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S U N DAY, D EC E M B E R 2 0, 2 0 1 5 | PA RA D E .CO M
Dad vs. DadChristmas DadsHo-Ho-Holiday Dad-OffMark Wahlberg and Will Ferrell play feuding fathers in the new Christmas movie comedy Daddy’s HomeBy Dotson Rader
PLUS Last-Minute Cheer, p. 4Sweet & Spicy Ham, p. 14
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© PARADE Publications 2015. All rights reserved.
PAGE: 2 CODE: 21A1 BOOK: 16 ISSUE: 12-20-2015
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Email your questions for Walter Scott to [email protected]
WALTER SCOTT ASKS ...
EDDIE REDMAYNEAfter his wrenching portrayal of Stephen Hawk-ing in The Theory of Everything, the Oscar winner, 33, gets in touch with his feminine side in The Danish Girl as one of the first known recipients of sex reassignment surgery. Red-mayne’s powerful performance, based on the real-life story of how Einar Wegener became Lili Elbe in the 1920s, has already made him a top contender for this year’s Oscar nominations.What advice did you get from transgender women on playing Lili? “Because the time frame is condensed in the fi lm, it was really about Lili fi nding herself. Some of the trans women I met spoke about this period in their lives. They described it as ‘hyper-feminization.’ As they were beginning to transition, perhaps they wore too much makeup or dresses
that were perhaps a bit too much. They de-scribed it as being like a girl’s adolescence.”
Did you ever have any doubts about taking on this dual role? “When I read the script, I found it the most passionate love story, a story of identity and authenticity. As I start-ed to research Lili’s life, I thought she was the most extraordinary person. So
there wasn’t really any question in my mind. It felt like a great privilege to get to play the part.”
You’ve taken on some very dramatic
roles. Do you ever want to play some-
thing more frivolous? “I’m doing a fi lm at the moment, J.K. Rowling’s Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, which couldn’t be more different from play-ing Lili, but defi nitely has its own challenges. The thing that drives you as an actor is getting lucky enough to be able to choose to play interesting people, whether they’re real or fi ctional. I’ve been pretty blessed.”
WALTER SCOTT ASKS ...
What’s up with Krysten Ritter? I miss her since Don’t Trust the B---- in Apartment 23 went off the air.
—Charlie Pontus, Akron, Ohio
A: Since leaving ABC’s Don’t Trust the B, Ritter, 34, has acquired super-powers for her new 13-episode Netfl ix series, Marvel’s Jessica Jones. She plays a superhero trying to rebuild her life as a private investigator in New York City. The show, streaming now, also features Carrie-Anne Moss, Mike Colter, Rachael Taylor and David Tennant.
WALTER SCOTT’S
What does Eddie Redmayne like to do to take his mind
off acting? Go to Parade.com/redmayne
to fi nd out.
‘To Infi nity—and Beyond!’Toy Story’s 20th Anniversary Has it really been two decades since we laughed, cheered and cried along with Andy (John Morris), Woody (Tom Hanks) and Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen) in the groundbreaking Disney-Pixar movie about the secret lives of toys? Here are fi ve fun facts you might not know:
1. Toy Story was the fi rst fea-ture-length fi lm made entirely using computer animation.
2. The Odd Couple, The Defi -ant Ones and other “buddy” movies were stud-ied as prototypes for Toy Story’s Buzz and Woody.
3. The movie almost didn’t get made because the characters —Woody especially—were considered too harsh.
4. Buzz Lightyear’s original name was Lunar Larry.
5. Billy Crystal turned down the chance to voice Buzz Light-year, a decision he regrets.
I love watching The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, but I wonder: Is Kyle Richards ever sorry she agreed to do the show? I might be!
—May L., Albuquerque, N.M.
A: Despite the broken friend-ships, catfi ghts and embar-rassing situations for all the world to see, the former Little House on the Prairie actress, 46, has few regrets about living her life in front of the cameras. “With all of the negative stuff, there is also the positive,” she says. In Bravo’s new sixth sea-son, Richards and husband/real estate tycoon Mauricio Umansky show off their $1.5 million home renovation.
Visit Parade.com/toystory for a look at the cast, then and now.
2 | DECEMBER 20, 2015
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12022015153848 Approved with warnings
© PARADE Publications 2015. All rights reserved.
Be a last-minute holiday hero. Price Match Guarantee*.Save up to 30% on gifts at Dell.com. Order by 3pm EST on 12/23 for 12/24 delivery*.Select order codes only. Subject to available supply and payment confi rmation. Customer must select next business day shipping in cart. Not available for APO/FPO, Alaska, Hawaii, TVs 46" or larger, 55" monitors, smartphones or phone accessories. Dell is not responsible for carrier errors or delays.
Off ers valid 12/17-12/23 11 am EST unless otherwise noted.Δ DELL PREFERRED ACCOUNT (DPA): Off ered to U.S. residents by WebBank, who determines qualifi cations for and terms of credit. Promotion eligibility varies and is determined by WebBank. Taxes, shipping, and other charges are extra and vary. Dell and the Dell logo are trademarks of Dell Inc.
