As anyone who watched her on "Alias" knows, Jennifer Garner's got some moves. So it's no surprise that the actress, who's in town filming "The Ghosts of Girlfriends Past," can cut a rug. Emerson dance instructor Marlena Yannetti has been working with Garner (inset) and her "Ghosts" costar Daniel Sunjata, and she's plenty impressed. "[Garner] said she spent a summer with the Joffrey Ballet, and I believe it," said Yannetti, who choreographed a dance sequence for the movie with help from one of her students, Adam Eisenhut. Eisenhut has described the dance - a foxtrot - as "typical Fred and Ginger." "We've had a couple of rehearsals and we'll have a couple more," Yannetti told us yesterday. "Jennifer is just a doll. She and [Sunjata] are both so easy to work with and to talk to." Eventually, the bit will be filmed in a ballroom at the Crane Estate in Ipswich. Asked if she's starstruck working with Hollywood actors, Yannetti laughed. "I've danced New York and on Broadway and worked with Bob Fosse," she said. "I'm not easily impressed, but I am with them."
Tribute on tap for Coolidge winner Thomas
A few colleagues of this year's Coolidge Award winner,
Jeremy Thomas, are confirmed for next month's festivities. We're told actress
Debra Winger and directors
Nicolas Roeg and
Julien Temple will be in Boston to pay tribute to Thomas, the British film producer whose credits include several
Bernardo Bertolucci movies. Winger worked with Thomas on "The Sheltering Sky." Roeg teamed with him on "Insignificance" and "Eureka." And Temple and Thomas worked on "The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle" and "Joe Strummer: The Future Is Unwritten." The Coolidge Award, whose previous recipients include Chinese director
Zhang Yimou, cinematographer
Vittorio Storaro, actress
Meryl Streep, and film editor
Thelma Schoonmaker, will be presented April 16. Organizers hope to announce additional guests.
Overwhelmed by his reception
Pats receiver
Randy Moss broke down yesterday as the US Postal Service in West Virginia honored No. 81 with a limited-edition commemorative envelope. With his mother sitting beside him, Moss got emotional while talking about his childhood in Rand, W. Va., and his miraculous feats on the football field. The Postal Service is making 5,000 of the envelopes available, selling them for $6 each at post offices throughout the state. Not surprisingly, a few of the envelopes were already available on
eBay yesterday, selling for $35.
Star treatment
What was with yesterday's ho-hum press release announcing
Audrina Patridge's upcoming appearance at
Ed Kane's club The Estate? Don't the promoters know that nude pics of the star of "The Hills" hit the Internet this week, prompting Patridge to post a defense on her MySpace page? Well, they do now. The saucy shots were taken five years ago, before Patridge was
Lauren Conrad's sidekick on the MTV hit. "I intended them to be artistic and not in any way provocative," wrote Patridge, who'll get the VIP treatment at the club next Saturday. "I was naive, overly trusting of people, and inexperienced." The press release merely refers to Audrina as an "aspiring actress" and "Tinseltown sweetheart." Geez, do we have to do everyone's job for them?
Mavericks party on
A cast of thousands - OK, maybe dozens - attended Details magazine's "Mavericks 2008" party in Beverly Hills the other night. But if a maverick is defined as someone who stands apart from the crowd, why were omnipresent reality TV types
Kim Kardashian and
Kristin Cavallari, Motley Crue's
Nikki Sixx, and "Beverly Hills 90210" actor
Ian Ziering on the guest list? And what's so subversive about Newton native
B.J. Novak (inset), who's one of the writers and producers of the hit show "The Office"?
Plenty of support
Maureen Feeney was among friends at Thursday's "Celebration of Women's Leadership" event. Ostensibly a fund-raiser for the City Council president, the affair at Union Oyster House was hosted by Senate president
Therese Murray and attended by former gubernatorial nominee
Shannon O'Brien, Weber Shandwick's
Micho Spring, Boston Medical Center's
Elaine Ullian,
Joanne Jaxtimer of
Mellon Financial, former councilors
Peggy Davis Mullen and
Diane Modica.
Tapped for water project
Good-looking local lads
Jeffrey Donovan and
David Chokachi were a few of the familiar faces at an event in LA this week for the TAP Project. Donovan, the Amesbury native best known for his work on "Burn Notice," and "Baywatch" beefcake Chokachi, who hails from Plymouth, are both supporters of the campaign to provide safe drinking water to children around the world. They were joined by
actors
Chad Lowe,
Daryl Hannah, and
Annabeth Gish.
Names can be reached at names@globe.com or at 617-929-8253.
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