose a bit of a challenge for her on set. 'I had to compartmentalize my nervous excitement for the job in front of me while also focusing on making it work,' Johansson added. 'I would have these really geeked out, fangirl moments and then be, like, 'OK, put that away for a second.'' Actor Scarlett Johansson is known for her Oscar-nominated performances in Marriage Story and JoJo Rabbit, as well as her recurring role as Marvel's Black Widow. Johansson began acting as a child, gaining critical acclaim for her role in The Horse Whisperer at age 13. She achieved widespread recognition with her impressive performances in the 2003 romantic movies Lost in Translation and Girl with a Pearl Earring before entering the Marvel Cinematic Universe with the mega-hit The Avengers in 2012. In more recent years, Johansson has starred in films like Fly Me to the Moon, The Phoenician Scheme, and Jurassic World: Rebirth. She is married to Saturday Night Live comedian Colin Jost. FULL NAME: Scarlett Ingrid JohanssonBORN: November 22, 1984BIRTHPLACE: New York, New YorkSPOUSES: Ryan Reynolds (2008–2011), Romain Dauriac (2014–2017), and Colin Jost (2020–present)CHILDREN: Rose and CosmoASTROLOGICAL SIGN: Sagittarius Scarlett Ingrid Johansson was born on November 22, 1984, in the Manhattan borough of New York City. Her father, Karsten Johansson, is a Danish architect, and her mother, Melanie Sloan, is a producer and actor. She has a fraternal twin brother named Hunter, an older brother, Adrian, and an older sister, Vanessa. Scarlett also has an older half-brother, Christian, through her father's first marriage and later gained a younger sibling when her mother adopted her sister Fenan. Scarlett's interest in acting surfaced at an early age. At age 7, she began auditioning for commercials and started taking acting classes at The Lee Strasberg Theatre and Film Institute. When she was 8 years old, she appeared in an off-Broadway production of Sophistry with Ethan Hawke. Scarlett continued to seek out roles and decided to study at Manhattan's Professional Children's School, a private educational institution known for such famous acting alumni as Carrie Fisher, Rita Moreno, and Sarah Michelle Gellar. At PCS, the young Scarlett pursued her passion for musical theatre and even took tap dance lessons. 'I was a big song-and-dance type of kid—you know, one of those kids with jazz hands,' she told Interview Magazine in September 2013. 'I liked to improvise and do weird vocal exercises. I was a major ham.' Soon, she would be performing professionally. In 1994, Johansson landed her first paid acting role in a sketch on Late Night with Conan O'Brien before making her movie debut in the Rob Reiner comedy North. Recalling her first time on the set of North, she told New York Magazine in February 2004, 'For some reason, I just knew what to do, instinctively. It was like, I don't know… fate.' Her first leading part came two years later with Manny & Lo, an independent dramatic comedy. Johansson played the younger sister of a pregnant teenager, both of whom were in foster care. Her twin brother and sister, Vanessa, also appeared in the film. At 13 years old, Johansson first earned critical acclaim in the 1998 neo-Western The Horse Whisperer. Her portrayal of Grace MacLean, a young amputee, won over many fans, including the film's star and director Robert Redford. 'That film changed things for me in a lot of ways,' Johansson later recalled to Esquire in October 2013. 'I went through this realization that acting, at its heart, is the ability to manipulate your own emotions.' Following the success of her breakout performance, the young actor received even more attention with her supporting role in 2001's Ghost World, despite its tepid performance at the box office. After graduating high school in 2002, Johansson found herself as one of Hollywood's top up-and-coming actresses. She landed two starring roles in 2003, both of which garnered her critical accolades. In Lost in Translation, she played a woman visiting Tokyo who forms an unlikely relationship with a much older man, played by Bill Murray. Johansson also gave an impressive performance as a servant girl who is painted by famed artist Johannes Vermeer (Colin Firth) in Girl with a Pearl Earring. Both roles earned her Golden Globe nominations for Best Actress. Johansson took on a variety of projects after these early successes. In 2004, she appeared in A Love Song for Bobby Long opposite John Travolta, as a young woman trying to reclaim her deceased mother's house. Her performance secured her another Golden Globe nod for Best Actress. The following year, Johansson starred in the drama Match Point, in which she played a woman having an affair with a married tennis instructor. For the role, she scored her first Golden Globe nomination for Best Supporting Actress. Johansson later worked with director Brian De Palma on the 2006 crime thriller The Black Dahlia. After appearing in several dramas, Johansson tried her hand at comedy again in The Nanny Diaries (2007), playing a dysfunctional, wealthy couple's nanny. The following year, she appeared in Woody Allen's romantic comedy Vicky Cristina Barcelona, opposite Javier Bardem and Penelope Cruz. Turning to big-budget fare, Johansson, who stands at 5 feet, 3 inches, took on the role of the super agent Black Widow in Iron Man 2 (2010) opposite Robert Downey Jr. The action flick became one of the summer's big blockbusters and set the stage for her contributions to numerous films in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Johansson next appeared as Black Widow in the 2012 box-office smash The Avengers. The film also featured Downey as Iron Man, Chris Hemsworth as Thor, and