Maren Morris releases ‘Kiss the Sky’ for ‘The Wild Robot’ movie

Maren Morris has released her new song “Kiss the Sky” for the upcoming film The Wild Robot, set to premiere Sept. 27 featuring the voices of Lupita Nyong’o, Pedro Pascal, Catherine O’Hara, Billy Nighy, Kit Connor, Stephanie Hsu, Mark Hamill, Matt Berry and Ving Rhames.Morris shares (via Billboard): “I was honored to be approached to write for The Wild Robot because I just identified so closely with the story. I was so emotionally moved by this story as a mother. Writing the songs for this film was such an honor because it made me feel even closer to my son, especially when I’m touring and sometimes have to be far away from him. The entire Wild Robot team has been so supportive of the creation of these songs and I’m so excited for the world to see this film.”
The film follows Roz (Nyong’o), a robot who gets stuck on an island and becomes friends with its animal inhabitants; according to a press release: “‘Kiss the Sky’ accompanies a pivotal emotional sequence in the film. As the sequence continues, the song is interwoven with the film’s score by Oscar winning composer Kris Bowers.”
Another song from Morris, “Even When I’m Not,” will also appear as the end-title song on The Wild Robot, produced by The Monsters & Strangerz production team and Tejada. Kris Bowers handled orchestration and served as the movie’s composer.
Listen to Kiss the Sky: HERE.
Editorial credit: Kathy Hutchins / Shutterstock.com

Palm Beach stylist shared White House experience for ‘Reagan’ movie

Deborah Koepper was in her kitchen when she got a phone call about Nancy Reagan.For anyone else, an out-of-the-blue call on a summer day asking for information about the former first lady would be unusual.But for the longtime Palm Beach stylist and beauty expert who for four years during Ronald Reagan’s second presidential term was Nancy Reagan’s stylist and also did makeup and skin care for high-profile White House visitors, this was like so many other calls she’s received over the years.That phone call came from Oklahoma, where the new film “Reagan,” a biographical feature about the former actor-turned two-term Republican president, was filmed. “Reagan” premieres Aug. 30 in theaters nationwide.”That just always kind of happens to me,” she said of the call, laughing as she added that she’s still not sure who referred the film’s production team to her but suspects it was someone with the Nancy Reagan Foundation. “It’s well-known that I was Mrs. Reagan’s makeup and skin person.”The first call from “Reagan” to Koepper came in the summer of 2022, about two years after the movie began filming in the Sooner State.”Reagan” stars Dennis Quaid as Ronald Reagan and Penelope Ann Miller as Nancy Reagan. It tells the story of Ronald Reagan’s life through the lens of actor Jon Voight as a fictional former KGB agent who represents the number of Russian agents who were tasked with keeping tabs on Reagan from his time as a movie star through his presidency.Before she opened Deborah Koepper Beauty more than three decades ago in Palm Beach — first at 215 Sunset Ave. and now at 265 Sunset — she was a highly sought-after makeup artist and aesthetician, so much so that she stepped away from a career in medicine when one of her mentors, a leading plastic surgeon, saw her potential in the beauty business.She pivoted her studies to the renowned Von Lee International School of Aesthetics, where both her talents and her renown grew.Soon after graduating, Koepper was invited to the White House by Robin Weir, Nancy Reagan’s personal hairstylist, who heard about the promising young stylist and saw potential in her work.Weir called Koepper at her home in Maryland to offer her the position. “I go, ‘Is this a joke?'” she recalled. “He said, ‘No, we want you to come to work with us in the White House.'”Koepper said she was able to share with the producers of “Reagan” some of the details about Nancy Reagan’s beauty regimen, including her weekly routine to get pin curls.”She was elegant. She was wonderful,” Koepper said of the late first lady.Koepper also shared the details she knew about some of the former president’s biggest moments in the spotlight — including who was behind one of Reagan’s most famous lines.”Ken Duberstein (Reagan’s White House deputy chief of staff) is the one who told Mr. Reagan at the last minute to say, ‘Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall,'” Koepper said, referring to Reagan’s historic 1987 comment during a speech at the Berlin Wall.”I was always around everything that was being said,” Koepper noted, because of her position working with so many high-profile White House visitors and the first lady. It’s something that prompted Duberstein’s widow, fellow Palm Beacher Jackie Duberstein, to tell Koepper: “You were in the inner sanctum.”One of Koepper’s favorite memories of working in the White House was one of Nancy Reagan’s birthdays, when Koepper styled Reagan before the first lady was set to wave to NBC viewers. Koepper got a first-hand look at how the press grilled Reagan, and how the first lady handled their questions with grace before turning to NBC’s cameras to smile and wave.Koepper still has the dress she wore that day.She fondly recalled Nancy Reagan as someone who “protected her own.””They gave her such a bad rap,” she said of the media’s portrayal of Reagan at the time. “But all she did was love him. She had no agenda. None.”She recalled Ronald Reagan coming back to the White House after a long day and looking for Nancy to kiss her. “They were a true love story,” Koepper said.While in Washington, D.C., she styled dignitaries including the late Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and Princess Diana.When she sees any promotional material for the film, she looks to see if Nancy Reagan’s hair has a pin curl, or if Margaret Thatcher’s hair is teased well.Koepper is a star in her own right. Her work has been featured on hundreds of magazine covers, and she often is called on to weigh in on beauty trends and tips for major publications. In 2020, she was one of three guests on the Palm Beaches episode of “Destination America” on Discovery.And in 2009, her work featured for the first time on the big screen when her cosmetics line was used to beautify the stars of “Confessions of a Shopaholic.”Since opening in Palm Beach, she has hosted a number of celebrities, and counts many longtime Palm Beach families as both friends and clients.When Thatcher — portrayed by Lesley-Anne Down in “Reagan” — stopped into Palm Beach soon after Koepper’s tenure in the Reagan administration, Koepper said she was surprised to see the former British prime minister in the famed Thomas Morrissey salon where she worked at the time.”I was just like, ‘What are you doing?'” Koepper said, laughing, recalling her surprise at running into Thatcher.She also continues to hone and develop her cosmetics and skin care line, Deborah Koepper Beauty.And she continues to see herself as a conduit, connecting people over space and decades — in the same way she helped to connect “Reagan” to the finer details of its storied subjects.”My work is all about relationships,” she said, adding, “There are no coincidences.”

