Nerine Shatner Friendly House
This non profit organization is one of the nation's first residential
homes for women recovering from alcohol and substance abuse.
Donate
Here>>>
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Hollywood
Charity
Horse Show
For the past eleven years, William Shatner has spearheaded the HCHS
which features some of the best western reining riders in the country
while simultaneously raising money for charity.
Donate
Here>>>
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William
Shatner also
Supports:
March
of
Dimes Canada
The Jewish
National Fund
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Post subject:
Posted: Apr 08, 2008 - 11:29 AM
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Joined: Nov 12, 2004
Posts: 8606
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And anonymous on this X17.com site posted that Bill's profile is on RichSoulMates.com. Gee...does Bill have the time to post there?  |
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Post subject:
Posted: Apr 13, 2008 - 10:22 AM
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Joined: Mar 10, 2004
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A special message from William Shatner
Click the image to see a video message from William Shatner!
February 2008
Dear friends,
Nothing in life prepared me for the experience of tinnitus. One day, while filming the episode "Arena" for my television series Star Trek, I was standing too close to a special effects explosion. The blast robbed me of some hearing and left me with screeching tinnitus that I have endured ever since. You know what I mean when I say that tinnitus affects everything in one's life; you know how those first months of living with tinnitus are. No words adequately explain the agony.
It's been many years since that dreadful accident. With ATA's help and the right treatment I've learned to push my tinnitus into the background, at least on most days. I never realized how valuable silence was until that blast took it from me. ATA is working to give back silence to all of us! Its committed staff and volunteers need and deserve our help. Did you know that ATA is the only association of its kind in the world that makes it possible for individuals to band together to fund research for a cure? When I developed tinnitus, a cure seemed like a remote possibility. Today, the world's best researchers are very optimistic that a cure is on the horizon!
David Fagerlie, chief executive officer of ATA, recently visited me at my office in Los Angeles. He calls tinnitus the malady of the 21st century because it increasingly disturbs the lives of more and more people. He shared with me the brutal fact that tinnitus is the number one disability of soldiers injured in the global war on terror. These young men and women doing battle to protect our freedom often come home with sounds they can't escape and will probably have forever, unless we are successful in our fight to cure tinnitus. David told me that even young children develop tinnitus from exposure to loud sounds. He noted a recent study conducted by the Centers for Disease Control, which found that nearly 13 percent of all American children have hearing damage from noise exposure alone! Hundreds of thousands -- maybe a million or more -- may have tinnitus from those injuries.
David cares deeply about this growing epidemic and is determined to bring silence back into our lives. He readily admits that he and ATA can't do that without our help. Will you help me fight this important fight? My years on television and movie sets of Star Trek, were full of daring adventures that saved planets from evil empires. But even Captain Kirk couldn't do that without the loyalty and performance of his crew. Think of ATA as a real-life starship and we are the crew leading it toward accomplishing its vital mission.
The future is in our hands. Will we be satisfied with a few dollars going into research, making a cure possible in the next generation or two? I say NO! We have a way to speed the rate of discovery now. Let's take action together. Please join me in making a very generous donation to ATA so that we are doing what we can to bring back silence in our lifetime.
Please go to ATA's donation page and give enough so that you really feel you are making a special contribution to create a better life for yourself and for the millions upon millions of others who are counting on ATA to make a difference. Thank you so very much.
Sincerely,
William Shatner
Member, Honorary Board
American Tinnitus Association
http://www.ata.org/involved/donate_campaign.php
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E7bL9BhESYA (ATA video @ YouTube)
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Post subject:
Posted: Apr 16, 2008 - 11:41 PM
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From JTA.com...
Shatner explores Passover story in dramatic reading of Exodus
Courtesy of WilliamShatner.com
By Ami Eden, Published: 04/15/2008
NEW YORK (JTA) -- Less than a month after the death of Charlton Heston, another of Hollywood's great over-actors is taking center stage in the retelling of the Passover story.
