When Kirsten Dunst checked herself into the Cirque Lodge Treatment Center back in 2008, celeb gawkers (including yours truly) assumed the usually bubbly star had gone the way of Lindsay Lohan, Tatum O’Neal, and hordes of other former Hollywood child stars.
You know the Nose Candy is sweeter than a Jolly Rancher to the Children of Beverly Hills.
But in a candid chat with the Dec. 2010/ Jan. 2011 issue of BlackBook Magazine, the All Good Things actress says it was depression, not dope, that sent her into rehab.
All Good Things is a theatrical adaptation of one of New York City’s most famous true-crime stories and one of the nation’s most captivating missing person cases: that of real-estate heir Robert Durst, who, in 1982, was accused of (but never tried in) the murder of his missing wife.
Kathie Durst has never been found.
In the movie, Ryan’s first in nearly four years, Gosling and Dunst play characters based on The Dursts. The Tinseltowners also appear topless on the promotional poster for the Andrew Zarecki-directed, Frank Langella-assisted mystery, in theaters Dec. 3.
A New York man convicted of breaking into the hotel room of actress Kirsten Dunst and swiping a designer handbag valued at $2,000 has been sentenced to four years in the clink.
The former Spider-Man star has joined the cast of director Walter Salles’ adaptation of Jack Kerouac’s novel, Variety dished on Thursday. Twilight’s Kristen Stewart, Garrett Hedlund, and Sam Riley will also star in the film.
Kirsten Dunst taps into some old-fashioned Hollywood glamour in a 1930s-inspired photoshoot for V Magazine. Decked out in garb designed by Givenchy, Kirsten channels her inner Greta Garbo while being snapped by famed fashion photographer Mario Testino. In this issue, Dunst discusses her unique friendships with both The Mulleavy Sssters of fashion house Rodarte and Japanese pop artist Takashi Murakami as well as her upcoming long-awaited film All Good Things, which she describes as the best work she has done to date.