Chris Evans as Captain America. The actor continued to hold down her high-profile role in a string of Marvel blockbusters, including Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014), Avengers: The Age of Ultron (2015), Captain America: Civil War (2016), Avengers: Infinity War (2018), and Avengers: Endgame (2019). Her involvement in the franchise proved highly lucrative, fueling her rise to the top spot in Forbes' ranking of the world's highest-paid actresses in 2018. Johansson flew solo for the first time in 2021's Black Widow, which received mostly positive reviews. Johansson remained busy outside of her commitments to Marvel. In 2011, she co-starred alongside Matt Damon in Cameron Crowe's dramatic comedy We Bought a Zoo. The following year, she took on the character of real-life film star Janet Leigh in Hitchcock, which explores the life of director Alfred Hitchcock during the making of the horror classic Psycho. 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Taking on another controversial project, Johansson also appeared in Taika Waititi's Jojo Rabbit (2019), as the mother of a 10-year-old boy in Nazi Germany who considers a goofy Adolf Hitler to be his imaginary best friend. The role scored her an Oscar nod for Best Supporting Actress, making her the 12th performer to receive double nominations in the same year. Two years later, she reprised her role as Ash in Sing 2. Johansson returned to the big screen in the 2023 Wes Anderson film Asteroid City, in which she played Midge Campbell, a lonely 1950s movie star. She reportedly took a huge pay cut for the role, earning just over $4,000 per week. The following year, Johansson starred alongside Channing Tatum in the romantic comedy Fly Me to the Moon, set against the backdrop of the 1969 moon landing. The film, which premiered in theaters and on Apple TV+, received mostly positive reviews. She later voiced Elita-1 in the animated series Transformers One. 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But when I was younger, a lot of the roles I was offered, or I went for, had their ambitions or character arcs revolving around their own desirability, or the male gaze, or a male-centered story. That is less frequent, though—something has shifted. I've been trying to get into a Jurassic movie for, I don't know, 15 years or something. I was so stoked that it all came together. Fact Check: We strive for accuracy and fairness. If you see something that doesn't look right, contact us! You Might Also Like Nicole Richie's Surprising Adoption Story The Story of Gypsy Rose Blanchard and Her Mother Queen Camilla's Life in Photos
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Adam Levine recalls getting 'slung' over bodyguard after confronting nightclub owner
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The director of 'Jurassic World Rebirth', Gareth Edwards, explains why he put Steven Spielberg easter eggs in the film
Director Gareth Edwards spoke to Business Insider about fulfilling a childhood dream by directing "Jurassic World Rebirth." Steven Spielberg, who directed the original "Jurassic Park," was heavily involved, leading Edwards to add several nostalgic elements. "Jurassic World Rebirth" is now in theaters. Kids often dream of becoming police officers or doctors. For "Jurassic World Rebirth" director Gareth Edwards, however, his childhood dream was a bit more specific: working with iconic director Steven Spielberg. And now it's finally come true with the latest in the dinosaur action film franchise. Edwards has found the Hollywood moviemaking sweet spot: directing major blockbusters that are also creatively satisfying. He found geek boy superstardom when he made the first-ever spin-off in the "Star Wars" franchise, 2016's "Rogue One: A Star Wars Story." It's gone on to be regarded as one of the best ever within the beloved galaxy far, far away (though he disagrees with that opinion). He followed that up by creating an original idea out of the studio system, a rarity these days, when he released 2023's "The Creator." The movie stars John David Washington as a special forces agent hired to hunt down and kill an AI. Now, Edwards is taking on the legacy IP genre by helming "Jurassic World Rebirth," out now. Taking place decades after the events of "Jurassic World Dominion," the story, penned by "Jurassic Park" screenwriter David Koepp, follows Scarlett Johansson as the leader of a team of operatives who travel to an island research facility to take genetic material from dinosaurs. For Edwards, making the movie checked off a childhood dream of working alongside Steven Spielberg, who was heavily involved in the filmmaking process. And it shows as "Rebirth" features several hat tips to the master, ranging from "Jurassic Park" to "Jaws." "I hate the word IP, but there are only two franchises I would absolutely drop everything for and just do them. I already did one of them with 'Star Wars,' and this was the other one," Edwards told Business Insider. "So when Steven gives you this script, you're just checkmated immediately. The idea that you turn Steven Spielberg down is impossible." BI spoke with Edwards while he was in New York City about the hourslong conversations he had with Spielberg while making the movie, his thoughts on "Rogue One" as it nears its 10th anniversary, and whether he'd ever consider making another "Star Wars" movie. Business Insider: So what led you to sign onto "Jurassic"? After "The Creator," I started the process of what am I going to do next. There was a thing in my mind that I was excited about. And in that process, a sequence from "Jurassic Park" entered my mind, and I forgot how they pulled it off, so I just put it on to get