I remember her from The Phantom as the femme fatale. 

BTW I agree with the sentiment about Giada Delaurintis vs. Nigella. White guys 
love Giada and her cleavage.

--- In scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com, Keith Johnson <keithbjohn...@...> wrote:
>
> i remember her from the first Zorro movie, and wouldn't call her curvy--not 
> on level even of Kate Winslet or something. But she's a beautiful woman--i 
> literally caught my breath when she appeared on screen for the first time in 
> Zorro. Still can't believe she got with that old fart Douglas! :) 
> 
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "Martin Baxter" <truthseeker...@...> 
> To: "SciFiNoir2" <scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com> 
> Sent: Thursday, January 14, 2010 4:45:22 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
> Subject: RE: [scifinoir2] OT: Study Finds British Women Want Curves Again 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Keith, Zeta *was* curvy, back in the day. She's lost a lot of that, primarily 
> because she was stalked for several years, went through horrible stress. 
> She's still in seculsion, to a degree. In her commercials for that telephone 
> company (can't recall which one), she's not even there. She's green-screened 
> in. 
> 
> "If all the world's a stage and all the people merely players, who in bloody 
> hell hired the director?" -- Charles L Grant 
> 
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQUxw9aUVik 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
> From: keithbjohn...@... 
> Date: Thu, 14 Jan 2010 04:55:52 +0000 
> Subject: [scifinoir2] OT: Study Finds British Women Want Curves Again 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Related to the conversation where I'd noted the Brits seem to use more women 
> with "real" shapes (at least in "Dr. Who"). Although, even here i see 
> perceptions have changed. I mean, in what universe is Catherine Zeta-Jones 
> considered curvy? She's beautiful, but I'd call her slim at best. A related 
> article I read was talking about something called the "waist-to-hip" ratio, 
> which supposedly measures a woman's curves. It claimed a WTH of 0.7 indicated 
> a perfect figure. Then, however, the article said that women with that 
> "perfect figure" included Selma Hayek, Jessica Alba, and Audrey Hepburn? Huh? 
> Hayek's got the curves, sho' 'nuff. Alba ain't anything close to what i'd 
> consider curvacious. Fit, but not Coke-bottle curvy. And Hepburn?? My 
> goodness, on this scale, the likes of Pam Grier, Kenya Moore, Nichele 
> Nichols, and other classic voluptuous sisters would be considered overweight! 
> 
> So much of this conversation on beauty frankly ignores whole groups of 
> people. I rarely see African American or Latina women talked about as the 
> standards, unless it's something stupid like last year's fixation on Michele 
> Obama's arms. 
> 
> At any rate, I hope this is a trend reversing, and more women the world over 
> realize that being anorexic-looking isn't a standard of beauty worth worth 
> obtaining. 
> 
> *********************************************************************** 
> 
> 
> British women 'want to be curvy not thin' 
> 
> (AFP) â€" Jul 22, 2009 LONDON â€" British women hanker after a curvy 
> hourglass body shape rather than trying to be ultra slim, preferring Kate 
> Winslet to Kate Moss, according to a poll published Wednesday. 
> Sixty percent admitted to being either an "apple" or "pear shape," but 75 
> percent said they wanted a figure like Catherine Zeta-Jones or Marilyn 
> Monroe, against only 10 percent who wanted to squeeze into a slim size 10 
> dress. 
> The findings reflect changing attitudes in Britain -- where obesity is a 
> growing problem -- among women tired of the so-called Size Zero culture long 
> fuelled by advertising and the fashion industry. 
> "The report shows that women's attitudes to slimming over the last 50 years 
> have changed with their figures," said Laura Bryant of the food company which 
> commissioned the poll of 2,000 women. 
> "It seems British women have lost their waists but now they are demanding 
> them back." 
> And she added: "They are more concerned about getting a curvy hourglass shape 
> like their grandmothers instead of being the perfect size 10 which shows a 
> marked shift in attitude from the 80s and 90s, when success and failure when 
> slimming was benchmarked against fitting into certain sized clothes." 
> A top-10 list of female celebrities whose shape inspired women was topped by 
> buxom TV cook Nigella Lawson and actresses Helen Mirren, Judy Dench, and 
> Joanna Lumley. 
> The findings might raise eyebrows in neighbouring France, which has the 
> highest proportion of clinically underweight women in Europe, according to a 
> study published in April. 
> Only half of those French women think they are thin, said the study, noting 
> that in Britain, Spain and Portugal, the number of women who see themselves 
> as seriously skinny easily outstrips the number who actually are. 
> A study last December found that one in three adults in England will be obese 
> by the time London hosts the 2012 Olympics. 
> Between 1993 and 2004 the proportion of obese people rose "significantly", 
> from almost 13.6 percent to 24 percent among men and from almost 17 percent 
> to 24.4 percent among women, according to University College London 
> researchers. 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
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