From lab coats to innovations: 10 greatest women scientists and their significant contributions in science

Throughout history, women have made significant contributions to science and technology and overcoming the barriers to achieve groundbreaking discoveries. These women exemplify the profound impact of female scientists across various disciplines. Their contributions not only advanced their fields but also inspired future generations to pursue careers in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM).Celebrate women’s legacies in promoting their work and discoveries remain recognized and valued.Women scientists’ achieving groundbreaking discoveriesMarie Curie (Physics, Chemistry)Marie Curie was a trailblazer in the field of radioactivity, becoming the first woman to win a Nobel Prize and the only person to win Nobel Prizes in two different scientific fields: Physics (1903) and Chemistry (1911). Her discoveries of the radioactive elements polonium and radium not only advanced scientific understanding but also laid the groundwork for cancer treatment through radiation therapy. Curie’s relentless pursuit of knowledge and dedication to science established her as a pioneer for women in STEM.Rosalind Franklin (Chemistry)Rosalind Franklin was a skilled chemist and X-ray crystallographer whose work was crucial in understanding the molecular structure of DNA, RNA, and viruses. Her famous photograph, known as Photograph 51, provided key insights that led to the discovery of the DNA double helix by James Watson and Francis Crick. Despite her significant contributions being overlooked at the time, Franklin’s legacy has been increasingly recognized, symbolising the essential role of women in scientific research.Jane Goodall (Primatology)Jane Goodall revolutionised primatology with her groundbreaking research on chimpanzee behaviour in Gombe Stream National Park, Tanzania. Her pioneering field studies, which included observing tool use and social interactions, challenged the conventional view of humans as unique in their behaviours. Goodall has since become a prominent conservationist, advocating for animal welfare and environmental protection through her organisation, the Jane Goodall Institute.Sally Ride (Physics, Astronaut)Ride made history in 1983 when she became the first American woman to travel to space aboard the Space Shuttle Challenger. A physicist by training, she flew on two space missions, contributing to scientific research and inspiring countless young women to pursue careers in science and engineering. Ride later founded Sally Ride Science, which promotes STEM education and aims to encourage girls to explore careers in these fields.Ada Lovelace (Mathematics, Computer Science)Often celebrated as the first computer programmer, Ada Lovelace was a mathematician who worked on Charles Babbage’s early mechanical general-purpose computer, the Analytical Engine. Her visionary notes on the potential of computers to perform complex calculations and create music laid the foundation for modern computing. Lovelace’s work highlights the importance of creativity in scientific innovation and is an enduring inspiration for women in technology.Hedy Lamarr (Engineering, Hollywood Actress)Hedy Lamarr, best known as a Hollywood actress, was also a brilliant inventor. During World War II, she co-developed a frequency-hopping spread spectrum technology to prevent enemy interception of communications. This technology later became fundamental to modern wireless communications, including Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. Lamarr’s dual legacy as a talented actress and a pioneering inventor exemplifies the multifaceted contributions women can make to society.Chien-Shiung Wu (Physics)Chien-Shiung Wu was a prominent experimental physicist known for her work on the Manhattan Project and her experiments that proved the theory of parity violation. In 1978, she became the first woman to receive the National Medal of Science, highlighting her substantial impact on the field of nuclear physics. Wu’s achievements are a testament to the vital role women play in scientific advancement.Valentina Tereshkova (Astronaut)In 1963, Valentina Tereshkova became the first woman to fly in space, orbiting the Earth aboard Vostok 6. Her mission lasted nearly three days, making her a symbol of female achievement in space exploration. Tereshkova’s journey not only demonstrated women’s capabilities in science and engineering but also inspired future generations of female astronauts.Dorothy Hodgkin (Chemistry)Dorothy Hodgkin made significant contributions to X-ray crystallography, which allowed her to determine the structures of crucial biomolecules like penicillin and vitamin B12. She was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1964, making her the first British woman to win a Nobel Prize in science. Hodgkin’s work has had a lasting impact on biochemistry and pharmaceuticals.Rachel Carson (Marine Biology, Conservation)Rachel Carson’s groundbreaking book “Silent Spring” raised awareness about the dangers of pesticides and sparked the modern environmental movement. Her research and advocacy played a pivotal role in shaping environmental policies and promoting conservation efforts. Carson’s legacy as a pioneering environmentalist continues to inspire activists and scientists alike.Also Read | Uncovering the mystery of peculiar noises in the Mariana Trench

