Hairy Situation: Jennifer Aniston is tressed out. The Friend who launched a thousand haircuts will play a jilted wife in the August comedy She's the One, but don't look for the famed Rachel 'do up there on the big screen. ''I didn't know about her hairstyle,'' says One director Ed Burns (The Brothers McMullen). ''She came in to audition and I said, 'Your hair looks great.' I thought she was going to kill me. She said she wanted to change it.'' In the film, Aniston's usually sleek locks are curled, clipped, feathered, and ponytailed. The makeover may be Aniston's way of distinguishing her film career from her TV career: Her hairdo was similarly redone for the currently filming romantic comedy Picture Perfect. ''She fits her haircut to the character,'' says a spokesman for the actress. ''In She's the One, she wanted to downplay glamour. In Picture Perfect, she's a New York career girl, so she's funkier and more urban. Who knows what she'll do when she's done with these movies.''
Pretty in Primrose: Tweeds catalog customers must be doing a
double take. The company, which eschews celebrity models for
mopey-looking mannequins, just issued a fall edition sporting
the face of ex-Brat Packer Molly Ringwald. No, Tweeds hasn't
gone Hollywood, says company president Marty Brill. The celeb
covers are part of the company's new philanthropic program,
Women Giving Back. In exchange for Ringwald's services, Tweeds
contributed to two of her favorite AIDS charities, Friends In
Deed and Concerned Parents for AIDS Research. ''We thought maybe
there was a way to raise awareness of charities through women
who are typical of Tweeds consumers,'' explains Brill. Tweeds
will feature one celebrity per season (next up: Olympic swimmer
Janet Evans, who'll appear on behalf of the American Diabetes
Association). While the celebs aren't paid, they do get one
invaluable perk: all the Tweeds merchandise they want. Would you
prefer that suit in soft mint or bark?
Casey Davidson
Magic Vie: Asked in a '94 poll to decide which of two sitcom
sorceresses was more powerful, Nick at Nite viewers chose the
Bewitched twitch over the I Dream of Jeannie blink. Was someone
at Columbia where big-screen versions of both vintage TV shows
are brewing watching? Jeannie now seems trapped in the bottle
without a director or a script, while the studio is more
intoxicated with Bewitched than Dr. Bombay. Execs were recently
treated to a New York reading of the script, which focuses on
how good witch Samantha met hubby Darrin, by Douglas Carter
Beane (To Wong Foo...). Penny Marshall is producing and Ted
Bessell (That Girl's Donald Hollinger) is to direct. With more
than mere mortals behind the scenes, Alicia Silverstone, long
rumored to be a leading contender to play Jeannie, along with
Cameron Diaz and Lisa Kudrow, is now expected to nose out the
role of Samantha. A spokeswoman for the actress says Silverstone
hasn't conjured up a deal on either film. Well...
Richard Natale
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