This week the Jewish Music Group is releasing Exodus: An Oratorio In Three Parts, a dramatic biblical reading by William Shatner accompanied by the Arkansas Symphony Orchestra.
The album is taken from recordings of back-to-back evening performances in April 2005 at the Robinson Center Music Hall in Little Rock.
In an exclusive interview Monday with JTA, Shatner credited David Itkin, the orchestra's conductor, with writing the music and bringing together passages from the Bible and the Haggadah to produce the final text.
"It's his creation," Shatner said, adding that he thought so highly of the production that he made arrangements to have the two performances recorded.
"On the Saturday night that most of this record is taken from, my thrill was connecting with the audience the way we did," the star of Star Trek and Boston Legal recalled.
"The actor, along with 350 voices in the choral group and 75 people in the orchestra, all combined to reach out to this audience of several thousand people. The magic of the CD is that you can hear the connection, especially at the end, between the audience and the actor."
At first glance, the Exodus production sounds more like a project for Shatner's best-known Star Trek co-star, Leonard Nimoy. Nimoy has long been known for mining his Jewish heritage, from basing Spock's split-fingered Vulcan greeting on the ancient Israelite priestly blessing to drawing inspiration from Kabbalah for a book of semi-nude photographs.
But now, at the very end of the performance, it's Shatner reciting the priestly blessing -- to an enthusiastic ovation.
So does the Exodus reading, along with a film in the works titled The Shiva Club, point to some sort of later-in-life artistic engagement with his Jewish roots?
No, Shatner says, just a coincidence.
"My being Jewish does not inform the things I do, necessarily," Shatner explained, speaking by phone during a lunch break from shooting an episode of Boston Legal.
"Exodus is a wonderful piece, no matter what religion you are. The Shiva Club, which is a movie I am attempting to make sometime soon, is about crashing a shiva, if you will. A couple of comics crash a shiva. I could have, I suppose, made it an Irish wake, but the shiva I was more familiar with."
Just as Shatner says his religious background does not inform his art, he also insists that his turn as the narrator of Exodus has not led to any sort of personal transformation or alter his connection to the Passover holiday.
"I come from a Conservative Jewish home in Canada, which is pretty much like an Orthodox home here in the States. And we celebrated Passover every year and held a long seder," Shatner said, adding that he continues to mark the holiday.
"My daughter makes a seder, but it's a little more modern" -- plenty of English, he explained -- "and a little less time than the old-fashioned ones."
http://www.jta.org/cgi-bin/iowa/news/ar ... xodus.html
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Post subject:
Posted: Apr 17, 2008 - 07:45 PM
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From NY Daily News Gatecrasher...
William Shatner relives 'Trek' in book
Thursday, April 17th 2008, 4:00 AM
William Shatner says he never realized until after Star Trek ended how disliked he was by the rest of the cast.
In Up Till Now, the actor's autobiography, he describes putting in years of hard work after the show to repair his relationship with the other actors.
He developed one of his closest bonds with Leonard Nimoy (the show's Mr. Spock), whose alcoholism during the series he discusses at length.
Nimoy himself writes in the book: "I loved going to the theater in London because they allowed you to drink before the show and during intermission."
Shatner says Nimoy helped him deal with the alcoholism of his third wife, Nerine Kidd, who tragically drowned in their pool with booze and Valium in her system.
Fans of the famous space-opera will enjoy Shatner's gossipy behind-the-scenes stories, including the fuss over TV's first interracial kiss with Nichelle (Uhura) Nichols -- who told him bluntly that she despised him. (As did Scotty, Sulu and Chekov, apparently.)
No wonder he's not in the next Star Trek movie!
http://www.nydailynews.com/gossip/2008/ ... _book.html
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Post subject:
Posted: Apr 17, 2008 - 11:34 PM
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Post subject:
Posted: Apr 18, 2008 - 04:57 AM
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From JewishJournal.com...
Set a place for Shatner at the seder
By Tom Teicholz, 2008-04-18
William Shatner is God. And Pharaoh. And Moses, too.
