The B-52s’ Kate Pierson and her wife Monica Coleman have announced the sale of their California getaway, “Kate’s Lazy Desert.”
Located 15 miles from Joshua Tree in the Mojave Desert, “Kate’s Lazy Desert” is a campground featuring six decked out airstream trailers. The colorful vintage airstreams each have different themes, like Tiki, Planet Air, Hot Lava, North to Alaska, or Kate’s Hairstream, and each sleep two.
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There’s also no light pollution, so the night sky is full of stars over the desert compound. The property also includes a pool, as well as an adjacent property with a septic system, electric and water hookup, and a house footprint.
In addition to singing and playing keyboards in The B-52s, Pierson has a noted interest in getaway properties. She and Coleman also own a 10-cabin lodge in the Catskills called “Kate’s Lazy Meadow,...
Located 15 miles from Joshua Tree in the Mojave Desert, “Kate’s Lazy Desert” is a campground featuring six decked out airstream trailers. The colorful vintage airstreams each have different themes, like Tiki, Planet Air, Hot Lava, North to Alaska, or Kate’s Hairstream, and each sleep two.
Get The B-52's Tickets Here
There’s also no light pollution, so the night sky is full of stars over the desert compound. The property also includes a pool, as well as an adjacent property with a septic system, electric and water hookup, and a house footprint.
In addition to singing and playing keyboards in The B-52s, Pierson has a noted interest in getaway properties. She and Coleman also own a 10-cabin lodge in the Catskills called “Kate’s Lazy Meadow,...
- 4/17/2024
- by Paolo Ragusa
- Consequence - Music
Kate Pierson, the B-52s singer, recently married her longtime girlfriend Monica Coleman in Hawaii. Kate Pierson, Monica Coleman Wed Pierson and Coleman tied the knot in front of close friends and family members at their Hawaii destination wedding last weekend. For the nuptials, Pierson wore a victorian-styled pink dress, while Coleman went with a pale gold wedding […]
The post Kate Pierson Marries Monica Coleman, Shares Wedding Pictures appeared first on uInterview.
The post Kate Pierson Marries Monica Coleman, Shares Wedding Pictures appeared first on uInterview.
- 8/5/2015
- by Chelsea Regan
- Uinterview
Huggin' and a-kissin', dancing' and a-lovin'! Kate Pierson of the B-52's married her longtime girlfriend Monica Coleman this past weekend in Hawaii, the singer herself confirmed via Facebook on Tuesday, Aug. 4. Pierson, 67, posted a photo from the gorgeous outdoor nuptials with her new wife moments after they tied the knot. "#Itsofficial!" the singer-songwriter wrote, alongside a snap of the brides in their gowns. In the pic, Pierson wears a tulle skirt that falls to her knees with another tiered, petal pink layer on top, while [...]...
- 8/5/2015
- Us Weekly
Even though it's a big week for Hollywood divorces, it just so happens to be a week of weddings, too! Kate Pierson, one of the lead singers of The B-52s, married longtime partner Monica Coleman in Hawaii over the weekend. Pierson posted several photos of the weekend in Hawaii to her Facebook, giving fans an inside look at their romantic destination wedding. Pierson donned a pink, Victorian-style dress while her now-wife opted for a gold gown. Wearing a floral crown, Pierson looked elated posing next to her wife. "#itsofficial!" she captioned the picture. She also posted an up-close selfie with her wife right after the reception, with both women wearing leis to celebrate their union. "Married...
- 8/4/2015
- E! Online
Opens: in France: April 30 (SBS Films, Medusa Film)
"The Great Alibi", the second Agatha Christie adaptation to reach French screens in four months, is not so much as whodunit as a why-make-it. Slickly turned out with a plethora of top acting talent, the movie will do air to middling business at home and abroad, but you have to wonder what its interest was for director Pascal Bonitzer, one of France's best screenwriting talents.
The original 1946 novel, "The Hollow", is a standard Christie country house murder mystery, which Bonitzer transposes from England to France. When handsome psychiatrist Pierre Collier (Lambert Wilson) arrives for the weekend at the home of senator Henri Pages (Pierre Arditi) with his long-suffering wife Claire (Anne Consigny) in tow, he finds himself sharing the premises with two of his mistresses -- one current, the other an ex -- along with Lea Mantovani (Caterina Murino), an old flame who has since become a film star. It's hinted that even Pages's wife Eliane (Miou-Miou) was an earlier conquest.
Naturally, Collier soon ends up dead. Detective inspector Grange (Maurice Benichou) is called in to solve the mystery and most of the subsequent action, including the killer's eventual comeuppance, takes place in Paris. The dialogue is crisp and agreeably waspish, acting is uniformly first-rate and lensing and lighting impeccable. Benichou brings a breath of fresh air to the proceedings, and Arditi and Miou-Miou form an endearingly eccentric couple. "Alibi" passes pleasantly enough, yet there's no satire, little passion and not much real tension.
Cast: Lambert Wilson; Miou-Miou; Pierre Arditi; Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi; Anne Consigny; Mathieu Demy; Caterina Murino; Grange: Maurice Benichou; Marthe: Celine Sallette. Director: Pascal Bonitzer. Screenwriters: Pascal Bonitzer, Jerome Beausejour. Based on the novel by: Agatha Christie. Producer: Said ben Said; Executive director: Sybille Nicolas. Director of photography: Marie Spencer. Production designer: Wouter Zoom. Costume designer: Marielle Robaut. Music: Alexei Aigui. Editor: Monica Coleman. Sales: UGC Distribution. No MPAA rating, running time 93 minutes.
"The Great Alibi", the second Agatha Christie adaptation to reach French screens in four months, is not so much as whodunit as a why-make-it. Slickly turned out with a plethora of top acting talent, the movie will do air to middling business at home and abroad, but you have to wonder what its interest was for director Pascal Bonitzer, one of France's best screenwriting talents.
The original 1946 novel, "The Hollow", is a standard Christie country house murder mystery, which Bonitzer transposes from England to France. When handsome psychiatrist Pierre Collier (Lambert Wilson) arrives for the weekend at the home of senator Henri Pages (Pierre Arditi) with his long-suffering wife Claire (Anne Consigny) in tow, he finds himself sharing the premises with two of his mistresses -- one current, the other an ex -- along with Lea Mantovani (Caterina Murino), an old flame who has since become a film star. It's hinted that even Pages's wife Eliane (Miou-Miou) was an earlier conquest.
Naturally, Collier soon ends up dead. Detective inspector Grange (Maurice Benichou) is called in to solve the mystery and most of the subsequent action, including the killer's eventual comeuppance, takes place in Paris. The dialogue is crisp and agreeably waspish, acting is uniformly first-rate and lensing and lighting impeccable. Benichou brings a breath of fresh air to the proceedings, and Arditi and Miou-Miou form an endearingly eccentric couple. "Alibi" passes pleasantly enough, yet there's no satire, little passion and not much real tension.
Cast: Lambert Wilson; Miou-Miou; Pierre Arditi; Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi; Anne Consigny; Mathieu Demy; Caterina Murino; Grange: Maurice Benichou; Marthe: Celine Sallette. Director: Pascal Bonitzer. Screenwriters: Pascal Bonitzer, Jerome Beausejour. Based on the novel by: Agatha Christie. Producer: Said ben Said; Executive director: Sybille Nicolas. Director of photography: Marie Spencer. Production designer: Wouter Zoom. Costume designer: Marielle Robaut. Music: Alexei Aigui. Editor: Monica Coleman. Sales: UGC Distribution. No MPAA rating, running time 93 minutes.
- 5/20/2008
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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