I’ve Finished My Manuscript, Now What? On Dealing With Post-Book Blues

Several months ago, when I finished the manuscript for my book, and then again more recently, when I submitted the final draft of it to my publisher, people told me the same thing: you must be so relieved. You must be so happy! Usually I responded to these polite comments with affirmation, saying yes, I was relieved, I was thrilled to be finally done. And that was not a lie, exactly, because who would not feel a sense of relief after years of hard labor in the gulag that is writing a book? But the full truth, I must now admit, was a little more complicated. If I stopped to probe my relief, what was hiding behind it was more like a vacancy, an absence of feeling. Having completed my book, I was hollow.Article continues after advertisementRemove Ads
Back in November 2017, I drove out to Sag Harbor on the East End of Long Island to have tea with Peter Matthiessen’s widow. I told Maria that I wanted to write a biography of her late husband, the renowned novelist, naturalist, Zen roshi, and fleeting CIA agent. Maria is a no-nonsense woman, and along with her blessing she gave me a warning: I was committing to something far larger than I realized, a vast impossible labyrinth of a subject. I smiled, sipped my tea, and, in the weeks following, signed a contract with Penguin Random House. My original due date gave me three years to finish—in retrospect, less of a deadline than a grand delusion.
Acknowledging it was done, passing the text over to my publisher, meant losing something I’d come to depend on.
Peter Matthiessen wrote thirty-two books. I began by reading them in sequential order. I read all the secondary material I could get my hands on, the interviews and essays and profiles. This was a hell of a lot of stuff, but it was manageable; I could still see the boundaries I had to work with. Then Maria gave me a copy of Matthiessen’s hard drive, and I began to understand what I had got myself into, why she had warned me. On the hard drive were 39,933 items about Zen and whales and the CIA. Because the files were haphazardly organized, I would need to go through and rearrange them into my own custom database.
At the same time, there was Matthiessen’s paper archive to consider at the Harry Ransom Center in Austin, Texas. This, too, would turn out to be far larger than it looked on the surface. There was a finding aid online, but it failed to note that Ransom staff had only catalogued part of the collection thus far. It wasn’t until I spoke with an archivist that the uncatalogued part was revealed to me, like an iceberg suddenly inverting in the water: dozens of boxes filled with correspondence, drafts, journals, notebooks, audio tapes, and samples of Bigfoot fur. The challenge was so vast and formidable that I realized it would be impossible to go through it all on occasional research visits from New York. And so, in 2019, my partner and I relocated to Texas, much as Robert Caro once moved there for Lyndon B. Johnson, and I became a fixture in the Harry Ransom Reading Room.
Some writers approach their writing like a regular day job. They go to their desk; they get on with the tasks at hand; they clock out and turn to other activities, enforcing a line between work and life. That is the healthy approach to writing: just a job like any other, dentistry or plumbing. But I am incapable of being so regimented. For me, there is no line between work and life. I go to my desk in the morning and do not leave, psychologically speaking, until I am in bed, unconscious. Even then, sometimes the work continues in my dreams.Article continues after advertisementRemove Ads
I conducted hundreds of interviews over the course of the seven years on this project. I traveled to the Hamptons, to the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, to bird sanctuaries, mosquito-infested swamps, a Zen monastery in the Catskills. In May 2022, I walked hundreds of miles across the Himalayas, retracing the journey Matthiessen made famous in his classic book, The Snow Leopard. The journey took three weeks, and left me with the kind of altitude sickness that manifests as bloody noses and explosive fits of coughing. I returned to America harboring a parasitic infection that required a nuclear bomb of antibiotics to eradicate.
Sometimes my husband got annoyed with me for getting overly “absorbed” in my writing project. I was creating an atmosphere in our house, humming as I bashed on the keyboard, that was “too intense” and “stressful,” he complained. The stress radiated out and distracted him in the other room. He felt assaulted by it. I shrugged off his concern, insisting I was simply dedicated, the unspoken implication being that he was not dedicated enough. To myself, I said I could stop whenever I wanted—the same language, I now realize, that an addict uses to excuse their addiction.
