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 Edward Norton And Nicolas Cage
  January 11, 2001 - New York Post
Nicolas Cage catered his 37th birthday bash at the Sky Bar in L.A. with a "giant stuffed pig with an apple in its mouth," mortifying his vegetarian pals. Watching Cage dine on swine Sunday night were galpal Penelope Cruz, Ed Norton, Salma Hayek, Lucy Liu, Francis Ford Coppola, Sofia Coppola, David Spade, Michael Bay, Jerry Bruckheimer, Spike Jonze, and Hugh Hefner, who allegedly offered his seven buxom blonde galpals to Cage as a "birthday gift." Cage politely declined. Kid Rock crashed the bash, but made amends by buying the birthday boy a $600 bottle of 25-year-old Macallan.
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Edward Norton, Grandma Rouse: The Gems Of Columbia
  December 13, 2000 - Washington Post
Homegrown movie star Edward Norton--known for portraying such violent characters as an adolescent killer in Primal Fear and a thuggish white supremacist in American History X--is actually a sweet guy who cares deeply about his fellow humans. So tomorrow night at the Finnish Embassy, the 31-year-old Columbia native receives--along with his grandmother--a Common Ground Award from Search for Common Ground, the world's largest nongovernmental organization dedicated to conflict resolution. Other honorees include philanthropist Libby Rouse, who happens to be Norton's 85-year-old granny, and Nobel laureate Kim Dae Jung, the peacemaking leader of South Korea, who will be represented by his ambassador. The North Korean government at first agreed to accept, but at the last minute declined, an award for mysterious strongman Kim Jong Il. "I'm very happy that things, after you do them, take on a life of their own," Norton told us yesterday. He's being recognized for directing and starring in this year's Keeping the Faith, a screwball comedy about a rabbi and a priest who fall in love with the same woman. "I guess I'm being cited because of the ecumenical, interfaith aspect of the film. I think it's thematically a film about the strength of communities and their being diverse. But this wasn't just our $30 million rabbi-and-a-priest joke. We always thought there was more to it than that. When you can reach people in ways that you didn't expect, it's thrilling." As for his grandmother, founder of Columbia's Community Life Center and the widow of legendary developer James Rouse (who built Columbia and Boston's Faneuil Hall, among other landmarks), Norton said: "She lends a sort of special energy to everything. She's worked very hard for Common Ground, so they're giving her a lifetime award.
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Edward Norton And Chocolat
  December 13, 2000 - Variety
Edward Norton attended the premiere of Miramax Films' "Chocolat," on Monday, December 11th.
He and Salma Hayek were also among the crowd enjoying chocolate confections provided by Godiva at the after-party  in the Academy lobby.
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SAG, AFTRA talk contract with Hollywood's top execs
  December 5, 2000 - The Hollywood Reporter
Edward Norton was one of the actors that spoke at a meeting between the SAG/AFTRA actor unions and the studio and network executives about industry concerns. 

