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Articles in March, 2004 issue of Interview
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Department of alternative career planning
by Roberta Paterson -
Regina Spektor: what the strokes have wrought
by Tracey Hummer -
John Waters: the den mother of society's weird and wonderful outcasts gets a hanging. Selma Blair asks the questions
by Selma Blair -
Wilbur Wants to Kill Himself
by Andrea Meyer -
Charlize Theron: given the chance to show what she can do, this actress emerged not only with a great performance, but with a reminder of why acting is a great art
by Ingrid Sischy -
Vito Schnabel: he could be the next great art dealer, but first he has other things to doincluding college
by Joey Einhorn -
The Vines Winning Days
by Milena Selkirk -
Spartan
by Henry Cabot Beck -
Splashion: what happens when you combine a dash of art, a dollop of fashion, and a stroke of genius?
by Tony Moxham -
Drama class
by Peter McGough -
Elbow: these soulful art rockers aren't just drawing crowdsthey're moving bodies
by Chris Martin -
TV on the Radio Desperate Youth, Blood Thirsty Babes
by Jonathan Durbin -
Broken Lizard's Club Dread
by Jarret McNeill -
Glass slippers: Cinderella would have maxed out her credit card
by Richard Dorment -
Samantha Morton: from a private life filled with unexpected turns to a career fueled by taking risks, this actress is no friend of convention, here, she compares notes with another performer who lives and works outside the box
by Lili Taylor - Still pretty baby
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Romola Garai: her personal history reads like a Jane Austen novel. Now she's taking her adventures to Hollywood
by Scott Lyle Cohen -
The snow show: a crazy idea finally has its day, and artists and architects get to play
by Gregory Rossi -
The Dreamers
by Dimitri Ehrlich -
Letter from the editor March 2004
by Ingrid Sischy -
Will Kemp: when he danced he dared to take unexpected turns and great leaps. Bets are he'll do this again in his next life as an actor
by Angela Matusik -
Courtney Love America's Sweetheart
by Stephen Mooallem -
Starsky & Hutch
by Susan Johnston -
Kenneth Cole: how to succeed at designing clothes and redesigning the status quo. Artist Barbara Kruger, a seer when it comes to words and images, talks to the man who uses them brilliantly
by Barbara Kruger -
Blondie: with the music industry desperately in need of a shot of adrenaline, rock 'n' roll's first platinum punks are back to prove, once again, that for music to be popular, it need not be predictable
by Tim Blanks - Mac is back
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Sondre Lerche: sunny California lounge pop from the land of endless winter nights
by Britt Schoenhoff -
Zuleikha Robinson: tired of cookie-cutter ingenues? Here's the antidote
by Erica Abeel -
Good Bye, Lenin!
by Richard Dorment -
Josh Groban: so how did Josh Groban manage to woo millions of hearts with just his set of prodigious pipes?
by Renee Fleming -
Evan Rachel Wood: not since 12-year-old Jodie Foster's turn in Taxi Driver has a kid made jaws drop the way Evan Rachel Wood did in last year's Thirteen. But that was just the beginning
by Richard Dorment -
John Frusciante Shadows Collide With People
by Jonathan Durbin -
Hidalgo
by Henry Cabot Beck -
Karole Armitage: it's hard enough to keep a dance company afloat, let alone keep in perfect step with the times for more than two decades. This still-radical choreographer has done both
by David Salle -
Heath Ledger: how does a young actor with smarts help his audience get over annoying details like his pinup factor? By throwing himself headfirst into roles that require more than a pretty face
by Paul Bettany -
Windswept and wonderful: this year optimism is the most beautiful trend in fashion
by Richard Dorment -
The Von Bondies Pawn Shoppe Heart
by Tom Lanham -
The Girl Next Door
by Bob Nicol -
Tim Robbins: in 1981, he co-founded the theater troupe the actors' gang to bring a greater social conscience to the stage. More than two decades later, with the gang's production about the war in Iraq running in New York, he's still offering up grist for
by Jack Black -
Neon nights
by Patrick McMullan -
Not just Wednesdaybut Saturday night too
by Carl F. Allen, Jr. -
Neil Young: rock's legendary rabble-rouser certainly has some storiesperhaps none more intriguing than the one surrounding his new film, a musical morality tale. Jim Jarmusch gets the goods
by Jim Jarmusch -
Kristin Kreuk: attention Canada's new prime minister: if this actress writes you a letter, answer it
by Rebecca Wallwork -
Noi
by Andrea Meyer -
Anna Faris: her send-up of celebrity vapidness in last year's Lost in Translation had audiences asking, "who is she?" but from her earliest days as a schoolyard loner to her accidental career in comedy, she's been surprising everybody, including
by Sandra Bernhard -
The request line
by Josh Cooley -
Norah Jones Feels Like Home
by Dimitri Ehrlich -
Tom Hardy: last year, he was named outstanding newcomer to the London stage. This year, he's hoping the accolades will follow him across the Atlantic
by Mark Simon Burk -
Shots in the dark: the love-it-or-hate-it hot button of last year's film festivals finally gets its day in the theaters
by Graham Fuller -
Stripe out!
by Ilan Rubin
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