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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2012 SUND SUND SUND SUND SUND D S N AY, AY, A AY Y Y S E PT S T PT S EMBE EMBE BE BE R 23 R 23 , 20 , 20 0 0 12 12 12 PLUS MORE STARS OF THE SEASON PINK BEN AFFLECK DENNIS LEHANE VIOLA DAVIS AND A FATHER’S TALE BY ANDREW McCARTHY QUAID’S FIRST TV SERIES,VEGAS, PREMIERES SEPT. 25 ON CBS BY DOTSON RADER LIVE! 2-HOUR PREMIERE EVENT MONDAY SEPT 24 8|7c © PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2012SUNDSUNDSUNDSUNDSUNDDS N AY,AY,AAYYY SEPTS TPTS EMBEEMBEBEBER 23R 23, 20, 2000121212

PLUS MORE STARS OF

THE SEASON

PINKBEN AFFLECK

DENNIS LEHANEVIOLA DAVIS

ANDA FATHER’S

TALE BYANDREW

McCARTHY

QUAID’S FIRST TV SERIES,VEGAS,

PREMIERES SEPT. 25 ON CBS

BY DOTSON RADER

LIVE! 2

-HOUR P

REMIE

RE EVENT

MONDAY S

EPT 24

8|

7c

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

Page 2: Parade 09-23

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2 • September 23, 2012

P January Jones and

Jessica Paré

Q: This was the fi rst year

Jeff Probst wasn’t nomi-

nated for Outstanding

Reality Series Host. How

did he react? —Michael S.,

Chester Springs, Pa.

A: The Survivor host, who has won this award for the past four years (ever since the category was launched), took the news in stride. “I’m so grateful for the love I’ve received from the Emmys,” says Probst, 50. “I didn’t feel snubbed at all. It’s never a certainty to be nominated; a lot of factors are involved.”

P Jeff Probst

Q: Will Claire Danes’s

pregnancy be worked

into the second season of

Homeland? —Joseph Webber,

St. Louis

A: No; the Emmy- nominated actress, who announced in July that she is expecting her fi rst child with husband Hugh Dancy, says that Carrie, her CIA agent character, “remains fervently non-pregnant.” Danes, 33, adds that she was a little concerned about the physical demands of the role, but “it’s proven to be a nonissue.”

Walter Scott’s

WALTER SCOTT ASKS …

Jimmy KimmelThis year’s Emmy host, 44, is also a nominee; his late-night ABC talk show, Jimmy Kimmel Live!, snagged its � rst nod for Outstanding Variety Series.

Is it extra special to host the Emmys since you’re also

nominated? Yes! It would have been like showing up to the prom without a date otherwise.

Is there a camaraderie among the late-night hosts?

The truth is, it’s very competitive. We don’t spend a lot of time together. In fact, one of the few times we see each other is Emmy night.

The rivalry will only get fi ercer come January, when

your show goes head-to-head with Jay Leno’s and

David Letterman’s. Will there be any big changes?

I was very happy to be asked to move to 11:35. It’s kind of like getting an engagement ring after living with someone for 10 years—I feel like a blushing bride. I don’t think there will be any big changes. Mainly, I’m hoping they stick with the existing host.

Send your questions to Walter Sco� at [email protected] or P.O. Box 5001, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y. 10163-5001.

Here’s who you voted for in Parade.com’s Emmy poll.

FAVORITE

FUNNY LADY

Melissa McCarthy (Mike & Molly)

BIGGEST

EMMY SNUB

Hugh Laurie (House)

MOST DESERVING

MODERN

FAMILY NOMINEE

Eric Stonestreet

ERIC TALKS ABOUT GOING UP AGAINST HIS COSTARS AT PARADE

.COM/MODERN

Q: How will the fashion on Mad Men change as it moves into the late ’60s?—Nicole Warner, Macon, Ga.

A: “The pants are get-ting wider and the skirts are getting shorter,” says Janie Bryant, the AMC show’s costume designer. Gone are the prim sweaters and full skirts worn by Betty ( January Jones) in the early years. In season fi ve of the series, nominated for 17 Emmys, Megan ( Jessica Paré) sported fl ared jeans, minis, bright colors, and bold prints that refl ected the mod trends of 1967. See Mad Men’s fashion evolution at Parade.com/style.

THE RESULTS ARE IN!

PARADE

Q: I hear Shirley MacLaine has joined the cast of Downton Abbey. Who will she be playing? —Joan O’Sullivan, Ill.

A: MacLaine landed the role of Martha Levinson, the feisty American mother of Elizabeth McGovern’s Lady Grantham, on the 1920s-set British drama, up for 16 Emmys. “The corsets were so demanding,” MacLaine, 78, says of her period costumes. “The buttons were located somewhere I couldn’t even reach!” Downton Abbey returns to PBS Jan. 6.

SHIP THE THING

TO MY HOUSE

ALREADY!”

—Don Cheadle’s tweet upon learning of his nomination for Showtime’s House of Lies. See more funny Emmy tweets at

Parade.com/twitter.Parade.com/twitter.

IT’S EMMY NIGHT! Watch the awards on ABC at 8 p.m. ET

P Shirley MacLaine

TK

n ABC at 8 p.m. ET

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

Page 3: Parade 09-23

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CONSUMIDOR: LÍMITE DE UN CUPÓN POR COMPRA de productos y cantidades especifi cadas. LÍMITE DE 4 CUPONES SIMILARES POR FAMILIA POR DÍA. Cualquier otro uso constituye fraude. No se autorizan los cupones si los productos se compran para reventa. NULO si se transfi ere, vende, subasta, reproduce o altera el original. Puede que pague impuestos de venta. No loenvíe a Procter & Gamble.

