Sunday, November 24, 2013
PHOTO OF THE DAY : JOAN IS ALL HEAD IN THIS TALES!
Saturday, November 23, 2013
RADIO UPDATE : SATURDAY LIVE! BBC RADIO 4 .. NOVEMBER 23RD 2013...
Camila Batmanghelidjh, Joan Collins, Luke Wright, Charlie Higson, John McCarthy
Click link below to listen to Joan discuss her love of Camels.. Its 20mins in! ......
- Duration:
- 1 hour, 28 minutes http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b03j63jb
- Saturday 23 November
2013
- First broadcast:
Richard Coles and Anita Anand with Kids Company Founder Camila
Batmanghelidjh, The Inheritance Tracks of Charlie Higson, JP Devlin waxing
lyrical with actress Joan Collins, the willowy sound of a cricket bat being
fashioned, Ben Markus who was given, maybe, 12 months to live in January 2012 on
finding love and the strength to KBO ( keep battling on ), topical poetry from
Luke Wright and John McCarthy is joined by London writer Travis Elborough on a
trail through the capital to see the sites of sights you can't see any more.
They don't see the Euston Arch, old London Bridge, Vauxhall Pleasure Gardens or
Battersea Park Funfair.
Friday, November 22, 2013
PHOTO OF THE DAY : JOHN IS ALWAYS TOPS OF THE FASHION STAKES WITH JOAN AROUND!
Joan with John Galliano on the red carpet of the 1994 British Fashion Awards, where she presented John with his designer of the year award...
Thursday, November 21, 2013
TV ALERT : SUNDAY SCOOP! ... ITV 1 ... NOVEMBER 24TH .. 11.30 AM ..
EVENT UPDATE : ADVENTURE IN WONDERLAND IN AID OF GREAT ORMOND STREET & THE REUBEN FOUNDATION.. BRIDGEWATER HOUSE LONDON .. NOVEMBER 21ST 2013..

Joan now back in London after a busy time in New York hosted 'Adventure in Wonderland', a gala event a Bridgewater House to raise funds for Great Ormond Street Hospital and The Reuben Foundation..![]() |
| Joan & Percy with Tamara Beckwith & Joyce Reuben |
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| Joan Collins with Giorgio Veroni |
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| Joan addresses the patrons |
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
PHOTO OF THE DAY : WHICH JOAN IS WITCH!
As I featured a post on Joan's recent visit with school kids from PS 212 in New York to read 'Hansel & Gretel' as part of the class program in which they studied the series of Faerie Tale Theatre episodes.. A few people have mailed to ask about the series. So here is a shot of Joan as the Witch with Ricky Schroder and Bridgette Anderson as 'Hansel & Gretel' .....
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
Monday, November 18, 2013
PHOTO OF THE DAY : GLOBAL STARS JOAN AND GEORGE ARE A GOLDEN TEAM!
Joan attends the press call for the 46th Annual Golden Globes in 1989 with good friend George Hamilton. They both hosted the show that year.. Joan is wearing a wonderful gown by Bob Mackie.
Sunday, November 17, 2013
PRESS UPDATE : MAIL ON SUNDAY .. EVENT MAGAZINE. . THE LAST WORD ..NOVEMBER 17TH 2013
'I've never taken handouts from a man. I've done this all myself': Inside the head of... Joan Collins...
PUBLISHED: 22:00 GMT, 16 November 2013 | UPDATED: 22:04 GMT, 16 November..After five marriages, there’s not much our Joan doesn’t know about men. And after 60 years in showbusiness she’s sure of one thing...you get the face you deserve!
What is your earliest memory?
Watching my mother doing housework in our home in Maida Vale. I was about two, and I distinctly remember bandleader Henry Hall on the radio and Here’s To The Next Time playing – I was jigging about, dancing and feeling warm and happy.What sort of child were you?
My mother called me Miss Perpetual Motion. I was always dancing, running, playing… I was also very acrobatic. We moved about an awful lot because we were evacuated. My sister and I stayed with our mother, and my father [theatrical agent Joe Collins] stayed at home keeping the showbiz fires burning.I was a happy little girl, but I wasn’t very good at school. When I was 12, I was sent to a boarding school in Tring, which was awful. They washed my hair with Vim, sent me to bed with it wet, and every night they ladled out hot chocolate from a huge milk churn; at the bottom was an old wet sock we thought belonged to the headmaster. I called my dad and got him to bring me home.
Who do you most admire?
