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Marriage, Death, and Leo
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President Clinton disappears
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from the tabloids this month as they return to their classic themes: lousy
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marriages, loss, licentiousness, and Leo.
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The
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Globe , the Star , and the National Enquirer all agree the
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10-month marriage of Titanic director James Cameron and
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Terminator actress Linda Hamilton--his fourth--is over. There appear to
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be two reasons: 1) his continuing affair with Titanic actress Suzy Amis
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and 2) according to the Globe , Hamilton's realization--along with the
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billion people who watched the Academy Awards--that he's a "jerk." Cameron and
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Hamilton were an ex-couple (they have a 5-year-old daughter) when they suddenly
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married last year. It's usually a bad sign when, as the Star reports,
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your friends are more surprised by your wedding than by your separation. The
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marriage permanently unraveled, says the Globe , when the director moved
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out of his marital home a day after he was spotted making out with Amis in his
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Humvee. Ah, romance! Most shocking of all is the Enquirer 's assertion
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that Hamilton did not sign a prenuptial agreement. According to the
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Star , the actress wants half of the director's Titanic earnings,
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which could be $100 million.
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Enough money for a B-2 bomber is also at stake in the
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marital woes of Home Improvement star Tim Allen. Last week the tabs were
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reporting that if the sitcom star did not go into rehab, his wife of 14 years,
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Laura, was going to leave him. This week he is in rehab and, says the
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Star , his wife wants out anyway. For Allen's part, according to the
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Enquirer , his stay at Promises rehab center in Malibu (where Christian
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Slater is another guest) has made him realize he wants out. If one of them gets
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their wish it could make a big dent in what the Star estimates is a $110
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million fortune. The tabs leave the impression that the Promises counseling
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sessions are patched directly into their newsrooms. According to the
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Enquirer Allen said part of the reason he is having so many problems
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right now is that he is unhappily married. The publication says he's asked his
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wife not to come for the Saturday family picnic. But he has had one special
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visitor, says the Star : his lawyer.
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There are
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mixed signals about the state of the marriage of newlyweds actress Sharon Stone
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and San Francisco Examiner Executive Editor Phil Bronstein. According to
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the Star , when they're together in their L.A. home, they make love
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incessantly. "From the kitchen to the garage, they've christened practically
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every room." Maybe a session in the broom closet killed their passion because,
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according to the Enquirer , "the honeymoon is over." Stone wants her
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husband to give up his job and work in Hollywood, but he "hates the Hollywood
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scene," reports the publication. He has also "fumed to friends, 'There's no way
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I am going to give up my life and become a Hollywood trophy husband.' " This
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has left some friends with no option but to start "taking bets on how long the
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marriage lasts."
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The deaths of Linda McCartney and Tammy Wynette
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were widely covered by the rest of the press, but one of the tabloids' special
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missions is to give you celebrities' final words and farewells. The tabs were
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certainly taken in by Paul McCartney's subterfuge about where his wife spent
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her last days. To protect the family's privacy, a spokesman told the press
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she'd died in Santa Barbara, Calif., when she actually died at a ranch the
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family owns in Arizona. So it seems unlikely that, at the end of her life, she
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said, as the Enquirer reports, "I want to smell the Pacific," or that an
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"insider" saw her there.
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McCartney issued a statement
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saying he held his wife in her final moments and told her they were riding
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horses together on a fine spring day. Linda "closed her eyes and gently slipped
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away." The Enquirer preferred that her life end this way: Linda
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whispered to Paul, "I love you. I want you to be brave. We'll meet again to
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continue our love affair."
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The Star had its own
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version of her parting words. " 'Give me one last kiss,' Linda weakly begged
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Paul minutes before she closed her eyes for the last time. 'I won't leave you,'
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he whispered. 'I'll always love you.' " The Star , too, had her dying in
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Santa Barbara, although its own reporting turned up a neighbor in Arizona who
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said the family was on its ranch shortly before her death.
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The
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Globe also fell for the Santa Barbara story, and it has the most florid
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deathbed scene. " 'There is no woman on earth who can take your place,' sources
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say a heartbroken Paul McCartney sobbed to his dying wife Linda as he tenderly
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clutched her hand. 'I will never marry again.' " It seems unlikely Linda would
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have wanted, or Paul have made, such a promise. (It is a vow Thomas Jefferson
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did make to his dying wife. Keeping it may have led to the situation with that
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woman Miss Hemmings.)
