The cast of St. Elmo's Fire helped define the generation of actors known as the Brat Pack. Here's what they're all up to now.
The male counterpart to Molly Ringwald in the '80s would have to be Judd Nelson -- and just wait until you see what he looks ...
Down to the costumes, Johnson County Library reenacted the most popular scenes from the 1985 movie directed by John Hughes.
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25 Years Ago, a Made-for-TV Sci-Fi Movie Ignited an Entire Generation's Fear of the Bermuda Triangle
Among the original made-for-movies reaching the airwaves, Lost Voyage attempted to enter a territory overlooked by major ...
Unlike regularly programmed and filler episodes, bottle episodes are like extra bonuses that focus on a few characters, often ...
According to a 1999 oral history published in Premiere Magazine, Nelson didn't just play Bender during filming — he lived as him. Unit publicist Fredell Pogodin observed that Nelson could be extremely ...
A free downtown block party celebrating the new year, a new food and music festival, and more this weekend in the Sarasota ...
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‘The Breakfast Club’ cast have an ‘emotional’ reunion 40 years later — and reveal if they’d do a sequel
Detention is back in session. The cast of “The Breakfast Club” — Molly Ringwald, Judd Nelson, Anthony Michael Hall, Emilio Estevez and Ally Sheedy — reunited Saturday during a panel at the C2E2 ...
Don’t you forget about her. Molly Ringwald is speaking out about a controversial scene in “The Breakfast Club.” The Brat Pack actress, 57, reunited with the movie’s stars — Anthony Michael Hall, Judd ...
Little Mix alum Jesy Nelson is offering a glimpse into her life after her twin daughters, Story and Ocean, were both diagnosed with a severe muscular disease. “I’m so in love with her little laugh,” ...
The Nelson twins — heirs to a television dynasty — burst onto the music scene as rock stars, earning Geffen Records about $23 million while packing arenas. But at the height of their success, they ...
Willie Nelson, and specifically his life on the road, is the focus of a new opus profile in The New Yorker. The highlights are many, but Bob Dylan’s attempt to explain the appeal of Nelson stands ...
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