Mrs Thatcher. I like someone who sticks to their opinions even if they’re not popular. She did a great deal for this country and showed how women in the workplace can outdo men. I met her several times through my friend, Tim Bell. She was never exactly warm and fuzzy, but I always had such enormous respect for her. I went to her 80th birthday and to her funeral. She was a remarkable woman.When did you last cry?
I rarely cry, but I did a few days ago while watching the latest Tom Hanks film, Captain Phillips. It’s incredibly emotional and terribly moving, and the tears came.How do you relax?
I lie on my bed, surrounded by magazines and newspapers, and I put on an old movie like Casablanca or The Fabulous Baker Boys.What has been your biggest achievement?
I’m very proud that I’ve had a career that has lasted 60 years, that I live in a house I’ve always wanted to live in and that I’ve done this all myself. I’ve never taken handouts from a man; I’ve worked very hard and I’ve achieved the lifestyle I wanted.… and your biggest disappointment?
My previous [four] marriages failing. I don’t really count my first one [to Irish actor Maxwell Reed], as even on my wedding night I told my father I was making a big mistake. I was young and naive.What are you best at?
Decorating and designing clothes. I love designing – most of my evening dresses are my own designs. I have a lady who makes them up for me and I absolutely love the process. I know what fits, what works and what suits a mature woman. I would love my own range. I have a wig range, but not a clothes range.What would you like to be better at?
Cooking. I can scramble an egg but I can’t poach one and boiling one can be tricky. I do a great roast chicken and spaghetti bolognese but I’d like to be better.What is your best character trait?
Optimism. Life is a lot easier if your glass is always half full.… and your worst?
Impatience and intolerance. I’ve given up driving in London because there are so many bad, rude drivers and it makes me so furious. I’ll drive in LA, but I’ve stopped driving my Mini here.Who would your dream dinner date be?
John F Kennedy, Frank Sinatra and Sarah Bernhardt. That would be enough for one great night.
'I'm very proud that I've had a career that has lasted 60 years,' said Joan (pictured in 1961)
Who are you closest to?
My husband, Percy [Gibson]. He is my accomplice, my best friend and my perfect partner.What is your biggest fear?
Apart from the fear of losing a family member, it has to be snakes. They terrify me. We all have something we fear. My friend Natalie Wood always told me she hated water, that she would never even swim in a pool because she was so scared of it [Wood was to drown in an accident in 1981].What or who do you dream about?
I have a recurring dream that involves an infant or a baby. Last night I dreamt I was handed a giant baby and I had to look after it. I have no idea what this means.What is your most treasured possession?
My charm necklace. It started off with me buying a chain and a lucky horseshoe, and over the years people have bought me charms. I’ve got little Eiffel Towers, American flags, palm trees in gold and silver, little mementos from various stages of my life and presents from friends and people like Warren [Beatty]. Whenever I go on a plane I take it with me.What is your favourite word and why?
Fabulous. That needs no explanation.
What was the best night of your life?
The night I was presented with an OBE by the Queen. I had a party at my home in London with close friends and family, and we had a wonderful dinner and good wine and champagne. I never in all my life expected to be honoured by the Queen. What is your motto?
I have many. ‘You get the face you deserve’; ‘Eat life or it will eat you’; and ‘Life is a banquet and most poor suckers are starving’.‘Passion For Life’ is published by Constable in hardback, £25
PHOTO OF THE DAY .: THE LAST TIME I SAW JOAN... SHE WAS IN MONTE CARLO!!
Joan looking fabulous as night club chanteuse & undercover spy Katrina Petrovna in the 1986 miniseries 'Monte Carlo', here warbling 'The Last Time I Saw Paris'...
Saturday, November 16, 2013
WHICH JOAN IS HEAD OF THE CLASS!

Joan took time out to visit New York's PS212 School to read to the 1st graders and joined them to act out scenes from the CableAce Award Nominated episode of Shelley Duvall's Faerie Tale Theatre based on the classic tale 'Hansel & Gretel'. Joan starred in the 1983 production in a dual role of the wicked stepmother and the even more wickedly witch! The class of first graders is currently studying the episodes of the highly rated series of plays, with Joan's episode and performance their favourite. After acting out scenes from the episode, the children asked a series of question's about it, including 'How long it took to apply the prosthetics and if it hurt? Joan was delighted to be asked to attend and at the end of the morning the class presented her with a book they made of drawings of scenes from the program.Joan found all of the kids very well behaved and half of the class of fifty five wanted to be actors!
Friday, November 15, 2013
PHOTO OF THE DAY : JOAN HAS HER EYE ON THE AWARD!
Joan receives the Award for Excellence from Marine Optical for her sales of her still successful range of Eyewear in 1993..
Thursday, November 14, 2013
PRESS UPDATE : THE SPECTATOR .. NOVEMBER 16TH ..