Just in time for Passover, the Jewish Music Group (a division of Shout Factory) has released Exodus: An Oratorio in Three Parts, performed by the Arkansas Symphony Orchestra. It is conducted by David Itkin, who created and composed the Oratorio, sung by baritone Paul Rowe and includes dramatic readings from the Bible and from the haggadah, spoken by none other than Shatner.
"It's perfect seder entertainment," Shatner said recently, but more than that, "it speaks to people of all religions. It's something that should be in repertory."
Exodus: An Oratorio is divided into three parts: "Moses and Pharaoh," "The Ten Plagues" and "Redemption." The music mixes symphonic and sacred, modulating strings, choral voices and baritone solos to provide both uplift and ballast to the biblical material -- as well as gentle musical transitions between some of Shatner's narrative performances. While Shatner has been parodied for his ability to bring a level of bombast to almost any material, here he gives a varied and nuanced performance -- his voice varies from sounding like a pulpit rabbi to the muted and conversational tones of a line reading. And then there are the special effects that are his signature -- when he makes his words pop with emphasis: (i.e., I..... AM..... THE..... LORD!)
Exodus was recorded live on April 9 and 10, 2005, at the Robinson Center Music Hall in Little Rock, Ark., where the Arkansas Symphony was joined by a choir of 350.
Click here for a short excerpt of Shatner's performance. MP3. 700K.
"It was quite a happening," Shatner recalled in a recent telephone interview.
The work is just one of a number of new projects for the actor, who turned 76 on March 22. In the next few weeks, his autobiography, Up Till Now, will be released, as well as a DVD of William Shatner's Gonzo Ballet, which is a feature-length documentary about a ballet based on Shatner songs from his Ben Folds-produced album Has Been. And, on April 26, he will host his annual event, Hollywood Charity Horse Show to raise money for a therapeutic equestrian program for handicapped kids.
To listen to Shatner tell the story of Moses, Aaron and Pharaoh, to hear him read of the ten plagues and the story of the parting of the Red Sea, mixed in with choral and solo performances in English and Hebrew, is to realize how much of an icon he has become and what an amazingly diverse career he has had.
Shatner was born in Montreal, Canada, to Jewish parents and grew up in a kosher home. As a teenager, he was a counselor at a B'nai Brith camp in the Laurentian mountains in southern Quebec, according to various Web sites. He attended McGill University, earning a bachelor's in commerce. However, by the time he was 20 he had already landed a small role in a Canadian TV series. Over the next decade, Shatner would perform Shakespeare and appear on the Broadway stage in Christopher Marlowe's Tamburlaine The Great, as well as the Richard Mason play The World of Suzie Wong, and the Harold Clurman-directed A Shot in the Dark, alongside Julie Harris and Walter Matthau.
During the 1950s, Shatner appeared in several of the "golden age of television" dramas, such as Omnibus, Studio One and The Kraft Television Hour, including "A Town Has Turned to Dust" directed by John Frankenheimer and written by Rod Sterling. Shatner also had roles in such now-classic films as The Brothers Karamazov (with Yul Brynner and Claire Bloom) and Judgment at Nuremberg.
A list of Shatner's credits from the early '60s includes almost every famous series, including The Twilight Zone, 77 Sunset Strip, Route 66, The Outer Limits, The Defenders, Dr. Kildare, and Gunsmoke.
In 1966, he assumed command of the Starship Enterprise, as Captain James T. Kirk. Although only 79 original episodes ran between 1966 and 1969, the Star Trek series cemented Shatner in the popular consciousness.
Nonetheless, after the series was cancelled, and following a divorce, Shatner was forced to live out of his truck, performing summer stock. During this period, concerned that he had been typecast as Kirk, Shatner wandered in the wilderness, taking whatever roles he could.
He returned to the helm of the Enterprise for the six Star Trek movies (directing the fifth). And he also returned to TV as the star of the police drama T.J. Hooker, and then to host the reality series Rescue 911.
