Celebrity News: Jane Fonda goes to the Vienna Opera Ball with Lugner – Panorama

Jane Fonda, 85, US actress, is the newcomer to Richard “Mörtel” Lugner’s side. At least for the annual Opera Ball. Since 1992, the Viennese entrepreneur has been paying top-class celebrities to accompany him in a media-effective manner. In the case of Fonda, money is likely to play a rather minor role as a motivation. She is considered a multiple millionaire. “She has more money than me,” said the 90-year-old liar of the climate activist, fitness icon and two-time Oscar winner. “She is a great woman and has achieved a lot in her life.” When it comes to fitness, he won’t be able to compete with her either. “She does aerobics every day,” says Lugner. He has had a fitness center at his mall for 32 years but has never visited it. The opera ball with more than 5000 guests is a social event in Austria and was recently canceled due to the corona pandemic.

(Photo: Richard Drew/dpa)

Anna Sorokin, 32, famous imposter, wants to entertain prominent guests in house arrest. The con artist, who became famous through a Netflix series, is planning her own reality show called “Delvey’s Dinner Club” together with the production company Butternut. several media reports. Under the name Anna Delvey, she posed as a wealthy heiress for years and was a part of New York’s high society. Filming is scheduled to take place in Sorokin’s East Village apartment as she is currently under house arrest and has to wear an ankle bracelet for violating visa requirements. According to the US portal Page Six, she wants to talk to the celebrities primarily about herself and her experiences with the judiciary. In 2o19, Sorokin was sentenced to at least four years in prison for fraud, but was released earlier for good behavior.

People: undefined
(Photo: Thomas Bachun/Imago/Gepa pictures)

Mikaela Shiffrin, 27, US ski racer, is misunderstood. After her 84th World Cup victory at Kronplatz, Italy, Shiffrin is only two wins away from beating record holder Ingemar Stenmark, former Swedish ski racer. An ORF moderator pointed out to Shiffrin that she could do this at the weekend. Shiffrin then said she had to regenerate first. “After yesterday I was pretty tired, I’m not having the best moment of my monthly cycle right now.” But the simultaneous interpreter apparently did not understand what a “monthly cycle” is and translated: “I don’t even get to ride my bike, which I do every month.” Shiffrin also said on the show that it should be normal to talk about periods in competitive sports.

People: undefined
(Photo: Gonzalo Fuentes/Reuters)

Gerard Pique, 35, former Spanish soccer player, introduced the strawberry jam eater. Piqué posted seven months after splitting from singer Shakira, 45 on Instagram a photo of himself and his new girl Clara Chia Marti, 23. According to media reports, he is said to have cheated on Shakira with Marti. Allegedly, the Colombian singer found out about him because there was a jar of strawberry jam in the fridge. Neither Shakira and her children nor Piqué eat strawberry jam.

People: undefined
(Photo: Evan Agostini/dpa)

Julia Fox, 32, US actress, gives her fans a somewhat unusual apartment tour. “Hopefully someone can look at it and think: Okay, maybe I’m not doing so bad after all,” says Fox at the beginning of the Tiktok clip. She shows her 1.6 million followers the living room of her New York apartment, which also contains her unmade bed, her two-year-old son Valentino’s nursery, her bathroom, which she says is “tiny” and the “really messy” kitchen. The apartment is comparatively small and not particularly made up. There is also a “little mouse problem” that doesn’t bother her that much: “I appreciate that they come out at night and clean up the crumbs that my son dropped on the floor.”

Scarlett Doumato, 10, US amateur detective, has scientifically verified whether Santa Claus exists. On Christmas Eve, as is traditional in the United States, she left a plate of cookies for Santa Claus. The next morning she collected the bitten pieces and sent them to the police. “Dear Cumberland Police, I took a sample from a biscuit and carrots that I put out for Santa and the reindeer on Christmas Eve and was wondering if you could take a DNA sample to see if Santa is real?” she wrote, according to a letter obtained by Cumberland police published on Twitter. She wrote that the biscuits had been forwarded to the laboratory. “We will do our best to give her answers.” Again mirror reported, the responsible health department then reported: Despite the most modern analysis technology, “the presence of Santa Claus could neither be definitively confirmed nor disproved”. Scarlett was “a bit irritated” about it, reports the Washington Postbut came to the conclusion that Santa Claus could actually exist.


source site