
Princess Diaries fans stunned to learn early 2000s heartthrob is a nepo baby... from a VERY famous family
Robert shot to fame in 2001 after starring as Michael Moscovitz in the 2001 film The Princess Diaries and he is also known as the lead vocalist of the rock/pop band Rooney.
But fans are only just realizing that the now 42-year-old has not only acted with Academy Award winner Anne Hathaway, but he is also Sofia Coppola's nephew.
While his family connection to the famous filmmaking family is no secret, many fans were shocked to learn about his prestigious background via his teen cousin Romy Mars on TikTok.
Romy, the 18-year-old daughter of Sofia and musician Thomas Mars, is no stranger to dropping family lore on social media - but the teen recently sent her followers into a frenzy after revealing the actor and singer is her cousin.
'Me when I remember one of my cousins is the dude from Princess Diaries,' she wrote on the short clip, showing herself and Robert dancing to her soon-to-be released single, Ego.
The video sparked an immediate response from incredulous users, with hundreds rushing to the comments.
'I really forget how many Coppolas there are,' one user wrote.
'Is your WHOLE family tree famous?' questioned another, with someone else adding: 'Every day I discover something new about the Coppola family.'
'I just went on a two-hour deep dive on this family tree. They are all related to the dude who made Godfather and related to Nicholas Cage and a bunch of other people how???' someone else wrote.
Another agreed, sharing: 'They are really the nepo family.'
Robert's famous family includes his uncle Francis Ford Coppola, cousin Nicholas Cage, cousin Sofia Coppola and his brother, Jason Schwartzman.
Romy, who rose to fame in 2023 after going viral for revealing that her parents grounded her for trying to charter a helicopter, often shares tidbits of her luxurious lifestyle online.
At the time, she uploaded a clip to TikTok explaining that she was punished for attempting to use her dad's credit card to fly from New York to Maryland 'to have dinner with my camp friend.'
Her mother, 54, is known for directing acclaimed movies like Lost in Translation and Marie Antoinette.
And Romy's father, 48, is the lead singer of the indie band Phoenix. She also has a younger sister named Cosima, 15.
Romy, who also has a younger sister named Cosima, 15, is quickly making a name for herself, with her fans even hailing her as 'a star'
While his family connection to the famous filmmaking family is no secret, many fans were shocked to learn pf Robert's prestigious background via his teen cousin Romy Mars ' TikTok
Earlier in the month, the teenager shared a post from a Chanel event which she attended with her sister and famous mom, including a snap of countless bags from the designer.
She also shared a video of herself watching her dad performing on stage, with fans calling it 'iconic'.
'Having Thomas Mars as your dad, ICONIC,' one fan wrote.
'Having him and Sofia Coppola as parents... it's unreal,' another added.
In May, Romy shared a snap with singer Lana Del Rey, which has garnered nearly 50,000 likes.
For her 16th birthday, none other than Jacob Elordi presented her with her cake since the Australian actor was the star of her mother's film Priscilla.
Robert tends to keep a fairy private life, and is still performing with Rooney.
The indie band, which formed in 1999, had a breakthrough with their self-titled debut album, Rooney, which was released in 2003.
The band's popularity skyrocketed after making a guest appearance on the hit teen drama The O.C., performing their hit single I'm Shakin'.
