Jennifer Love Hewitt has struggled with her body image – but she has no problem embracing a racy new role.
The actress, who has been hitting the gym and staying in shape, stars as a prostitute in Lifetime's The Client List, which airs Monday. And while the revealing part isn't every mother's dream, Hewitt's mom has a sense of humor about it.
"She thinks it's hilarious," the Ghost Whisperer star told PEOPLE at Palazzo Las Vegas's Azure Luxury Pool over the weekend. "She was like, 'So let's review … For 15 years people have been talking about your boobs. Earlier this year, you wrote about your hoo haw in a book. Now you're playing a crack ho on TV.' She was like, 'Do you think maybe you could do an animated movie next?' "
Though she wants to honor her mother's wishes, Hewitt isn't opposed to another racy role.
"I like pushing the edge," she says. "The thing I love is that people have allowed me to push it to a certain point and then back off of it and not have to go too far. As long as they can let me do that, I'm all up for the role."
As for her body, Hewitt says "I think it's really nice when I get named, like, 50 Hottest Bodies. That kind of stuff is good, but the rest, I'm good if they never talk about it again."
Monday, July 19, 2010
Sheryl Crow set to start "International Tour"
Sheryl Crow is about to leave her bucolic spread outside Nashville and embark on an international tour to support her 100 Miles From Memphis album that's out today. But no matter how far she roams, she'll carry the home front with her this time.
When Crow makes that 41-date jaunt across North America, the U.K. and Europe (her first U.S. show is Aug. 12 in Gilford, N.H.) she'll be accompanied by son Wyatt, 3, whom she adopted in 2007, and 11-week-old Levi, whose adoption she announced in June. Wyatt gets his own bed on the tour bus, while Levi gets a bassinet and a crib. Crow tested the arrangement recently during five dates on the Lilith Fair tour, "and it worked out fine."
"When they're little, they're not tethered to one place," says Crow, 48, who travels with a nanny and various friends and family. "Until they're in a structured school situation, it's easy to travel. The bus is completely tricked out for kids. I go to work at 9 at night, so I put them down and go to work. During the day, we visit zoos and museums and parks, and they're surrounded by an extremely loving family."
The nine-time Grammy winner was raised with two older sisters and a younger brother in the small town of Kennett, Mo. (referenced in the album title), and she wants her sons "to grow up like I did, with the closeness of a sibling." That also includes being surrounded by a "normal" home environment — a vision reflected in the video for first single Summer Day, where Wyatt is shown briefly romping in Central Park amid kids carrying balloons, ice cream cones and flowers.
But Summer Day aside, her seventh studio album is anything but blissful and homespun (for one thing, Rolling Stone Keith Richards lends a hand). Her intent was to capture the sexy, sweaty, horn-spiked flavor of the classic soul music of her youth, woven by such heroes as Al Green, Otis Redding, Aretha Franklin and Marvin Gaye.
"Soul music is typically about sensuality, vulnerability and desire, so I kind of let the music guide me in the writing (of the lyrics)," says Crow, who wrote or co-wrote nine of the 12 songs. "It's an emotionally freer album" than 2008's introspective Detours, which reached No. 2 on Billboard's album chart and sold about 405,000 copies, according to Nielsen SoundScan.
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