LOS ANGELES - Hollywood heavyweights from the major studios and television networks turned out in force to meet with members of the Screen Actors Guild and the American Federation of Television & Radio Artists on Monday for informal discussions about issues that will affect negotiations for a new film and television contract. The current contract covering the 135,000 members of SAG/AFTRA expires June 30. The first meeting between the two sides, described as "collegial" and "informative" by those who attended, took place at the Alliance of Motion Picture & Television Producers headquarters in Encino. SAG insiders said "not in 20 years" had such top executives gathered to hear their concerns. Sources on both sides of the negotiating table said that although other discussions might take place before the end of the year, no formal bargaining is expected until next month. "It bodes well to keep these conversations going," SAG president William Daniels told The Hollywood Reporter. The turnout for Monday's meeting read like a who's who of Hollywood: Viacom's Jonathan Dolgen, Warner Bros.' Barry Meyer, News Corp.'s Peter Chernin, NBC's Scott Sassa, CBS' Les Moonves, Sony's Mel Harris, DreamWorks' Jeffrey Katzenberg, Universal's Ron Meyer, MGM's Chris McGurk and AMPTP president Nick Counter. They attended what turned out to be a 1 1/2-hour exchange with various members of SAG and AFTRA, including Daniels and AFTRA president Shelby Scott. "It was good to see the CEOs there," one participant said. "It showed that they cared." The only studio not represented was the Walt Disney Co., which led one participant to joke, "They were represented by a news van they sent over from KABC." Some of the issues discussed were salary compression, runaway production, cable residuals, digital technology and the steps the networks have taken on diversity. "The meeting began with conversation about how this was an above-the-scale issue, noting that (SAG) wanted more," one person in attendance said. Former SAG president Ed Asner spoke, as did actor Edward Norton, who kept his comments focused on runaway production and talked about problems on "The Score," which was shot in Canada. About 40 or 50 members were on hand from SAG/AFTRA, including Holly Hunter, Noah Wylie, Tobey Maguire, David Hyde Pierce, Valerie Harper and soap stars Eric Braeden and Susan Flannery. SAG issued a news release after the meeting saying that "a vital element that has been missing for these deliberations, however, is information on theatrical and television residuals that was to have been provided as part of a residuals study." SAG said the release of those numbers was negotiated as part of the 1998 theatrical and television contract and was to be delivered to SAG and AFTRA, allowing time for the unions to analyze and discuss the information before the start of the wages and working condition committee meetings. Those meetings began in October. Another wages and working condition committee meeting is scheduled for today. Residuals study numbers are expected to be delivered to SAG and AFTRA by the end of this week, sources said. "It will be impossible for us to begin formal negotiations with the AMPTP until we've taken the residuals information we bargained for in 1998 into account," SAG associate national executive director John McGuire and AFTRA national executive director Greg Hessinger said in a statement. The concern over a possible strike has prompted studios to ramp up production and change schedules around so as not to be caught in midproduction in June. The meeting comes just after SAG and AFTRA have ended a strike against the advertising industry, the longest in their history. "We've been saying for weeks that we believe there's always a deal to be made, and our members very obviously prefer to be working rather than walking a picket line," Daniels and Scott said in a statement. "Actors and producers unquestionably need each other. Both sides would be well served to keep in mind that we're each part of a team necessary to create quality entertainment." There are no other informal meetings scheduled yet between the members of the AMPTP and SAG/AFTRA.

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Charlie's Angels
  November 5, 2000 - Thanks to Asoray@aol.com
Edward Norton attended "Charlie's Angels"'s night premiere at the 13th Tokyo International Film Festival. Drew Barrymore, Lucy Liu and Tom Green were among the guests.
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Keeping The Faith Won Award For Best Screenplay
  November 5, 2000 - The Hollywood Reporter Online
Edward Norton’s “Keeping the Faith” received the award for best screenplay at the 2000 Tokyo International Film Festival. After the ceremony, “Keeping the Faith” writer Stuart Blumberg joked that sometimes life itself can resemble a screenplay. “When I arrived (in Tokyo), I realized I had left my camera at (New York’s Kennedy) airport, and here I am receiving this prize and a digital camera.” The cameras were given out along with the awards.
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Norton, Keener Buss Smoochy
  October 31, 2000 - Variety
Edward Norton and Catherine Keener are kissing up to "Death to Smoochy,'' a comedy that Danny DeVito will direct for Warner Bros. Norton will play Smoochy, a blue rhino on a children's television show. Smoochy is replacing a Barney-like costumed character (played by Robin Williams) who was canned for taking payola. The ousted star is already fuming, but when his hated on-air replacement starts a romantic tryst with his former lover, a VP of development played by Keener, he snaps and plots his assassination. Former "Late Night With David Letterman'' scribe Adam Resnick (''Lucky Numbers'') wrote the script. Keener (''Being John Malkovich'') is likely to bail out of Phoenix Pictures' "Basic'' -- a picture that, only two weeks ago, she had been attached to star in under helmer Lee Tamahori. 