At the same time, Shatner began to display a sense of humor about his long tenure as Captain Kirk, and the legions of obsessed Trekkie fans, in such films as Airplane II and National Lampoon's Loaded Weapon and in skits on Saturday Night Live. He gained further notoriety as a pitchman for Priceline.com.
More recently, Shatner hit gold again, portraying attorney Denny Crane on Boston Legal, a role he originated on the series The Practice. He is one of the few actors to receive consecutive Emmy awards for playing the same character on two different series.
Shatner's life has also had its share of tragedy: his third wife, Nerine, drowned after mixing valium and alcohol. Shatner recently told Details magazine that he didn't "understand closure ... we grieve forever."
As for his recording career, it began with his much-derided 1968 album, Transformed Man and with his over-the-top spoken word interpretations of songs such as Bob Dylan's "Mr. Tambourine Man." In 2004, Ben Folds produced Has Been, a collection of songs, many of which he co-wrote with Shatner, including featured guest performances by Joe Jackson and Aimee Mann. It was well received and became a commercial success.
Which brings us back to Exodus and its composer David Itkin.
Itkin grew up in a conservative Jewish home, began writing music at 14 and conducting at 16. A graduate of the University of The Pacific Conservatory, he has been music director of the Arkansas Symphony since 1993, while also conducting and serving as music director for the Abilene Philharmonic Orchestra. It has just been announced that he will leave The Arkansas Symphony after the 2008-2009 season to become director of orchestral studies at the University of North Texas at Denton.
At a seder in 2003, Itkin said he was stuck by the dramatic possibilities of the Passover story. He developed the composition while on sabbatical in Florence, Italy, the following summer and fall.
When Itkin secured a 2005 date for the Exodus Oratorio he still needed a narrator. "We kicked around lots of names," he said, and always considered but was not wedded to using famous Jewish actors. "We kept winnowing and winnowing the list" he said, "and Shatner's name kept coming up. And it wouldn't go away."
Itkin contacted Shatner, and it turned out that not only was he interested, he was available on the needed dates.
"It was intriguing," Shatner recalled.
So with little preparation, other than years of reading the haggadah at seders, Shatner arrived in Little Rock the night before the first performance.
"He was great fun to be around," Itkin recalled.
There were two rehearsals and two performances -- one on Friday and one on Saturday night. Itkin was impressed by how Shatner was able to deliver his narrative within the very proscribed places and vary each character, much like different "takes," affording choices for editing the eventual produced work.
"On Saturday," Shatner said, "everything fell into place." He reveled in the experience of being on stage with 350 choral members and a 72-piece orchestra, he said.
"There's no magic like a live audience," Shatner says in the recording's liner notes. "The performer sends out the words, the music, the love, and he gets back the energy of the audience in waves."
In the final section, "Redemption," he intones the words of the priestly blessing: "May the Lord Bless you and keep you; may he be gracious to you; may the Lord make the light of his countenance to shine upon you; and may he grant you peace."
"The words were like a benediction over the whole audience." Shatner recalled.
At the seders I attend, I am not above some moments of audio-visual enhancement. I recall one spectacular seder where, at the strategic moment, the late Charlton Heston burst onto a screen to part the Red Sea. In recent years, the immediate post-seder entertainment has been funny Passovers songs (like "There's No Seder Like Our Seder" to tune of "There's No Business Like Show Business"). This year may well find our seder going forth with Shatner and the Exodus Oratorio.
And let us all together say: Amen.
http://www.jewishjournal.com/home/preview.php?id=19257
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Post subject:
Posted: Apr 18, 2008 - 10:59 AM
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Joined: Dec 31, 2006
Posts: 61
Location: Georgia
Status: Offline
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| Where can you purchase or download this? Says entertainment for your seder, well that is this weekend! |
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Post subject:
Posted: Apr 18, 2008 - 11:05 AM
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Joined: Dec 31, 2006
Posts: 61
Location: Georgia
Status: Offline
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| Found it on cdbaby.com in case anyone else is interested. |
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Post subject:
Posted: Apr 18, 2008 - 05:29 PM
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Post subject:
Posted: Apr 22, 2008 - 01:00 AM
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Joined: Dec 12, 2005
Posts: 9995
Location: OKLAHOMA, O-K-L-A-H-O-M-A, OKLAHOMA, OK! YEEOW!
