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  • Catherine Lara
    CHLFLO_009912
    Catherine Lara
    Catherine Lara
    1974.
    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL © LECOEUVRE PHOTOTHEQUE

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • Catherine Lara
    CHLFLO_009911
    Catherine Lara
    Catherine Lara
    1974.
    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL © LECOEUVRE PHOTOTHEQUE

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • Marcel Amont et Geoges Brassens
    CHLFLO_001223
    Marcel Amont et Geoges Brassens
    Marcel Amont
    Geoges Brassens.
    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL CHANTEUR CHANTEUSE © PHOTOTHEQUE LECOEUVRE

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • DIAMANTS SUR CANAPE
    CHLINT_052690
    DIAMANTS SUR CANAPE
    DIAMANTS SUR CANAPE
    (BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY'S)
    1961
    real Blake Edwards
    avec Audrey Hepburn
    d'après le roman de Truman Capote
    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL © Paramount

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • Weekly Cabinet Meeting at the Chancellery in Berlin, Germany
    DUKAS_187405624_NUR
    Weekly Cabinet Meeting at the Chancellery in Berlin, Germany
    Federal Minister of Finance and Vice Chancellor Lars Klingbeil chats with Federal Minister for the Environment, Climate Action, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety Carsten Schneider prior to the weekly Cabinet Meeting at the Chancellery in Berlin, Germany, on July 30, 2025. (Photo by Emmanuele Contini/NurPhoto)

     

  • Signe d'hiver
    CHLINT_007164
    Signe d'hiver
    Signe d'hiver
    2002
    Real Jean-Claude Moireau
    Cyrille Thouvenin.
    Collection Christophel © Jean-Claude Moireau

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • Les Griffes de la peur
    CHLAFP_022179
    Les Griffes de la peur
    Les Griffes de la peur
    Eye of the Cat
    1969
    Real David Lowell Rich
    Gayle Hunnicutt.
    Collection Christophel © Joseph L Schenck Enterprises

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • Trump’s Early Exit Throws G7 Summit Into Question
    DUKAS_186128489_NUR
    Trump’s Early Exit Throws G7 Summit Into Question
    BANFF, CANADA – JUNE 17:
    A police officer and an RCMP officer chat beside the G7 Summit logo displayed during the G7 Kananaskis Summit, outside the International Media Center in Banff, Alberta, Canada, on June 17, 2025. (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto)

     

  • Discord Logo Photo Illustrations
    DUKAS_186070801_NUR
    Discord Logo Photo Illustrations
    A laptop keyboard and Discord logo displayed on a phone screen are seen in this illustration photo taken in Krakow, Poland on June 16, 2025. (Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto)

     

  • Popular And Trending Apps Photo Illustrations
    DUKAS_185755349_NUR
    Popular And Trending Apps Photo Illustrations
    ChatGPT on App Store displayed on a phone screen is seen in this illustration photo taken in Krakow, Poland on June 7, 2025. (Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto)

     

