Mar. 15, 2025
Elizabeth Hurleyis navigating a unique path to happily ever after inChristmas in the Caribbean.
PEOPLE has a first look at the trailer for the upcoming romantic comedy from Screen Media, in which Hurley, 57, plays Rachel, who “gets her groove on and finds love at the beach” in the Caribbean overChristmas, taking her friends on her would-be honeymoon to the tropical locale after her fiancé leaves her at the altar.
Mar. 15, 2025
Damian Hurleycooked up a seductive new thriller — and enlisted momElizabeth Hurleyfor a key role.PEOPLE is exclusively debuting the first trailer forStrictly Confidential, which is billed as a “sensual thriller with a devilish twist” and serves as the feature directorial debut for Damian, 21.As the plot goes, “On the anniversary of Rebecca’s (Lauren McQueen) death, Mia (Georgia Lock) returns to the Caribbean paradise where she and her best friend shared her final days.
Mar. 15, 2025
Elizabeth Hurley and Mike Myers inAustin Powers: International Man of Mystery(1997).Photo: New Line Cinema/Courtesy Everett Collection
Paging Ms. Kensington!
In a recent interview surrounding her upcoming movieChristmas in the Caribbean, actress and modelElizabeth Hurleytold PEOPLE she’d “of course” be down for reprising her role as Vanessa Kensington from 1997’sAustin Powers:International Man of Mysteryand 1999’sAustin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me, should the opportunity arise.
That is, as long as it involves franchise starMike Myers, whom Hurley, 57, says “goes down as one of my very favorite costars.
Mar. 15, 2025
Elizabeth Poett’s Floral Butter Cookies.Photo:Jennifer CauseyElizabeth Poetthas just the trick for adding flair to simple butter cookies: edible flowers.“There is no way not to be joyful when making these cookies,” says the author ofThe Ranch Tablecookbook. “Not only are they so much fun to make but they also bring so much joy to others.“TheMagnolia Networkstar calls these cookies “perfect for the holidays,” adding that it is “impossible to have just one!
Mar. 15, 2025
Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor.Photo:Bob Penn/Sygma/Sygma via Getty
Bob Penn/Sygma/Sygma via Getty
Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton on the set of 1966’s ‘The Sandpiper’.API/GAMMA/Gamma-Rapho via Getty
API/GAMMA/Gamma-Rapho via Getty
“They’d take over whole floors of grand hotels so all these people had accommodation,” Lewis says. “But what all this meant was that they never met ordinary people after that. They never mixed with anyone else. It was this very insulated life, rather like, I imagine, members of the royal family.