

SWAMP
Interview with Indie Icon
Parker Posey



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? The Burning
Is this really the end?

Ozzy Osbourne has officially bid farewell to the stage.
On Saturday, July 5, 20205 Osbourne, 76, performed his final show with his Black Sabbath bandmates Geezer Butler, Tony Iommi and Bill Ward, at his āBack To The Beginningā farewell concert in Birmingham, England. The 10-hour show, hosted by Jason Momoa, featured performances from Metallica, Guns Nā Roses, Jack Black, Steven Tyler and more. At one point during the
For the closing set, according to a photo posted on X and various videos, the legendary rockstar was lifted to the stage while sitting on a black throne accompanied by skulls and topped with a black bat. He sang hits such as āCrazy Trainā and āMama Iām Coming Homeā while remaining seated the entire set.
āItās so good to be on this stage... You have no idea how I feel,ā Osbourne told the crowd, according to Planet Rock Radio. āThank you from the bottom of my heart.ā
In February 2023, Osbourne announced the cancellation of his tour dates due to ongoing medical issues and various health scares.
show, which was livestreamed in the U.K., legendary drummers including Toolās Danny Carey, Red Hot Chili Peppersā Chad Smith and Blink-182ās Travis Barker battled with their drumsticks while playing a cover of Sabbathās āSymptom of the Universe.ā
Additionally, according to The Hollywood Reporter, Dolly Parton, Elton John, Billy Idol, Jonathan Davis, and more recorded inspiring messages to Osbourne and the band, thanking them for the years of inspiration.
āI am honestly humbled by the way youāve all patiently held onto your tickets for all this time, but in all good conscience, I have now come to the realization that Iām not physically capable of doing my upcoming European/UK tour dates, as I know I couldnāt deal with the travel required,ā Osbourne said in a statement posted to his social media accounts at the time.
The former Black Sabbath vocalist admitted his āsinging voice is fine,ā but he remains physically weak after three operations, stem cell treatments, physical therapy and Hybrid Assistive Limb treatment, which uses a robotic exoskeleton to help
The Singular Charm of Parker Posey

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Long before checking into HBOās prestige vacation drama, Parker Posey had already cemented her status as the ultimate quirky cool girl of American independent cinema. With her razor-sharp comedic timing and those impossibly expressive eyes, Posey carved out a niche that no one else could fill. She wasnāt your typical Hollywood starletā thank god for that.


PARKER: Iām so tired, by the way.
CHRISTINA: Iām tired too, so weāre at the same level. Do you still live in New York?
PARKER: Iāve been on 19th and 7th for like five years. I love it.
CHRISTINA: How long have you lived in New York?
PARKER: I went to SUNY Purchase for four years and then I just moved there right after. I got a soap, I just went in to audition for As the World Turns because it was a free ride into the city. I had no idea that I would actually get the job.
CHRISTINA: How long were you on the soap for?
PARKER: A year and four months.
CHRISTINA: Did you like doing it?
PARKER: Itās the hardest work Iāve ever done in my life. Itās melodrama. Itās a different style of acting that ... normal people donāt act that way. I like soap opera acting. If itās done really well, thereās nothing better. Itās old school. Itās like what those melodramas in the ā30s and ā40s were like.
CHRISTINA: Itās hard for me to imagine you on a soap because youāre so deadpan.
PARKER: I would try to make it funny. Some directors let you, and some wonāt. Oh please, Iām having a flashback. Really want me to take it seriously? It was so cheesy. So, how old are you?
CHRISTINA: Iām 34. Iām old.
PARKER: You look so young! You look 24.
CHRISTINA: Thanks. You look younger than 27. So, howād you end up at Purchase?
PARKER: Ohhh. I was raised in Louisiana and Mississippi. I went to North Carolina School of Arts for summer programs for ballet. And then I didnāt get into ballet school, which I really wanted to. I really wanted to leave our hometown and go away somewhere. The dean of the school said I should act. So I took acting there and then I auditioned for three schools and Purchase was the only one I got into.
CHRISTINA: How did you like it?
PARKER: I recommend it. Just for discipline. I had a harder time in college than I did in ...
CHRISTINA: The real world?
PARKER: Yeah. I went in thinking, āOh yay, finally people who get me. I donāt feel like such a freak.ā And then, it was the same problems I had growing up. Not that Iām such a weirdo, but you know, the thing is, I donāt think programs like that are especially nurturing to 18 and 19-yearolds. They just think good acting is like crying - āOh, she cried and she screamed and she got angry.ā
CHRISTINA: Is it easy for you to cry, in acting? I can cry at the drop of a hat.
PARKER: Sure. I mean, it depends if youāre having a bad day or not. Sometimes itās really fun. It depends on how much crying youāre doing in your real life. I donāt know why people make such a big deal about crying. I think because people donāt do it enough. Iām so boring.
CHRISTINA: No youāre not. Donāt worry.
PARKER: Is this a long article?
CHRISTINA: Itās the cover story. PARKER: Shit. I wish I were more entertaining today. Iām usually funny.
CHRISTINA: You donāt have to feel pressure to be funny all the time.
PARKER: But I do. No I donāt. Yeah I do. What were you saying?

CHRISTINA: What was Laurel, Mississippi like?
PARKER: Population like, 2,000. Iām glad Iām from there, but I think the south is just wacko and crazy. Thereās good story-telling, good characters. Nothing to do, but you know, the hypocrisy everywhere ... forty-one Baptist churches in my hometown. One Catholic church.
CHRISTINA: Were you Catholic?
PARKER: Yeah, they thought Catholics were like alcoholics ācause they serve wine in mass. And the Jews were all shot or killed. I mean, where are they? So they preach all this, you know, love your brother, yet literally over the tracks, poor people are getting shot. Weāre talking like, Carson McCullers.

CHRISTINA: I just finished reading The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter, and thatās immediately what I started thinking about when you were talking about the south. How did people react when you went away?
PARKER: They didnāt know what I was doing. They just thought I was weird. But then I got on the soap opera and, you know, wheee! It was the greatest thing that could happen to my hometown. My family just loved it.
CHRISTINA: What do your parents do?
PARKER: My dad owns a car dealership. My momās a housewife.
Guide to Parker's Cult Classic Films




Basquiat (1996)
Party Girl (1995)
Dazed and Confused (1993)
Josie and the Pussycats (2001)