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TRexx does such a good service to the gang here with his news! And all in accordance to the prophecy! Appreciate it, TRexx!  |
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Post subject:
Posted: Apr 22, 2008 - 09:28 AM
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From ExtraTV...
A Day in the Life of Jerry Penacoli
Posted by WebExtra on April 21, 2008 5:43 AM
...
7:30 AM: The day started by battling an hour and a half of LA traffic to get to the set of "Boston Legal" -- now, the show rarely shoots on-location, and this day their location was north of Los Angeles in horse country: the beautiful Ventura Farms -- a gorgeous location where (and the more mature will remember this show) "The Big Valley" was shot... the newbies will be interested in knowing it's where "Heroes" shoots alot. But, I digress...
9:00 AM Shooting on the set... There's an upcoming storyline between William Shatner's character and a horse farmer (played by Broadway star Christine Ebersol), and it was a cool opportunity to capture Shatner on horseback, and interview him -- and, trust me, he's always in rare form.
10:00 AM: Got a great interview with Shatner, where he reveals alot about this particular episode (second to the last one for this season - airing in May), but also talks about life at 77 -- he can't believe he's that old -- and his recent hip replacement surgery, which he really hasn't talked about... The writer's strike enabled him to make the time to get it done. He's become 'hip' again, but it was his HIP that had been a recurring problem. Happy to report, he's all better...
11:00 AM We learn that "Boston Legal" -- (by the way, I'm biased, it's one of my favorite shows) has not learned if it's being picked up yet by ABC for another season... c'mon!!! It's one of the best-written shows... with one of the best, most prestigious group of actors... It never disappoints, in my estimation. (Again, I digress...)
...
http://extratv.warnerbros.com/2008/04/a ... ry_pen.php
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Post subject:
Posted: Apr 22, 2008 - 12:02 PM
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Joined: Nov 12, 2004
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| TRexx wrote: | From ExtraTV...
A Day in the Life of Jerry Penacoli
Posted by WebExtra on April 21, 2008 5:43 AM
...
7:30 AM: The day started by battling an hour and a half of LA traffic to get to the set of "Boston Legal" -- now, the show rarely shoots on-location, and this day their location was north of Los Angeles in horse country: the beautiful Ventura Farms -- a gorgeous location where (and the more mature will remember this show) "The Big Valley" was shot... the newbies will be interested in knowing it's where "Heroes" shoots alot. But, I digress...
9:00 AM Shooting on the set... There's an upcoming storyline between William Shatner's character and a horse farmer (played by Broadway star Christine Ebersol), and it was a cool opportunity to capture Shatner on horseback, and interview him -- and, trust me, he's always in rare form.
10:00 AM: Got a great interview with Shatner, where he reveals alot about this particular episode (second to the last one for this season - airing in May), but also talks about life at 77 -- he can't believe he's that old -- and his recent hip replacement surgery, which he really hasn't talked about... The writer's strike enabled him to make the time to get it done. He's become 'hip' again, but it was his HIP that had been a recurring problem. Happy to report, he's all better...
11:00 AM We learn that "Boston Legal" -- (by the way, I'm biased, it's one of my favorite shows) has not learned if it's being picked up yet by ABC for another season... c'mon!!! It's one of the best-written shows... with one of the best, most prestigious group of actors... It never disappoints, in my estimation. (Again, I digress...)
...
http://extratv.warnerbros.com/2008/04/a ... ry_pen.php
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I remember when Jerry Penacoli used to be in my old hometown of Philadelphia at KYW-3 (NBC) from 1982-1991 before he moved onto the west coast in '92. |
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Post subject:
Posted: Apr 23, 2008 - 04:37 AM
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From TheAge.com...
