Tea Leoni

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Téa Leoni Opens Up About Divorcing David Duchovny Last Year: "On Occasion, I Want To Throttle Him"


Tea Leoni

Last August Tea Leoni and David Duchovny officially ended their 17-year marriage for good as they reportedly got divorced three years after splitting up, and six months on the 48-year-old actress is truly happy as a single woman.

Tea Leoni
Duchovny and Leoni finalized their divorce in August 2014

While speaking with More magazine's March issue, of which she features on the front cover, Leoni opens up about life after divorce and finally coming to terms with getting older, which is something she used to constantly worry over.

Continue reading: Téa Leoni Opens Up About Divorcing David Duchovny Last Year: "On Occasion, I Want To Throttle Him"

Tea Leoni Breaks Silence On David Duchovny Divorce: "I Don't Know How I Could Ever Hate Him"


Tea Leoni

Tea Leoni and David Duchovny, who tied the knot back in 1997, have had a rather up and down relationship in the last several years. They initially separated in 2008 while the 'X-Files' star entered rehab to seek treatment for sex addiction, but the pair reconciled shortly after, and then split for a second time three years later in 2011.

David Duchovny
Duchovny and Leoni split for the second time in 2011

Their 17-year marriage became officially over in June of this year when Duchovny secretly filed divorce papers, citing "citing an irretrievable breakdown of the relationship," as the reason of their separation.

Continue reading: Tea Leoni Breaks Silence On David Duchovny Divorce: "I Don't Know How I Could Ever Hate Him"

FRIENDS: The Stars Who Auditioned For Monica, Ross, Rachel, Chandler And Joey.


Jennifer Aniston Courteney Cox Tea Leoni David Schwimmer

Who could possibly imagine anyone other than Courteney Cox donning a fat suit for the iconic Monica dance? Would Ross and Rachel have been suitably odd, yet totally perfect together if anyone other than David Schwimmer and Jennifer Aniston had bagged the roles? To join our ‘Alternate Cast’ series we take a look a selection of other actors who tried out for the roles of the much-loved FRIENDS cast.

friends alternate cast Can you imagine anyone other than Jennifer Aniston playing Rachel?

American movie star Tea Leoni was believed to be the producers’ first choice to play Rachel Green. However, Tea passed on the role and went on to star in The Naked Truth. The show only ran for three seasons but allowed Tea a lead role as opposed to FRIENDS, where she would have had to share the limelight with five other actors. She’s since gone onto to star in a string of Hollywood films, so we don’t think she suffered too much from turning down Rachel.

Continue reading: FRIENDS: The Stars Who Auditioned For Monica, Ross, Rachel, Chandler And Joey.

Tower Heist Trailer


 

Josh Kovacs has been a resident in Queens for more than ten years; in that time, he has acquired and lived in one of New York City's most secured and lavish apartments. He works for the Wall Street billionaire Arthur Shaw, who just so happens to live above Josh, in a swanky penthouse flat, making him the wealthiest resident there.

One day, Arthur is convicted of stealing two billion dollars from his investors and he is placed under house arrest. The investors he stole from turn out to be Josh and his crew; Arthur has taken their pensions that they entrusted him to manage. Josh is forced to admit that his retirement fund was taken too.

Josh and his crew form a plan to take back their pension fund, which they think is hidden in Arthur's penthouse. They call upon a petty robber, Slide, to help them, who in turn hires his team of amateur thieves, to scout the penthouse. It turns out that the crooks know the layout of that particular apartment, so taking the two billion back should be a cinch, right?

Starring: Ben Stiller, Eddie Murphy, Matthew Broderick, Casey Affleck, Tea Leoni, Michael Pena, Gabourey Sidibe, Alan Alda, Nina Arianda, Judd Hirsch and Marcia Jean Kurtz

Tea Leoni Wednesday 3rd December 2008 2008 UNICEF Snowflake Ball New York City, USA

Tea Leoni

Tea Leoni Tuesday 27th November 2007 The 2007 UNICEF Snowflake Ball at Cipriani 42nd Street - Arrivals New York City, USA

Tea Leoni

Deep Impact Review


Very Good
I admit it. I'm a sap for the touchy-feely business sometimes.

Deep Impact makes no apologies for being a sob-fest. I mean, how else do you smash a comet into the earth without killing off a few hundred million people, and breaking a few hearts in the process? As the first disaster-from-space film of the year, Deep Impact sets the bar at an interesting level. It's not an action film, although it has action elements. It's not a thriller, although suspense is in the mix. It's more a drama than anything else, the main story lines being a reporter (Téa Leoni) estranged from her father, a young astronomer (Wood) who finds he can't abandon his girlfriend, and a codgery astronaut (Robert Duvall) who gains acceptance among a younger crew.

