julianne moore
- Celebrities who come to Baltimore frequent Tattooed Heart, Orioles, Center Stage.
- The joint appearance by President Obama and Hillary Clinton on ¿60 Minutes¿ wasn¿t about the Democratic nomination in 2016, as some analysts have insisted this weekend.
- Overall, the Golden Globe nominations proved kind to made-in-Baltimore productions.
- Baltimore productions earn mixed reception at Screen Actors Guild award nominations.
- Baltimore's Pat Moran won an Artio Award from the Casting Society of America for her work on HBO's "Game Change," the locally-produced film about the 2008 presidential election.
- The biggest winner Sunday at the 64th Primetime Emmy Awards had to be Showtime's "Homeland," which took the top three drama awards in an upset over such favorites as "Mad Men" and "Downton Abbey." But, Baltimore-based productions and stars had a very big night, too.
- Whatever happens Sunday night in Los Angeles, Baltimore is already a winner when it comes to this year¿s Emmy Awards.
- Baltimore's Pat Moran won an Emmy Award Saturday for casting on HBO's "Game Change."
- Celebs were in full force attending shows and parties in the name of good fashion.
- HBO's Baltimore productions "VEEP" and "Game Change" got solid Emmy notice with the comedy earning a best actress nomination for Julia Louis-Dreyfus and the made-for-TV movie about the 2008 presidential election picking up best actor and actress nominations for Julianne Moore and Woody Harrelson.
- What everyone is saying about the movie before weekend premiere
- What sets "Game Change" part is how it has radically shortened the distance between real-life events and their Hollywood depiction. As the producers deftly blend actual news footage and dramatic recreations, "Game Change" vaporizes the lines of fact and fiction as you watch.
- But, of course, he hasn't seen the film about 2008 presidential campaign either
- Independent film, starring Mary-Louise Parker, Ving Rhames and James Woods, begins filming in Baltimore March 5.
- And the Baltimore-made docudrama is likely to stir real political debate
- See Julianne Moore's Palin go into meltdown mode
- "Game Change," the made-for-TV movie starring Ed Harris as John McCain and Julianne Moore as Sarah Palin, will premiere March 10.
- Yesterday Gov. Martin O'Malley announced that "House of Cards" — a Washington-based TV series starring Kevin Spacey — will be filmed in Baltimore this spring, making it the third political drama to be produced in Maryland in less than a year.
- "House of Cards," a political thriller starring Kevin Spacey and directed by David Fincher, will be filmed in Baltimore starting this spring, it was confirmed Thursday by Gov. Martin O'Malley.
- Remember the Baltimore sightings of Ed Harris, Julianne Moore and Woody Harrleson last summer?
- Organizers of the 16th annual Baltimore Book Festival, which opens Friday, say they couldn't care less that a larger, glitzier, more star-studded event is being held on the exact same weekend in the nation's capital just 40 miles to the south.
- Sarah Palin's tour of the East Coast may or may not mean she's running for president, but she is certainly making the point that vigorous competition will lead to a stronger GOP candidate in 2012.
- The producers of 'Game Change' have deftly turned the Baltimore area into a nationwide campaign trail.
- Julianne Moore, playing Sarah Palin in HBO's Game Change, filming in Baltimore