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CONSUMIDOR: LÍMITE DE UN CUPÓN POR COMPRA de productos y cantidades especifi cadas. LÍMITE DE 4 CUPONES SIMILARES POR FAMILIA POR DÍA. Cualquier otro uso constituye fraude. No se autorizan los cupones si los productos se compran para reventa. NULO si se transfi ere, vende, subasta, reproduce o altera el original. Puede que pague impuestos de venta. No loenvíe a Procter & Gamble.

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– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

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© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

Page 4: Parade 09-23

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4 • September 23, 2012

’70s. Vegas just felt right. It’s John Wayne and Al Capone in the same story, cowboys versus gangsters. And it was an op-portunity to work in L.A. and sleep in my own bed at night. My very fi rst day of work, I went in to say goodbye to my daughter, and she said, “Daddy, what day are you coming

back?” I said, “I’m coming back tonight, honey.” She went, “Yay!” [Quaid and his wife, Kimberly, have 4-year-old twins, Thomas and Zoe; he also has a 20-year-old son, Jack, with ex-wife Meg Ryan.]It sounds like fatherhood is very

important to you.

I love being a dad, and I’m good at it. Kids teach you about life, like how not to focus on yourself so much.What was your childhood like

growing up in Texas?

My father [an electrician who died in 1987] was a frustrated actor. He was always doing impressions and crooning like Bing Crosby and Dean Martin. I think that’s why my brother [Randy Quaid] and I [went into acting]. I’m very much like him in a lot of ways; sometimes I can kind of feel him inside me. My mom [who worked as a real estate agent] is my rock. We have long, deep conversations about all kinds of things. You were young when your

parents divorced. For a child,

that’s a kind of

abandonment.

Yeah, I was 11 or 12. There were abandonment

PARADE: The CBS drama Vegas,

premiering Sept. 25, is your fi rst

TV series. What drew you to the

project at this point in your career?

Dennis Quaid: I’ve been look-ing for something to do in television for a couple of years, because what’s going on there now is like the great stuff that was happening in movies in the

QUAIDDennis

A new urban cowboy

Long arm of the law Quaid, 58, plays

real-life sheri� Ralph Lamb, who clashed with the mob, in the

’60s-set drama Vegas.

WATCH LISTMEET THE PEOPLE WHOSE PROJECTS WILL BE MAKING NEWS THIS FALL

� e

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

Page 5: Parade 09-23

It starts with you. We know you’re gonna have fun in this car, thanks to its 278-horsepower V-6

engine.* But be careful out there, Johnny Law’s looking for a little fun too. The all-new Accord.

*Standard on EX-L V-6. EX-L V-6 Coupe model shown. ©2012 American Honda Motor Co., Inc. accord.honda.com

278-Horsepower V-6 Engine

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

Page 6: Parade 09-23

6 • September 23, 2012

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A lot has changed since Pink recorded her 2008 album Funhouse. “I was heartbroken and single and angry and hot,” recalls the 33-year-old, who at the time was separated from her husband, motocross racer Carey Hart. On her new disc, The Truth About Love, she’s still singing about volatile relationships—but now she’s started looking at their upside. “This time I’m married and a new mom and only a tad angry,” she says with a laugh. With the couple’s reconciliation and birth of their daughter, Willow, in June 2011, Pink (born Alecia Moore) says the creative process was “completely differ-ent. There weren’t as many late nights or sleeping on couches or whiskey. It was actually just as fun and even more productive—go fi gure.”

Truth includes collaborations with Lily Rose Cooper (formerly known as Lily Allen), Eminem, and fun.’s Nate Ruess; a couple of tracks feature the percussive stylings of her daughter. “Willow likes to bang on things,” Pink says, “and I like to press ‘record.’ It wasn’t very serious or planned. I do think she has a drum set in her future.”

Though she’s the new face of CoverGirl—“I was very honored; the ladies they choose are all unique and powerful women”—Pink happily admits that her typical day “is not very rock ’n’ roll. It involves bicycle rides and helmets, snacks and crackers, and making sure I packed the sippy cup. Carey and I laugh more now than ever. It is absolute heaven on earth.” —Chris Willman

issues there, which I think I still have.What did you do to make divorce

easier on your son Jack? [Quaid

and Ryan divorced in 2001.]

You don’t bad-mouth your ex or anything like that. The key is your kid knowing that both parents still love him and are there for him. Now Jack is acting, too; he had

a role in The Hunger Games.

Was that something you and his

mother encouraged?

No, it’s what he wanted to do. Maybe it’s in the genes—he was

making little videos at 5 and 6. Do you worry that because his

parents are famous, he’ll doubt

that he really earned his success?

No, because I’ve never given him anything. When I’ve tried, he won’t take it. I offered to help him get an agent, and he didn’t want that. He did it on his own. The only thing we did do is we didn’t let him be a child actor. [We wanted him to] have a childhood.Fame often chews up young actors,

doesn’t it? Look at Lindsay Lohan,

your costar in The Parent Trap.

