LOS ANGELES â" When Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes first got together, he jumped on a couch, she gushed girlishly, and many of their fans said, âHuh?â
Their split could cause just as much drama.
Not only are the images of two Hollywood stars at stake, so is the future of 6-year-old Suri, with some speculating that Holmesâ decision to file for divorce in New York might mean sheâs seeking sole custody of their daughter.
Ultimately, Cruise may have the most to lose.
âThereâs no question this divorce is going to hurt his public image,â said Dorie Clark, author of the forthcoming âReinventing You: Define Your Brand, Imagine Your Future.â
âHis brand was already tarnished significantly when he first got together with Holmes five years ago and was infamously jumping up and down on Oprahâs couch, and shortly afterward the videos of him praising Scientology were leaked,â she continued. âThis divorce is another opportunity for questions to be raised about his personal life, his religious beliefs â" which many consider outside the mainstream â" and thatâs not what a box-office star really wants.â
California divorce attorney Michael Kelly, who is not involved with the Cruise-Holmes case, called Holmesâ East Coast filing âa tactical moveâ that signifies âthere will be an attempt to gain an advantage.â
New Yorkâs comparative-fault divorce laws could be advantageous for Holmes, he said. The couple lived in Los Angeles.
Cruise and Holmes married in 2006 after a whirlwind love affair. He proposed at the Eiffel Tower. Their wedding was held at a 15th century Italian castle.
She filed for divorce Thursday, ending her first marriage. This will be Cruiseâs third divorce. He was previously married to actresses Mimi Rogers and Nicole Kidman, with whom he has two children.
Cruise showed up alone at the recent Los Angeles and London premieres of his latest film, âRock of Ages.â Holmes also was absent earlier this month when Cruise received the Friars Club Entertainment Icon Award in New York. But he did bring Suri with him, allowing her to stay up late for the raunchy proceedings.
âDivorce will actually help Katie Holmesâ brand,â Clark said. âMore people are going to be thinking about her and aware of her. This is generating a lot of sympathy and interest from people.â
Holmes, 33, rose to fame on the teen soap âDawsonâs Creek.â She went on to appear in âBatman Begins,â and earned raves for her roles in independent films such as 2003âs âPieces of Aprilâ and 2005âs âThank You for Smoking.â She took a break after giving birth to Suri in April, 2006, and marrying Cruise in November.
She did just a handful of roles until stepping things up in 2011. Holmes played Jackieâ Kennedy in the Emmy-winning miniseries âThe Kennedys,â appeared in Adam Sandlerâs âJack and Jillâ and just wrapped a film with William Hurt. She said sheâs set to start another project in July.
Meanwhile, Cruise, who turns 50 on Tuesday, has remained a megastar. His latest role, as an Axl Rose-style rock star in âRock of Ages,â has won him strong reviews (though not corresponding box-office results), and his most recent âMission Impossibleâ installment, âMission Impossible: Ghost Protocol,â has made more than $690 million worldwide.
âTom Cruiseâs brand has always been the dynamic, likable hero â" the âMission Impossibleâ star that youâre rooting for â" and it becomes harder for the public to get behind someone as a hero and want to go to the box office and cheer them on when there are serious questions about what kind of husband and father he is,â Clark said.
Holmesâ attorney, Jonathan Wolfe, said Friday that âKatieâs primary concern remains, as it always has been, her daughterâs best interest.â
___
AP Entertainment Writer Ryan Pearson contributed to this report.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
No comments:
Post a Comment