Katie holmes what does she know




















What follows sounds like a plot out of some Mickey Rooney movie. Because it coincided with opening night of Damn Yankees , her high school play. Who does she think she is? The studio eventually rescheduled the audition. She got the part. It was her third audition — if, you know, you count Damn Yankees. We always emphasize that they should go for the gold, if you want to use that term, or the brass ring — try to be your best. And, by gosh, she hit it. And at this point, it has not affected her.

It would mean a lot to him. All right? Attention, kids who want to be famous! This little scenario is what fame is. It is not glamorous premieres. It is not hobnobbing with other stars. Most often, it is some annoying girl inviting you to a party. Holmes politely takes the number, extricates herself and heads out onto the street, which smells delightfully of fried chicken from the Taste of Country down the block.

Not much of an eater, Holmes says her favorite food is pretzels with salsa. I lived two blocks away from the video store that they shoot at. It was so much fun — we hung out all the time, and we just had a blast. We were new to television and had no idea what we were in for. The four cast mates, thrown into a new situation, forged a deep bond. There was a lot of love in that room when the foursome recently reunited. We met the other two kids for dinner, and as soon as the quartet was complete, it was the damnedest thing: The dynamic reverted exactly back to what it was last year.

When the four of us get together, an instinctive dynamic develops. James becomes the quiet, respectful guy; I become the loud, obnoxious guy; Michelle becomes Lolita; and Katie becomes the cute girl next door. She is, after all, part of the new crop of crossover TV actresses — the Neves, the Jennifer Loves, the Sarah Michelles — who seemingly work nonstop before their Q ratings fall.

Certainly, Disturbing Behavior is not a good sign. What am I gonna say when I see them? Her manager, Guillod, explains his plan. We wanted her to get a feel of what making a feature film is like. Then we tried to get her feet wet in another area, so she did Go , this little independent film that was directed by Doug Liman, who did Swingers. By that time she was ready to carry a film, and we put her with a director, Kevin Williamson, whom she was familiar with. Now, next year?

Believe me, she will be doing only one movie. Holmes is a solid, talented actor who is leagues above her contemporaries. Everybody in L. But I want to grow old with somebody! Somebody that you can be proud to say is from your hometown. Of course, being the good girl she was, Holmes put off the audition so that she could fulfill her committment playing Lola in her high school musical "Damn Yankees. Holmes didn't date much before she met Cruise, but she did have one other serious relationship.

Klein and Holmes became engaged in late , when she was 24, but they ended their relationship in March , a few weeks after Klein was arrested on drunken-driving charges. He pleaded guilty to one misdemeanor count and was sentenced to a fine, community service and five years' probation. At the time, her publicist released a statement quoted in Us Weekly: "They broke off the engagement but are remaining good friends.

Holmes was cast in "Dawson's Creek" her senior year of high school. While playing high schooler Joey Potter for the next six years, she put off college. She was accepted to Columbia University in New York. Then there were movie roles and, perhaps, her biggest role as Mrs. Tom Cruise. Now that's she's established herself in a new apartment in New York's Chelsea neighborhood, it will be interesting to see if Holmes takes some time to continue her studies.

I remember walking the city with my parents after dinner one night and thinking, "I need an apartment here. I need to be here. LB: When you finally moved here in [after divorcing Cruise], there was, of course, a huge amount of attention on you. KH: That time was intense. It was a lot of attention, and I had a little child on top of it.

We had some funny moments out and about in public. So many people I didn't know became my friends and helped us out, and that's what I love about the city.

There was one incredible moment when I think I actually cried. Suri was 6 or 7, and she was spending the night at a friend's house while I was seeing the ballet at Lincoln Center. At 10 o'clock I got a call: "Mommy, can you come get me?

She was exhausted. She fell asleep on the way home, and when we pulled up to our building, the cab driver opened the door and helped me not wake her. He helped carry her to the building. He was so kind. LB: I love that you're very in the world — especially because there were years when you couldn't be. How great does it feel to be able to take cabs and not have to retreat at all? KH: Well, part of that is my lack of ability with technology.

The Uber app and I just don't work out. But when I was young, Dawson's Creek was such a huge leap. Within a year of graduating from high school, we were known everywhere.

It was quite a lot. Obviously, the world was not what it is today — there weren't as many paparazzi or people with phones. But it was still weird that I was treated differently. It felt unnatural, and I didn't understand it.

Now I don't lead with being a public person; I lead with being a person. You should be kind because that's what people do, not because you want people to think you are kind. KH: As I told a friend of mine, "You know what's so upsetting about the 40s? My old tricks don't work. So I was always the cute one, and you get used to being the little cute one. Then you wake up one day —. KH: I'm basically always putting lotion on. I do all that Barbara Sturm stuff: hyaluronic, face brightening, face cream, skin cream.

It's so vain. But that happens. It kind of hits you. LB: It's a very odd feeling when you're practically a child in your head and then your face and body go KH: It's very odd. I used to get away with no makeup. When I was a teenager and a young actress, it was about being sort of grungy. Now I'm like, "Oh god, I have to do stuff! LB: But it's not. You're a visible human being.

I've met Suri only once so far, but I was struck by how open she was. KH: I love her so much. My biggest goal has always been to nurture her into her individuality. To make sure she is percent herself and strong, confident, and able. And to know it. She came out very strong — she's always been a strong personality. She'll pick an activity and work her butt off until she's really good at it.

Then she's like, "OK, I'm going to try the next thing. I have to say, I did recently see some fan site [about her] posted when she was a baby, and it was very intense. We were followed a lot when she was little. I just wanted her outside, so I would walk her around to find parks at, like, 6 in the morning when nobody would see us.

But there's one video where I'm holding her — she was 2 at the time — and she starts waving at the cameras. She's pretty special. LB: Exactly. Why does a cashmere bra seem like a practical and fundamental item in your closet? KH: Honestly, I wasn't feeling so sexy. And I saw that and was like, "Sexy. I can do that! That's how my brain works.

But then I was like, "Oh, wait, I'm not in a cabin, and I'm not going to a cabin. I had noticed other people wearing bras with blazers.

LB: Yes. But your sweater was perfectly positioned. It was a little off the shoulder but not totally off the shoulder. KH: I didn't want to get into trouble with my teenager! We were school shopping, and I was just trying to hail a cab on Sixth Avenue. It looked way more glamorous than it was. KH: I'd like to wear more Valentino. And then, I'm not going to lie, I thought J. Lo's costumes during the [Super Bowl] halftime show were absolutely incredible.

I watched her [Instagram] story where they were putting on all the Swarovski crystals. KH: I went through this phase as a kid where I changed my clothes 10 times a day. I think I drove my mother crazy. But I loved my prom dress senior year. This was , so it was grunge time. Was I cool enough to wear my dress with Doc Martens? No, I wasn't. Did I want to?

Yes, I did. I still have it in a storage unit. And I liked the pantyhose I wore with it. Testing out the black hose with open-toed shoes and a summer dress. KH: Scrunchies are back, you know. KH: I was a bit of an only child since my siblings are older, so I got very used to entertaining myself. I still do; I like to stay busy. My mother had a very successful drapery business, but then when I was born — I was a lot of work.



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