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The Sun
6 minutes ago
- The Sun
My husband's openly gay but we still have a great sex life – people are confused but it works & we're trying for a baby
HEADING off stage Samantha Greenstone beamed with delight. She'd just auditioned for a part in Fiddler on the Roof and it had gone excellently but if the directors had any doubts, she had already secured one fan. 6 6 'A fellow actor approached and told me that if I didn't get the part they were crazy,' Samantha, 38, recalls. 'He introduced himself as Jacob and we wished each other luck. ' Auditions were often cold and competitive environments, so it stuck out to me that he'd been so sweet.' Not long after Samantha received the news she was hoping for, she had secured the part and much to her delight so had Jacob. A month later they began rehearsals and Samantha and Jacob became fast friends. 'A few days into rehearsals, we went out for drinks with another cast member,' Samantha says. 'While they headed off after a couple of rounds, Jacob and I kept chatting till 4am, and he ended up sleeping on my sofa. 'From then on, we hung out whenever we could, grabbing dinner or going to the gym. 'Jacob told me he was gay, but that he wasn't out to his parents yet.' But while Samantha was secure in their friendship it seems others were less so. I'm much taller than my 5ft husband - people think he's my son and say he's not a 'real man' but we have the best sex ever 'Friends would ask if we were dating,' Samantha says. 'I knew we had something special but I wasn't sure what. 'Jacob and I never wanted to be apart from each other, even sleeping in the same bed after nights out. 'And something between us just didn't feel like a normal friendship but I just assumed I must have misinterpreted things.' After 18 months as best pals Samantha visited an energy healer for advice on her relationship with Jacob. 'She told me the two of us shared a 'spiritual umbilical cord',' Samantha says. 'With that, everything clicked into place for me. 'I didn't want to live with the uncertainty any more, and I was sure that, come what may, our friendship was strong enough to survive.' 6 6 Samantha plucked up the courage and sent Jacob a text asking whether he felt anything more than friendship for her. 'A few minutes later he replied telling me that of course he felt more than friendship and he was willing to see where this went,' Samantha says. 'I was as giddy as a teenager.' That weekend, Jacob and Samantha were both due to attend a friend's birthday party. 'When I saw him at the party, it wasn't awkward at all, and afterwards we headed back to my place,' she says. 'We were watching a film in bed, and he leant over and kissed me. 'It felt so natural and it made me wonder why we'd waited so long. 'We slept together that night and it was totally magical and romantic, like a Hollywood film.' From then on Jacob and Samantha were a couple. She says: 'None of our friends were surprised, and plenty of them asked what had taken us so long. 'I'd met his parents before, and when Jacob called his mum to tell her we were dating, she was so happy she cried.' The couple moved in immediately and began building their life together. 'Jacob was such a care-taker, always bringing me coffee or cooking us dinner,' Samantha says. 'But as the honeymoon period faded, we both began to worry whether the relationship would work long-term. 'I worried I was trapping him or taking him away from a man but he always assured me he wasn't missing out. 'Yet he was still feeling anger and frustration from not having fully come out to his parents.' One afternoon when Samantha was visiting her family she had a call from Jacob. He explained that he had come out to his dad but was still in a relationship with Samantha. 'His dad was confused but accepting and Jacob said it was a huge relief,' she says. 'He explained that living a seemingly 'straight' life, without being fully open about his sexuality, had been driving him crazy.' From then on it was smoother sailing for the pair, who began seeing a couples' therapist together. Samantha says: 'To our surprise she told us she was also in a mixed-orientation relationship – she considered herself straight, but was married to a woman. 'It was a revelation to realise our situation wasn't totally unique. 'Jacob told me he wasn't bisexual and was solely attracted to men, and that's important to his identity. 'But he explained that I was his soulmate and that's its own star in another galaxy.' While friends worried that her relationship might make her feel less physically desirable Samantha said it was quite the opposite. 'He doesn't just see me as body parts but as a whole,' she says. 'Jacob told me that he'd initially been concerned about whether the physical aspect of the relationship would work, but in the moment it had felt completely right.' After six years together, the couple went ring shopping. Then, just a few months later, Jacob proposed to Samantha on a red carpet outside the iconic Beverly Hills Hotel. 'Both of us had our own ideas for the wedding – from Jacob's Phantom of the Opera entrance music, to my Titanic-themed wedding cake,' she says. There were 35 guests in attendance, including both of their families. After the marriage ceremony, the couple posted a selection of photographs online. 'I'm marrying a gay man at the court house! I captioned it, cheekily,' Samantha says. 'We were flooded with questions – with people even saying our relationship was a tax dodge. 'Loads of commenters wanted to know whether we slept together.' Samantha made a TikTok video in a bid to clear things up. 'We have a great sex life, and we have sex the traditional way,' she explained to her followers. 'If you need us to tell you about the birds and the bees, then that's not our problem.' "We don't have an open marriage either - we're 100% monogamous to each other." The couple received messages from others in mixed-orientation relationships too. 'It just shows it's more common than you'd think,' she says. 'Now we've been married for six months, and we're trying for a baby. 'My husband may be gay, but I'm 100 per cent sure he's the man for me.' 6


The Guardian
6 minutes ago
- The Guardian
The return of the spoof: can comedy's silliest subgenre make a comeback?