  • Riverside Relaxation By The Vltava River In Prague
    DUKAS_184821909_NUR
    Riverside Relaxation By The Vltava River In Prague
    Three young people spend time together on the sandy bank of the Vltava River, sketching and talking in the shade of riverside trees in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 12, 2025. Art supplies and personal belongings are spread around as they engage in a creative outdoor session by the calm water. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660855_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors sit at Kavarna Fantova in the historic counter hall of Prague Central Station, an Art Nouveau masterpiece, in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660850_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors sit at Kavarna Fantova in the historic counter hall of Prague Central Station, an Art Nouveau masterpiece, in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660845_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors are in the historic Art Nouveau counter hall of Prague Central Station in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660840_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors are in the historic Art Nouveau counter hall of Prague Central Station in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660835_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors sit at Kavarna Fantova in the historic counter hall of Prague Central Station, an Art Nouveau masterpiece, in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660834_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors are in the historic Art Nouveau counter hall of Prague Central Station in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660833_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors are in the historic Art Nouveau counter hall of Prague Central Station in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660825_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors are in the historic Art Nouveau counter hall of Prague Central Station in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660823_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    The historic Art Nouveau counter hall of Prague Central Station in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. The interior is part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660821_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors are in the historic Art Nouveau counter hall of Prague Central Station in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660819_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors are in the historic Art Nouveau counter hall of Prague Central Station in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660817_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors sit at Kavarna Fantova in the historic counter hall of Prague Central Station, an Art Nouveau masterpiece, in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660815_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors sit at Kavarna Fantova in the historic counter hall of Prague Central Station, an Art Nouveau masterpiece, in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660813_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors are in the historic Art Nouveau counter hall of Prague Central Station in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • George Clooney parle de sa nouvelle pièce de Broadway au Late Show
    DUKAS_181468897_BES
    George Clooney parle de sa nouvelle pièce de Broadway au Late Show
    Pictures must credit: CBS Hollywood A lister George Clooney appears on the Late Show With Stephen Colbert in the USA to talk about his return to theatre on New York’s Broadway. Clooney , 63, stars as a legendary US journalist Edward R. Murrow, who was the most trusted person in television news during the 1950s. At the time he stood up to US Sen. Joseph McCarthy during the Hollywood Communist witch hunts. In the early Fifties 300 actors, writers and others suspected of being communists were blacklisted in Hollywood and excluded from the workforce. Clooney also co-wrote the production, titled Good Night, and Good Luck. His last stage performance was 39 years ago. Asked by Colbert why he took so long to return to the boards, he joked: “I wanted to wait until I was old enough to not remember my lines.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • George Clooney parle de sa nouvelle pièce de Broadway au Late Show
    DUKAS_181468885_BES
    George Clooney parle de sa nouvelle pièce de Broadway au Late Show
    Pictures must credit: CBS Hollywood A lister George Clooney appears on the Late Show With Stephen Colbert in the USA to talk about his return to theatre on New York’s Broadway. Clooney , 63, stars as a legendary US journalist Edward R. Murrow, who was the most trusted person in television news during the 1950s. At the time he stood up to US Sen. Joseph McCarthy during the Hollywood Communist witch hunts. In the early Fifties 300 actors, writers and others suspected of being communists were blacklisted in Hollywood and excluded from the workforce. Clooney also co-wrote the production, titled Good Night, and Good Luck. His last stage performance was 39 years ago. Asked by Colbert why he took so long to return to the boards, he joked: “I wanted to wait until I was old enough to not remember my lines.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • George Clooney parle de sa nouvelle pièce de Broadway au Late Show
    DUKAS_181468871_BES
    George Clooney parle de sa nouvelle pièce de Broadway au Late Show
    Pictures must credit: CBS Hollywood A lister George Clooney appears on the Late Show With Stephen Colbert in the USA to talk about his return to theatre on New York’s Broadway. Clooney , 63, stars as a legendary US journalist Edward R. Murrow, who was the most trusted person in television news during the 1950s. At the time he stood up to US Sen. Joseph McCarthy during the Hollywood Communist witch hunts. In the early Fifties 300 actors, writers and others suspected of being communists were blacklisted in Hollywood and excluded from the workforce. Clooney also co-wrote the production, titled Good Night, and Good Luck. His last stage performance was 39 years ago. Asked by Colbert why he took so long to return to the boards, he joked: “I wanted to wait until I was old enough to not remember my lines.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • George Clooney parle de sa nouvelle pièce de Broadway au Late Show
    DUKAS_181468857_BES
    George Clooney parle de sa nouvelle pièce de Broadway au Late Show
    Pictures must credit: CBS Hollywood A lister George Clooney appears on the Late Show With Stephen Colbert in the USA to talk about his return to theatre on New York’s Broadway. Clooney , 63, stars as a legendary US journalist Edward R. Murrow, who was the most trusted person in television news during the 1950s. At the time he stood up to US Sen. Joseph McCarthy during the Hollywood Communist witch hunts. In the early Fifties 300 actors, writers and others suspected of being communists were blacklisted in Hollywood and excluded from the workforce. Clooney also co-wrote the production, titled Good Night, and Good Luck. His last stage performance was 39 years ago. Asked by Colbert why he took so long to return to the boards, he joked: “I wanted to wait until I was old enough to not remember my lines.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • George Clooney parle de sa nouvelle pièce de Broadway au Late Show
    DUKAS_181468842_BES
    George Clooney parle de sa nouvelle pièce de Broadway au Late Show
    Pictures must credit: CBS Hollywood A lister George Clooney appears on the Late Show With Stephen Colbert in the USA to talk about his return to theatre on New York’s Broadway. Clooney , 63, stars as a legendary US journalist Edward R. Murrow, who was the most trusted person in television news during the 1950s. At the time he stood up to US Sen. Joseph McCarthy during the Hollywood Communist witch hunts. In the early Fifties 300 actors, writers and others suspected of being communists were blacklisted in Hollywood and excluded from the workforce. Clooney also co-wrote the production, titled Good Night, and Good Luck. His last stage performance was 39 years ago. Asked by Colbert why he took so long to return to the boards, he joked: “I wanted to wait until I was old enough to not remember my lines.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • George Clooney parle de sa nouvelle pièce de Broadway au Late Show
    DUKAS_181468828_BES
    George Clooney parle de sa nouvelle pièce de Broadway au Late Show
    Pictures must credit: CBS Hollywood A lister George Clooney appears on the Late Show With Stephen Colbert in the USA to talk about his return to theatre on New York’s Broadway. Clooney , 63, stars as a legendary US journalist Edward R. Murrow, who was the most trusted person in television news during the 1950s. At the time he stood up to US Sen. Joseph McCarthy during the Hollywood Communist witch hunts. In the early Fifties 300 actors, writers and others suspected of being communists were blacklisted in Hollywood and excluded from the workforce. Clooney also co-wrote the production, titled Good Night, and Good Luck. His last stage performance was 39 years ago. Asked by Colbert why he took so long to return to the boards, he joked: “I wanted to wait until I was old enough to not remember my lines.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • George Clooney parle de sa nouvelle pièce de Broadway au Late Show
    DUKAS_181468813_BES
    George Clooney parle de sa nouvelle pièce de Broadway au Late Show
    Pictures must credit: CBS Hollywood A lister George Clooney appears on the Late Show With Stephen Colbert in the USA to talk about his return to theatre on New York’s Broadway. Clooney , 63, stars as a legendary US journalist Edward R. Murrow, who was the most trusted person in television news during the 1950s. At the time he stood up to US Sen. Joseph McCarthy during the Hollywood Communist witch hunts. In the early Fifties 300 actors, writers and others suspected of being communists were blacklisted in Hollywood and excluded from the workforce. Clooney also co-wrote the production, titled Good Night, and Good Luck. His last stage performance was 39 years ago. Asked by Colbert why he took so long to return to the boards, he joked: “I wanted to wait until I was old enough to not remember my lines.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • George Clooney parle de sa nouvelle pièce de Broadway au Late Show
    DUKAS_181468800_BES
    George Clooney parle de sa nouvelle pièce de Broadway au Late Show
    Pictures must credit: CBS Hollywood A lister George Clooney appears on the Late Show With Stephen Colbert in the USA to talk about his return to theatre on New York’s Broadway. Clooney , 63, stars as a legendary US journalist Edward R. Murrow, who was the most trusted person in television news during the 1950s. At the time he stood up to US Sen. Joseph McCarthy during the Hollywood Communist witch hunts. In the early Fifties 300 actors, writers and others suspected of being communists were blacklisted in Hollywood and excluded from the workforce. Clooney also co-wrote the production, titled Good Night, and Good Luck. His last stage performance was 39 years ago. Asked by Colbert why he took so long to return to the boards, he joked: “I wanted to wait until I was old enough to not remember my lines.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • George Clooney parle de sa nouvelle pièce de Broadway au Late Show
    DUKAS_181468787_BES
    George Clooney parle de sa nouvelle pièce de Broadway au Late Show
    Pictures must credit: CBS Hollywood A lister George Clooney appears on the Late Show With Stephen Colbert in the USA to talk about his return to theatre on New York’s Broadway. Clooney , 63, stars as a legendary US journalist Edward R. Murrow, who was the most trusted person in television news during the 1950s. At the time he stood up to US Sen. Joseph McCarthy during the Hollywood Communist witch hunts. In the early Fifties 300 actors, writers and others suspected of being communists were blacklisted in Hollywood and excluded from the workforce. Clooney also co-wrote the production, titled Good Night, and Good Luck. His last stage performance was 39 years ago. Asked by Colbert why he took so long to return to the boards, he joked: “I wanted to wait until I was old enough to not remember my lines.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    DUKAS_181101105_FER
    Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Leo   1
    Ref 16538
    13/02/2025
    See Ferrari pictures 
    Pictures must credit: NBC
    The on-screen toy boy lover of Renée Zellweger in the new Bridget Jones movie has told how he claimed he could drive when he got his first big acting break — but it was a lie.
    And he got found out when asked to take the wheel on the second season  of hit TV show White Lotus.
    Now British actor Woodall, 28, is the romantic interest in new rom com Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy with Zellweger, 55.
    He told TV chat show host Jimmy Fallon , 50, how his role in White Lotus taught him a pretty big lesson on doing that job.
    Asked what that was he said: “-Don't lie about skills you don't have.”
    He explained: “I told them that I could drive because they asked me.
    “You know, I'd just been cast and I didn't want to lose this job. 
    “So I said, ‘Yeah.’”
    There was a scene where his character Jack has to drive around the Italian island of Sicily where the series is set.
    Fallon said: “But you don't know how to drive? Did you have your licence?”
    Woodall answered: “No, but they thought that I could do it.
    “I turned up on set, and I saw that they had a stunt driver, so I thought, ‘Oh, I'm good.’
    “And then they said, ‘We want you to swerve up around the corner, stop on a dime, do the scene, swerve off, stop again, drop the phone out the car, and then bomb down the road.’
    “And I was like, “I can't do this. This is not for me.’”

