Amanda Palmer (red shirt) and teacher Steven Bogart (to her left) with Lexington High students Saturday night.
(Boston Globe Photo / Aram Boghosian)
Palmer hangs out in Lexington
Amanda Palmer (red shirt) and teacher Steven Bogart (to her left) with Lexington High students Saturday night.
(Boston Globe Photo / Aram Boghosian)
Amanda Palmer has to be the most popular girl at Lexington High School. The frontwoman of the Dresden Dolls - who is an LHS graduate - hosted a party Saturday night for students who performed in a show she produced for them with her former drama teacher Steven Bogart. The late-night shindig was held at Palmer's parents house in Lexington. About 40 teens snacked on pizza and hung out with Palmer and Bogart in the living room. Grown-ups played it cool and stayed in the kitchen.
Gala power
Dawn Robinson, Maxine Jones, Terry Ellis, and Cindy Herron - better known as En Vogue (above, from left) - got the crowd moving at Saturday night's Boston Medical Center Gala. The group performed at Showcase Live! at Patriot Place on Friday.Cambridge native Mindy Kaling, best known as the vapid Kelly Kapoor (inset) on "The Office," is ready to take over the world - or at the very least, your television. Not long after word got out that the 29-year-old actress had signed a seven-figure deal with NBC to create her own show, Kaling called us giddy, ready to chat about her plans to be the network's next Tina Fey. Kaling assured us that she will continue her role on "The Office," although her new show won't be a spinoff. It will be something new - and probably more like the traditional sitcoms she grew up on. That means there could be a laugh track. "If I could stay up and watch 'Cheers' back in the day, that was huge," she said. "I don't want to do [my show] docu-style."
Kaling said she hopes to pull in some New York theater talent to star in her comedy. After all, that's where she and "Office" costars like Rainn Wilson got their starts. An admittedly often-starstruck Kaling said she'd also love to rope in a serious movie star, someone who's known for drama and can do what Alec Baldwin does for "30 Rock." "Kathy Bates, Chris Cooper, Ben Affleck," she said. "These are people who are deeply, deeply funny. You watch 'Good Will Hunting,' and [Affleck] has such amazing comedic timing." Kaling, of course, got her big break mocking Affleck in her critically acclaimed, off-Broadway show "Matt & Ben."
Kaling said she doesn't get home much anymore, but plans to visit Boston this summer for her 30th birthday. Seven-figure contract or not, the actress and her family have a tradition of walking around the Prudential Center, getting their nails done, and getting "intimidated by
Around town
Slugger David Ortiz was spotted with friends at the Estate nightclub on Saturday night. . . . Patriot Laurence Maroney walked with his mother in the March of Dimes March for Babies event on Saturday. Kevin Youkilis also attended the 3,000-person walk. . . . Comedians Janeane Garofalo and Rob Riggle, in town for AltCom at the Somerville Theatre (see review below), made a pit stop Friday at the WZLX Drive for Charity at City Golf in Natick.
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