a refresher. I'm doing this with "Jurassic" and the next day my friend saw on the internet that Universal was looking for a director for a new "Jurassic" movie. So I sent that to my agent, and I just typed in the text with the link to the story, "Is this stupid?" hoping he'd say, "Yes, stay away." And hours later, my agent got back to me, and the ball started rolling. Be careful what you wish for. What I really enjoyed about "Rebirth" is its stand-alone feel. Was that intentional? It was in David Koepp's script. That's why I really liked it. What the best sequels have in common is that the first one didn't know it was part of a trilogy or the start of sequels. It was just this self-contained story. So that's the way to go, to try to tell the best film you can. It's then a high-class problem after that. And I'm not joking, but I haven't had a single conversation about a sequel with anyone from Universal or the producers. That was my follow-up. Nobody tapped you on the shoulder and suggested a more heavy-handed way to tease another movie? No. It was even a joke with the actors. But the movie also has a lot of nostalgia, with hat tips ranging from "Jurassic Park" to "Jaws. " Did that come organically? When I got the script, it felt like a magical ticket back to being a kid again. So a lot of that was already in there, and half of it I probably brought with me. I mean, you're making a movie for Amblin that features a giant creature in the water. Of course, you're going to lean into "Jaws." Yeah. The script said, "They're chasing a giant dinosaur in the water, on a boat, with a rifle leading out the front," and you're like, "Guys, I don't know if you've ever seen this movie called 'Jaws,' but I don't know how we escape those visuals." So it was a difficult situation, and the only way I got through it was this being a giant love letter to Steven Spielberg. Whenever there's a gap, I'm going to put something in that is a reflection of something from his movies that we love. You have now worked with two faces on the Mt. Rushmore of American cinema, George Lucas and Steven Spielberg. Compare and contrast working for them. Well, George had retired when we started "Rogue One," so he was totally happy for us to go do our thing. But I did have the more surreal moment of showing him around the set of "Rogue One." But what I did to take the pressure off myself, seeing I was doing a "Star Wars" spin-off, I was competing with the likes of the holiday special and Caravan of Courage, the Ewok adventure. So I jokingly framed those movie posters in my office as a reminder to me that I just have to do better than those. Then, one day I was told George is here, and he just walked into the office, and I was blown away. And as I was talking to him, I realized the posters on the wall. So I'm trying to be as animated as possible so he wouldn't look at the wall. Steven developed the story with David, so he was fully engaged from the start. He was in the meetings during preproduction. He would call me when I started shooting. He watched the dallies every day. We even sent him the first cut of the movie. I would have hour and a half phone calls with him giving me feedback. Were you prepared he'd be so hands-on? It was definitely the right amount, but going in I didn't know if I'd see him once or all the time. I didn't know how it was going to play out. And I remember on day one, the first meeting at Universal, I get there early, and the next person who walked in was Steven Spielberg. I'll never forget the first interaction I ever had with him. It was right after "Godzilla." I got an email from ["The Lord of the Rings" creator] Peter Jackson, and there's a video attached. I hit play and it's Steven Spielberg. Peter Jackson was filming Steven Spielberg at George Lucas' birthday party. Steven had just seen "Godzilla" and was saying really nice things about it, so Peter sent it to me. I watched it and collapsed and burst into tears. There are moments as a filmmaker where everything you're doing in your life, you ask, Why am I doing this? What is the goal? You don't know. That is the answer to why I'm doing this; for that moment, for that little video. We're coming close to 10 years of "Rogue One" coming out in theaters. Do you appreciate your contribution to "Star Wars"? It's arguably the best "Star Wars" movie since Disney bought Lucasfilm, and it's up there as one of the best out of all the movies. Can you appreciate that? I don't agree with it, but I appreciate it. I'm very grateful that people say nice things. But what's super interesting about it, which you have to keep in your pocket as you go through making other films, is that it's not about how people feel the day it gets released, it's how people feel about it 10, 20 years from now. When you make a movie, you're living at least a year from now. You're trying to imagine what it's like, all these decisions you're making, what they are going to be like a year from now when this movie is released. What's the audience going to think? And as the movie comes out, you go, "I'm going to pretend I'm living 10 years from now and it doesn't matter what people say in the moment." It's the kid who comes up to you 20 years from now and goes, "Oh my god, I loved that movie!" I think that's the reward. Would you ever go down that road of doing "Star Wars" again? It's the thing that was in my life before I knew what a film was. And so it's like your mom; it's like something so a part of you. I'm always fascinated by what they're doing. I never stop loving that trilogy, but I'm very happy to move on and do my thing. This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity. Read the original article on Business Insider