The Naked Gun, a sequel/reboot to the old movie series of the same name, represents the first of its kind in a long time. No, not a legacy sequel, nor a Liam Neeson movie; the in-demand Irish actor still does two or three of those a year. Like its predecessors, The Naked Gun is a spoof – part of a comedic subgenre with astonishing versatility, in that it can lay claim to some of the very best and very worst comedies of all time. Maybe that's why these movies, despite relatively low budgets and decent success rates, will sometimes disappear for years at a time. Now, in a period when a pure comedy hasn't crossed the $100m mark in the US in almost a decade, The Naked Gun seems to be leading a revival. A sequel to the rock-doc spoof This Is Spinal Tap arrives next month, follow-ups to Scary Movie and the Mel Brooks Star Wars spoof Spaceballs are on the way, and there have even been whispers of a fourth Austin Powers film. The leader of the latest comeback has a connection to some high-water marks: the original Naked Gun, yes, but more importantly 1980's Airplane!, a feature-length spoof of the then-popular disaster movies from comic film-makers David Zucker, Jim Abrahams and Jerry Zucker. ZAZ, as the team was known, didn't invent the idea of parodying familiar genres in a barrage of intentional (and subverted) cliches, sight gags, puns and other stupid-clever jokes. But Airplane! took on movies like Airport with such a deadpan density, and such a shockingly high hit rate, that it wrested the spoof crown from previous king, Mel Brooks (whose Young Frankenstein and Blazing Saddles are still standard-bearers for loving genre parody). Brooks often appeared on camera in his films, while the ZAZ boys did not; instead, Leslie Nielsen became the face of their efforts, and an unlikely catalyst for a youth-driven trend in the process. Following his flawlessly deadpan role in Airplane! as a doctor ('I am serious … and stop calling me Shirley'), Nielsen starred in the team's failed (but hilarious) TV procedural spoof Police Squad! which was eventually turned into the 1988 big-screen comedy The Naked Gun. The odd thing about the original Naked Gun is that, unlike Airplane!, it's not a particularly close parody of a classic or trendy film genre. It mostly takes the framework of the Police Squad! show, which was more akin to 60s cop dramas, and throws in some elements of neo-noir crime thrillers. (There's also a grab-bag of other assorted movie references throughout the trilogy.) Nevertheless, or perhaps because it didn't require any specific genre knowledge, The Naked Gun was a big enough hit to inspire a pair of sequels – and plenty of knockoffs. A spoof boom lasted for most of the 90s, peaking in 1993 with National Lampoon putting their name on Loaded Weapon 1, veteran film-maker Carl Reiner contributing the erotic-thriller goof Fatal Instinct, Abrahams himself directing the Rambo-inspired Hot Shots! Part Deux, and Mel Brooks returning with Robin Hood: Men in Tights. A later entry, a spoof of urban dramas with the omnibus title of Don't Be a Menace to South Central While Drinking Your Juice in the Hood, kickstarted the next generation of spoofs when writers/stars Marlon and Shawn Wayans moved on to savage resurgent horror movies with Scary Movie. A spoof built around a movie as self-aware and self-satirizing as Scream should not have worked – the Scream characters crack jokes, while The Naked Gun and its ilk tend to goof on seriousness – but it actually outgrossed its target. Later spoofs trumpeted the presence of 'two of the six writers' of Scary Movie, the non-Wayans-afilliated Jason Friedberg and Aaron Seltzer, who also wrote the off-brand Nielsen-starring parody Spy Hard. Friedberg and Seltzer more or less got themselves appointed the ZAZ of the 2000s, even as an actual Zucker went on to make some of the later Scary Movie sequels. Their hits include Date Movie, Epic Movie and the 300 parody Meet the Spartans. Watching the Friedberg-Seltzer spoofs of the 2000s is like