Joan Collins's notebook: Captain Phillips is great, but Gravity sent me to sleep
Plus: Thank you Valentino, Tom Ford, William Boyd et al for making my book-launch party so swell
All eyes on the Philippines this week, and rightly so. Godspeed to those American and British ships making their way to the devastation in Leyte and Samar. It’s sad, though, that the global news machine can only process one disaster at a time. The world has all but forgotten the tropical storms and floods that have battered Acapulco in the past two months. It’s a lesser tragedy, with mercifully a much less significant death toll, but nevertheless it tears at my heart. Acapulco was my youthful stamping ground, the most glamorous, exciting, beautiful place I had ever been. At 22 I went on holiday there for a week and stayed for another six. It was a playground for some big Hollywood names, and the surroundings reflected their standards of hedonism. I followed in their footsteps like a panting little puppy, water-skiing around the gorgeous, unpolluted bay for hours, eating in fabulous restaurants and dancing all night. Alas, no more. These days it feels as if the drug cartels have taken over: everyone who owned a villa triple-locked their doors and hired hefty security guards. Most of those I knew eventually sold up and left.
The Oscar race has begun in earnest, with a few good movies on release and some terrible ones. I agree with all the praise for Tom Hanks in Captain Phillips — but not about Gravity, the film which has the lovely and talented Sandra Bullock being pulled about in space on what looks like an umbilical cord. It sent me to sleep. I dragged Percy and Ivan Massow to see another film I had high hopes for, having read four-star raves from several critics. Sadly it was such a pretentious boring dud that we left halfway through. It amazes me that critics can be so enthusiastic about what was — we all agreed — a dull second-rate film, and yet give lukewarm and bad reviews to truly entertaining and original movies. (Blue Jasmine was underrated this year, for instance.) I keep re-learning that the ‘critics’ choice’ is most emphatically not mine.
It was enormous fun collating photographs for my new illustrated memoir, Passion for Life. There are more than 500 images in the finished book, but the most exciting find, for me, was a cache of early-20th-century photographs and scrapbooks belonging to my late Aunt Pauline, which now forms the bulk of the chapter on my family. As the pictures show, we were a showbiz tribe. My grandmother entertained the troops in ostrich feathers and lace-up boots during the Boer War, my Aunt Lalla played opposite the 1920s matinee idol Jack Buchanan in a West End revue, and Aunt Pauline revealed more than a hint of legs and bare bosom as a showgirl and flapper. My grandfather and father, who were agents and theatrical entrepreneurs, oversaw them all, and reminded me of a famous Mel Brooks line: ‘Judge, I confess I’m a lying, backstabbing, stinking cheat — I can’t help it: I’m a Broadway producer!’
It’s been ten years since Percy and I took the last flight of that beautiful bird Concorde. We went from New York to Heathrow — and how the tears and the champagne flowed as we landed. Even the fire department got into the act and sprayed three planes with their hoses as a gesture of farewell. I still miss it. A trip to New York that took less than three-and-a-half hours can now take over nine. One devastating crash sealed the fate of a sleek achievement of Anglo-French ‘entente’, and now Concorde flies no more. Rest well, our streamlined friend, though I yearn for your return.
Throwing a party is always enjoyable and my book launch had all the ingredients for a marvellous one. The venue was No. 41, next to the Westbury Hotel, a glamorous nightclub with a fleur-de-lys carpet, Titian-style baroque paintings, burgundy velvet banquettes and a magnificent mirrored bar. One hundred and twenty souls were invited and I thought that, as often happens, many of the celebrities wouldn’t show. I was so wrong. Shortly after the designated hour, Tom Ford arrived, the epitome of masculine glamour and style, closely followed by A.A. Gill and Tim Jeffries, no slouches in the dandy department themselves. Then, within what seemed the blink of an eye, Jeffrey Archer, Lynda La Plante, Peter James and William Boyd turned up, closely followed by Tara Palmer-Tomkinson, Tamara Beckwith and Amanda Eliasch. Hairstylists to the stars Nicky Clarke and Charles Worthington threatened scissors at dawn. Towards the end, in swept Signor Valentino Garavani accompanied by Giancarlo Giammetti and the photographer Mario Testino — like a second-wave assault on Normandy. I’m still on a high just thinking about it. To paraphrase Frank and Bing, what a swell party this was.
This article first appeared in the print edition of The Spectator magazine, dated 16 November 2013
PRESS UPDATE : DAILY EXPRESS ...THURSDAY NOVEMBER 14TH 2013..
