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News, April 21: Possible End for “Raymond,” Dangerfield Moved From ICU, Grammys, AMAs Shuffle Dates, More…

Top Story: The End of the Road for “Raymond”?

Say it isn’t so! Comedian Ray Romano is dropping hints that the ninth season of his hit CBS comedy Everybody Loves Raymond may be its last. Romano, who attended a concert Saturday in Las Vegas to benefit the Tiger Woods Foundation, joked about how he keeps the series fresh and original: “You stop after one more year.” The comedian credited his writers for always drawing on their own lives and bringing new material to the show, but said it’s hard work. “You start to repeat yourself,” Romano, 45, told The Associated Press. “The trick is to get out when you’re still wanted–not too soon, but not too late.”

Juliette Lewis Files for Divorce

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Natural Born Killers star Juliette Lewis has filed for divorce from her husband of nearly four years, professional skateboarder Steve Berra. Lewis‘ publicist told the AP Thursday “the divorce is mutual and amicable.” It was Lewis‘ first marriage. The 29-year-old actress was nominated for an Oscar for playing a teenager stalked by a deranged convict in the 1991 remake of Cape Fear.

Buscemi Protests Close of NY Firehouse

Actor Steve Buscemi joined about 50 demonstrators in New York Saturday to protest Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s cost cutting proposal to close eight firehouses. Buscemi, who starred in films such as Fargo and Reservoir Dogs, was a New York City firefighter from 1980 to 1984. Bloomberg said last week at least 30 more might have to be closed if the city does not receive state or federal to close a $3.4 billion budget deficit, the AP reports.

Dangerfield Moved From ICU

Rodney Dangerfield was moved from the UCLA Medical Center’s intensive care unit to a private room Friday, the AP reports. The comedian’s publicist said he might be allowed to go home in the next few days if he continues to recover. Dangerfield, 81, underwent a 12-hour brain surgery April 8 to improve his blood flow for an upcoming heart valve replacement, tentatively planned for late May.

Grammys, American Music Awards Change Dates

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The 2004 Grammys are switching from its usual late-February date to Sunday, Feb. 8 to avoid a head-on collision with the Academy Awards, which will move next year from March to late February. Billboard reports that next year’s Grammys are also expected to return to L.A. after this year’s stint in New York. The American Music Awards, meanwhile, are set to move from early January to Nov. 16, 2003 so the show can air during sweeps. In its January slot, the AMAs found itself competing with too many awards shows.

Pop Stars Unite for Iraqi Children

Pop stars including Paul McCartney, George Michael, David Bowie and Avril Lavigne released an album Monday to raise money for child war victims in Iraq, Reuters reports. Profits from the album will go to War Child, a relief and development charity set up after the war in former Yugoslavia. The charity said the album, Hope, was not political. “The plight of children transcends politics. These songs are a plea for hope without which the children of Iraq have nothing at all.”

New Museum Dedicated to Science Fiction

A museum dedicated to the art, literature and film of science entertainment is set to open in Seattle thanks to billionaire Paul Allen. Tentatively named the Science Fiction Experience, the exhibit is slated to open in the summer of 2004 in Allen’s Experience Music Project (EMP). Visitors can expect to see science fiction props, including Captain Kirk’s original command chair from the Star Trek TV series, a complete set of autographed first editions of the Foundation Trilogy by Isaac Asimov and a collection of Astounding Science Fiction magazines and artwork depicting the future.

Blacklisted Actress Karen Morley Dies

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Actress Karen Morley, who starred in early 1930’s movies such as Mata Hari and Dinner at Eight, died of pneumonia on March 8 at the Motion Picture Country House in Woodland Hills, Calif., the AP reports. She was 93. Morley‘s film career was cut short in 1947 when she testified before the House Committee on Un-American Activities and refused to answer questions about her possible enrollment in the Communist Party. Afterward, she continued promoting left-wing causes and, in 1954, ran unsuccessfully as a New York lieutenant governor candidate for the American Labor Party.

Quintessential Western “Shane” Turns 50

Paramount Pictures premiered the Western Shane starring Alan Ladd 50 years ago this week in New York, the AP reports. The cowboy pic, based on a 1949 book by Jack Schaefer, went into general release over a five-month period and garnered six Oscar nominations, including one for Best Picture. It only won one for cinematography (Loyal Griggs). Shane follows a disillusioned gunfighter who becomes an unwilling participant in a feud between an old ranching family and new homesteaders. It is told through the eyes of the son of a family that takes Shane in and famously ends with Shane riding off after he’s been shot in the climactic gunfight with the boy hollering “Shane … Shane … come back!”

Role Call: Silverstone Joins “Scooby-Doo” Sequel

Alicia Silverstone, best known as Cher in the 1995 hit Clueless, will star opposite Sarah Michelle Gellar, Freddie Prinze Jr., Matthew Lillard, Linda Cardellini and Seth Green in Warner Bros.’ Scooby-Doo sequel for director Raja Gosnell. Silverstone will play a relentless reporter named Heather. The sequel begins shooting April 14 in Vancouver and is slated for release March 26, 2004.

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