    OPS: Leo Woodall on the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    DUKAS_181101098_FER
    Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Leo   1
    Ref 16538
    13/02/2025
    See Ferrari pictures 
    Pictures must credit: NBC
    The on-screen toy boy lover of Renée Zellweger in the new Bridget Jones movie has told how he claimed he could drive when he got his first big acting break — but it was a lie.
    And he got found out when asked to take the wheel on the second season  of hit TV show White Lotus.
    Now British actor Woodall, 28, is the romantic interest in new rom com Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy with Zellweger, 55.
    He told TV chat show host Jimmy Fallon , 50, how his role in White Lotus taught him a pretty big lesson on doing that job.
    Asked what that was he said: “-Don't lie about skills you don't have.”
    He explained: “I told them that I could drive because they asked me.
    “You know, I'd just been cast and I didn't want to lose this job. 
    “So I said, ‘Yeah.’”
    There was a scene where his character Jack has to drive around the Italian island of Sicily where the series is set.
    Fallon said: “But you don't know how to drive? Did you have your licence?”
    Woodall answered: “No, but they thought that I could do it.
    “I turned up on set, and I saw that they had a stunt driver, so I thought, ‘Oh, I'm good.’
    “And then they said, ‘We want you to swerve up around the corner, stop on a dime, do the scene, swerve off, stop again, drop the phone out the car, and then bomb down the road.’
    “And I was like, “I can't do this. This is not for me.’”

