After the pair enjoyed an implausible pop stardom together, Flynn baled out and found peace with his inner self. |
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Isaac Hayes gets to follow up his blaxploitation stardom with the meaty role of The Duke. |
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Family friend and singer Neil Scott has helped Rebecca on her way to stardom, giving her vocal coaching and moral support. |
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This night was all about the group's ascension to crossover pop stardom and the sugar-coated singalong anthems that got them there. |
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Once the stakes were raised and he got a taste of stardom, his humor became unconsciously cruel. |
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Enjoying stardom while shrewdly aware of its unreality, she was accessible, loyal, generous, with a pungent sense of humour. |
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It is not unusual for places to be catapulted to stardom thanks to the medium of TV or cinema. |
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As a nipper she was academically disenchanted, but once she got a taste of stardom, the wagging tomboy became the perfect teen. |
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And his personality is perfect for stardom in the new, yet ever-changing world of vlogs, Kahn said. |
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He simply wants to be on stage and in the spotlight, hip-hopping his way to stardom and never-ending nourishment. |
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But her hopes of turning raw talent into stardom could be dashed as she needs to raise cash to pay for the fees. |
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If not quite a tale of rags to riches, the story of Salim's rise to stardom certainly comes close. |
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They are very much coach's players who have gained stardom, lost it, and regained it again. |
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Hockey ace Holly Stringfellow is on the way to international glory stardom being picked for Britain. |
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The film traces his rise to international stardom through a sequence of classic archive performances. |
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However, for the boy who dreamed of the red and black shirt, it has been a rapid rise to stardom. |
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Fifty years of dreaming about stardom and fame, and suddenly I wake up and I'm in Bolton. |
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But his experience in the field of production held him in good stead in the rise to stardom. |
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York teenage sensation Nicola Parry has reached a new high in her rapid rise to rugby league stardom. |
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He rose to stardom following his starring roles in The French Connection and Superman. |
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During the course of the story Smith has a lot to say about the emptiness of celebrity and stardom and what it means. |
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I think the more you do the more you encourage the myth of fame and stardom. |
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Although the championship may mark the pinnacle of Neil's career his rise to stardom has not been an overnight one. |
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Young Jazz supremo Jamie Cullum's rise to stardom could be topped with a prestigious Brit award. |
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These have overtaken Top of the Pops in the ratings by revealing how pop stardom and celebrity is manufactured. |
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Ms Simpson has risen to international stardom as a recording artist and television personality. |
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Their rapid rise to stardom has not gone unnoticed by those closest to the band, either. |
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It's obvious that his stardom is very important to him and has affected his boxing career. |
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He has held pop concerts across China in the shortest period after stepping into stardom. |
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The sharp vocals and beat alone could have catapulted this song into some level of stardom. |
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The song, the first tune to be played on Radio 1 when it was launched in 1967, catapulted the group to stardom. |
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More than a year after filming finished, celluloid stardom is still on hold for Ally McCoist. |
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He charms his way into stardom with his infectious laughter and a casual sense of humour. |
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Fame and the chance of international stardom have not made him lose sight of his Swazi roots. |
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She parlayed her impressive WUSA performance into a second chance at national team stardom. |
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It is rather painful however to watch her clutch at the chance for stardom with a diligence and a desperation that the film does not warrant. |
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The rodeo setting itself, centering upon cowboy and cowgirl stardom, is an important part of the Western popular tradition. |
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Hot on the fast lane to stardom, the young guys and gals are wracking brains, boggling minds. |
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His self-penned songs track his career from despondent dreams of stardom to the travesty of having achieved them. |
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Burdened by addiction and avarice, Fatty's rise to stardom soon became a fall from grace. |
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It seems that she was groomed for stardom from an early age and has been handed the opportunity rather than having to earn it. |
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More than 15,000 wannabes have been waiting in line through the night for their chance at stardom. |
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It would seem that entry through the stage door to stardom does not come by simply donning a pair of jelly shoes and a rah-rah skirt. |
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And keeping people waiting is part of what stardom is about, which is why he showed up over half an hour late without anyone seeming to mind. |
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He doesn't go in for the trappings of stardom, preferring a quiet family life. |
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Crossing over from pop music stardom to movie stardom is a killer assignment, no matter how big you are as a pop phenomenon. |
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The Korean Wave may have subsided some but that hasn't kept K-pop superstar Rain from working on cementing international stardom. |
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With Die Mommie Die, camp theater dragmeister-playwright Charles Busch brings his lampoonery to the screen for a shot at movie stardom. |
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Big-flavor varietals such as Zinfandel and Syrah will attain stardom in the wine world. |
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Since American pop culture reveres stardom, rappers often garner more attention and respect than they deserve. |
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Are individualism and stardom necessary to the dramatic work, or are they supplemental, a mere appendage of modernity? |
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The 24-year-old has rocketed to stardom with his mixture of classical jazz and funk. |
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He shot to stardom in Fame Academy, where his wild performances stood out against other pop wannabes. |
