Latest news with #Don'tWorryDarling


Daily Mirror
3 days ago
- Entertainment
- Daily Mirror
Florence Pugh and Yungblud leave onlookers baffled as they pour pints at pub
Hollywood actress Florence Pugh spent her Friday night pouring pints of Guinness in a very popular London pub alongside Yungblud Marvel star Florence Pugh delighted London pub-goers with an unexpected shift behind the bar at The Devonshire in Piccadilly on Friday. The 29-year-old actress was spotted pouring pints and mingling with customers as part of a surprise appearance tied to the release of Yungblud's new music video for his single Zombie. Dressed down and playful, Pugh received cheers after nailing the pour on a pint of Guinness, proudly asking: 'Whose is this?' Her next attempt didn't go quite as smoothly however after serving up a frothy glass, she laughed and admitted: 'I'm sorry.' In another clip, she jokes her first effort was 'a bit lumpy' while being coached by bar staff. Her appearance comes on the same day Zombie dropped - a raw, emotional track from Yungblud's upcoming album Idols, out June 20. Pugh stars in the video as a grief-stricken, emotionally exhausted health worker, donning angel wings in a symbolic portrayal of inner collapse. 'The song was written initially about my grandmother going through serious injury and trauma, leading her to become a different person to who she was before,' Yungblud, real name Dominic Harrison, explained. 'It's about the feeling of deterioration and ugliness… shutting out the world and the people we love out of fear of becoming a burden or an embarrassment. It's f****** scary.' Pugh, known for her powerful roles in Little Women, Don't Worry Darling, Dune: Part Two, and most recently Marvel's Thunderbolts, brings her signature emotional depth to the role. She previously appeared in Rachel Chinouriri's Never Need Me video, showing an ongoing interest in music collaborations. Yungblud, 27, is no stranger to public antics. Earlier this year, he pulled a similar stunt by serving drinks at the Hawley Arms in Camden. With two UK No. 1 albums (Weird! and his self-titled record) and a recent 'Disruptor of the Year' award from the Northern Music Awards under his belt, the artist continues to blend music with rebellion and raw emotion. It comes after the singer told The Mirror that he's coming out fighting with his new music. He's confronted his demons, taken up boxing and is battling against toxic masculinity. And what he delivers with album Idols really packs a punch. 'I really had to face myself… figure it out and face it,' he tells. And Yungblud reckons he has really grown in the process. 'I would use food and alcohol to distract myself and push things down,' he says. 'The album is a mirror to that. I have singing lessons. I don't drink as much and I've been getting better at sleeping. I've been getting better at being able to navigate this whole thing better – that's been epic.' Having previously opened up about his battle with body dysmorphia, the Doncaster rocker –told how he has now 'cut out people that were not good' for him, and that posing topless for his album promo is a 'kickback against those people'. He's not shying away from hard topics to climb the charts either. He says: 'Me and my friends were talking about sexuality. It was what young people were talking about but it wasn't being represented in music at all. It was kind of like, 'Oh, don't sing about that. It's too political to go on Radio One.' 'I was like, 'This is what people want to hear, this is what I want to say, this is what I want to sing about'.'
Yahoo
4 days ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Nick Kroll Recalls Orchestrating John Mulaney's 2020 Drug Intervention: 'So Deeply Scared He Was Gonna Die'
Nick Kroll is opening up about the drug intervention he orchestrated for his longtime friend and collaborator John Mulaney in 2020. The Big Mouth co-creator and star got candid during a recent appearance on Dax Shepard's Armchair Expert podcast, where he recalled being 'so deeply scared that he [Mulaney] was gonna die' at the time. More from The Hollywood Reporter Nick Kroll Reveals Lady Gaga and Howard Stern as the Two Stars 'Big Mouth' Just Couldn't Get How Did Peacock's 'Poker Face' Reel in So Many Guest Stars? Natasha Lyonne's Gravitational Pull NeueHouse and Stacey Wilson Hunt Team to Launch Podcast Series 'My Hollywood Story' 'It was so scary and brutal to go through,' Kroll said. 'He was in New York. I was in L.A. It was the height of the pandemic. So it was incredibly stressful to be in the midst of the pandemic, trying to literally coordinate and produce an intervention, bringing a bunch of different people together, friends from college.' To add to the stress, Kroll had a lot going on in his personal life as well, including his pregnant wife nearing birth and filming Don't Worry Darling ('There was no stress there,' he quipped to Shepard, hinting at the film's drama). And then he said Mulaney 'was running around New York City like a true madman. And I was so deeply scared that he was gonna die.' Kroll went on to talk about the processes of planning an intervention, which also led to a revelation. 'You're all of a sudden going back and being like, 'Oh, that's why I've had an inconsistent friend for the last X amount of time,'' he explained. 'It gives you both empathy for them and also a tremendous amount of anger because they've been lying to you.' The Red One actor also shared an emotional phone call he had with Mulaney shortly before the intervention. 'I have a very clear memory of being outside of my house — someone was working inside my house, it was again [the middle of] COVID — sitting on the ground, on the phone with him, both of us crying, and me just being like, 'I'm so scared you're going to die,'' the comedian recounted. 'And I felt him feeling the same way, but also like, 'Yeah, yeah, yeah…anyway, I gotta go. I'm in this new Airbnb.'' Mulaney has previously detailed the experience of his intervention during his Netflix comedy special, Baby J. The intervention, which happened on Dec. 18, 2020, saw the comedian surprised by a group of friends, including Kroll, to address his misuse of cocaine, Adderall, Xanax, Klonopin and Percocet. He then spent two months in a Pennsylvania drug rehabilitation facility. Kroll later noted on Armchair Expert that after rehab, it still took some time for them all to heal from the experience. 'When he came out of rehab and started doing standup all about it, he was still pretty fucking pissed about the intervention,' he said. 'So he was pretty angry and all of a sudden, I was like, 'Oh, I don't know if I like having jokes about me.'' However, Kroll said he eventually recognized that the way everyone processes pain is different. 'What [Mulaney's] willing to share is what makes him so fucking funny and dynamic and intoxicating as a performer, that he's giving you a written version of his life, but he's giving you access to elements of himself,' he explained. 'And I myself am very guarded in certain ways.' Throughout their careers, Kroll and Mulaney have collaborated on several projects, including the Broadway play Oh, Hello and the Netflix series Dinner Time Live. Best of The Hollywood Reporter Hollywood's Most Notable Deaths of 2025 Harvey Weinstein's "Jane Doe 1" Victim Reveals Identity: "I'm Tired of Hiding" 'Awards Chatter' Podcast: 'Sopranos' Creator David Chase Finally Reveals What Happened to Tony (Exclusive)