    OPS: Leo Woodall on the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    DUKAS_181101090_FER
    Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Leo   1
    Ref 16538
    13/02/2025
    See Ferrari pictures 
    Pictures must credit: NBC
    The on-screen toy boy lover of Renée Zellweger in the new Bridget Jones movie has told how he claimed he could drive when he got his first big acting break — but it was a lie.
    And he got found out when asked to take the wheel on the second season  of hit TV show White Lotus.
    Now British actor Woodall, 28, is the romantic interest in new rom com Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy with Zellweger, 55.
    He told TV chat show host Jimmy Fallon , 50, how his role in White Lotus taught him a pretty big lesson on doing that job.
    Asked what that was he said: “-Don't lie about skills you don't have.”
    He explained: “I told them that I could drive because they asked me.
    “You know, I'd just been cast and I didn't want to lose this job. 
    “So I said, ‘Yeah.’”
    There was a scene where his character Jack has to drive around the Italian island of Sicily where the series is set.
    Fallon said: “But you don't know how to drive? Did you have your licence?”
    Woodall answered: “No, but they thought that I could do it.
    “I turned up on set, and I saw that they had a stunt driver, so I thought, ‘Oh, I'm good.’
    “And then they said, ‘We want you to swerve up around the corner, stop on a dime, do the scene, swerve off, stop again, drop the phone out the car, and then bomb down the road.’
    “And I was like, “I can't do this. This is not for me.’”

    OPS: Leo Woodall on the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    DUKAS_181101084_FER
    Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Leo   1
    Ref 16538
    13/02/2025
    See Ferrari pictures 
    Pictures must credit: NBC
    The on-screen toy boy lover of Renée Zellweger in the new Bridget Jones movie has told how he claimed he could drive when he got his first big acting break — but it was a lie.
    And he got found out when asked to take the wheel on the second season  of hit TV show White Lotus.
    Now British actor Woodall, 28, is the romantic interest in new rom com Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy with Zellweger, 55.
    He told TV chat show host Jimmy Fallon , 50, how his role in White Lotus taught him a pretty big lesson on doing that job.
    Asked what that was he said: “-Don't lie about skills you don't have.”
    He explained: “I told them that I could drive because they asked me.
    “You know, I'd just been cast and I didn't want to lose this job. 
    “So I said, ‘Yeah.’”
    There was a scene where his character Jack has to drive around the Italian island of Sicily where the series is set.
    Fallon said: “But you don't know how to drive? Did you have your licence?”
    Woodall answered: “No, but they thought that I could do it.
    “I turned up on set, and I saw that they had a stunt driver, so I thought, ‘Oh, I'm good.’
    “And then they said, ‘We want you to swerve up around the corner, stop on a dime, do the scene, swerve off, stop again, drop the phone out the car, and then bomb down the road.’
    “And I was like, “I can't do this. This is not for me.’”

