^ 10 Cinderella (fall in love with your favorite fairy tale all over again) \ Those step-sisters The step-sisters i have their go at the prince first. > L' / / , / i t m I u I Cinderella meets the handsome prince next. **** ‘ ' rngf; .01 - jSp They look pretty good together, don’t they? * ’ M m **>■ f%?; \ f; f t / ^J'J'CLDpilu ! CtjOpiiL^ euev ctpevl What is it about this story that inspires so many? Perhaps it’s the sympathy for the title character, the fantasia of the pumpkin carriage, the optimism of the Fairy Godmother, or, in this case, the breathtaking dance by the Moscow Festival Ballet. You’ve read it many times. Now, witness CINDERELLA in its most magical and enchanting form, ballet. CINDERELLA Moscow Festival Ballet | Company of 50 Saturday, February 7 at 7:30 PM Sunday, February 8 at 2:00 PM _^ eC TICKETS 845-1234 www.MSCOPAS.org PATRICIA S. PETERS LAGNIAPPE LECTURE SERIES: How does a ballet become a fairy tale? Join us for an informal discussion about CINDRELLA with a representative from the Moscow Festival Ballet. Presented by The OPAS Guild, the discussion will be held one hour prior to the performances in the Forsyth Center Galleries of the MSG. buy tickets, be inspired MSC OPAS Three Decades of Performing Arts em n entertain in&p tre NAT Wednesday, January 28, 2004 THE BATTAl! ‘The Return of the King’ lead Oscar race with 11 nomination By David Germain THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Middle-earth crowned its monarch. Now, Academy Awards voters seem ready to crown “The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King” as the first fantasy to win best picture. The final chapter of Peter Jackson’s trilogy, based on J.R.R. Tolkien’s classic set in an imaginary world of hobbits, wizards and elves, took a lead ing 11 Oscar nominations Tuesday, among them best pic ture and director. Key acting nominees includ ed Golden Globe winners Bill Murray as a washed-up actor in “Lost in Translation,” Diane Keaton as a down-on-love playwright in “Something's Gotta Give,” Chariize Theron as serial killer Aileen Wuornos in “Monster” and Sean Penn as a vengeful father in “Mystic River.” The Napoleonic era naval adventure “Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World” received 10 nomina tions, including best picture and director for Peter Weir. The other best-picture nomi nees were the quirky Tokyo tale “Lost in Translation,” the somber vengeance story “Mystic River” and the uplifting horse-racing drama “Seabiscuit.” The most notable snubs were for the Civil War saga “Cold Mountain,” which failed to get nominations for best picture, director Anthony Minghella or lead actress Nicole Kidman, last year's best-actress winner for “The Hours.” The fdm had scored well in earlier movie honors. The biggest surprise was 13- year-old Keisha Castle-Hughes. For her performance as a Maori girl bucking tribal tradition in “Whale Rider,” she became the youngest person ever to be nom inated for lead actress. Another surprise pick was director Fernando Meirelles for the Brazilian film “City of God.” “Lost in Translation” earned nominations for directing and original screenplay for Sofia Oscar Insider BeLind tie scenes at The Academy Awa rds Coppola. She was only the third woman ever nominated for director, after Lina Wertmuller for 1976’s “Seven Beauties” and Jane Campion for 1993’s “The Piano.” “It’s pretty unbelievable. I’m happy to be in good company,” said Coppola, the daughter of Francis Ford Coppola and the first American woman nominat ed for director. A win for Coppola would make her kin the second family of three-generation winners, joining Walter, John and Anjelica Huston. Coppola’s father is a five-time winner and her grandfather. Carmine Coppola, won for musical score on “The Godfather Part II.” Besides best picture and director, nominations for “Return of the King” included original score and song, visual effects, film editing and adapted screenplay. The film was shut out in acting categories, though. With their strange creatures and mythical settings, fantasy flicks have had a hard time gaining favor with Oscar voters. No such fantastical film has ever won the top Oscar, yet universal acclaim and success at previous awards have