San Francisco Chronicle
22-05-2025
- Entertainment
- San Francisco Chronicle
These celebrities hid among BART riders for S.F. film shoot: ‘I've never seen anything like it'
Olivia Wilde and Seth Rogen spent rush hour on BART while filming their new project in San Francisco. Both actors casually roamed Glen Park Station on Tuesday, May 20, shooting scenes for the upcoming romantic comedy 'The Invite,' BART representatives confirmed. 'It was a fantastic experience. Seth Rogen was awesome, he interacted with patrons,' Matt Overall, a BART transportation supervisor who was on-site Wednesday, told the Chronicle. Overall was supervising the shoot, which took about four hours, to ensure that it didn't interfere with regular service. 'The crew was amazing,' he added 'They were astonished at how well the station looked … They told us that the BART system was better than any system they've been on from L.A. to New York to Chicago.' Wilde is both directing and starring in the film, which also features Penélope Cruz and Edward Norton. It draws inspiration from the Spanish film, 'Sentimental' (2020), and was adapted by Rashida Jones and Will McCormack, following two couples during an evening of 'repressed emotions and unexplored sexuality,' according to the film's official synopsis obtained by Variety. The project marks Wilde's third as director, her most recent being the 2022 thriller 'Don't Worry Darling.' A release date for 'The Invite' has not yet been announced. BART's communications department issued a film permit for a cast and crew of 25 to shoot scenes at the station from 2-6 p.m. on Tuesday. 'The Invite' was approved to film both on the platform and on an in-service train to Balboa Park Station. The crew was 'filming a scene in which Rogen's character, a piano teacher, is commuting on BART with a bike, exits a train at Glen Park Station, goes up the escalator and exits the station,' Filming notices recently posted by Invite Productions, Inc. around the Make Out Room nightclub suggest that the production will continue shooting scenes in the Mission District on Wednesday, May 21. The company is based out of the same West Hollywood address as Annapurna Pictures, which is working on 'The Invite.' Prior to Tuesday's BART shoot, Wilde and Rogen filmed a scene in the auditorium of A.P. Giannini Middle School that morning, the school's Assistant Principal Heidi Smoot confirmed to the Chronicle. Though Smoot said the filming process at the school was 'self-contained' to ensure students were in class and not interfering, the project's BART visit was a stark contrast. Commuters were 'ecstatic' when they realized Rogen and Wilde were filming at the station, though many didn't immediately notice the actors or film crew because they blended in so well, according to Overall. Once they did, however, he said many riders lingered on the platform to take photos. 'I've never seen anything like it,' Overall said. 'The public was really engaged and they were really happy to see that BART is finding other means of adding revenue to our service. It's so positive that they're doing things like this, and I think we need to do more of it.'


Irish Independent
16-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Irish Independent
‘The White Lotus', ‘It Ends with Us', ‘Don't Worry Darling': Why are we so obsessed with cast feuds?
It's been a month since we checked out of 'The White Lotus' and yet feud rumours are still circling. So why can't we let go of obsessing over co-stars who don't get on? ©Evening Standard From The White Lotus to It Ends with Us and Don't Worry Darling, our preoccupation with TV and film cast feuds is as endless as the apparent feuds themselves. Some of the biggest, most memorable celebrity stories of the past few years have been spawned by alleged cast feuds, including the Blake Lively-Justin Baldoni lawsuit, spit-gate with Harry Styles, and Walton Goggins' and Aimee Lou Wood's reported falling out.


Irish Independent
15-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Irish Independent
‘The White Lotus', ‘It Ends with Us', ‘Don't Worry Darling': Why are we so obsessed with cast feuds?
It's been a month since we checked out of 'The White Lotus' and yet feud rumours are still circling. So why can't we let go of obsessing over co-stars who don't get on? ©Evening Standard Today at 21:30 From The White Lotus to It Ends with Us and Don't Worry Darling, our preoccupation with TV and film cast feuds is as endless as the apparent feuds themselves. Some of the biggest, most memorable celebrity stories of the past few years have been spawned by alleged cast feuds, including the Blake Lively-Justin Baldoni lawsuit, spit-gate with Harry Styles, and Walton Goggins' and Aimee Lou Wood's reported falling out.