    OPS: Leo Woodall on the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    DUKAS_181101076_FER
    Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Leo   1
    Ref 16538
    13/02/2025
    See Ferrari pictures 
    Pictures must credit: NBC
    The on-screen toy boy lover of Renée Zellweger in the new Bridget Jones movie has told how he claimed he could drive when he got his first big acting break — but it was a lie.
    And he got found out when asked to take the wheel on the second season  of hit TV show White Lotus.
    Now British actor Woodall, 28, is the romantic interest in new rom com Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy with Zellweger, 55.
    He told TV chat show host Jimmy Fallon , 50, how his role in White Lotus taught him a pretty big lesson on doing that job.
    Asked what that was he said: “-Don't lie about skills you don't have.”
    He explained: “I told them that I could drive because they asked me.
    “You know, I'd just been cast and I didn't want to lose this job. 
    “So I said, ‘Yeah.’”
    There was a scene where his character Jack has to drive around the Italian island of Sicily where the series is set.
    Fallon said: “But you don't know how to drive? Did you have your licence?”
    Woodall answered: “No, but they thought that I could do it.
    “I turned up on set, and I saw that they had a stunt driver, so I thought, ‘Oh, I'm good.’
    “And then they said, ‘We want you to swerve up around the corner, stop on a dime, do the scene, swerve off, stop again, drop the phone out the car, and then bomb down the road.’
    “And I was like, “I can't do this. This is not for me.’”

    OPS: Leo Woodall on the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    DUKAS_181101070_FER
    Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Leo   1
    Ref 16538
    13/02/2025
    See Ferrari pictures 
    Pictures must credit: NBC
    The on-screen toy boy lover of Renée Zellweger in the new Bridget Jones movie has told how he claimed he could drive when he got his first big acting break — but it was a lie.
    And he got found out when asked to take the wheel on the second season  of hit TV show White Lotus.
    Now British actor Woodall, 28, is the romantic interest in new rom com Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy with Zellweger, 55.
    He told TV chat show host Jimmy Fallon , 50, how his role in White Lotus taught him a pretty big lesson on doing that job.
    Asked what that was he said: “-Don't lie about skills you don't have.”
    He explained: “I told them that I could drive because they asked me.
    “You know, I'd just been cast and I didn't want to lose this job. 
    “So I said, ‘Yeah.’”
    There was a scene where his character Jack has to drive around the Italian island of Sicily where the series is set.
    Fallon said: “But you don't know how to drive? Did you have your licence?”
    Woodall answered: “No, but they thought that I could do it.
    “I turned up on set, and I saw that they had a stunt driver, so I thought, ‘Oh, I'm good.’
    “And then they said, ‘We want you to swerve up around the corner, stop on a dime, do the scene, swerve off, stop again, drop the phone out the car, and then bomb down the road.’
    “And I was like, “I can't do this. This is not for me.’”

    OPS: Leo Woodall on the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    DUKAS_181101063_FER
    Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Leo   1
    Ref 16538
    13/02/2025
    See Ferrari pictures 
    Pictures must credit: NBC
    The on-screen toy boy lover of Renée Zellweger in the new Bridget Jones movie has told how he claimed he could drive when he got his first big acting break — but it was a lie.
    And he got found out when asked to take the wheel on the second season  of hit TV show White Lotus.
    Now British actor Woodall, 28, is the romantic interest in new rom com Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy with Zellweger, 55.
    He told TV chat show host Jimmy Fallon , 50, how his role in White Lotus taught him a pretty big lesson on doing that job.
    Asked what that was he said: “-Don't lie about skills you don't have.”
    He explained: “I told them that I could drive because they asked me.
    “You know, I'd just been cast and I didn't want to lose this job. 
    “So I said, ‘Yeah.’”
    There was a scene where his character Jack has to drive around the Italian island of Sicily where the series is set.
    Fallon said: “But you don't know how to drive? Did you have your licence?”
    Woodall answered: “No, but they thought that I could do it.
    “I turned up on set, and I saw that they had a stunt driver, so I thought, ‘Oh, I'm good.’
    “And then they said, ‘We want you to swerve up around the corner, stop on a dime, do the scene, swerve off, stop again, drop the phone out the car, and then bomb down the road.’
    “And I was like, “I can't do this. This is not for me.’”

