People, March 31, 2003: Difference between revisions
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<center><h3> Look of Love </h3></center> | <center><h3> Look of Love </h3></center> | ||
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She must have liked what she heard. By the end of 2002, Krall and Costello were stepping out together, and at this year's Grammys (where she won best jazz-vocal album), Krall, 38, and Costello, 47, arrived arm in arm. They were together again at a London benefit last month, performing a steamy duet of Elton John's, "Sorry Seems to be the Hardest Word." Then they appeared at a March 10 gala in New York City, where Krall turned heads in a low-cut brown jacket and Gucci miniskirt, and where Costello and his band the Attractions were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. At the ceremony Krall said that their relationship "has been great, and I'm very happy." | She must have liked what she heard. By the end of 2002, Krall and Costello were stepping out together, and at this year's Grammys (where she won best jazz-vocal album), Krall, 38, and Costello, 47, arrived arm in arm. They were together again at a London benefit last month, performing a steamy duet of Elton John's, "Sorry Seems to be the Hardest Word." Then they appeared at a March 10 gala in New York City, where Krall turned heads in a low-cut brown jacket and Gucci miniskirt, and where Costello and his band the Attractions were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. At the ceremony Krall said that their relationship "has been great, and I'm very happy." | ||
Indeed, both singers seem to be putting heartache behind them. London-born Costello, who was divorced from his first wife, Mary, in 1985 (they have a son, Matthew), split from his wife of 16 years, former Pogues bassist Cait O'Riordan, in September. And last year Krall, who grew up in Nanaimo, a town in Canada's British Columbia, broke up with her boyfriend of two years, screenwriter John-Paul Bernbach. She also suffered, in quick succession, the loss of her mother and two of her closest mentors. Adella Krall, an elementary school teacher, died of multiple myeloma, a rare form of bone marrow cancer, at age 60 last May. "She was a very special person," Krall told Britain's Sunday Telegraph. "Then I lost [singer] Rosemary Clooney a month later, who was a very strong maternal figure to me. Then I lost Ray Brown [the musician husband of Ella Fitzgerald] four days after that, who was a paternal figure to me. Both of those people had consoled me when my mom died." | Indeed, both singers seem to be putting heartache behind them. London-born Costello, who was divorced from his first wife, Mary, in 1985 (they have a son, Matthew), split from his wife of 16 years, former Pogues bassist Cait O'Riordan, in September. And last year Krall, who grew up in Nanaimo, a town in Canada's British Columbia, broke up with her boyfriend of two years, screenwriter John-Paul Bernbach. She also suffered, in quick succession, the loss of her mother and two of her closest mentors. Adella Krall, an elementary school teacher, died of multiple myeloma, a rare form of bone marrow cancer, at age 60 last May. "She was a very special person," Krall told Britain's ''Sunday Telegraph''. "Then I lost [singer] Rosemary Clooney a month later, who was a very strong maternal figure to me. Then I lost Ray Brown [the musician husband of Ella Fitzgerald] four days after that, who was a paternal figure to me. Both of those people had consoled me when my mom died." | ||
Krall, who now lives in Manhattan's Greenwich Village and hangs out with Costello in New York City and Ireland, remains close to her father, Jim, 65, an accountant, and her sister Michelle, a former police officer. "I have clients with major record labels whose mothers have never been to a show," says her longtime friend and lawyer Josh Grier. "Diana included her parents significantly. If Diana were leaving [the theater after] an appearance on David Letterman, the first thing she would do in the car would be to call her folks." | Krall, who now lives in Manhattan's Greenwich Village and hangs out with Costello in New York City and Ireland, remains close to her father, Jim, 65, an accountant, and her sister Michelle, a former police officer. "I have clients with major record labels whose mothers have never been to a show," says her longtime friend and lawyer Josh Grier. "Diana included her parents significantly. If Diana were leaving [the theater after] an appearance on David Letterman, the first thing she would do in the car would be to call her folks." | ||
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'''People, March 31, 2003 | '''People, March 31, 2003 | ||
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*[http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20139645,00.html People.com] | *[http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20139645,00.html People.com] | ||
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[[Category:Bibliography 2003 | [[Category:Bibliography]] | ||
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[[Category:People| People 2003-03-31]] | [[Category:People| People 2003-03-31]] | ||
[[Category:Magazine articles | [[Category:Magazine articles]] |
Revision as of 19:51, 25 May 2014
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