But the truth is that working on this book gave my hours shape and meaning. It gave me, a person prone to existential malaise, a means of keeping the demons at bay. After a while, I began to understand myself in relation to the book. It turned into a frame for everything else. When somebody asked me what I did, that perennial American question—“So, what do you do?”—I replied that I did True Nature. In other words, I allowed the project to become an identity.
And this is why I was engulfed by a sense of hollowness when I finally submitted the manuscript. Acknowledging it was done, passing the text over to my publisher, meant losing something I’d come to depend on.
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Do other writers feel the same way when they finish a book? I’m in the “weird gulf that follows a massive creative project,” I recently texted my friend Catherine Lacey, author of Biography of X.
“The gulf! I know it well,” she replied.
Looking for reassurance, I asked her to tell me what she meant.
Writing should not be so completely consuming that one’s sense of self comes to depend on the status of a manuscript.
“I usually just cry a lot and feel frustrated,” she wrote in a follow-up email. “I really feel happiest when a project is ongoing, when I have something to answer to, and there’s always a fear at the end of a book that it’s the last one I’ll ever write. Now that I’ve been writing for a decade, I try to anticipate the slump and have something else to work on lined up, even if it’s a small thing, an essay or a story. But I still feel depressed. Later a little relief comes, but the depression is more memorable.” (She added, supportively, “I think the fact that it hurts to finish a book is a sign that you did it right, that the book has a piece of you in it, that you deeply care.”)
Caoilinn Hughes, author of The Alternatives, described a very different and enviable reaction to finishing a book. “It is euphoric,” she told me. “It’s better than winning a medal at the Olympics because you don’t have to look at a ribbon or coach or clock to see how you’ve done. You know yourself how you’ve done. You’ve seen it through. That is the doing. That’s what was needed. And, unlike a triathlete, or a sailor for that matter, you’re unlikely to throw up. You bask, bask, bask (I like to bask for at least six months)…because every single other minute of the novel writing process is pencil-in-the-gut agony.”Article continues after advertisementRemove Ads
I also asked Heather Clark, whose biography of Sylvia Plath, Red Comet, was even more involved than my own of Peter Matthiessen. What did she feel after Red Comet was done? There was “no elation” after nearly ten years of work, Heather admitted, “not even relief—just a deep sense of satisfaction that I had left nothing on the field with this book. I had done all I could.” Her overriding impression was one of being spent.
Heather immediately launched into other biographical projects; she did not allow herself to dwell in the gulf for even a moment. This was Matthiessen’s strategy as well: on to the next thing before the angst could catch him. Caoilinn, on the other hand, procrastinates before she starts something new—“until I reach peak self-loathing.” Catherine distracts herself with travel, dinner parties, elaborate hobbies. She suggested I consider something “really punishing and awful, like Pilates or learning how to maturely deal with your feelings or making sourdough.”
I am still figuring out what’s next for me. Right now, in between scribbling lines of this essay, I float around the house like an empty nester, stunned by the silence, staring out of windows. But I am trying to treat the gulf, or slump, or whatever you want to call this state of suspended animation, as an opportunity to renegotiate terms with my work. Writing should not be so completely consuming that one’s sense of self comes to depend on the status of a manuscript. One should not radiate stress through solid walls.
The poet Alina Stefanescu recently tweeted a good line from Kierkegaard’s notebooks, written by him after a late night of writing: “My head is as empty as a theater, where a play has just been performed.” It is time, I think, to do a gut renovation of the theater while it is still vacant, before the next performance begins.
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Which Big Fall Book Should You Read?

