Posts Tagged ‘Wilson Phillips’

Bijou Phillips Rocks Out

August 9th, 2008

Bijou Phillips is waiting for me at Starbucks on 42nd Street in NYC in the wee hours of a humid morning when the streets are teeming with fans eager to catch the Jonas Brothers performance on Good Morning America.

The model/actress, 28, tells me she has been waiting for this day – the one that her film What We Do Is Secret – is released – for ten years. The beauty scored the role as bassist Lorna Doom in the biopic about Darby Crash and his seminal punk band The Germs when she was 18! (Talk about a juicy storyline — Darby Crash had a five-year-plan to become a legend, but the leader of L.A.’s first punk act died of a drug overdose the day before John Lennon was killed.)    

“It’s taken this long to finally get it made,” she tells me. “It’s been a crazy journey. We’ve been almost about to make the movie so many times. To have it be the day that it’s released is awesome.”

Surely her impressive pedigree – dad is John Phillips of The Mamas And The Papas fame, mom is model Genevieve Waite and half sister is Wilson Phillips singer Chynna Phillips – made her a natural for the role of a 1970s punk rocker.   

“I just think the band is so cool and the whole story,” she says as coffeehouse music blares in the background. “I love the idea of a female bass player. I love Los Angeles in this era and this kind of music. It’s such an honor to be involved in it for me, it was such a big deal.”

Bijou, who learned to play all the songs in the movie during a three-month time span, spent time with legendary Lorna to research her role. Turns out, Go-Go Belinda Carlisle nearly joined the band, and gets the biopic treatment. Alas, Bijou doesn’t know if Belinda has seen it, nor did she give input to the role.

The girl named after the Lambert, Hendricks and Ross song My Petite Bijou released her own alternative-pop album in 1999 called I’d Rather Eat Glass, and this flick helped her get back to the music – albeit jazz music.

“I just did a movie called Dark Streets that’s doing the festival circuit right now, and I wrote a lot of the music for that. That’s coming out, and I’m thinking about making another record. I’m putting a couple songs on iTunes. You can check a lot of it out on my MySpace page.”

All right, so what was her most rock ’n’ roll experience growing up?

“I spent a lot of time on tour with my parents,” Bij tells me. “The most odd thing that happened was Christmas on tour when I woke up, and my dad had taken wrapping paper while I was asleep – I don’t know how they did it – but they wrapped the entire room – all the walls – in wrapping paper. It was special because God knows where we were, I think it was Minneapolis, and I got presents of course. It was really cute because we didn’t have a tree or anything and they made it pretty. It was nice.”

That’s a wrap – catch What We Do Is Secret in theaters now.

Carnie Wilson

March 19th, 2008 / Author: OK! Staff

Carnie Wilson’s Weight Struggle

March 18th, 2008

In 1999, Carnie Wilson famously underwent gastric bypass surgery to cut 150 lbs. off her 300-lb. frame. Her struggle with her weight wasn’t over, though, as she gained back the pounds carrying daughter Lola, now 2. But after a stint on VH1’s Celebrity Fit Club, Carnie shed another 22 lbs. That was two years ago. Now, a month away from her 40th birthday, Carnie weighs 208 lbs. and wears a size 16. Opening up to OK!, the singer says she has hit "rock bottom" with her weight.

"Everyone can see that I’m bigger, but I cannot hibernate," she tells OK!. "I’ve never lied or been dishonest about what’s going on in my life. Even all these years later, having had such a great weight-loss story, being back in this place is so familiar. And it hurts. I don’t want to feel this way anymore. It doesn’t feel good when you have to struggle to get your pants on."

The source of her tremendous weight gain is snacking. Since having her daughter, the former Wilson Phillips star says she turned all her focus on her little girl, leaving little to no attention to her weight or diet.

"I had anxiety, started snacking and gained it all back and more," she says. "I have a weakness when it comes to snacking. For me, it’s a tortilla with cheese, popcorn and graham crackers, all in one night."

Now Carnie is determined to get back into shape — and get pregnant.

"I’d like to lose 45 to 50 pounds and then try to get pregnant again. I know I will do it! I don’t consider myself a failure. I just got off track."

For more on Carnie, check out the latest issue of OK!, on newsstands Thursday!

OK! Interview: Carnie Wilson

January 9th, 2008

She shot to fame with one of the catchiest pop songs of the ’90s, but come January, Carnie Wilson will be going country.

The singer, one-third of Wilson Phillips, will compete on CMT’s new show Gone Country, premiering Jan. 25. With such celebs as Sisqo and Julio Iglesias, Jr., in the lineup, the show pits established music stars against each other in an effort to revamp one to be the next country star. And as a longtime country music fan, Carnie couldn’t be more excited to release her inner cowgirl — even if she had no idea what she was getting herself into.