Lindsay was, like, 11 [in The Parent Trap]. She was a very self-aware, smart kid who could act effortlessly. It’s just a chapter of her story, what she’s been going through over the past years. It’s not what one expected, but Lindsay’s story is not over. You weren’t much older than Jack

is now when you made Breaking

Away. How did that fi lm affect you?

Suddenly, things got a lot easier as far as being offered jobs. I didn’t have to audition any-

more. Before that, it was about getting, like, 20 rejections for each yes. The Big Easy turned you into a

movie star at 33. Were you aware

of being a heartthrob?

[grins] No, I wasn’t. You weren’t considered a catch in

high school?

I wasn’t a popular kid. I spent a lot of time by myself. I still think of myself as a middle-class boy from Houston. I don’t walk around feeling like a movie star.Did you feel you deserved your

success when it arrived?

I felt like I deserved it once I got off cocaine. That would be in my late 30s. Cocaine makes you paranoid and lowers your self-esteem. We all did it back in the ’70s and ’80s. Had a great time, so they tell me. It was fun, then it was fun with problems, then it became just problems. How did you kick that addiction?

I used to try to quit, and I’d be right back the next day doing it again. And then one day, I don’t even know why, I just knew it was over. There wasn’t some big event, like I felt I was having a heart attack. I did have a vision where I saw myself dead in maybe 5 or 10 years, and I didn’t want that. I checked myself into rehab, and 28 days later, I was out. I started play-ing golf the day I got out of rehab in 1990; I needed something else to obsess about. [laughs] What do you still love about acting?

I remember going to the movies when I was a kid and coming out feeling like I was Steve McQueen or John Wayne. It did good things for my self-esteem. Those things strike you deep and stay with you. I love creating char-acters, studying human nature. Maybe I’m studying my own nature while I do it. —Dotson Rader

A new baby, a new way of life

Meet the real-life

sheriff Vegas is based

on at Parade.com/quaid

Mee

she

on

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

Page 7: Parade 09-23

His two fall projects: He directed and stars in Argo (in theaters Oct. 12), the stranger-than-fi ction story of the CIA “exfi ltration specialist” who in 1980 rescued six American embassy workers from Tehran in the midst of the Iranian hostage crisis by giving them identities as sci-fi fi lmmakers. He also stars in the new Terrence Malick movie, To the Wonder.On re-creating events he’s too

young to remember: “You want to root it in the period,” Affl eck, 40,

says of Argo, “but without being obvi-ous, like doing a big

The 66-year-old singer’s much anticipated memoir, Waging Heavy Peace (due Sept. 25), pulls back the cur-tain on his life. He’s also the focus of director Jonathan Demme’s documentary Neil Young Journeys (on DVD Oct. 16). Says Demme (I’m Carolyn Parker: The Good, the Mad, and the Beautiful):

“On the one hand, Neil’s

an easygoing guy, but he’s also extremely serious. He’s serious about what’s going on in the world, how people treat each other, and his work. Just make sure you’re working every bit as hard and as passionately as he is.”

close-up on bell-bottoms.”On sporting shaggy hair and a

beard: “My daughters [Violet, 6, and Seraphina, 3] really complained about it. But they complain two hours after I shave: ‘You need to shave again, Daddy.’ They set a very high bar, one that I don’t ever meet.”

Ben

AFFLECKRediscovering a lost piece

of American history

Life with the new arrival: Affl eck and his wife, actress Jennifer Garner, welcomed a son, Samuel, in February. “We try not to work when the other’s working, but because directing takes so long, the burden falls on her dis-proportionately. She’s just incredible. She makes it possible.”—Steve Daly

He also stars in Malick movie, TOn re-creating

young to reme

root it in the p

ut in the leand

e

NEIL

YOUNG

REVEALING

SECRETS

’80s � ashback “It wasn’t that long ago,” A� eck (in a scene from Argo) says of the hostage crisis, “but it feels like a thousand-year gap. Cell phones, Google ...”

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

Page 8: Parade 09-23

8 • September 23, 2012

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MUMFORD & SONSThree years ago, Mumford & Sons was an obscure English band with folky leanings and a love of banjo music. Then came the hit single “Little Lion Man”; a perfor-mance at the 2011 Grammys that put them on the musical map worldwide; double-platinum sales for their fi rst album, Sigh No More; and the wedding of lead singer Marcus Mumford to Oscar-nominated actress Carey Mulligan, his childhood pen pal. Top of the world, right? Yet the band’s new album, Babel (due Sept. 25), contains “a lot of brokenheartedness,” says bassist Ted Dwane, 28. “Life is endlessly gloopy and thick and rich. While it’s been an amazing time for us, in our personal lives we’ve had a lot of hard work to do, with relationships to try to hold on to. These are not rare emotions that we’re singing about. We all have dramas.”

With Babel’s fi rst single, “I Will Wait,” conquering rock radio, Dwane notes that the band hasn’t felt the need to change much about their music. “We just do what we do,” he says. “If people are digging it, you owe them everything you have.” —C. W.

