Features

Hurley-Burly

January 1995 Matthew Tyrnauer
Features
Hurley-Burly
January 1995 Matthew Tyrnauer

Hurley-Burly

SPOTLIGHT

Actress Elizabeth Hurley has been with Hugh long—seven years and seven months, to be precise—she's begun to look alike. "We sometimes look horrifyingly a shot of us kissing and it actually looks quite rude!" she sens with an aplomb belying her bad-girl, punk past. Another thing site finds quite rude is the relentless ogling by the British press, who ha e been on her like a pack of Rottweilers since she appeared Ivith Grant at the Four Weddings and a Funeral premiere safety pirttned into a scanty black Versace creation, now known to every wa m-blooded Englishman as That Dress. "I have been accused of putting the feminist movement back 50 years," she says. "I just thoughi it was an evening dress. It's very nice, it's a beautiful cut—cut in many places! But it was no big deal!" The dress may not

jvc I a big deal, but it made Hurley into one overnight. Inapprised civilization of her devotion to Marie Osmond (a lie) • " bust size (unconfirmed), and her romantic past with a punker named S~otic. (Not true! "He was just a friend.")

Hurley and her current friend appear to I m "I almost feel Hugh's blood now," she together they've formed a production company, called Simiar^^^Kspecializing in movies "with a large part in them for Hugh." As foR career, her next picture is called Mad Dogs and Englishmen fit's about a group of heroin addicts, not Noel Coward). The film is the role of her career, which, up to the present, has been scantier than the dress that made her famous. Now all they've got to worry about is what Hugh will wear to her premiere.

MATTHEW TYRNAUER