Tag: Love.Angel.Music.Baby

USA Today US

Solo Stefani

A lion in lamb’s clothing By Elysa Gardner

NEW YORK — If you want to know how Gwen Stefani maintains her youthful enthusiasm, not to mention her girlish figure, try chatting with her for half an hour. But take your vitamins first.

“I’m just going to keep talking until you ask another question,” Stefani chirps, plopping onto a sofa in MTV’s green room. No Doubt’s 35-year-old, cellulite-free lead singer has described herself as having been a chubby teenager, but her breathless energy suggests the metabolism of a hummingbird. Read the rest of this article »



InTouch Weekly USA

Gwen Stefani: “I’m starving”

Is the No Doubt singer getting carried away with a too-restrictive diet and a harsh exercise regimen?

Gwen Stefani is as famous for her rock-steady music as her rock-solid abs, but lately, the No Doubt singer is looking thinner than ever – perhaps too thin. Gwen, who has struggled with weight issues since childhood, has been serious about diet and exercise for years. But now, her regimen has left her looking gaunt.

Could stress be to blame? The past year has been a high-pressure time for the Grammy winner, who is branching out to acting (with a role in The Aviator), and has also made the break from her band of 18 years to record her first solo album, Love, Angel, Music, Baby, due out next month. Gwen says it was a difficult time. “I just had a breakdown,” she reveals. “I was like,  ‘I gotta stop now.’ ” But instead of giving up, she tackled her self-doubt in the lyrics of her first single, “What Are You Waiting For?” where “confident” Gwen gives “nervous” Gwen a pep talk, even telling herself in the chorus, “You’re still a super hot female.” Read the rest of this article »



V International

Scan of V Magazine International from Fall 2004 featuring Gwen StefaniJust A Girl

For the past 17 years, she has stood as the punky siren of the band No Doubt. But there is more to Gwen Stefani’s platinum-blonde life than meets the eye. There’s her fashion line, her acting career, and her first solo dance album with a little help from some music-industry heavies. Christopher Bollen meets the girl underneath it all.

When a certain then-unknown pop star landed for the first time in the New York and climbed into the back seat of a cab, she spoke those immortal words that have now become firmly cemented in rock-music legend: “Take me to the center of everything.” The driver dropped her off in Times Square. Whatever your feelings may be about this particular pop icon, the anecdote does offer a profound lesson: It is relatively easy to stand for a few seconds at the heart of the universe (in 1978, according to this cab driver, that would be the corner of 42nd and Broadway). The tough part is being able to stay there. Read the rest of this article »



Entertainment Weekly USA

Scan by No Doubt Scrapbook of Entertainment Weekly Magazine USA from May 28, 2004 featuring No Doubt; Adrian Young, Gwen Stefani, Tom Dumont and Tony KanalThe Greatest Show on Earth?

Well, No Doubt’s greatest hits, anyway – which is what they’ll be playing on their last tour before Gwen Stefani drops a solo CD. By Chris Willman.

Shooting what little breeze there is on a hot, insufferably still LA day, Gwen Stefani suddenly feels the need to cull a statistic from a bandmate. “How many times do you think you’ve thrown up in your life, Tony?” she asks. Tony Kanal looks like he’s not certain he wants to play this game. “I’m not sure it’s a lot,” the bass player answers with a nervous chuckle. Better to focus on the immediate future. “This time,” he insists, “it’s gonna be much more mellow and healthy.” Fifty points if you’ve already figured out our subject of the day: rock touring. Their little O.C.-teem-ska-band-that-could, No Doubt, is hitting the amphitheater circuit in June, pairing up with blink-182 for one of the summer’s most anticipated tours. (One of the most economical too: Ticket prices top out in the mid-two-figure range, or about $250 cheaper than it’d cost you for a similar seat to see Madonna.) It’s a nationwide victory lap in honor of their recent blockbuster hits collection, The Singles 1992-2003, whose new song, a cover of Talk Talk’s “It’s My Life,” afforded them yet another top 10 smash (their tenth). This could be the optimal point in their history to catch the band: They’ve been together long enough to almost count as seasoned elder statesmen – 17 years, which is about 170 in rock years – but, being still in their 30s, they’re vigorous, scrappy, and in no danger yet of outgrowing their audience. Read the rest of this article »



Cosmopolitan USA

Scan by No Doubt Scrapbook of Cosmopolitan US June 2004 featuring Gwen StefaniIt’s good to be Gwen Stefani

With a solo album in the works, a new fashion line in stores, and a big movie on the way, Gwen Stefani’s career is on fire. Oh yeah, and did we mention she also has that rock-god husband, Gavin Rossdale? Today she let us in to her fab world. By Jennifer Kasle Furmaniak.

When Gwen Stefani walks into the trendy 60 Thompson hotel in New York City, it’s obvious why she’s touted almost as much for her unique style sense as she is for her amazing singing and songwriting abilities. She’s dressed in an old pair of Levi’s, a Vivienne Westwood belt, a funky Libertine jacket, and sexy-as-hell green Christian Dior snakeskin stilettos. The ensemble is made even more striking by Gwen’s signature platinum-blond hair, porcelain-pale face and saturated red lips. Read the rest of this article »



Vogue USA

Scan by No Doubt Scrapbook of Vogue magazine USA from April 2004 featuring Gwen StefaniThe first lady of rock

Glamorous Gwen Stefani has become the ultimate music icon with that rare thing – a good reputation. Now, as Jonathon Van Meter discovers, she’s setting her sights on Hollywood. Photographed by Steven Meisel

Gwen Stefani’s house in Los Feliz has a vaguely spooky quality to it. The unease I feel when I pull up in front may simply be the result of my having watched Sunset Boulevard one too many times. Or perhaps the damp January chill has something to do with it. In any case, when the high gates swing open, I walk up the curving, rain-slicked driveway. I am greeted at the heavy wooden door by Stefani’s assistant, Pete, an affable young English fellow who is a childhood friend of Stefani’s husband, Gavin Rossdale. Read the rest of this article »