Her new novel: Flight

Behavior (due Nov. 6) involves a beautiful, mys-terious event—millions of fl ame-colored butterfl ies blanket a mountain hollow in Tennessee—that causes friction between those who consider it a sign from God and those who think it’s the result of climate change. “We are, at this moment,

engaged in some ferocious culture wars,” says King-solver, 57, a trained biolo-gist. “This is my attempt to cross the divide.”Her kitchen confi dential: “Yesterday we cooked 45 pounds of tomatoes into sauce,” says Kingsolver, whose 2007 best seller, Animal, Vegetable, Miracle, chronicled her family’s

transition to eating only what they could grow, bar-ter, or raise themselves.On juggling farm life in

Appalachia with fame as

a prizewinning writer: “Whenever I’m at a black-tie event, I double-check my fi ngernails. Because, really, there’s no telling what’s under them.”—Jennifer Cadoff

SEYMOURHOFFMAN

Phil�

Master craftsman

Success hasn’t changed them

A passion for both art and science

The actress, 27, stars as the title heroine in Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina (in theaters Nov. 16). Says director Joe Wright (who also worked with Knight-ley on Pride & Preju-dice and Atonement):

“There is something

quite anachronistic about Keira. I think we both feel more at home in the past. She has poise and elegance and grace; she’s not a sloucher intellectu-ally or physically. She wants to understand the people she’s play-ing, and perhaps under-stand herself as well.”

KEIRA

KNIGHTLEY

A TIMELESS

TALENT

“I always check in with my reviews,” says Philip Seymour Hoffman. “Other-wise everyone’s afraid to talk to you. I’m like, ‘I know what they said—it’s okay,’ whether good, bad, or mixed.”

Fortunately, Hoffman’s notices are usually raves. Boundless talent and a prodigious work ethic have propelled the 45-year-old from consummate character actor to Oscar winner (Capote) and Tony nominee (Death of a Salesman). He’s now starring in The Master, playing a preening cult leader who latches on to a troubled disciple (Joaquin Phoenix). It’s his fi fth teaming with his pal, writer-director Paul Thomas Anderson.

Anderson has said that The Master’s story was vaguely inspired by the life of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard, but Hoffman took his cues from Orson Welles. “The character is like a charismatic fi lm director,” he says. “People want to be around him and follow him. I keyed into Welles’s gravitas.”

Along with critical acclaim, com-mercial success has come Hoffman’s way: He’s been cast as Plutarch Heavensbee in The Hunger Games: Catching Fire. Still, he feels that acting doesn’t get easier with age or experi-ence. “Anything that matters,” he says, “never gets easier.” —Leah Rozen

Barbara K� gsolver

Group therapy “Recording is quite a cathartic process,” says Ted Dwane (right, with, from le� , “Country” Winston Marshall, Marcus Mumford, and Ben Love� ).

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

Page 9: Parade 09-23

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Page 10: Parade 09-23

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Page 11: Parade 09-23

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C© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

Page 12: Parade 09-23

MONDAYS 8:30/7:30c CBS» TV is not included. No celebrity endorsement implied.

NEW COMEDY

SURVIVOR: PHILIPPINES WED 8/7c

New Solo TV sound system

D © PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

Page 13: Parade 09-23

CBS»TUESDAYS 10/9c

NEW DRAMA

For people who truly enjoy TV…and want to get the most out of it.

To order or learn more: 800-901-0259, ext. CJ149 or Bose.com/Solo

E© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

Page 14: Parade 09-23

FRIDAYS 9/ 8c CBS» TV is not included. No celebrity endorsement implied.

New Solo TV sound system

THE BIG BANG THEORY THUR 8/7c

NEW DRAMA

F © PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

Page 15: Parade 09-23

CBS»THURSDAYS 9/8c

Introducing a simple solution for better TV sound.

To order or learn more: 800-901-0259, ext. CJ149 or Bose.com/Solo

G© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

Page 16: Parade 09-23

Hear the

Bose® Solo system

in your home and

discover why Bose

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name in sound.

To order or learn more:

800-901-0259, ext. CJ149

or Bose.com/Solo

No celebrity endorsement implied.

New Solo TV sound system

H © PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

Page 17: Parade 09-23

Lately I have noticed quite a few newspa-pers and magazines praising a polish formulated by a homemaker. The articles

report that Donna Maas grew frustrated withrubbing and scrubbing her silver, brass and othermetals only to see them quickly become dull andtarnished again. Determined to put an end toher constant battle with tarnish Donna formu-lated a metal cleaner and it’s transforming theindustry.

Anita Gold, nationally syndicated columnistand expert on the restoration of antiques callsMAAS (named after its inventor) “The best andmost amazing polish in the world.” Ms. Goldwrote in her column, “A truly miraculous polishreferred to as “miracle polish” that’ll turn themost disastrous pieces into the most de-brightfulis MAAS Fine Polishing Creme For All Metals,which cleans, restores, preserves and polishes toperfection any brass, copper, chrome, silver,stainless steel, aluminum, gold or any other metalwith amazing results – no matter how badlystained, spotted, discolored, flood-damaged,weathered, dirty, dingy, drab, or dull they may be.”

Since I had an old brass lamp in desperate needof restoration, this journalist decided to putMAAS to the test. The lamp had been stored inthe garage and was in far worse condition than Iremembered. I was flabbergasted as I watchedthe polishing creme wipe away layers and yearsof tarnish. Never have I used anything so easy.The lamp actually looks better than when I purchased it. Better yet, months later it’s stillglowing!

The polish worked so effortlessly, I decided torefurbish my mother’s collection of antique brassand copper cookware. The badly stained potsand pans developed black spots that had beenimpossible to remove.MAAS wiped away theyears of built-up residueeven from the most dis-colored pieces. Whilepolishing the pots andpans, I noticed MAASapplying a shine on thestainless steel sink. So Icleaned the entire sinkwith the creme. WOW!The shine is unbelievable

and although I wash dishes every day, the shinekeeps-on-shining. And it’s no longer coveredwith ugly water spots – water just rolls off theprotective finish and down the drain.