Fall is the season of Big Books: the mega-hyped, the much-recommended, and the written-by-celebrities. And despite the fact that we’re in a (god-forsaken) election year, the literary cup, as usual, runneth over. So how’s a discerning gal or guy to choose which Big Book to read (first)?Article continues after advertisementRemove Ads
Just like last year, Lit Hub is here to help with a fail-safe flowchart guaranteed to match you to your own ideal Big Fall Book. What you do with that information, well, that’s up to you.
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Oscars 2025: Laapataa Ladies beats Ranbir Kapoor’s Animal as India’s official entry, wins against THESE major movies

Kiran Rao’s film Laapataa Ladies has been selected as India’s official entry for the 2025 Oscars, the Film Federation of India announced on Monday. According to PTI, the Hindi movie, a humorous take on patriarchy, was chosen from 29 films.Popular films like Sandeep Reddy Vanga’s Animal, starring Ranbir Kapoor, Malayalam National Award-winning Aattam and Cannes winner All We Imagine As Light were among the contenders.A 13-member committee led by Assamese director Jahnu Barua made the decision. The committee unanimously selected Laapataa Ladies for consideration in the Best International Film category at the Academy Awards.Other notable films on the list included Tamil film Maharaja, Telugu films Kalki 2898 AD and Hanu-Man, as well as Hindi films Swatantraya Veer Savarkar and Article 370. Last year, the Malayalam hit 2018: Everyone is a Hero was sent as India’s entry.Aamir Khan at the OscarsThis is not the first time an Aamir Khan movie has been sent to the Oscars.Lagaan (2001) – Directed by Ashutosh Gowariker and produced by Aamir Khan, Lagaan was nominated for an Oscar and is one of the most well-known Indian films on the international stage.Rang De Basanti (2006) – Directed by Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra, this film starring Khan was a critically acclaimed entry focusing on youth activism and patriotism.Taare Zameen Par (2007)—Directed by Aamir Khan, this film about a dyslexic child was selected as India’s entry but did not receive an Oscar nomination.Laapataa Ladies Box OfficeLaapataa Ladies stars Nitanshi Goel, Pratibha Ranta, Sparsh Shrivastava, Ravi Kishan, and Chhaya Kadam in key roles. According to Sacnilk, the movie collected ₹20.58 crore in India during its 13-week theatrical run.With ₹2.75 crore in the overseas market and India gross collection ₹24.31 crore, the worldwide business of the movie stood at 27.06 crore. As per media reports, the movie was made with around ₹5 crore. The Bollywood movie is now streaming on OTT Behemoth, Netflix.