Sienna Miller the British It Girl has received a
public apology from fiance Jude Law, who admitted to
having an affair with a nanny after reports of his
infidelity surfaced in several tabloids.
"Following the reports in today's papers, I just want
to say I am deeply ashamed and upset that I've hurt
Sienna and the people most close to us," Law said in a
statement to the British Press Association. "I want to
publicly apologize to Sienna and our respective
families for the pain that I have caused.
"There is no defense for my actions which I sincerely
regret and I ask that you respect our privacy at this
very difficult time."
Law confessed to bedding 26-year-old Daisy Wright, the
caregiver to one of his children, who was hired by his
ex-wife, Sadie Frost. The two reportedly met in New
Orleans earlier this year where Law was filming All
the King's Men.
Though Law beseeched the public for privacy in the
matter, Wright has no such hang-ups about her steamy
encounter with the Cold Mountain star.
"It was amazing," Wright told London's Sunday Mirror
of her mattress romp with Law. "Jude was a masterful
lover who made my whole body tingle."
The nanny told the Sunday Mirror that her connection
with Law began after the two attended a Robert Plant
concert along with Law's child.
When they returned home after the concert, they shared
some wine and...
"The next thing I knew, he was kissing me--it was
amazing. He felt so lovely. We kissed and kissed for
what seemed like ages I was thinking, 'I cannot
believe this. Jude Law is snogging me'," Wright told
the paper.
"The next thing I know, we are dragging each other
upstairs to his bedroom, kissing and then, in the
bedroom, ripping off each other's clothes."
After a wild night of sex, the two were discovered in
bed by one of Law's children, Wright said.
"The next thing I knew I heard the door open and the
child was looking at me in bed. I was probably still
drunk and opened one eye. I just thought I am not
going to wake up, I am not going to move. I just lay
there," Wright said.
According to published reports, Wright, who had served
as weekend nanny to 8-year-old Rafferty, 4-year-old
Iris and 2-year-old Rudy since last August, was
recently let go from the position after Frost decided
she needed someone older to care for her children.
Miller, 23, has made no public comment about her
fiance's admission. On Monday, she arrived at a
theater in London's West End looking "grim faced"
before taking the stage in a production of As You Like
It, a British television station reported.
The actress reportedly did not appear to be wearing
her engagement ring.
Friends say the couple are "working through" their
problems, according to BBC News.
Roman Polanski, testifying on the first day of his
libel suit against the publishers of Vanity Fair
magazine, said that he was the victim of an
"abominable lie."
The Polish-born movie director is suing publisher
Conde Nast over a 2002 article that said he seduced a
woman on the way to the funeral of his murdered wife,
Sharon Tate.
Tate, who was pregnant, was killed by followers of
American serial killer Charles Manson in Los Angeles
in 1969.
Polanski called the Vanity Fair article "particularly
hurtful because it dishonors my memory of Sharon,"
adding, "that's not the way I behave."
He said his memories of the time immediately after
Tate's death are hazy. "I was sedated and dazed," he
said.
Polanski is the acclaimed director of "Chinatown,"
"Rosemary's Baby" and "The Pianist," which drew on his
childhood experiences escaping the Holocaust and won
an Academy Award for best director in 2003.
Polanski faces arrest in the United States since
pleading guilty to having sex with a 13-year-old girl.
He was charged with rape and five other felonies in
1977.
He fled Los Angeles for Paris soon after, fearing that
he could face a lengthy prison sentence. The charge to
which he pleaded guilty is not an extraditable offense
in France.
Director Bryan Singer says next summer's Superman
Returns is first and foremost a love story.
"It's a story about what happens when old boyfriends
come back into your life after they've been gone a few
years and things have changed," Singer said at
Comic-Con.
A three-minute clip of his movie drew a standing
ovation from a crowd of several thousand
convention-goers.
"Superman has always been about Lois Lane, Superman
and Clark Kent and this love triangle between these
three people who really are only two people," Singer
says.
Superman Returns, which is due in theaters in June,
finds Clark Kent and his Superman alter-ego back in
Metropolis after several years of trying, in vain, to
return to his home planet.
Back at the Daily Planet, Kent discovers that his
former love interest, Lois Lane ( Kate Bosworth), has
a boyfriend and a child. Lane writes a cynical story
about Superman's return and in a tirade bluntly
informs him, "The world doesn't need a savior, and
neither do I."
Superman Returns picks up a few years after 1978's
Superman, which starred the late Christopher Reeve.
It's as if that film's three critically panned sequels
didn't exist.
"It sort of puts the first film in a vague history,"
Singer says. "It utilizes elements, icons and images
from that movie and helps give us a place to begin."
The late Marlon Brando, who played Superman's father,
Jor-El, will be seen in the new movie, and
computer-generated re-creation will supplement
archival footage of the actor.
Singer, who also directed the blockbusters X-Men and
X2, says his Superman harks back visually to the 1930s
and '40s vision of the superhero.
Warner Bros. has been trying to relaunch the Superman
franchise for 11 years. Singer was asked to step in
last year, and he says he jumped at the chance, even
if it meant relinquishing the X-Men franchise.
"I identify with Superman," Singer says. "I am
adopted, I am an only child, and
I wear tights...
I love the idea that he comes from another world, that
he's the ultimate immigrant. He has all these
extraordinary powers, and he has a righteousness about
him."
The World Famous Jerry Lentz
What you are about to become obsessed with is completely true.


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