An independent consumer study of 28 metalpolishes reports, “MAAS Polishing Creme has noequals in all around polishing performance...”MAAS retained its shine longer than every polishtested. Good Housekeeping Institute recom-mends MAAS for restoring heavily tarnishedheirlooms stating, MAAS cleans best and giveslasting results.”

The Miami Her-ald says “Polishingproduct can renewold silver.” TheChicago Tribuneheadline sums it allup by saying “OneAmazing Polish IsThe Best At Every-thing.”

How did a home-maker come up withsomething the in-dustry’s experts couldn’t? The reporter in mehad to find out.

During our interview Donna explained, “Ienjoy the warmth that beautifully polished met-als add to a home. However, not the hours it tookto keep them tarnish free. The harsh cleaners always left my hands dry and burning – one instant silver dip smelled so bad I felt sick. WhenI read the label, I discovered it contained cancer-causing ingredients. That's when I became determined to find a better way to care for themetals in my home.”

And that she did. Her formula developed inconjunction with a chemist friend quickly

restores and leaves a deep,rich one-of-a-kind lusterbeyond anything I've everseen.

“To my surprise,”Donna reveals, “the for-mula far exceeded myoriginal goal. MAAS re-stores glass fireplacedoors, clouded crystalvases, fiberglass, linoleumand even plastic.

The restorations were so remarkable everyonesuggested that I sell my invention on television.”

Donna sent samples of her polish to televisedshopping channels and both QVC and The

Home Shopping Networkasked Donna to personally ap-pear on TV to demonstrateher product. 17,000 viewerscalled during MAAS’ debutand encore performancesquickly brought a million dol-lars in record-breaking sales.

Leona Toppel was about tothrow away a brass chandelier.“No amount of elbow greasecould shine it up. With very little effort (a big plus for me

because I suffer from arthritis) MAAS made thatchandelier look like new. It’s been years and toeveryone's surprise it’s still glowing.”

“MAAS outperforms every polish I’ve tried,”Donna beams with satisfaction. “So if you’re astired as I was of cleaning metals just to see tar-nish reappear a few weeks later, MAAS it!”

At Last, A Polish ThatKeeps Metals Shining!

Finally, you can restore every metal and moreto it’s original beauty with MAAS easy wipe-on,wipe-off, no-wait polish. Just send $12.95 plus$5.95 S&H for one large 4 oz. tube of MAAS.Save when you order two tubes and receive aFREE polishing cloth (total value $33.85) foronly $19.95 plus $5.95 S&H. Illinois residentsadd 7.25% sales tax. Mail your order to:

MAAS – DEPT. P39237101 Adams Street, Suite 3

Willowbrook, IL 60527-8432(Please make checks payable to MAAS)

Order online at www.maasinc.com/P3923

Miracle Polish Ends Struggle With Tarnishing Metals.

Homemaker InventsA Shine That Lasts

AdvertisementADVERTISEMENT

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

Page 18: Parade 09-23

10 • September 23, 2012

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After playing a maid in The Help, Viola Davis found herself defl ecting arguments that her Oscar-nominated role perpetuated stereotypes. She’s primed for more controversy with Won’t Back Down (in theaters Sept. 28), the tale of a teacher who joins a single mom (Maggie Gyllenhaal) to force reform in a failing elementary school. “I just got out of the whole race issue,” says Davis, 47, “and now I’m getting into hot-button education issues. That’s why I’m in a spa right now, relaxing.”

Davis has helped raise funds for the Central Falls, R.I., high school she attended (and where one of her sisters teaches). “I didn’t have any [school] choices when I was a kid, ’cause I grew up poor,” she says. “But I had teachers who thought I was gifted and validated me.”

The last year has been one of great change for Davis, who with her husband, actor Julius Tennon, adopted a newborn daughter. “It was the best thing that could ever happen to me,” she says, “but I had to learn on my feet.” At the same time, “I found my voice, after years of struggling with low self-esteem.” In Won’t Back Down, she once again puts a very human face on a contentious topic. “If you want a good crying scene,” she laughs, “you call 1-800-VIOLA.” —S. D.

Viola Davis

Famous for Boston-area crime novels that have become megastar movies—including Mystic River—Dennis Lehane has a big bank account these days, but not the big head to go with it. Cheerful and modest, this onetime working-class kid even lets some Florida sun into his latest book, the Prohibition-era Live by

Night (due Oct. 2).

Lehane, 47, was teaching at his alma mater, Eckerd Col-lege in St. Petersburg, when he met his wife and found the setting for Live by Night, which sends his morally fl ex-ible hero Joe Coughlin (featured in 2008’s The

Given Day) to Ybor City, Fla., to be a rum runner. “Maybe this century left me behind,” he says of the book series, citing his lack of interest in “cell phones and social media.”

Live by Night is being developed as a fi lm for Leonardo DiCaprio, who starred in Shutter

Island, based on a Lehane mystery so

grim it’s set in an asylum. Written during the bleak post-9/11 years, Shutter Island represented the tail end of Lehane’s “black period,” when he felt “as close to a nervous breakdown as an Irish Catholic from Dorches-ter can get.” As always, he funneled the dark-ness into his work. “It saves me a fortune in therapy,” he says. —Caryn James

Taking chances, taking charge

In sunshine, a� er shadows

LEHANE

If you suffer from Tinnitus and experience ringing in the ears, buzzing, hissing, whis-tling, or other sounds, you should know that help is available. Many people are putting up with irritating noises because they are not aware of this proven treatment.

