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Interview
View more issues: April 2006, May 2006, July 2006
Articles in June 2006 issue of Interview
- Shots in the dark: in an era defined by information that travels faster than the speed of light, freedom still rings from the radio
by Graham Fuller - The mystery in the mix
by William Breiding - Style with sting: summertime and the fashion is bee-zy
by Joseph Errico - Lemming
by Michael Koresky - The King
by Michael Koresky - Hair today, gone tomorrow: the 'do for summer is short, sharp, and shocked
by Joseph Errico - Various Artists: Monsieur Gainsbourg Revisited
by Stephen Mooallem - Lindsay Lohan
by Ingrid Sischy - Eva Hesse: two summer exhibits showcase the lasting legacy of a shooting star of modernity
by Pat Steir - Thought for the day
by Fred Boeneker - Wordplay
by Stephen Mooallem - Mystery jets: spaced-out guitar solos, sing-along anthems, and one head-banging dad
by Sarah Wilson - Corinne Bailey Rae: Corinne Bailey Rae
by Ray Rogers - Kuno Becker
by Brendan Lemon - Charm school: take manners into your own hands
by Melissa Schweiger - Che'Nelle: experimental pop songs that are bound for heavy rotationand unbound by genres
by Omar Dubois - This month's blockbuster question
- Hugh Jackman: the world's gnarliest superhero and his X-Men director get down and dirty about scents, handmade shoes, and Sunday-morning pancakes
by Brett Ratner - The Stills: Without Feathers
by Stephen Mooallem - Deborah Harry: the woman who reinvented punk rock with a shot of Hollywood glamour talks about the new frontiers of feminism, fighting music-industry complacency, and how you can dye your hair red and still be the singer in a band called Blondie
by Ana Matronic - Spalding: Gray a new festival this month celebrates the uninhibited workand inscrutable lifeof the theater world's original king of pain
by Miranda July - The fiery furnaces: it's an old joke that most fledgling rock bands would sell their grandmothers for a record deal; this one made theirs the lead singer. Welcome to the weird, wonderful world of Matthew and Eleanor Friedberger
by Greil Marcus - Abbie Cornish: how an acting career that began with a wrong turn is about to take a star turn
by Graham Fuller - Peeping Tom: Peeping Tom
by Matt Diehl - Tracey Emin: as a girl, Tracey Emin would create dollhouses out of cardboard boxes and wall hangings that she'd stitch together by hand. Today her works still have that same homespun quality, but it's the in-your-face, no-holds-barred way they speak about
by Julian Schnabel - Black in: everyone celebrates the little black dress. But how about its summer cousinthe little black bathing suit?
by Michael Elins - Rosie Perez: in a new documentary, the actress explores the meaning of all things Puerto Rican and finds plenty to be proudand angryabout
by Jimmy Smits - Diana Ross: Blue
by Matt Diehl - Color me crazy: the colors in the rainbow multiply this season as designers bring tint and tingle, hue and highlight, depth and dimension to fashion's palette
by Paola Kudacki - Ellen Page: how many teenagers could hold their own while wearing a leather suit and hanging 70 feet above the ground with Halle Berry? Ellen Page can
by Jarret McNeill - Hot Chip: The Warning
by Matt Diehl - Bedfellows and soul mates
by Patrick McMullan - The notorious Gretchen Mol
by Phil Skoglund - Sam Huntington: paging Martha Stewart: the actor who plays the man of steel's new sidekick is big on restoring thingsbe they New England manors or the summer's most supersized blockbuster
by Meghan Sutherland - Alexi Murdoch: Time Without Consequence
by Ray Rogers - Letter from the editor June 2006
by Ingrid Sischy - The other side of the mountain
by Jennifer Muller - Bree Turner: clearly, the lucky bracelet she relies on to win over casting directors is working
by Carolyn Murnick - The Break-Up
by Leslie Cafferty - Elephant dancing: the who, the what, the wow, and the why
by Greil Marcus - A reader's tip
by Renee Nettesheim - With love: in 1969while social, artistic, and sexual revolutions rocked the cultureCartier introduced a revolutionary two-piece bracelet that had to be locked together or unlocked by somebody else, preferably a loved one. Now it looks like lig
by Annabel Tollman - The Omen
by Stephen Mooallem