Jennifer Aniston eyeing Park Ave love nest

Jennifer Aniston and Jim Curtis seem serious.
The A-list lovebirds visited swanky apartments along Park Avenue in search of a nest.
Both have their hearts set on a wedding in Greece, as both have Greek heritage, a source said. The couple, however, have not publicly confirmed any engagement.
For Aniston, this would be a third marriage after her marriages to Brad Pitt and Justin Theroux.
They were made public last fall. Aniston posted a photo of the couple kissing on Instagram on Curtis’ birthday, writing, “Happy birthday my love. Baby.”
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Prince Harry and Meghan Markle. (Getty)
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, like to travel privately, but they don’t have their own jet. They have friends who lend them jets.
The self-exiled British royals, who live in Montecito, California, had just been in Lebanon visiting refugee camps.
The March issue of Town and Country reveals that DigitalBridge CEO Mark Danzi was generous with his plane to the royal family. Danzi is apparently obsessed with polo and Prince Harry invites him to matches.
Other friends also lent them their jets. Amal Clooney lent her husband George Clooney’s plane when the Duchess flew from London to New York for her baby shower.
It’s good to be royal.
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Priscilla Presley. (Getty)
Priscilla Presley wasn’t well prepared when she interviewed for a role in “Dallas.”
Although she had never seen the series and didn’t know its star Larry Hagman, she called the prime-time soap “fabulous.”
“I lied throughout the entire interview,” Presley said at the Old Bags luncheon at Breakers in Palm Beach, Florida. “I didn’t know I was such a good liar.”
Presley – peddling his book, “Softly, As I Leave You: Life After Elvis” – spent five seasons on the show.
She was interviewed on stage by James Norton, founder and creative director of RobertJames, who created the It Bag for the luncheon of 600 guests.
Guests included Audrey Gruss, Kimberly Paige Bluhm, Jamee Gregory, Simone Levinson, Laine Siklos and Jean Shafiroff.
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Mel B of the Spice Girls with her husband Jimmy Gulzar in 1999. (Photo by Dave Benett/Getty Images)
Dutch-born dancer Jimmy Gulzar, first husband of Spice Girl Mel B, claims David Beckham copied his way of dressing and even his tattoos.
Gulzar said on the Allison Interviews podcast with host Allison Kugel that Beckham, who is married to Posh Spice Victoria Beckham, had no style when they met.
“David, in his documentary, when they asked him, ‘Where does your style come from?’ He says, “Oh, old movies like James Cagney.” You are a lying son of a gun. Since when did James Cagney dress like a hip hop rockstar? Gulzar fumed.
“From the moment he [shaved his head] and I put on the clothes that I gave him, and all the loot…I gave him the mark,” he said. “That’s what I gave David, I gave him a mark, because David wasn’t markable. He looked like an altar boy before he met me. Then he met me, and boom! Then all the contracts start coming in.
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Chris Carter in 2002. (Getty)
NFL Hall of Fame wide receiver Cris Carter played for the Philadelphia Eagles, Minnesota Vikings and Miami Dolphins, but now lives in Boca Raton, Fla., where he will play golf in the James Hardie Pro Football Hall of Fame Invitational March 2-8.
The playing field includes PGA champions John Daly and Padraig Harrington and football legends Emmitt Smith, Ronde Barber and Lawrence Taylor.
Bobby Love, a contributor to Joan Jedell’s Hampton Sheet, asked Carter what he would do after the football season ended.
Carter said he was suffering from the offseason blues, but his wife was really happy to be able to watch TV again.
The golf course invites you. Carter can’t wait to take on his fellow gridiron bigs. “Every time I see another player, I’m going to say stupid things.”
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Black History Month was celebrated at Southampton Art Center with a screening of “I Was Born This Way” which includes interviews with Dionne Warwick, Lady Gaga and Billy Porter.
The film, directed by Daniel Junge and Sam Pollard, explores the life and legacy of Carl Bean, a disco singer turned archbishop and pioneer of the LGBTQ civil rights movement.
His most famous song was “I Was Born This Way” in 1977, which Questlove said was “a song ahead of its time…That song started a revolution.”
Bean moved to the city and became a gospel singer with the Christian Tabernacle Choir in Harlem, then moved to Los Angeles in the mid-’70s, switched to R&B and formed a group called Carl Bean and Universal Love.
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President of the Louvre Museum Laurence des Cars. (Getty)
French President Emmanuel Macron has accepted the resignation of Louvre Museum director Laurence des Cars after the infamous jewelry theft at the museum.
Thieves stole nine pieces of jewelry worth more than $100 million, including items belonging to the French crown jewels. Only one piece, the crown of Empress Eugenie, was found after being abandoned when the thieves fled.
You don’t need to rob a museum to get your hands on a piece from this historic collection. MS Rau, in New Orleans, is now offering for just under $8 million a pair of natural pearl and diamond earrings that belonged to Queen Amélie, the last queen of France who reigned from 1830 to 1848.
These earrings represent the only known legal opportunity to acquire authentic French crown jewels, with uninterrupted royal descent and full documentation.
Maybe President Macron’s government will buy them for the Louvre.
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Classy restaurants aren’t just about the food.
“Fine dining is about intention and orchestration: the seamless integration of food, service, atmosphere, narrative and exclusivity, coming together to create a cohesive experience that feels purposeful rather than transactional,” said veteran event marketer Herb Karlitz.
Karlitz, who is producing a talk at the NY Restaurant Show at the Javits Center on March 9, will moderate a panel with chefs Marcus Samuelsson, Simon Kim, Ayesha Nurdjaja, executive chef of Shuka and Shukette, and Eugene Remm, the restaurateur behind Catch Hospitality Group.
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Hundreds of cocktail lovers will gather in Brooklyn on March 21 for the Bloody Mary Festival, now in its 13th year.
“The Bloody Mary is the quintessential New York drink because it reflects the life of the city,” said festival founder Evan Weiss.
“No two recipes are the same, and when you order one, you never really know what you’re going to get. That unpredictability is what makes it special, just like New York. Leave your apartment and anything can happen.”
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Outside: Actor Manny Perez of NBC’s “Third Watch” joined Dr. Ramon Tallaj, the founder of SOMOS Community Care, to celebrate the accomplishments of Dominican Americans at their rally in Washington, D.C. last week. Tallaj, who regularly works with baseball legends Mariano Rivera, David “Big Papi” Ortiz and Sammy Sosa to raise money for their Bronx community, delivered the keynote… The 25th Flamenco Festival has arrived downtown with 80 participants from 16 companies performing through March 15.




