Posts Tagged ‘Maggie Grace’

2009 CFDA Awards

June 16th, 2009 / Author: OK! Staff

Liam Neeson: I Never Take It For Granted

January 30th, 2009 / Author: Valerie Nome

Although Liam Neeson plays an overprotective father dealing with his grumpy ex-wife in the kidnap thriller Taken, his reality couldn’t be more serene.

The Irish-born actor, 56, has a happy home life with Natasha Richardson, 45, and they are parents to Micheál, 13, and Daniel, 12.

“His sons are very lucky,” former Lost star Maggie Grace, who plays his daughter, tells me. “He’s wonderful, gracious, giving and protective.”

In addition, Liam and Natasha, who wed in 1994, have one of the longest-running unions in showbiz.

Now he opens up to me at NYC’s Regency Hotel about his family, marriage, former costar Mickey Rourke and Oscar picks.

How are you overprotective of your sons?
Now that they’re 12 and 13, I’m less overprotective. Just living in New York when they’re kid-kids, every time you leave the building there are concerns such as crossing the road.

I am blessed. My wife and I feel that when our kids are 17, 18, we’ll show them the door, and say ‘it’s a big world out there, go and see it – some of it.’

However, I’ve got two boys. If I had a daughter, I’m not sure I would be like that. I’d be a bit more protective.

Now that you have kids, do you prefer to do more family-friendly fare?
Oh sure, yeah. I did a voice for [video game] Fallout 3. I eventually got my son one, and he played it. He’s like ‘dad, it’s you!’ There’s no escape. I’m going ‘yes, son.’

What’s the secret to a happy marriage?
Never take it for granted. That’s what I constantly do. Work at it.

Is it true that your wife is leery about returning to Broadway?
She had a gripe that it seems to be a one-newspaper town. If Ben Brantley of The New York Times doesn’t like you, the shows seem to go into freefall. It’s unfair. But she loves theater. We both do. We’re trying to find something to do together for the first time in fifteen years.

But all the planets have to be aligned to get back onstage. We have to find the right piece of material and it has to be right for the kids.

Many showbiz couples don’t like to work together, but you’re fine with it?
Yeah. Tasha and I worked together twice before we were married, and we have a wonderful chemistry onstage. I’d look forward to it. As long as it’s the right thing, I think she would, too.

What do you think of Mickey Rourke’s comeback?
Mickey’s wonderful. We did a film called A Prayer For The Dying years ago. He was terrific. He was very good. I sensed somewhere in the future he might get lost. I can’t intellectualize that, but he had a lot of hangers-on. He’s gone through stuff, so it’s wonderful to see him back. It is a thrilling performance he does in The Wrestler.

Any favorite films for Oscar picks?
I recently saw The Reader. I loved the book. I thought that was very well-adapted. My buddy Ralph Fiennes was beautiful in it. They were all great. Especially Kate Winslet, too, but it was very hard to play the older version of that young boy, the German actor David Kross.    

And there’s a brace of other screeners I haven’t seen yet. It’s hard to get the time, you know?

Taken is in theaters now.

Dressed to Impress

December 18th, 2007

Maggie’s One-Shoulder Elegance

September 28th, 2007

Maggie Grace’s Lonely Birthday

September 21st, 2007

Be sure to wish Maggie Grace a happy birthday today, but don’t bring up her love life!

The former Lost star turned 24 on Friday and sounded a little bummed she won’t be spending it with someone special when OK! inquired about any significant others in her life at the premiere of her new film, The Jane Austen Book Club, last night.

“[My love life] as measured by what yardstick?” Maggie joked. “That’s a question of self-definition right before my birthday tomorrow.”

But the actress still has a lot to celebrate — The Jane Austen Book Club opens in theaters today too, a project Maggie was excited to take on because one of her favorite books is Pride and Prejudice. “I’ve wanted to be Elizabeth Bennet since I was 14 years old."

Currently, she has The Crimson Petal and the White bookmarked, as well as The Oxford Anthology of Love Poetry, another old and “influential” read.

"I read it when I was 15. Wink, wink! My Bible teacher called it soft-core erotica, so of course I loved it!"

For more on Maggie, check out the latest issue of OK!, on newsstands now!

Wavy Hair

September 13th, 2007
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