Celebrities: Charlize Theron is embarrassed by her daughter – Panorama

Charlize Theron, 47, US-South African actress, sometimes embarrasses her daughter. “We’re walking through an airport and she’s like, ‘Oh my god, you’re on a f***ing wall with no tops, mom. That’s so embarrassing!'” She then replied in mock indignation: “We’re going to use this to pay for your college !” Theron told the mag The Hollywood Reporters. “But deep down, like any mother, I just want to fucking impress those two.” The daughters of the actress are ten and seven years old.

(Photo: Allison Dinner/dpa)

Paris Hilton, 41, reality star, has frozen quite a few eggs. “We have tons of them waiting for us,” she told the magazine People. She and husband Carter Reum, 41, decided to have egg retrieval during the pandemic lockdown, Hilton said. “We knew we wanted to start a family and I thought to myself, This is perfect timing. I usually fly 250 days a year, let’s just store all the eggs and get ready.”

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(Photo: Mario Anzuoni/Reuters)

Viola Davis, 57, actress, feels connected to other mothers in her carelessness. “I locked my kid in the car when it was sweltering outside,” Davis confessed to co-star Jennifer Lawrence in an interview with the magazine Variety. “I got out of the car, closed the door and realized I didn’t have my keys. I threw myself on the floor Jennifer. I screamed.” When she dialed 911, help came quickly and her daughter was freed from the car. For her part, Lawrence told of a car ride when she realized too late that her son was not strapped securely in his child seat. “He just swayed around.”

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(Photo: Neanne Degraa/dpa)

André Kaczmarczyk, 36, actor, would like more variety. In “Polizeiruf 110” he investigates as Commissioner Vincent Ross on the German-Polish border. Traditionally, episodes feature a victim, suspects, and two investigators. “Why does the thriller always have to start with a corpse? Why not shoot the ‘police call’ from the perspective of a suspicious person? Why doesn’t a criminal case sometimes remain unsolved?” asks Kaczmarczyk. “If you don’t break these traditions, we shouldn’t be surprised that these formats are subject to a certain uniformity,” he told the German Press Agency.

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(Photo: Tobias Hase/dpa)

Hansi Kraus, 70, actor, hopes a thief will like his photos. He had exhibited photographs in the stairwell of the Iberl stage, a popular theater in Munich – three pictures are now gone. He was with the police, but the officers gave him little hope that the thieves would be caught, Kraus told the German Press Agency. That’s why he refrained from reporting it. The photos showed Munich city motifs. He was disappointed about the theft, but: “If someone liked the pictures so much – maybe he’ll come and have them signed.”

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