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After just a few episodes of that show he was being hailed as the next magician and illusionist to enjoy mainstream stardom in America. |
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The junior leading men, admirable technicians to whom the notion of charisma is alien, don't appear destined for stardom. |
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The film gave Claire Danes and Leonardo DiCaprio their first taste of true movie stardom and bankability. |
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Although stardom beckoned at an early age, Michael was initially thwarted in his desire to act. |
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A beauty contest winner in her teens, she was signed by 20th Century-Fox and soon shot to movie stardom. |
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I toy around with the idea of attention or stardom, but never know what to do with it when the spotlight shines on me for a brief moment. |
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He also appeared at Harrogate Theatre as Edmund Kean and played a bit part in Coronation Street before stardom. |
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With his flowing mane and soul patch, his requisite unorthodox childhood and his uncanny feel for the ice, he seemed destined for stardom long before Salt Lake City. |
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Sellers translated his vocal mutability into a visual variety, applying wigs and fake noses, playing old men and women, and creating a new kind of stardom. |
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He was also the observant one, casting a sardonic eye on the absurdities of pop stardom, the Swinging Sixties and the aftermath of that crazy decade. |
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After some serious soul-searching I came to realise that the only reason for my sudden stardom was the fact that I was born west of the Iron Curtain. |
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The captain's story is conspicuously smooth, a vertical ascent to stardom. |
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My creative juices boil at the prospect of national stardom. |
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But if you dress up the idea in a forbidding vocabulary, full of neologisms and recondite references to philosophy, then you may have a prescription for academic stardom. |
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Pop stardom is simply not on his agenda, with film scores and theme music having significantly more appeal, and in his view, greater longevity in terms of a career. |
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He chose a Bosman move to Bayern Munich, and, with inevitable stardom waiting, promptly smashed up his knee when he was playing for Germany against Austria. |
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I wondered which next superstar I might have the privilege of seeing live at the coalface of stardom in Hollywood. |
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Charlotte Cushman is unique among nineteenth century interpreters of Shakespeare in achieving stardom in roles of both genders. |
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There followed three years of mixed fortunes for him, with successes in fringe productions, but West End stardom was elusive. |
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Actresses such as Sophia Loren, Giulietta Masina and Gina Lollobrigida achieved international stardom during this period. |
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Once there, Sims can schmooze, network, and name-drop their way to stardom in the movies, music, or fashion. |
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However, all that will change tonight when 21-year-old Jasmin Leigh Morris, from Swansea, makes her bid for stardom. |
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Since we now live in a reality T talent contest-obsessed world, more kids than ever are being exposed to potential stardom and fame. |
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Few rags-to-riches stories can match that of 50 Cent's rise to fame, stardom and power. |
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The shop But he left two years later when he shot to stardom on The X Factor. |
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As the new start you must rise to stardom, taking on challenges from rival stuntmen as you go. |
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A clutch of kookie characters make up Prunty's latest female-friendly novel about the vagaries of stardom. |
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Christened Eileen, she changed her name to a word meaning 'on her way' in Ojibway, and headed for Nashville in search of stardom. |
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A NORTH Wales choir signed up by a top boy band manager was last night set for Hollywood stardom. |
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But are TV talent shows a credible way for up-and-coming performers to launch themselves on their path to stardom? |
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Camel jockey stardom eventually brings its sweet rewards thanks to a kindly Sheikha's intervention. |
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It's only the legs that give these ichthyoids of Olympic stardom and decided he'd rather tour the world with Disney on Ice. |
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Romantic frisson is provided by Dice, a presumably hip club DJ who thrusts Billie on her road to stardom. |
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Other parents like Soman clapped and cheered for their wards as little kids smiled and enjoyed their moment of stardom. |
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It's as if you're sitting at home with TV channel changer in hand, surfing through the story of Tina's rise to stardom. |
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It has played an important part of the Games' identity promotion since the 1980 Summer Olympics, when the Russian bear cub Misha reached international stardom. |
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Yet single-mindedness and dedication are traits to be admired in an era when so many are prepared to settle for less than their best because the trappings of stardom arrived. |
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What is the definition of stardom, not fame, but true stardom? |
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In America, they take this to what some might say were extremes, with children hothoused and groomed for spelling stardom with the annual national Spelling Bee competition. |
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By 1975, the pressures of stardom had begun to take a serious toll on him. |
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But the more Gilbert rises to stardom, the chirpier he makes his parents. |
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He recognised his financial need to work, and understood in the New Hollywood era of cinema, neither he nor Taylor would be paid as well as at the height of their stardom. |
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A personnel mishap seconds before Obree was due to launch his bid for world record stardom in Nevada saw Scotland's gutsiest cyclist turn to look me in the eye. |
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The TV talent show rocketed her from the small time to stardom. |
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It was a very young Chris Waddle long before United rescued him from being a sausage seasoner in a local factory and put him on the road to stardom. |
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Bowie declared himself gay in an interview with Michael Watts for a 1972 issue of Melody Maker, coinciding with his campaign for stardom as Ziggy Stardust. |
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He was a notch on her bedpost, a stepping stone on her quest for stardom. |
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