David Schwimmer has sparked rumours of romance with actress Sabine Singh. The former ‘Friends’ actor and the blonde beauty, who has appeared in hit TV shows ‘Dawson’s Creek’ and ‘Charmed’, were seen openly canoodling at top New York nightspot Employees Only.
Onlookers claim the smitten pair also had their tarot cards read together and shared a cocktail through one straw.
Last month, David was rumoured to be romancing British beauty Nicole Miller.
The handsome star, who has been starring in West End play ‘Some Girls’, fell for the stunning brunette - who works as a marketing manager for luxury department store Harrods - after spotting her in a London pub.
Source: femalefirst.co.uk
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Premiership footballer David Dunn and his fiance Emmerdale actress Sammy Winward have split up just months after the pair celebrated the birth of their first child, it emerged today.
The Birmingham City midfielder and his 19-year-old partner, who plays Katie Sugden in the ITV1 soap, are thought to have broken off their three-year romance a few weeks ago and have no plans to get back together.
The 25-year-old England international spent two months in bed earlier this year recuperating from back surgery and is hoping to hear in the next few days whether he can resume his playing career.
An Emmerdale spokesman said:
Opening this week, as if to confirm what a rotten, unoriginal summer it's been for Hollywood, Must Love Dogs is a romantic comedy that feels like yet another remake. It's not, though almost every line and comic situation is dispiritingly familiar.
Diane Lane plays Sarah, late thirties, divorced for eight months, moping about in ghastly childlike pyjamas and now besieged by her large family, all oddly eager to launch her on the dating scene. Her sisters post her profile on a matchmaking website, describing her as "voluptuous" (she isn't) and adding the caveat that gives the film its irritating title.
The film
Anytime you leave the theater singing one or more of the songs, you know the play was good, the singing was good, the orchestra was good and you had a good time. Who knew Cole Porter's "Kiss Me, Kate" included so many familiar hit tunes — "So In Love," "Wunderbar," and "Too Darn Hot." But as soon as the curtain rises on this Woodstock Musical Theatre production directed by Tish Lyon, the magic begins. The well-crafted scenery, the 1940s clothing and the palpable onstage energy immediately transport the audience back in time.
An audience member perusing the program before the
Hollywood's hot new couple, Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes, had never met until Cruise called her out of the blue and asked her for a date last month, Us Weekly reports.
Holmes secretly flew to Los Angeles in early April after Cruise summoned her to a private meeting at his office. Four hours of banter later, Cruise fessed up and asked the young actress on a sushi date, Us reports in its May 16 cover story (on newsstands Friday).
Cruise apparently was not impressed with Holmes' messy, dented BMW because he arranged for workers to clean up her clunker. (Related story:
FOR money managers on Wall Street more than for investors on Main Street, the return of the 30-year bond is like the rekindling of a close relationship.
"It's like having an old friend back," says Clifford A. Gladson, a senior vice president for fixed-income investments at USA A Investment Management. And David R. Glocke, a fixed-income portfolio manager at Vanguard, says that while he has no special feelings for the 30-year-bond, many colleagues do. "I've heard people refer to the 30-year in various tones," he said. "There's a love affair out there for some people."
Clearly, many fixed-income specialists have been