positioned “Return of the King" to break that barrier. “Obviously, we’ve got rea son to hope that happens,” said Jackson, also considered the favorite for the directing Oscar. “I think what’s helping us with ‘The Lord of the Rings’ is that people respond to the perform ances, to the reality of the situa tions on screen and the depth of it. It feels real to them. “So it’s not really the fantasy that’s dominant in the film. It’s the human emotion. The design of a lot of fantasy films can alienate audiences. We’re trying to do the opposite and make people feel comfortable in that world as something they can recognize.” The exclusion of “Cold Mountain” from the top category ended distri Miramax’s 11-year strei fielding at least one best-p contender, including last winner “Chicago.” Miramax co-founder H Weinstein, consu Hollywood’s scrappiest campaigner, said Mountain” was hurt byasl awards season this yea. Academy of Motion Picti and Sciences moved the to Feb. 29, three weeks than usual. “Cold Mountain” age to pick up seven lions, though, among tl actor for Jude Law Confederate deserter porting actress for Zellweger as a salt-of- Southerner. It was Zell third straight nomination. Along with Law Murray, best-actor were johnny Depp as a buccaneer in “Pirates Caribbean: The Curse Black Pearl" and Ben Ki as an Iranian immigi “House of Sand and Fog Murray is the latest string of actors such as Hanks and Robin William earned hard-won respect career that began in broad edy. Academy voters snubbed Murray for I998’s most acclaimed peri ances in "Rushmore.” Joining Keaton. Hughes and Theron in the actress category were Morton as an Irish mom itt York in “In America. Naomi Watts as a gr mother in “21 Grams.’’ It was the fourth nom for Keaton, a best-actress ner for 1977’s "Annie Keaton plays an older who has closed the door on then finds herself two men in “Something Ciive.” which has t million at the box o “It’s fantastic for of my generation.” Ki said. “It means we can in romantic comedies, they’re well-written and and acted, it works makes money.” ft k? I'VDi NEWS IN BRIEF Judge calls Schwarzenegger's $4 million campaign loans 'illegal' SACRAMENTO — Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger broke a state law during the closing weeks of the recall race when he took out $4.5 million in bank loans to help his cash- starved campaign, according to a preliminary ruling from a superior court judge. If Monday’s decision is upheld, the governor could be forced to pay back the loans out of per sonal funds. “The judge has agreed with us in a strongly worded position that these loans were illegal,” said attorney Lowell Finley, who filed a lawsuit in October attempting to stop Schwarzenegger from funding his campaign with bank loans that could be paid back by donors after the election. Finley said that the ruling from Judge Loren McMaster could spark sanctions from the California Fair Political Practices Commission — an agency that recently threatened Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante with a $9 million fine because of campaign infractions. Building collapses in Cairo suburb; at least eight dead CAIRO, Egypt — Rescue workers bulldozers and cranes to clear rubble and for survivors Tuesday after an 11-story caught fire and collapsed, killing at nine people. After working through the night under spodcj authorities recovered eight bodies — firefighters and police officers as well as a pi citizen, according to rescue officials or f scene and Egypt’s semiofficial Middle News Agency. At least six people remained trapped in the ble, and a member of the rescue team told Associated Press that rescuers had heard fro survivor beneath the debris. The survivorsart| others were alive with him, according to cue worker, who spoke on condition of am Gen. Mohammed el-Moayyed, in charged] cue efforts on the scene, said that six firef were believed to still be trapped in the rubtde] probably some workers from the appliance # IN THE AFTERNOON! Radio News from the newsroom i THE BATTALIO /on campus and community ne* 1:57 p.m. Monday through Friday on KAMU-FM 90.9 College Station / Bryan PROFITABLE NUMBER! 845-0569 The Battalion ie taken Classified Advertising lichers ; SCO