Celebrity News: Prince Albert II still has no Christmas presents – panorama

Albert II, 64, Prince of Monaco, is running late. “I haven’t shopped yet, okay?” he told US magazine People regarding his Christmas preparations. “It’s been a busy year, the last few weeks have been very busy.” However, he already has a list of the gifts he wants to get: toys and computer games for the children, Gabriella and Jacques, and “something practical” for his wife, Princess Charlene. “That’s what she wanted,” he said. But maybe he will give her something else.

(Photo: Francois Mori/AP)

LilyCollins, 33, British actress, doesn’t let a bad hair on her. “I had cut off my hair completely”, she said New York Times. At that time she was 26 years old and had just had some changes in her life that she did not go into detail. When she went to a party with the new short haircut, people would have asked directly, “What happened?” Collins is best known for her starring role as Emily Cooper on Emily in Paris. In the third season now underway, Emily also shortens her hair – albeit a little less radically: she just cuts a fringe.

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(Photo: Vianney Le Caer/dpa)

Daniel Craig, 54, British actor, licensed to nag. “Most scripts that are sent to you are rubbish,” he told the German Press Agency. “They’re okay, but they need a lot of work. You have to sit down and see if you can work something out.” It was different with the crime comedy “Knives Out”, which is now starting on Netflix and in which Craig plays. “I saw it and read it and knew immediately who this guy is.”

Joana Maria Cirer, 24, Ballermann resident, is annoyed by the Germans. “I can’t find a quiet corner in my apartment. It’s like I’m being sung straight into my ear,” she said Majorca newspaper. With a crowdfunding campaign, Cirer, who lives on the infamous Schinkenstrasse, is asking holidaymakers and locals for donations to soundproof her home. That would cost 10,000 euros. Cirer only moved into the apartment diagonally across from the Bierkönig last May. Although she knew what she was getting into, she underestimated the constant noise pollution. “Music and microphones are turned up all the way, from Monday to Sunday, from morning until late at night,” she said, reporting on insomnia, anxiety attacks and migraines, for which she now had to take antidepressants. Since she couldn’t study properly because of the noise, she had to stop preparing for a civil service exam.

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