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Edward Norton For The Clintons
  October 25, 2000 - Associated Press, Yahoo! News
On Wednesday, October 25, Edward Norton took part to "The Show,'' a production of music and comedy skits played at fund-raising birthday gala for Hillary Rodham Clinton. "The Show", directed by James Naughton, featured also Cher, soul singer Al Green, Ben Affleck, Cameron Diaz, Jon Stewart, Nathan Lane, Chris Parnell, Denis Leary, Molly Shannon, and Will Ferrell. Mr. Norton and the other artists were also the guests of honor at a party afterward.
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St-Exupéry
  October 16, 2000 - Allo Cinè
Edward Norton may portray Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, the famous writer ("The Little Prince") and aviator, in the film "Saint-Ex" for director Régis Wargnier, based on the book Saint Exupéry: A Biography by Stacy Schiff.
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A New Project
  October 5, 2000 - Yahoo! News 
WB is keen on Edward Norton to fill the rhino suit, a possibility now that the actor became free after exiting the Greg Hoblit-directed MGM film ``Hart's War.'' Norton might well be eyeballing real rhinos as he's away on vacation in Africa, so the disposition of the role could take several weeks to sort out. Filming begins in January. 
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Stage Blue
  October 1, 2000 - Unofficial Edward Norton Information Page
Edward Norton is one of the Los Angeles chairmen for Stage Blue, a celebration to be held simultaneously in New York and Los Angeles on November 13, 2000. The gala will showcase the theatre, film, and TV accomplishments of Yale Alumni. The proceeds of this event will go to support facilities for theater at Yale and to fund endowments for the Yale Dramatic Association and the School of Drama. For more information on Stage Blue, click here!.
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Edward Norton Won't Make War
  September 28, 2000 - Yahoo! UK & Ireland 
Only weeks after securing his biggest pay-cheque to date, Edward Norton has reportedly bailed out of his starring role in the prisoner-of-war drama Hart's War citing that old stand-by: creative differences. In the meantime, rumours are circulating that the potential casting of Bruce Willis as Norton's co-star is the real reason behind his exit. Norton looked set to receive a career-best $8m for starring in the MGM production as Tommy Hart, a former Harvard law student who is imprisoned in a Nazi PoW camp during the second world war. While inside Hart is called on to defend an African-American airman accused of murder and argues his case before a kangaroo court made up of his fellow prisoners. Reports suggest that Willis was being wooed to take on a major supporting role as an imprisoned American general but had demanded significant changes to the original script. It was these demands, say insiders, which prompted an angry Norton to bail out. Based on the novel by John Katzenbach, Hart's War has fought what could well prove a losing battle for several months now. The original choice for director, Alfonse (Great Expectations) Cuaron, was replaced by Gregory (Primal Fear) Hoblit, while at one stage Tobey Maguire was tipped to play the lead. Now with Norton out and Willis still wavering, Hart's War looks in deep trouble. Filming was due to start in Prague in January but may yet have to be pushed back. 
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Edward Norton At Tokyo International Film Festival
  September 27, 2000 - The Japan Times 
Sixteen films by new directors will be screened in competition at the 13th Tokyo International Film Festival, which will begin Oct. 28, according to event organizers. The 16 films, including pieces by Japanese directors Shin Togashi and Hideaki Anno and a work directed by U.S. actor Edward Norton, will compete for awards. The five-member jury will be headed by German director Volker Schlondorff, who made the 1979 award-winning film "The Tin Drum." The Tokyo film festival was first held in 1985 and took place every two years until 1991, when it became an annual event. 
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Edward Norton To Hayek's Frida Biopic
  September 19, 2000 - Mr. Showbiz 
Salma Hayek's biopic of Mexican painter Frida Kahlo may beat a rival project from Jennifer Lopez to the big screen. Hayek, who's long been attached to star as the iconic artist for Miramax, is now lining up an impressive set of cast members, including Antonio Banderas, Ashley Judd, and Edward Norton. The Hayek starrer may also be close to netting a director. Julie Taymor, whose theatrical staging of The Lion King brought her kudos and a Tony Award, is in negotiations to helm the picture. Latino hunk Banderas, who co-starred with Hayek in Desperado, has agreed to star in the supporting role of David Siqueiros, a painter who was a Rivera rival. Judd will play Tina Modotti, an Italian photographer who was part of Kahlo and Rivera's social circle. Norton, who is Hayek's off-screen partner, will do a cameo as Nelson Rockefeller. The other Frida Kahlo project, in which Lopez is to star, also has some big guns on board, with Luis Valdez (La Bamba) in the director's chair and Francis Ford Coppola producing.
