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Heath Heath Heath

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Penthesilea:

I need some young Ennis today ....

I wonder what the note behind his right shoulder says "I've never..." ?






Penthesilea:
And this one. You can never post this one too often, you ask me ...



If only, if only...

optom3:

--- Quote from: susiebk on March 13, 2008, 10:39:40 am ---Oh, he was sooo pretty!  Hate that word "was".



--- End quote ---

Me too, and have always hated that it is the 1st 3 letters of wasted.Neither word can ever seem to have good connotations.

Mikaela:
Ugh! That picture you just posted, Chrissii, is already being used by folks eager to cash in on the tragedy. Amazon just saw fit to recommend that I buy the following book:

http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1844546330/ref=pe_5301_10169831_pe_ar_t1


Nope. I don't think so, thank you very much. :(
 

mvansand76:
Saw this on lj.... Rally, really love this.... so how I see Heath....


Michelle Williams is breaking her silence about the untimely death of her beloved Heath Ledger.

The actress is speaking out in the new issue of Interview magazine. This is the first time she's talked publicly about Ledger since releasing a statement on February 1st.

Says Williams, "I think the interesting thing about Heath, which maybe people have only really fully discovered in his death, is how vulnerable he was. You can pick it up on it in his performances, but it’s easy to overlook because he was so physical and beautiful and strong and masculine,” she adds. “But there was always that underlying sensitivity. That’s who he was. He had a talent for everything that he put his mind to. He didn’t know limits."

Michelle also touches on Ledger’s history of sleeping issues.

“For as long as I’d known him, he had bouts with insomnia,” she says. “He had too much energy. His mind was turning, turning turning — always turning.”

Ledger's ex-girlfriend, fellow Australian Naomi Watts, also chats to the mag about the deceased star.

Says Watts, "I think he wanted to be someone who was doing the observing — not the one being observed. He hated not being able to go about his life in an ordinary way. But I think that, deep down, he enjoyed that he was being recognized for his talent. I think he was starting to own that and that's the deepest tragedy, in terms of his work. He was just beginning to own it and embrace it."

Adding some color, she says, "He was a huge, obsessive, chess freak – and very, very good at it."

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