MagniLife® Tinnitus Relief has already helped thousands find relief when nothing else has worked. It can be taken along with other medications with no side effects. “This tablet seems to be the only thing I’ve found that brings relief.” - Bert M., Mt. Pleasant, IA. The tablets dissolve under the tongue and contain Lycopodium, which reduces noises in

the ears. “I would definitely recommend this product to anyone.” - C. Robinson, OH.

MagniLife® Tinnitus Relief is availableat Walgreens, CVS/pharmacy, in the pain relievers aisle, and Rite Aid Pharmacy. It can also be ordered for $19.99 (plus $5.95S&H) for 125 tablets per bottle. Get a FREE bottle when you order two for $39.98 (plus$9.95 S&H). Send your name and addresswith payment to: MagniLife, Dept. T3-3, P.O. Box 6789, McKinney, TX 75071 or call 1-800-517-2534. Satisfaction guaranteed orreturn the bottles within 90 days for a fullrefund. Order now at www.MagniLife.com.

If you experience occasional minor leaks or dribbles of urine, or a total involuntary loss of urine, you should know help is avail-able. 25 million people suffer from inconti-nence problems, which may lead to a limiting of activities and social interactions to avoid embarrassment. Many people are putting up with this change of lifestyle because they are not aware of this proven treatment.

MagniLife® Urinary Incontinence Relief contains seven tested and proven ingredients, such as Causticum, which is used for adult incontinence, and Sepia, which relieves the sudden urge to urinate due to overactive blad-der. The tablets dissolve under the tongue and can be taken safely along with other medica-

tions with no side effects and no risk of drugdependency. Now you can regain control.“I’d like to thank you for your product, Uri-nary Incontinence Relief. It is so wonderful to not have to worry about the embarrassment of“accidents” in public.” Susan S., FL.

MagniLife® Urinary Incontinence Reliefcan be ordered risk free for $19.99 (plus$5.95 S&H) for 125 tablets per bottle. Get a FREE bottle when you order two for $39.98(plus $9.95 S&H). Send your name and ad-dress with payment to: MagniLife Dept. U3-3, P.O. Box 6789, McKinney, TX 75071 or call 1-800-517-2534. Satisfaction guaranteed or return the bottles within 90 days for a full refund. Order now at www.MagniLife.com.

If you suffer from Sciatica symptoms, such as intense pain in the buttocks and low-er back, or pain and numbness in your legs and feet, you are not alone. Over 170 mil-lion people suffer from the burning, tingling, numbing, and shooting pains because they are not aware of this proven treatment.

MagniLife® Sciatica Relief combines four proven ingredients that help ease the severe discomfort of Sciatica. It can be taken along with other medications with no side effects. The tablets dissolve under the tongue and con-tain Colocynthis, which has shown to relieve the shooting pains and tingling sensations.

“The Sciatica Relief tablets are a miracle so-lution to the pain of Sciatica.” - Lillie, CA.

MagniLife® Sciatica Relief is availableat Walgreens, CVS/pharmacy and RiteAid Pharmacy. It can also be ordered risk free for $19.99 (plus $5.95 S&H) for 125 tablets per bottle. Get a FREE bottle when you order two for $39.98 (plus $9.95 S&H).Send your name and address with payment to: MagniLife, Dept. S3-3, P.O. Box 6789, McKinney, TX 75071 or call 1-800-517-2534. Satisfaction guaranteed or return thebottles within 90 days for a full refund. Order now at www.MagniLife.com.

SCIATICA BACK PAIN?

URINARY INCONTINENCE?

RINGING IN THE EARS?

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DIABETIC FOOT PAIN?If you suffer from diabetic neuropathy, or

pain in your feet and legs due to nerve dam-age caused by Diabetes, you should know that help is available. Over 20 million Americans suffer from diabetic neuropathy and put up with painful, tingling sensations because they are not aware of this proven treatment.

MagniLife® Diabetic Neuropathy Foot Cream contains key ingredients, such as eu-calyptus oil and yellow jasmine, known to relieve pain, tingling, and numbness, while natural moisturizers restore cracked, damaged, and itchy skin to help protect against infection. Results are so fantastic, long-time sufferers are seeing improvements for the first time in years. “MagniLife Diabetic Foot Cream was

the first medicine I got that really really helped my legs and feet. I’d rub it on before bed and I had no tingling in my toes and my legs felt good. Thank you.” - A Burkhart, NC.

MagniLife® Diabetic Neuropathy Foot Cream is now available at Walgreens andRite Aid Pharmacy. It can also be ordered for $19.99 (plus $5.95 S&H) for a 4 oz jar. Get a FREE jar when you order two for $39.98 (plus $9.95 S&H). Send your name and address with payment to MagniLife,Dept. NC3-3, P.O. BOX 6789, McKinney, TX 75071 or call 1-800-679-3481. Satis-faction guaranteed or return your product within 90 days for a full refund. Order now at www.MDFootCream.com.

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© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

Page 19: Parade 09-23

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If you wished to test the effects

of a placebo, what would you

give the control group? —Doug

Johnson, Denham Springs, La.