watching children attempting to draw their own Looney Tunes or perform their own Saturday Night Live sketches: there's a basic understanding of what their imitation should look like (and a compulsion to have characters crushed by falling objects) but a lack of basic craft that's years away from passably amateurish. At times, projects like their magnum opus Disaster Movie barely seem to understand what a spoof even is; Friedberg and Seltzer know that it sometimes involves referring to other movies and/or cultural figures, which they do constantly, but are at a loss beyond ordering up a playground imitation. Look, I'm Iron Man! I'm Juno! I'm Miley Cyrus! Splat! (It almost goes without saying that the most oft-splattered targets tend to be 'annoying' women.) Like Nielsen in his post-ZAZ phase multiplied by the force of a thousand suns, Friedberg and Seltzer made so many of these things, and so badly, that when they started to falter at the box office it felt like a relief. That loud, graceless sensibility has now migrated over to YouTube and TikTok, where at least the amateurs-at-heart aren't charging viewers 10 bucks a pop for sub-skit imitations. Even some well-liked spoofs were deemed stretched thin at 85 minutes; maybe stacking dozens of quick-hit joke is a practice better-suited to shorter-form parodies. Perhaps sensing that, or simply wanting to pay tribute to the spirit of Police Squad! rather than the more mugging-intensive later installments, the new Naked Gun doesn't do much direct-scene parody. Its opening mimics the bank-robbing sequence from The Dark Knight in set design and score, but no one shows up in imitation Joker makeup. Director Akiva Schaffer, who knows from short-form comedy from his work as part of the Lonely Island, counterintuitively avoids taking the proliferation of a particular type of movie (like superheroes) as an imperative to spoof 'em good. That was the instinct behind the biopic parody Walk Hard, one of the last genuinely good spoofs, and a box office bomb in 2007. Instead, The Naked Gun continues to goof on cop thriller cliches and pile on the absurd puns and/or sight gags ('cold case' files in a refrigerator, a car wreck cleaned up via claw machine, etc), with the benefit of Neeson giving it his absolute best, unsmiling deadpan. So what are the conditions required for spoof movies to multiply? Several confirmed follow-ups seem well-timed if not overdue; dozens of straight-faced horror trends have come through since the most recent Scary Movie, and there's been a 270% increase in Star Wars films since the first Spaceballs. But highly specific parodies are not always an advantage. Done well, they can be exacting, like Young Frankenstein, or a memorable compendium of cliches, like Walk Hard. Done poorly, and suddenly you've got unfunny mash-ups. Then again, it would also be reasonable to ask what, exactly, the new Naked Gun is satirizing. Schaffer does work in some mockery of older white men exerting an iron grip on the culture while grousing how bad the world has become. Mostly, though, this particular spoof revival offers the gleeful release of watching an intentionally fake, silly movie in a theater, sharing laughs with strangers. Spoofing a movie through at-home streaming or phone-bound TikTok is certainly possible. But gags built around violating a generally agreed-upon reality of cinema work better in its natural habitat. That's something The Naked Gun, with its technical imitations of a 'real' movie, seems to understand more than any particular cop-movie trends: that it can provide the too-rare experience of laughing throughout a deeply silly movie that's as relentless, in its way, as the big-screen spectacle more typical of the 2020s. If the Naked Gun redo becomes the biggest comedy in months or even years, it could ease moviegoers back into the habit. If a subgenre responsible for some of the worst comedies ever made can still make 'em laugh, maybe comedy on the whole will get the chance to leave the house again.