The other face of George
Karl Quinn, April 23, 2008
A decade after Seinfeld ended, Jason Alexander and George Costanza remain inseparable.
...
For all that Seinfeld was a mould-breaking show, Alexander is very much a performer of the old school. He tirelessly mugs for the camera, turns the charm on in an instant, then moves on to the next obligation the second his allocated time is up. Never does he give in to the temptation to resent the fact that he and George Costanza are forever entwined.
And for that, he owes a considerable debt to William Shatner.
As a child, Alexander says, "I was a total Star Trek geek." Watching Shatner as Captain James T. Kirk, he realised acting (albeit rather hammily) was what he wanted to do with his life.
When he was 18, he auditioned for colleges where he might study drama. "I'd never had an acting class in my life, so I was doing Bill Shatner," he recalls. "I eventually ended up at Boston University because I auditioned for a man who had done Shakespeare with Shatner in Canada when they were both young men. And he said to me, 'I don't know if you can act, but it's the finest Bill Shatner impersonation I've ever seen.' "
About a year ago, Alexander hosted a celebrity roast of Shatner, but their personal connection goes much further back. "He was given to me for my 35th birthday by my friends," he says. "They knew I was a diehard fan. They called him up and said, 'We don't know if you watch this Seinfeld show, but there's this guy on it who just thinks the world of you, and you're the reason he became an actor; could we surprise him by giving you to him for lunch?' "
The two dined, and eventually became friends. "He talked to me about his experience of coming to resent the early success in his life," Alexander says. "He cautioned me against it. I don't know if I would have gone that path anyway, but he said, 'You've created something that is so meaningful to so many people; how often does anybody in any walk of life get to say that? You have to assume this is the biggest thing you will do in your career. And you should be grateful that you've had it once, because not everybody gets to taste that.' "
...
Read the complete Jason Alexander article at TheAge.com...
http://www.theage.com.au/news/arts/bcom ... 41615.html
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Post subject:
Posted: Apr 25, 2008 - 10:22 AM
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From IBM.com...
RU Ready to Boldly Go?
The IBM Rational Software Development Conference 2008 features an exciting line-up of keynote speakers including actor, author, philanthropist, one of pop culture's most recognizable figures and our guest speaker: William Shatner. You also won't want to miss the rest of the scheduled keynote speakers for this year's event!
William Shatner: Actor, Author, Philanthropist, and Pop Culture Hero.
RU Ready to hear a guest speaker of truly heroic proportions? Sure, many may claim the mantle "legend in his own time," but unlike our special speaker, few have earned it. Exemplifying the best of both individual and team achievement, our special guest will boldly take you where no developer has gone before! Get ready to set your agenda to "stun."
Wednesday, June 4
Reservations: 888-828-8850 OR 800-227-1500 OR 407-934-4000
Walt Disney World Swan and Dolphin Hotel
1500 Epcot Resorts Boulevard
Lake Buena Vista, Florida 32830
PH: 407-934-4000
Main Fax: 407-934-4099
Reservations Fax: 407-934-4710
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Post subject:
Posted: Apr 25, 2008 - 09:28 PM
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From GoUpstate.com...
Jan-Michael Gambill ousted from Invitational
Friday, April 25, 2008
...
[Pro tennis player] Gambill also collects Jaguar automobiles, lives in Hawaii, and is a self-proclaimed Star Trek addict, or "Trekkie." He's a close friend of William Shatner and plans to pursue an acting career.
"I'm going out to Los Angeles next month to try to pursue (acting) more seriously," Gambill said. "I've studied it a bit and been on the set of a few different things. But I've never given it 100 percent."
He hopes to sit in on a taping of his favorite show Boston Legal -- Shatner is one of the main stars.
...
Read the complete article at GoUpstate.com...
http://www.goupstate.com/article/200804 ... 018/SPORTS
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