    OPS: Leo Woodall on the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    DUKAS_181101056_FER
    Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Leo   1
    Ref 16538
    13/02/2025
    See Ferrari pictures 
    Pictures must credit: NBC
    The on-screen toy boy lover of Renée Zellweger in the new Bridget Jones movie has told how he claimed he could drive when he got his first big acting break — but it was a lie.
    And he got found out when asked to take the wheel on the second season  of hit TV show White Lotus.
    Now British actor Woodall, 28, is the romantic interest in new rom com Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy with Zellweger, 55.
    He told TV chat show host Jimmy Fallon , 50, how his role in White Lotus taught him a pretty big lesson on doing that job.
    Asked what that was he said: “-Don't lie about skills you don't have.”
    He explained: “I told them that I could drive because they asked me.
    “You know, I'd just been cast and I didn't want to lose this job. 
    “So I said, ‘Yeah.’”
    There was a scene where his character Jack has to drive around the Italian island of Sicily where the series is set.
    Fallon said: “But you don't know how to drive? Did you have your licence?”
    Woodall answered: “No, but they thought that I could do it.
    “I turned up on set, and I saw that they had a stunt driver, so I thought, ‘Oh, I'm good.’
    “And then they said, ‘We want you to swerve up around the corner, stop on a dime, do the scene, swerve off, stop again, drop the phone out the car, and then bomb down the road.’
    “And I was like, “I can't do this. This is not for me.’”

    OPS: Leo Woodall on the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    DUKAS_181101049_FER
    Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Leo   1
    Ref 16538
    13/02/2025
    See Ferrari pictures 
    Pictures must credit: NBC
    The on-screen toy boy lover of Renée Zellweger in the new Bridget Jones movie has told how he claimed he could drive when he got his first big acting break — but it was a lie.
    And he got found out when asked to take the wheel on the second season  of hit TV show White Lotus.
    Now British actor Woodall, 28, is the romantic interest in new rom com Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy with Zellweger, 55.
    He told TV chat show host Jimmy Fallon , 50, how his role in White Lotus taught him a pretty big lesson on doing that job.
    Asked what that was he said: “-Don't lie about skills you don't have.”
    He explained: “I told them that I could drive because they asked me.
    “You know, I'd just been cast and I didn't want to lose this job. 
    “So I said, ‘Yeah.’”
    There was a scene where his character Jack has to drive around the Italian island of Sicily where the series is set.
    Fallon said: “But you don't know how to drive? Did you have your licence?”
    Woodall answered: “No, but they thought that I could do it.
    “I turned up on set, and I saw that they had a stunt driver, so I thought, ‘Oh, I'm good.’
    “And then they said, ‘We want you to swerve up around the corner, stop on a dime, do the scene, swerve off, stop again, drop the phone out the car, and then bomb down the road.’
    “And I was like, “I can't do this. This is not for me.’”

    OPS: Leo Woodall on the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    DUKAS_181101042_FER
    Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Leo   1
    Ref 16538
    13/02/2025
    See Ferrari pictures 
    Pictures must credit: NBC
    The on-screen toy boy lover of Renée Zellweger in the new Bridget Jones movie has told how he claimed he could drive when he got his first big acting break — but it was a lie.
    And he got found out when asked to take the wheel on the second season  of hit TV show White Lotus.
    Now British actor Woodall, 28, is the romantic interest in new rom com Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy with Zellweger, 55.
    He told TV chat show host Jimmy Fallon , 50, how his role in White Lotus taught him a pretty big lesson on doing that job.
    Asked what that was he said: “-Don't lie about skills you don't have.”
    He explained: “I told them that I could drive because they asked me.
    “You know, I'd just been cast and I didn't want to lose this job. 
    “So I said, ‘Yeah.’”
    There was a scene where his character Jack has to drive around the Italian island of Sicily where the series is set.
    Fallon said: “But you don't know how to drive? Did you have your licence?”
    Woodall answered: “No, but they thought that I could do it.
    “I turned up on set, and I saw that they had a stunt driver, so I thought, ‘Oh, I'm good.’
    “And then they said, ‘We want you to swerve up around the corner, stop on a dime, do the scene, swerve off, stop again, drop the phone out the car, and then bomb down the road.’
    “And I was like, “I can't do this. This is not for me.’”