Ha, ha—very funny, Doug. But to answer your question, you’d give them the real thing! The difference is that you’d be interested in the effectiveness of the placebo instead of the drug. Placebos have even been tested against each other to determine which is more effective. In one study, sham acupuncture was pitted against dummy pills for chronic arm pain. The acupuncture worked better. (Objective measures, such as grip strength, showed no actual difference.)

Also, before the study began, subjects were advised of possible side effects. About 25 percent of the false- acupuncture patients and 31 percent of the fake-pill patients reported experiencing them!

Ask MarilynBy Marilyn vos Savant

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© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

Page 20: Parade 09-23

12 • September 23, 2012

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grade, he quit. My fantasy of a per-fect bonding experience was crum-bling. I did the only thing a father could do: I reached for my stash of M&M’s—the normally forbidden treat meant to be saved until our work was done—and dangled the bag in front of his wet blue eyes.

“Really?” His voice held a glimmer of hope.

“Really,” I said.Three dozen candy-coated

chocolates later, we found the lake. Our spirits soared. I showed him how to set up the tent. We splashed around in the cool, clear water. As darkness fell, a riot of frogs began a bellowing serenade. My son found their symphony hysterical and laughed himself to sleep.

In the morning the stove wouldn’t light. (I had neglected to bring enough propane.) My son had sardines and M&M’s for breakfast and pronounced it the best meal he had ever eaten. After a few languid hours, we skipped back home along the trail that had seemed endless just the day before.

The following year, we got rained out, and the year after that, time got away from us. But next weekend, we’re heading out for another overnighter. A value-size bag of M&M’s is already in my pack.

Andrew McCarthy’s fi lms include Pretty in Pink and St. Elmo’s Fire. His mem-oir, The Longest Way Home: One Man’s Quest for the Courage to Settle Down (Free Press), has just been released.

Into the WoodsWhen a father-son camping trip goes awry, a sweet bribe saves the day

By Andrew McCarthy

At the trailhead, we hoisted our packs, and my son ran ahead. The late summer air was humid, the trees heavy with a full season’s growth. After 20 minutes, he turned and asked, “How much farther, Dad?”

I’d worried that fi ve miles might be too much for him, but the lake had seemed the perfect destination. I began to tell stories to distract him from the walk. He gave me his pack to carry, and then, after a steep

time I went camping, I forgot something—like a frying pan or my knife or how, exactly, to tie a trucker’s hitch. I could get by with these mistakes when I was on my own. But with my son along, it was a different story: I’d be responsible for his safety. A subconscious fear was exposed, one easily masked by the comforts of everyday life.

A familiar aspect of parenting is that it forces you to try to live up to an idea of your better self. So, with anxieties acknowledged, our s upplies triple-checked, and our spirits high, we piled into the car and headed north.

This is the worst day of my life!” my then 7-year-old

son cried as he dropped to the ground. We had just climbed several hundred feet in elevation on a trail that would lead us to a remote lake in New York’s Catskill Mountains. The views from the ridge were expansive. But none of that beauty mattered now. We had miles to go; the after-noon was fading; and my son was having a meltdown.

The idea had been simple: Take my boy on our first over-night camping trip. I grew up in suburban New Jersey and didn’t spend a night outdoors until I turned 30, when I decided I ought to know how to pitch a tent. I enrolled in a monthlong course in the Absaroka Mountains in Wyoming and learned to be com-fortable without a roof over my head. Ever since, I’ve tried to go camping once a year, to keep up my skills but also because it was in the mountains where I discovered that simple connection—not only to the natural world but also to my place in it. I felt “at home” in myself when I was deep in the wilderness in a way that I never had before.

I’d been telling my son about the joys of the great outdoors, and he was keen to join me. And I was eager for him to experience at a young age what it had taken me so long to discover. Yet I was also apprehensive. It seemed that every

WHAT’S FOR BREAKFAST?

McCarthy’s son takes in the view over a tasty meal of sardines and M&M’s.

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

Page 21: Parade 09-23

Look Who’s Coming To

Town!Downloada personal message from Chef Jon

Join Chef Jon Ashton, from PARADE

and dash, at a brand new live cooking

event. Enjoy a fun-filled day of

cooking tips, great food,

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© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

Page 22: Parade 09-23

Get started at

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© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

Page 23: Parade 09-23

September 23, 2012 • 15

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TableAround the

It’s National Rice Month (who knew?). In honor of the occasion, whip up one of these classics.

RICE, RICE, BABY

KNOW YOUR VARIETIES A Grain-by-Grain Guide

1ArborioReadily absorbs

fl avors and becomes

creamy when cooked;

used in risotto.

2BasmatiDry and fl uffy, it’s

well suited to Indian

dishes as well as pilafs

and casseroles.

3Brown riceChewy with a

nutty fl avor and high in

fi ber. Great in a stir-fry

or in pudding.

4 JasmineFragrant and

long-grain, it lends

an exotic fl avor to

stir-fries and pilafs.

5 Long-grain white rice Cooks

up light and fl uffy; use

in casseroles, paella,

or puddings.

Cheesy RisottoSauté 3 scallions in 1 Tbsp olive oil for 2 minutes. Add 2∕3 cup arborio rice and cook 2 minutes. Add 2 cups water and 1∕2 tsp instant chicken bouillon granules. Bring to a boil, reduce heat, and cover. Cook 20 minutes. Remove from heat. Let stand for 5 minutes, then stir in 1∕3 cup grated Romano cheese.