Joan Collins reveals why avacados, oxygen facials and jeans are a complete no-no
JOAN Collins has packed so much into her 60-year career she says she’s had nine lives. It certainly seems like it. Caught up in the Hollywood publicity machine from the age of 17 her love affairs with movie stars such as Warren Beatty plus her five marriages have all played out in the public eye like drama-filled scenes from Dynasty.
By: Sophie Donnelly
0Comments
There have been many highs and lows. Before she rose to international fame playing Alexis Carrington on the hit television show one of Joan’s first encounters with the Hollywood world is one she tried to forget.
It came when she was given the chance to go to dinner with Irish actor Maxwell Reed, an opportunity she couldn’t refuse.
However the date didn’t have the fairytale ending she expected as he drugged and sexually assaulted the then 18-year-old Joan. “I was given a drink of rum and Coke into which was dropped what was called a Mickey Finn.
“Today it would be called Rohypnol or some kind of date rape drug.
“Maxwell sat me in his room with a book of pornography and said, ‘I’m just going to take a bath.’ The next thing I knew I was flat out on the sofa. It was vile,” she recalls. Joan looks as fierce and glamorous as ever in a chic Zara jacket, black tailored trousers and vibrant pink lipstick but with this memory comes a flash of vulnerability in her kohl-lined eyes.
Too embarrassed to tell her family and friends about the attack Joan, who was filming the Bafta?nominated movie I Believe In You, in Ealing, west London, confided in older actress Ursula Howells. “I spoke to Ursula about it and said I didn’t want anybody to know. It was a horrible experience and I don’t really like talking about it.”
However in her autobiography Passion For Life Joan explains how she went on to marry Maxwell in 1952 before divorcing him four years later.
“I attempted to wipe the incident from my mind and actually started dating him. Oh, foolish child,” she says.
Her third memoir, as she calls it, skims over her early childhood, her friendship with the royals and of course the “husbands and boyfriends”, says Joan raising a sculpted eyebrow.
When I ask if there are any revelations she was worried about publishing she quips: “If I was worried about them, darling, I wouldn’t put them in the book.”
In the memoir Joan also discusses her first modelling job where at the age of 17 she and 15 other girls were lined up and inspected by a photographer like pieces of meat.
“They still do that now, you know,” Joan tells me, which leads us on to her 21-year-old goddaughter and Britain’s model du jour Cara Delevingne.
I'm too needle-phobic for surgeryJoan Collins
The little girl who once bounced on Joan’s knee is now racking up fashion credentials all over the world as the face of Yves St Laurent, Burberry and DKNY and has been dubbed the new Kate Moss. “I saw Cara last night and she doesn’t need any advice,” Joan says.
“She is the most natural and down?to?earth girl you could ever meet. You would never believe she is a top model. I am very proud and I think it is wonderful what she has done.”
Joan can relate to how quickly Cara’s life has changed in the past year. “My life changed at 17 when I did my first movie in England called Judgment Deferred. Suddenly I was in the papers a lot.
“Then I went to Hollywood and the publicity machine started to work its magic on me
“On I went until Dynasty, which was a huge turning point as it made me internationally known. I’ve had nine lives,” smiles Joan, who married husband number five Percy Gibson, 32 years her junior, in 2002.
During the Dynasty years Joan was often compared with Elizabeth Taylor but she is quick to dismiss rumours of any rivalry.
“It was simply untrue. I’m not a very jealous person. The only part she got that I wanted was Cleopatra.
“Elizabeth and I were good acquaintances. When I got my third divorce from Peter Holm she sent me a little note that said, ‘I’m still ahead by three’, which was brilliant,” says Joan.
While she may not be competitive in a career sense when it comes to fashion she wants to stand out from the crowd.
“I really don’t like to wear the same as everybody else,” she says.
Her famous fashion know-how has seen Joan top the best-dressed lists over the past 60 years.
“If you have good cleavage you should wear V-neck tops, girls with big bosoms should never wear polo necks,” she advises.
“And jeans are the most unattractive garment ever invented.
Then her attention turns to what I’m wearing. “I like your dress by the way,” she says, cocking her head to the side and eyeing me up and down. When I tell her it’s from Topshop she shrieks, “You’re kidding. It’s fabulous” and makes me stand up so she can take a picture.
T hen we’re back to the fashion rules. “You accentuate the positives and eliminate the negatives. I say, ‘Use it or lose it’. I have my own fitness regime, which is centred around stretching, free-weights and fast walking.
I also have a trainer half of the year as I spend my summers in the south of France where I swim a lot.”
She also attributes her youthful looks to make-up. “Every woman should wear make-up, it takes years off.