    OPS: Leo Woodall on the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    DUKAS_181101035_FER
    Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Leo   1
    Ref 16538
    13/02/2025
    See Ferrari pictures 
    Pictures must credit: NBC
    The on-screen toy boy lover of Renée Zellweger in the new Bridget Jones movie has told how he claimed he could drive when he got his first big acting break — but it was a lie.
    And he got found out when asked to take the wheel on the second season  of hit TV show White Lotus.
    Now British actor Woodall, 28, is the romantic interest in new rom com Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy with Zellweger, 55.
    He told TV chat show host Jimmy Fallon , 50, how his role in White Lotus taught him a pretty big lesson on doing that job.
    Asked what that was he said: “-Don't lie about skills you don't have.”
    He explained: “I told them that I could drive because they asked me.
    “You know, I'd just been cast and I didn't want to lose this job. 
    “So I said, ‘Yeah.’”
    There was a scene where his character Jack has to drive around the Italian island of Sicily where the series is set.
    Fallon said: “But you don't know how to drive? Did you have your licence?”
    Woodall answered: “No, but they thought that I could do it.
    “I turned up on set, and I saw that they had a stunt driver, so I thought, ‘Oh, I'm good.’
    “And then they said, ‘We want you to swerve up around the corner, stop on a dime, do the scene, swerve off, stop again, drop the phone out the car, and then bomb down the road.’
    “And I was like, “I can't do this. This is not for me.’”

    OPS: Leo Woodall on the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    DUKAS_181101028_FER
    Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Leo   1
    Ref 16538
    13/02/2025
    See Ferrari pictures 
    Pictures must credit: NBC
    The on-screen toy boy lover of Renée Zellweger in the new Bridget Jones movie has told how he claimed he could drive when he got his first big acting break — but it was a lie.
    And he got found out when asked to take the wheel on the second season  of hit TV show White Lotus.
    Now British actor Woodall, 28, is the romantic interest in new rom com Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy with Zellweger, 55.
    He told TV chat show host Jimmy Fallon , 50, how his role in White Lotus taught him a pretty big lesson on doing that job.
    Asked what that was he said: “-Don't lie about skills you don't have.”
    He explained: “I told them that I could drive because they asked me.
    “You know, I'd just been cast and I didn't want to lose this job. 
    “So I said, ‘Yeah.’”
    There was a scene where his character Jack has to drive around the Italian island of Sicily where the series is set.
    Fallon said: “But you don't know how to drive? Did you have your licence?”
    Woodall answered: “No, but they thought that I could do it.
    “I turned up on set, and I saw that they had a stunt driver, so I thought, ‘Oh, I'm good.’
    “And then they said, ‘We want you to swerve up around the corner, stop on a dime, do the scene, swerve off, stop again, drop the phone out the car, and then bomb down the road.’
    “And I was like, “I can't do this. This is not for me.’”

    OPS: Leo Woodall on the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    DUKAS_181101021_FER
    Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Leo   1
    Ref 16538
    13/02/2025
    See Ferrari pictures 
    Pictures must credit: NBC
    The on-screen toy boy lover of Renée Zellweger in the new Bridget Jones movie has told how he claimed he could drive when he got his first big acting break — but it was a lie.
    And he got found out when asked to take the wheel on the second season  of hit TV show White Lotus.
    Now British actor Woodall, 28, is the romantic interest in new rom com Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy with Zellweger, 55.
    He told TV chat show host Jimmy Fallon , 50, how his role in White Lotus taught him a pretty big lesson on doing that job.
    Asked what that was he said: “-Don't lie about skills you don't have.”
    He explained: “I told them that I could drive because they asked me.
    “You know, I'd just been cast and I didn't want to lose this job. 
    “So I said, ‘Yeah.’”
    There was a scene where his character Jack has to drive around the Italian island of Sicily where the series is set.
    Fallon said: “But you don't know how to drive? Did you have your licence?”
    Woodall answered: “No, but they thought that I could do it.
    “I turned up on set, and I saw that they had a stunt driver, so I thought, ‘Oh, I'm good.’
    “And then they said, ‘We want you to swerve up around the corner, stop on a dime, do the scene, swerve off, stop again, drop the phone out the car, and then bomb down the road.’
    “And I was like, “I can't do this. This is not for me.’”