Daily Mail
6 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Ozzy and Sharon's love story: Fans share heartwarming clips of the Osbournes as rocker calls wife his 'soulmate'and says he would've been 'dead long ago' without her
Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne were one of the music industry's most famous couples. They married in 1982 after three years of dating and were together until Ozzy's death in July aged 76. Their relationship played out in the public eye from their earliest years together when Sharon managed his career to their family life on MTV reality show The Osbourne's. Through it all, Ozzy frequently spoke of his enduring love for his wife, who he called his 'soulmate' and credited her with saving his life. After his passing, fans have been sharing heartwarming clips of the pair speaking of their love for each other through the years. The Instagram account @RockandLoveofficial shared a clip of Ozzy speaking on the family's podcast where he said he 'couldn't live' without Sharon. 'Sharon is like my soulmate. Sometimes I love her, sometimes I don't love her. Sometimes I'm angry with her. Sometimes I'm crazy about her,' he said. 'Sometimes I'm very jealous of her. Sometimes I wanna f*****g kill her. But through it all at the end of the day, I love her more than anything in the world. I couldn't live without her, I don't want to live without her.' Sharon, who was sat alongside him, said: 'Ditto.' 'And my love for her now is bigger than it ever has been,' he finished. In another clip, Ozzy credited Sharon with keeping him alive during an interview with Zane Lowe in 2023. 'She's my heart and soul,' he said. 'How lucky I am to have what I have, if it wasn't for Sharon, I would've been dead long ago. I wouldn't've lasted.' 'Me too,' Sharon said. View this post on Instagram A post shared by HeavyMetalHardRock (@heavymetalhardrock) In another clip, Ozzy credited Sharon with keeping him alive during an interview with Zane Lowe in 2023 'You would've died of f*****g shopping,' Ozzy quipped to which Sharon laughed. Another clip of Sharon speaking about what first attracted her to Ozzy during a past interview on AXS TV. When asked if it was love at first sight, Sharon said, 'no, no, not at all.' Discussing how they got together, she said: 'In 79 we were working together and it was 80 it started. We were working together and it became something else.' Asked what she found attractive about Ozzy, Sharon said: 'He was so funny, so funny and quick witted, and yet very vulnerable. 'I just thought he was the funniest, sweetest guy I'd ever met because he was so vulnerable about everything and that attracted me to him.' Sharon paid a touching tribute to Ozzy as she led his emotional funeral procession on Wednesday. The Black Sabbath rocker died on July 22 and his funeral cortege travelled through his hometown of Birmingham on Wednesday. His grief-stricken wife Sharon and children Jack, Kelly, Aimee and Louis led the parade and stopped at Black Sabbath Bridge to an outpouring of love from the crowd. Sharon, 72, paid a subtle tribute to her late husband during the ceremony as she wore Ozzy's ring around her neck. She was seen wearing the recognisable gold ring featuring a row of diamonds around her neck on a chain. The distinctive piece of jewellery is believed to be Ozzy's wedding band, and he has been seen wearing it on his ring finger in recent years. According to reports, Ozzy has been wearing the ring since their 2017 vow renewal - which took place 35 years after they originally tied the knot. During the funeral, Sharon also held her hands up and gave a double peace sign - a gesture which has become synonymous with the metal star. Ozzy previously explained the significance behind the gesture, telling Rolling Stone in 2002: 'We were the last hippie band. We were into peace.' Huge crowds descended on Birmingham on Wednesday to pay tribute to the beloved Prince of Darkness at his funeral procession. The funeral cortege was led by a live brass band, Bostin' Brass, who performed versions of Black Sabbath songs such as Iron Man, as thousands of tearful devotees lined the streets and sang along in Ozzy's memory. The hearse carrying the singer's coffin - adorned with purple flowers spelling out 'Ozzy' - passed the star's childhood home in Lodge Road, Aston, shortly after midday. Flowers had been placed outside the terraced property, close to Villa Park, while the owners of the house put up a picture of Osbourne in the front bay window. Sharon led the procession with her children Jack, Aimee and Kelly and Ozzy's son Louis from his first marriage as they comforted each other amid their devastating grief. Thousands of people were pictured taking their places not only on Black Sabbath Bridge but along the city centre route along which his cortege travelled towards the Black Sabbath Bridge bench. Fans clapped and cheered chanting 'Ozzy, Ozzy, Ozzy' as the rock legend's hearse passed through the streets of Birmingham as Sharon watched on and brushed away tears. Ozzy and his Black Sabbath bandmates - Terence 'Geezer' Butler, Tony Iommi and Bill Ward - were recently given the freedom of the city of Birmingham, which recognises people's exceptional service to the city.