“I’m wearing lots of false eyelashes today and to me lipstick is the best cosmetic that exists.”
So would she consider surgery?
“I’d consider it but I’m too needle phobic,” Joan replies.
“I’ve just taken really good care of my skin and not put on weight and lost weight, which a lot of actresses do.
“I eat an avocado every day and have facials in New York with a girl called Tracie Martyn. She works a lot of oxygen into my skin.”
And then Joan is off to her next appointment and as she clip-clops down the hall I hear her say to her publicist: “I need to get that dress.”
l Passion For Life by Joan Collins is available to buy from QVC via qvcuk.com priced £10, item no 703062
PHOTO OF THE DAY : IT'S ALWAYS AN ALL STAR PARTY WITH JOAN AROUND!
Joan is featured with Clint Eastwood and her then beau Bill Wiggins in this 1987 photo taken at NBC Studios in Burbank after 'An All Star Party for Joan Collins' to benefit Variety Clubs International.
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
PROMO UPDATE : MARIO CASSILLI .. INTRODUCTION BY JOAN ..OUT NOW!
BIG hair, bold make-up and piles of bling: 80s stars revealed in all their gaudy glory in book celebrating snapper Mario Casilli
- Playboy's Mario, from Ohio, shot 80s stars as well as Playmates
- New self-titled book features cast shots of 80's most famous TV shows
- Musicians and movie stars also feature in £24.95 coffee-table read
- Photographer died aged 71 in 2002
By DENI KIRKOVA
PUBLISHED: 16:51 GMT, 12 November 2013 | UPDATED: 09:22 GMT, 13 November 2013
It was the decade of Dynasty, Dallas, shoulder pads and excess in all forms. Big was beautiful, greed was good, and beauty was bold.
Popular television series', films and music reflected the 1980s trend for beautiful people living extraordinary lives.
And cult photographer Mario Casilli captured those mesmerising subjects at their best, defining forever the look of 80s pop culture through his soft focus lens.
Joan Collins is the cover star of a new book dedicated to 1980s photographer Mario Casilli. She writes in the forword: 'Mario captured absolute glamour'
Stars like Joan Collins adored him for making them look fabulous, and his amazing photography is now immortalised in a spectacular coffee table book.
Joan, now 80, even wrote the foreword for the tome: 'I don't think any photographer today has managed to capture a decade in the way that Mario captured the absolute glamour and decadence in his 1980s photographs.'
As a young photographer working for Paul Hesse at his legendary Sunset Strip photographic studios, Mario Casilli mixed with the biggest names in Hollywood. His ease with high profile subjects and beautiful women would come to define his career.
Dallas star Morgan Fairchild pictured in 1983 wearing a silver headpiece by Casilli
Between 1957 and 1981 Casilli became one of the most prolific photographers for Playboy magazine, shooting no fewer than 57 Playmates, countless other pictorials and several covers.
He even persuaded Barbara Streisand to pose in her underwear.
The lensman was given key card #2 to Playboy's legendary chain of clubs; #1 being reserved for the magazine's boss, Hugh Hefner.
During the 1980s Casilli began shooting the most high profile TV and music stars in America, capturing the excess, the glamour and decadence of the decade through its most flamboyant household names.
Country star Dolly Parton captured in one of her now-iconic outfits in 1987
Hollywood Wives' Mary Crosby with bouffant hair, a liquid gunmetal dress and soft focus, shot in 1985
The biggest shows on TV were to define the decade. Shows making the cover of TV Guide would likely gain 3 or 4 ratings points so portraits of the stars were big business.
Casilli turned them into an art form and his soft focus, high-gloss vision would come to embody the 1980s American dream.
From Moonlighting, Miami Vice, Knight Rider and Baywatch to Fresno and The Golden Girls, the master photographer turned his lens to popular culture and redefined it.
Casilli's style was also a natural fit for rock and pop stars of the 1980 and the greatest musicians in the world queued up to be his subjects, including Lionel Richie, Dolly Parton and the Bee Gees.
Mario passed away in 2001 at the age of 71. Now his work is being published as a collection for the first time by Reel Art Press.
Mario Casilli by Tony Nourmand & Peter Doggett, £29.95, is published by Reel Art Press
Mario Casilli by Tony Nourmand & Peter Doggett, £29.95, is published by Reel Art Press
Joan Collins and Linda Evans of Dynasty working dramatic full make up, lots of jewels and tomato red
Knots Landing's Joan Van Ark in a liquid gold cape and leopard-print bikini, in 1987
Dallas's Larry Hagman in a cowboy hat and suit and Linda Gray in a ruffled, shoulder-padded frock in 1984
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