    OPS: Leo Woodall on the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    DUKAS_181101014_FER
    Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Leo   1
    Ref 16538
    13/02/2025
    See Ferrari pictures 
    Pictures must credit: NBC
    The on-screen toy boy lover of Renée Zellweger in the new Bridget Jones movie has told how he claimed he could drive when he got his first big acting break — but it was a lie.
    And he got found out when asked to take the wheel on the second season  of hit TV show White Lotus.
    Now British actor Woodall, 28, is the romantic interest in new rom com Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy with Zellweger, 55.
    He told TV chat show host Jimmy Fallon , 50, how his role in White Lotus taught him a pretty big lesson on doing that job.
    Asked what that was he said: “-Don't lie about skills you don't have.”
    He explained: “I told them that I could drive because they asked me.
    “You know, I'd just been cast and I didn't want to lose this job. 
    “So I said, ‘Yeah.’”
    There was a scene where his character Jack has to drive around the Italian island of Sicily where the series is set.
    Fallon said: “But you don't know how to drive? Did you have your licence?”
    Woodall answered: “No, but they thought that I could do it.
    “I turned up on set, and I saw that they had a stunt driver, so I thought, ‘Oh, I'm good.’
    “And then they said, ‘We want you to swerve up around the corner, stop on a dime, do the scene, swerve off, stop again, drop the phone out the car, and then bomb down the road.’
    “And I was like, “I can't do this. This is not for me.’”

    OPS: Leo Woodall on the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    DUKAS_181101007_FER
    Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Leo   1
    Ref 16538
    13/02/2025
    See Ferrari pictures 
    Pictures must credit: NBC
    The on-screen toy boy lover of Renée Zellweger in the new Bridget Jones movie has told how he claimed he could drive when he got his first big acting break — but it was a lie.
    And he got found out when asked to take the wheel on the second season  of hit TV show White Lotus.
    Now British actor Woodall, 28, is the romantic interest in new rom com Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy with Zellweger, 55.
    He told TV chat show host Jimmy Fallon , 50, how his role in White Lotus taught him a pretty big lesson on doing that job.
    Asked what that was he said: “-Don't lie about skills you don't have.”
    He explained: “I told them that I could drive because they asked me.
    “You know, I'd just been cast and I didn't want to lose this job. 
    “So I said, ‘Yeah.’”
    There was a scene where his character Jack has to drive around the Italian island of Sicily where the series is set.
    Fallon said: “But you don't know how to drive? Did you have your licence?”
    Woodall answered: “No, but they thought that I could do it.
    “I turned up on set, and I saw that they had a stunt driver, so I thought, ‘Oh, I'm good.’
    “And then they said, ‘We want you to swerve up around the corner, stop on a dime, do the scene, swerve off, stop again, drop the phone out the car, and then bomb down the road.’
    “And I was like, “I can't do this. This is not for me.’”

    OPS: Leo Woodall on the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    DUKAS_181100982_FER
    Bridget Jones star Leo Woodall's drive lie
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Leo   1
    Ref 16538
    13/02/2025
    See Ferrari pictures 
    Pictures must credit: NBC
    The on-screen toy boy lover of Renée Zellweger in the new Bridget Jones movie has told how he claimed he could drive when he got his first big acting break — but it was a lie.
    And he got found out when asked to take the wheel on the second season  of hit TV show White Lotus.
    Now British actor Woodall, 28, is the romantic interest in new rom com Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy with Zellweger, 55.
    He told TV chat show host Jimmy Fallon , 50, how his role in White Lotus taught him a pretty big lesson on doing that job.
    Asked what that was he said: “-Don't lie about skills you don't have.”
    He explained: “I told them that I could drive because they asked me.
    “You know, I'd just been cast and I didn't want to lose this job. 
    “So I said, ‘Yeah.’”
    There was a scene where his character Jack has to drive around the Italian island of Sicily where the series is set.
    Fallon said: “But you don't know how to drive? Did you have your licence?”
    Woodall answered: “No, but they thought that I could do it.
    “I turned up on set, and I saw that they had a stunt driver, so I thought, ‘Oh, I'm good.’
    “And then they said, ‘We want you to swerve up around the corner, stop on a dime, do the scene, swerve off, stop again, drop the phone out the car, and then bomb down the road.’
    “And I was like, “I can't do this. This is not for me.’”

    OPS: Leo Woodall on the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

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