Continue reading: Deep Impact Review

Hollywood Ending Review


Good

While it is getting harder and harder to indulge an aging Woody Allen's enduring fantasy of beautiful young women falling in love with him in his movies, the man's comedy instincts are as sharp as ever in "Hollywood Ending."

The sophisticated screwball jaunt stars Allen as washed-up movie director Val Waxman, whose hypochondria reaches new extremes when he's rescued from deodorant commercial hell by his producer ex-wife (Tea Leoni) and given one last shot by making a $60 million blockbuster. Panicked at the prospect of making or breaking his career -- not to mention working for his ex and the Hollywood greaseball she left him for -- Val goes psychosomatically blind.

Rather than quit the picture and doom himself to showbiz purgatory, he decides he just won't let on. He'll wing it and hope his cast and crew see his apparent ineptitude as visionary eccentricity.

Continue reading: Hollywood Ending Review

The Family Man Review


OK

Nicolas Cage makes a gosh-darn good Jimmy Stewart substitute in "The Family Man," starring as a Wall Street playboy taught a lesson in life priorities when he gets Frank Capra-ed into an alternative suburban reality that includes a wife, kids, a minivan, a mortgage and a job selling tires for his father-in-law.

His performance is superb as Jack Campbell, a toplofty workaholic millionaire of the new economy who is utterly baffled by waking up one morning next to the college sweetheart (Téa Leoni), whom he'd abandoned to pursue his career 13 years before.

How did he get there? Well, after stiff-arming his ornamental girlfriend on Christmas eve and ordering an emergency merger meeting for dinner time the next day, Jack catches the eye of some kind of cryptic seraph (Don Cheadle) by intervening in a convenience store hold up. When he tells Cheadle he has everything he could ever want in life, the busybody celestial spirit decides Jack's karma needs a realignment and sends him whirling into a world of What Might Have Been.

Continue reading: The Family Man Review

Jurassic Park III Review


OK

In 1993, the first "Jurassic Park" took Hollywood's first giant step into the world of computer generated special effects, rendering from scratch huge life-like dinosaurs that genuinely interacted with the humans they chased and chowed on. There were a few tell-tale signs of CGI style that savvy audiences now recognize (soft-focusy skin on some critters, for example). But there wasn't a movie-goer on Earth who wasn't agog at how real those dinos looked.

CGI effects have evolved exponentially in the last eight years and in "Jurassic Park III" the movie's biggest stars are so seamless blended and thoroughly convincing that the very concept of these ancient beasts being a special effect barely even crosses your mind. It only occurred to me once, for about 10 seconds, during a fight between a Tyrannosaurus Rex and this movie's even bigger, meaner baddie called Spinosaurus. Half way through the furious dust-up, it hit me: "Holy cow, these things aren't real!"

I might not even have thought about the effects at all except for being drawn to the extreme deliberateness of the movie's big-budget post-production by the over-amped, over-bearing, Dolby'd-to-death sound effects, apparently designed to shatter eardrums.

Continue reading: Jurassic Park III Review

Tea Leoni

Tea Leoni Quick Links

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Tea Leoni

Date of birth

25th February, 1966

Occupation

Actor

Sex

Female

Height

1.70




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Tea Leoni Movies

Tower Heist Trailer

Tower Heist Trailer

Josh Kovacs has been a resident in Queens for more than ten years; in...

Fun With Dick and Jane, Trailer Trailer

Fun With Dick and Jane, Trailer Trailer

Fun With Dick and Jane Trailer StreamsIn Columbia Pictures and Imagine Entertainment's holiday comedy Fun...

Deep Impact Movie Review

Deep Impact Movie Review

I admit it. I'm a sap for the touchy-feely business sometimes.Deep Impact makes no...

Hollywood Ending Movie Review

Hollywood Ending Movie Review

While it is getting harder and harder to indulge an aging Woody Allen's enduring fantasy...

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The Family Man Movie Review

The Family Man Movie Review

Nicolas Cage makes a gosh-darn good Jimmy Stewart substitute in "The Family Man," starring as...

Jurassic Park III Movie Review

Jurassic Park III Movie Review

In 1993, the first "Jurassic Park" took Hollywood's first giant step into the world of...

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