Cinnamon Raisin PuddingBeat 3 eggs, 11∕2 cups milk, 1∕3 cup sugar, and 11∕2 tsp vanilla extract. Add 1 cup cooked white rice and 1∕3 cup raisins. Pour into a baking dish and sprinkle with 1 tsp cinnamon. Set in a slightly larger pan; pour water into larger pan to a depth of 1 inch. Bake in 325°F oven for 50 minutes or until set, stirring once.

Slow Cooker CurryIn a slow cooker, combine 2 tsp minced garlic; 1 (1-inch) piece fresh ginger, grated; 2 Tbsp red wine vinegar; 11∕2 tsp curry powder; 1 Tbsp water; 1 tsp cumin; 1 tsp salt; and 1∕2 tsp pepper. Add 11∕2 lb boneless, skinless chicken thighs. Toss to coat. Cook for 7 hours on low. Add 2 cups cooked long-grain white rice, 3 diced plum tomatoes, and cilantro.

Southwestern SpecialIn a large pan, combine 1 (141∕2-oz) can stewed tomatoes, undrained; 1∕2 cup water; 1 (151∕2-oz) can black beans, rinsed; 1 cup uncooked instant brown rice; 1 cup corn;

1∕2 tsp cumin; and 1∕4 tsp chili powder. Simmer for 10 minutes or until liquid is absorbed. Add salt and pepper to taste.

Speedy PaellaIn a large sauce-

pan, bring 2 cups water to a boil. Add 1 cup long-grain

white rice and 1∕2 tsp salt. Cover and simmer

for 20 minutes or until rice is tender. In a skillet, sauté 1 chopped onion in 1 Tbsp olive oil until soft. Combine rice, onion, 1 cup thawed frozen peas, 1 lb cooked prawns or shrimp, 11∕2 cups diced, cooked chicken, and 1∕2 cup chopped pars-ley. Add salt and pepper.

In the Kitchen

SCAN HERE TO WATCH CHEF

JON ASHTON SHOW OFF A GREAT

RICE-COOKING TIP, OR VISIT DASHRECIPES

.COM/RICEHome Cooking

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.

Page 24: Parade 09-23

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Never be cold again

As Al Borland on Home Improvement I was the man with all the an-

swers. However, as Richard Karn I still look for money saving and

efficient heating in my home. I have an EdenPURE® Infrared Portable

Heater in my California home and like millions of others found it to be

a super-safe, reliable source of portable heat all year long.

We live in an area which is known for very cold winters. Our facili-ty is nearly 7000 square feet in area. When we began to utilize thefirst unit we were amazed to see how even the heat was for the en-tire living room area. We ordered a second and a third unit whichnow warms the entire home. Much to our surprise we are savingover $250 a month and had the lowest expense for heating wehave ever experienced here. I would heartily recommend yourproducts to anybody who is interested in really nice, even heat intheir home and also interested in saving on their utility expenses.

Dennis Crystal, Troy, MT (Retired Airline Pilot)

Enclosed you will find printouts of our electric bill andgas/heating/cooking bills for 2007 - 2008. Our gas com-pany, AmeriGas, stated that more money was savedthan would show up because of the cost going up. Wewould turn the gas on early in the morning and turn itdown to 60 degrees; We would use the EdenPURE®

heaters from then on and they provided such warmth andcozy heat. Many of our friends have informed me recentlythat they are going to purchase these heaters for theirhomes this winter.

Gloria D. Smith, Boydton, VA (Retired Elementary Principal)

How it works:

RICHARD KARN’S SAVINGS COUPON

The price of the EdenPURE® Personal Heater is $372 plus $17 shipping, but,with this savings coupon you will receive a $175 discount on the Personal Heaterwith free shipping and be able to get the Personal Heater delivered for only $197.

The Personal Heater has an optional remote control for only $12. Check below the number you want (limit 3 per customer)

■ Personal Heater, number _____■ Optional Personal Heater Remote $12, number _____

• To order by phone, call TOLL FREE 1-800-856-8998 Offer CodeEHS6456. Place your order by using your credit card. Operators are on dutyMonday - Friday 6am - 3am, Saturday 7am - 12 Midnight and Sunday 7am -11pm, EST.

• To order online, visit www.edenpure.com enter Offer Code EHS6456• To order by mail, by check or credit card, fill out and mail in this coupon.This product carries a 60-day satisfaction guarantee. If you are not totally satis-fied return at our expense, and your purchase price will be refunded – no questionsasked. There is also a three year warranty.

________________________________________________________________________NAME________________________________________________________________________ADDRESS________________________________________________________________________CITY STATE ZIP CODE

Check below to get discount:■ I am ordering within 10 days, therefore I get a $175 discount plus Free ship-

ping and my price is only $197 for the Personal Heater.■ I am ordering past 10 days, therefore I pay full price for the Personal Heater

plus shipping and handling.Enclosed is $_______ in: ■ Check ■ Money Order (Make check payable to EdenPURE®) or charge my: ■ VISA ■ MasterCard ■ Am. Exp./Optima ■ Discover/Novus

Account No. ______________________________________ Exp. Date ____/____

MAIL TO: EdenPURE®

Offer Code EHS64567800 Whipple Ave. N.W. Canton, OH 44767

Richard Karn is a paid spokesperson for EdenPURE®.

All of the testimonials are by actual EdenPURE® customers who volunteered their stories, and were given another EdenPURE® heater as thanks for their participation. Average homeowners save 10% to 25%.

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