“I was contacted by Renegade [83 Productions] and they had said that there was a really cool opportunity for me and it was weird because they had said it like that — that it was an opportunity,” she tells OK!. “I was a little nervous because they didn’t tell us anything. It was like, ‘The only thing we can tell is that you’re going be part of the cast and you’re going to live together and it’s going to be a country show.’”

Still, those slight nerves weren’t enough to overtake her enthusiasm. After working in Nashville while recording her Christmas album, Christmas With Carnie, out now, Carnie saw that as an “omen” and signed up for the show, in which each star was paired with the top country songwriters to pen a tune. The 39-year-old worked with Marv Green and Leslie Satcher and calls their connection and songwriting process “automatic.”

“I like the lyrics that country music has — they’re so simple, but they really talk about how you feel,” Carnie says. “I had to go into with a really, really open mind that I’m going to learn something from these guys. Just their personalities, they were just absolute dolls.”

Describing the final product as a mix of the Dixie Chicks and Sheryl Crow, Carnie hints that the song could serve as a steppingstone to a full LP. “We’ll have to see. That’s a possibility. I would love it.”

Had they tinkered with the guitar more, Wilson Phillips’ “Release Me” could’ve very well been a country record, she says. The group, which includes Carnie’s sister Wendy — with whom she had a mini-tour this year — and Chynna Phillips, may still get the chance to release one as they’re in talks to reunite next year.

“We were talking about Vegas and some dates," she says. "I’m trying to get the three of us in my studio in my house to do some vocals. We have a ton of songs that we wrote right before our last reunion and wrote about 30 songs and I’m trying to get the studio and we have eight kids between us and it’s a f***ing nightmare!”

If that doesn’t come into fruition, Carnie always has TV to fall back on. Already a veteran of reality shows, having competed on Celebrity Fit Club, Carnie reveals there are more boob tube projects on the horizon, including VH1’s magic show Celebracadabra and a top-secret one in development that has “been a dream of mine.”

She cautions that reality shows aren’t for everyone, but “is ideal for someone like me who is sort of wacky and it’s a perfect platform for me to sort of show who I am which is hyper, silly and real and emotional.”

On CFC last year, Carnie, who famously shed 150 lbs. through gastric bypass surgery in 1999, whittle 22 more pounds off her 5’3” frame. She has since put the weight back on.

“I’m so upset about it. But it’s the real deal, that’s where I’m at. I don’t hide it. It’s the truth. I’m definitely struggling. It’s hard especially now [during the holidays].”

Although she has a trainer, with whom she meets with thrice weekly for two hours of resistance training and elliptical exercises, Carnie would like to push it up to four hours and is determined to get back into the groove of working out every day. And while she’d like to drop 25 lbs., the number is not the be all to end all.

“I’m not obsessing about the scale. I’m trying to get that desire for the great healthy living back. It’s coming. But it’s something that you have to want to do that’s going to be permanent. Even with the gastric bypass, it’s still a challenge.”

Following her surgery, the author and former talk show host spiraled into alcoholism, consuming martinis into the double digits daily, she recently revealed. It wasn’t until she and her husband, Rob Bonfiglio, whom she married in 2000, decided to get serious about starting a family that Carnie finally addressed her addiction.

“My spirituality is my 12-step recovery. It’s my definite upkeep," she says. "It’s really hard because I have this constant need to sort of medicate and you know I just want a buffer. And it’s hard not to have vices.”

A few weeks after she quit, Carnie discovered she was pregnant, which she calls “a blessing.” Daughter Lola is now 2 ½ and seems primed to carry on the family business (Carnie’s parents are the Beach Boys’ Brian Wilson and The Honeys singer Marilyn Rovell).

“We were in Connecticut doing a concert, my sister and I, last week," she recalls. "Lola couldn’t handle not being a part of the sound check and getting on the stage with the microphone. We had to get her a microphone that wasn’t working so that she can prance along the stage. She’s so funny.”

The precocious youngster has already learned vibrato — adding Christina Aguilera-esque runs onto the end of “Jingle Bells” — and has penned two tunes. There’s the self-explanatory “When I Get Big” and “When Kelsey Misses Me,” about her friend Kelsey who, well, missed her when she went away.

So can a mother-daughter duet album be in the works?

“I totally think we should do that. I think she will wind up really singing by the time she’s 4, judging by how she is already, that she’s completely on key at 2 ½.”

By that time, there may be another voice in the household — Carnie and Rob hope to expand their clan soon.

“I’m going to be 40 in April so I really better get going!" she laughs. "It’s a big question mark right now and I really, really want her to have a sibling, so I would say there’s a really good chance."

As for other hopes for 2008, Carnie just wants to rededicate herself to her body.

"This last year I really slacked off so the upcoming year I just want to drink more water and exercise more. It seems like everything kinda falls into place when I do that."

By Joyce Eng

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