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Edward Norton In Ireland
  August 3, 2000 - VIP Ireland, Showbiz Ireland 
The cream of Hollywood, Edward Norton, Matt Damon, Salma Hayek, Ashley Judd, look set to be the first influx of visiting stars to join up with the pride of Sheriff Street, Jim Sheridan, for his next two movies.
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Edward Norton, Gregory Hoblit Reteam To Fight 'War'
  August 3, 2000 - Reuters/Variety
NEW YORK - Edward Norton has enlisted to join director Gregory Hoblit in "Hart's War,'' MGM's adaptation of John Katzenbach's World War II novel. Shooting will begin this January in Prague. It's the first pairing between actor and director since 1996's "Primal Fear,'' which garnered Norton, then a newcomer, an Oscar nomination and graduated Hoblit from TV dramas like ''NYPD Blue'' to features. In "Hart's War,'' Norton will play Tommy Hart, an American who gets shot down over Europe and winds up in a POW camp. A law student before enlisting, Hart defends a black prisoner accused of murdering a fellow soldier, a racist who is suspected of killing the only other black in the camp. The case transfixes the Germans, which is convenient because the Americans are using it as a diversion while attempting to escape. Katzenbach's novel is based on an incident in the life of his father, former U.S. attorney general Nicholas Katzenbach. "This has the potential to be 'A Few Good Men' meets 'The Great Escape,' and the idea of reteaming Edward and Greg Hoblit in a story that has so many elements of truth was just an unbelievable opportunity for us,'' said MGM president Michael Nathanson. Producer David Foster said Billy Ray (''Stuart Little'') is finishing a rewrite, and other roles will be cast quickly. His producing partner, David Ladd, is off scouting locations in Prague. Production on the film should be finished with enough time to spare for looping and mixing before a possible actors' strike after contracts expire May 31. The film becomes the second major WWII tale this year for MGM, which is weeks from starting production on ``Windtalkers,'' a John Woo-directed drama starring Nicolas Cage and Christian Slater. Norton is currently shooting "The Score'' with Robert De Niro and Marlon Brando for Mandalay. He was last in theaters with "Keeping the Faith,'' which he also directed. Hoblit's last project was "Frequency.''
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Dino De Laurentiis' Tribute
  July 7, 2000 - Daily Variety
Dino De Laurentiis gets a producers' tribute at this year's Deauville Fest. Ruda Dauphin landed the "Space Cowboys'' aging astronauts Clint Eastwood, Tommy Lee Jones, James Garner and Donald Sutherland, well as real astronaut Buzz Aldrin to guest. Also puffing their U.S. pix: Harrison Ford, Elizabeth Shue, Paul Verhoeven, Samuel Jackson, Edward Norton and John Cusack. And receiving a Hollywood musical toasting, Leslie Caron, Joel Grey, Gregory Hines and Mickey Rooney.