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Matrimony was also very much a part of the tabs' coverage
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of the death of country singer Wynette. Although she was only 55 when she died,
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she managed to cram in five marriages. Her first was to one Euple Byrd, who,
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reports the Star , when she drove off to Nashville to become a singer,
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shouted after her: "Dream on! Dream on!" Years later, when Wynette was signing
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autographs after one of her concerts, there was Byrd, standing in line. She
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turned his picture of her over and signed on the back, "Dream on! Dream on!
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Love, Tammy."
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probably aren't many fifth marriages that last 20 years, but Wynette's did. Her
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last husband, and manager, George Richey, was more than overcome by her death.
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At the funeral home the night after she died, reports the Star , "He ran
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up to the casket and tried to lift Tammy right out of it, saying, 'Come on
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honey, I'm taking you home.' " During her funeral, the Star says, "he
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lunged from his front pew--and tearfully wrapped his arms around the
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flower-strewn casket of his wife." All this led a friend to conclude, reports
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the Globe , "He won't be long behind his beloved Tammy."
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On the sex front, nonpresidential illicit
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encounters are all the tabs can muster this month. The Globe has an
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interview with the 14-year-old boy who at age 12 became the lover of the most
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reviled teacher in America, Mary Kay LeTourneau. LeTourneau, 36, is back in
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jail, pregnant a second time by the teen-ager--their daughter is now a year
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old. LeTourneau was the boy's teacher in both second and sixth grades, and he
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describes their relationship thus: "When I was six or seven, she encouraged me
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in my drawing. ... We were friends. But my feelings toward Mary became more
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romantic when I reached the 6 th grade." Yessiree. It seems the
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teacher could have taught Stone and Bronstein a thing or two: The boy describes
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how they "made love in nearly every room of her home while her husband Steve
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was away. At night we sometimes had sex outside on the deck--and even in a
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swing hanging from a tree in her front yard."
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Just when
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you start thinking private school vouchers would curb such situations, the
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Globe throws you a curve. The tabloid interviews 81-year-old actor Kirk
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Douglas, who reveals that his English teacher seduced him when he was 14. "Mrs.
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Livingston changed my life," he says. She introduced Douglas not only to sex
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but also to poetry. He says she gave him the confidence to be an actor, and he
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ended up helping to support her at the end of her life.
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The Star covers George Michael's arrest for exposing
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himself in a men's room at Los Angeles' Will Rogers Memorial Park as if it's
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writing a review. A "close friend" of the singer says: "He's a performer
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through and through. But he needs help." The arrest--and Michael's subsequent
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acknowledgment of his homosexuality--did give the Globe the opportunity
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to print pictures it had from last year of Michael cruising the same park. And
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both the Globe and the Enquirer note Rogers' most famous
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quotation: "I never met a man I didn't like." The Enquirer also
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helpfully contacted Earl Goss, the father of Michael's current live-in lover,
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Kenny Goss. The heartfelt but likely ineffective reaction from Goss Sr., who
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lives in Coleman, Texas, was, "I've got to talk to Kenny and sort this out.
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Kenny needs to come back home to Texas."
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Finally, the tabs deliver on
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their implicit promise to reveal every stray fact about Leonardo DiCaprio.
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Since the actor is only 23, this means scouring a rather meager past. So we
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learn from the Globe that as a 14-year-old he took classmate Cecilia
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Garcia out on a date. She recalls: "He looked in my eyes, put his arm around me
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and kissed me on the lips. It was a dry, short peck and it felt weird." Perhaps
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Leo later had a helpful English teacher: According to the account in the
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Star of more a recent former girlfriend, swimsuit model Kristen Zang,
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"he's a terrific kisser on top of everything else." But what he's not, the
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Globe documents, is a terrific spaghetti eater. A series of photos shot
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through a restaurant window shows the Titanic star slurping up his
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pasta. He obviously needs the carbohydrates. According to the Star , Leo
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was romancing model Kate Moss, but she dumped him when she learned he had
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cheated on her with another model. But, the Enquirer reported, Leo has
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turned his interest from model Naomi Campbell to Cuban model Carla Paneka. It's
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probably lucky that, according to the Enquirer , Leo was rebuffed by
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"Baby Spice" Emma Bunton while he was in London. All this has led to Leo now
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finding his life "a living hell," the Enquirer says. So he is taking the
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next step every young star must take. That is, talking about going to India to
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work with Mother Teresa's Missionaries of Charity. Says Mother Teresa's
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successor, Sister Nirmala, to the Enquirer , "Of course we would welcome
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Leonardo! The door is always open."
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