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Edward Norton Joins The Enterprise Foundation Board of Trustees
  July 2, 2000 - The Enterprise Foundation 
Columbia, MD – Hollywood darling Edward Norton is keeping the faith in some new ways by joining the board of trustees of the community development nonprofit started by his grandfather, developer James W. Rouse. The Academy Award-nominated actor will lend his name and some of his time to supporting the work and fund-raising efforts of the national community development organization. Norton, 30, worked in the New York office of The Enterprise Foundation between 1991 and 1993 as a writer and photographer. He continued to support Enterprise at special events after his acting career took flight. Norton, a graduate of Yale University, has a long-standing interest in the health and welfare communities. It is a cause he was drawn to early in his life, growing up in Columbia, MD, a racially diverse, planned community designed by his grandfather, Jim Rouse. "Enterprise’s work has been and remains critical to the health and spirit of our cities. I’m excited to play a role in facilitating that work and increasing awareness of its importance," Norton said. "We believe Edward’s support and representation of our work will be a tremendous asset to the foundation," said Bart Harvey, chairman and CEO of Enterprise. "He inherited a wonderful legacy from his grandfather, Jim Rouse, who cared so deeply about the needs of poor people. " Norton’s current film, "Keeping the Faith," has received critical acclaim. He is currently shooting "The Score" in Montreal with Robert DeNiro and Marlon Brando. Norton also played lead roles in "Primal Fear," "American History X," "Rounders," and "The People vs. Larry Flynt." The Enterprise Foundation helps rebuild communities. Working with partners and a national network of more than 1,500 nonprofit organizations across the country, Enterprise provides low-income people with affordable housing, safer streets and access to jobs and child care. Enterprise has raised and committed more than $3.4 billion in loans, grants and equity to build or renovate 107,000 apartments and houses. Launched in 1982 by Jim and Patty Rouse, The Enterprise Foundation is building America, one community at a time.
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Norton Is The Straw Man
  June 22, 2000 - Mr. Showbiz Deadline Hollywood
Also winding its way to remake reality is a rethinking of the 1971 Sam Peckinpah film Straw Dogs. My sources tell me that Edward Norton is determined to star in and direct the remake, from a script to be written by his Yale University pal — and the writer of the Norton-directed fizzle Keeping the Faith — Stuart Blumberg. Neither Norton's nor Blumberg's representatives would comment, but I hear that veteran producer Hawk Koch (Heaven Can Wait, Airplane!, Wayne's World) will oversee the remake, which will allegedly take place not in England, as in the original, but in the United States. A source close to the actor-director-writer pair says that Norton and Blumberg were approached by Koch, and now the whole package is being set up at Miramax, where it awaits Harvey Weinstein's approval. For those who missed it, Dogs is an investigation into the nature of pacifism and manhood. In Peckinpah's version, Dustin Hoffman is the man whose pacifism collapses after his wife is sexually assaulted by louts in the small English village in which they've recently settled. The original was based on the novel The Siege of Trencher's Farm, by Gordon Williams. For Norton, who has already visited the intersections of fear and violence in Fight Club, American History X, and Primal Fear, this looks like one terrific project. Koch was the producer on Norton's Fear and the Norton-Blumberg pairing Faith, which explains the trio's involvement here. Or perhaps Norton's interest in the remake sprang from his involvement in the American Film Institute's Salute to Dustin Hoffman program last year? No one's saying. "For Edward Norton, who has already visited the intersections of fear and violence in Fight Club, American History X, and Primal Fear, Straw Dogs looks like one terrific project." 
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Edward Norton At The Big Fight In L.A.
  June 17, 2000 - Associated Press
Click on the image to view the full sizeEdward Norton and Salma Hayek attended the big Oscar De La Hoya fight vs. Shane Mosley at the Staples Center in Los Angeles Saturday, June 17, 2000.
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Democrats Pull In Hollywood Money
  June 9, 2000 - Daily Variety
HOLLYWOOD - On Friday, June 9, DreamWorks held a fundraiser for Hillary Clinton's N.Y. senatorial campaign and she expressed her strong stand on gun control: "There are some who think of me as a threat to Western civilization.'' This dinner, at $5,000-$20,000 a couple raised $350,000 with Marilyn and Jeffrey Katzenberg hosting. The group included: Alan Horn, Morgan Freeman, Matt Damon, Gina Gershon, Rhea Perlman, Salma Hayek, Edward Norton, Kevin Spacey, Jennifer Perry and Andy Spahn, Laurie MacDonald and Walter Parkes with Sheryl Crow entertaining on (acoustic) guitar.
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Lakers Game...Again!
  June 7, 2000 - Associated Press
Click on the image to view the full size Edward Norton and Salma Hayek, wearing a purple wig, attend Game One of the NBA Finals between the Los Angeles Lakers and Indiana Pacers June 7 at Staples Center in Los Angeles. The Lakers won the first game 104-87. Click on the image to view the full size
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