* Instant savings applied at checkout when using Dell Preferred Account. Screens simulated, subject to change. Windows Store apps sold separately. App availability and experience may vary by market.* Pricing/Availability: Off ers subject to change, not combinable with all other off ers. Taxes, shipping, handling and other fees apply. Valid for new U.S. online purchases through the Dell Home Electronics and Accessories site and for phone orders of electronics and accessories purchased without a system only. Free shipping and handling off er available in Continental (except Alaska) U.S. only. Availability of electronics and accessories varies and quantities may be limited. Dell reserves the right to cancel orders arising from pricing or other errors. Market Value: Market Value is an estimate based on industry data such as published and as-sold prices for the same or comparable products in a survey of major online and/or offl ine retailers. Graphics and System Memory: (SDRAM): GB means 1 billion bytes, MB means 1 million bytes and TB equals 1 trillion bytes; signifi cant system memory may be used to support graphics, depending on system memory size and other factors. Hard Drives: GB means 1 billion bytes and TB means 1 trillion bytes; actual capacity varies with pre-loaded material and operating environment and will be less. Promotional EGift Card: Ships separately from purchase and typically arrives in 10-20 days from ship date via email; expires in 90 days (except where prohibited by law). Terms and conditions apply. See Dell.com/giftcard/promoterms. Price Match Guarantee: Generally, if you fi nd a lower-price advertised on the internet for an identical electronic product or a similarly confi gured Dell, HP, Apple or Lenovo, computer; Dell will match that price. Call or Chat online with a Dell Expert and we’ll walk you through the process. Learn more at dell.com/pricematch. EXTENDED RETURNS: On purchases made 11/24/15 to 12/25/15, return deadline is 1/15/16 or 30-days from invoice date, whichever is later. Excludes smartphones, related accessories and software if opened or downloaded. Trademark and Copyright Notices: Ultrabook, Celeron, Celeron Inside, Core Inside, Intel, Intel Logo, Intel Atom, Intel Atom Inside, Intel Core, Intel Inside, Intel Inside Logo, Intel vPro, Itanium, Itanium Inside, Pentium, Pentium Inside, vPro Inside, Xeon, Xeon Phi, and Xeon Inside are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the U.S. and/or other countries. Microsoft, Windows and the Windows logo are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation. Dell, the Dell logo and Inspiron are trademarks of Dell, Inc.
Dell.com has incredible choices, free shipping and Price Match Guarantee*. Visit Dell.com/deals, call 800-576-3355 or chat live at Dell.com/chat.
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© PARADE Publications 2015. All rights reserved.
ASSIGNING EDITOR ___________ | MANAGING EDITOR __________ | COPY EDITOR __________ | PHOTO EDITOR __________ | EDIT. DIRECTOR __________ | EIC __________
PAGE: 4 CODE: 89A1 BOOK: 16 ISSUE: 12-20-2015
ASSIGNING EDITOR ___________ | MANAGING EDITOR __________ | COPY EDITOR __________ | PHOTO EDITOR __________ | EDIT. DIRECTOR __________ | EIC __________
Edited by Alison Abbey / L I K E U S AT FACEBOOK .COM/PARADEMAG
Parade
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4 | DECEMBER 20, 2015
Last-Minute
WATCH THISBid goodbye to the bah humbugs with these festive fl icks and TV picks! All airtimes are ET.
Monday, Dec. 21
The Great Christmas Light Fight—season fi nale (8 p.m., ABC)The Great Holiday Baking Show—season fi nale (10 p.m., ABC)
Tuesday, Dec. 22
Fixer Upper—holiday episode (9 p.m., HGTV)
Wednesday, Dec. 23
I Love Lucy Christmas Show—1956 TV special (8 p.m., CBS)Property Brothers—holiday episode (9 p.m., HGTV)
Thursday, Dec. 24
A Christmas Carol—1938 movie (9:15 a.m., Turner Classic Movies)
A Christmas Story—1983 movie (marathon begins 8 p.m., TBS)
LIGHT UP THE NIGHTNothing brightens up a room or exterior more (or more quickly) than festive lighting. Flip the switch on these.
METAL STAR STRING LIGHTS, $29, West Elm and westelm.com
LED BIRCH GARLAND, $50, Crate & Barrel and crateandbarrel.com
1.CELEBRATE WINE CANVAS BOTTLE BAG, $10, swoozies.com
2. KATE SPADE CHEERS WINE TOTE, $20, Nordstrom
and nordstrom.com
3. GRAY REINDEER SILHOUETTE WINE BOTTLE
BAG WITH DRAWSTRING, $11, Walmart
and walmart.com
4.THRESHOLD WINE COZY, $13, Target and target.com
BE THE TOAST OF THE PARTYA bottle of bubbly is a great gift made greater when it’s tucked into one of these festive bags.
❷❶ ❸ ❹
BLISSLIGHTS, various colors for an
indoor or outdoor light show, $139,
blisslights.com
TURN ON THE TUNES San Francisco rock band Train, the boys behind “Hey, Soul Sister,” cover Stevie Wonder’s “What Christmas Means to Me,” Elvis’ “Santa, Bring My Baby Back (To Me)” and more, alongside original tunes. Stream the album Christmas in Tahoe free if you’re an Amazon Prime user, or buy the MP3 or CD, $8–$13, at amazon.com.
There’s still time to show your seasonal spirit with these holiday helpers.
Visit Parade.com/download for colorable wine bottle tags.
CheerCheer
1220_Picks.indd 4 12/2/15 3:34 PM
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© PARADE Publications 2015. All rights reserved.
ASSIGNING EDITOR ___________ | MANAGING EDITOR __________ | COPY EDITOR __________ | PHOTO EDITOR __________ | EDIT. DIRECTOR __________ | EIC __________ ASSIGNING EDITOR ___________ | MANAGING EDITOR __________ | COPY EDITOR __________ | PHOTO EDITOR __________ | EDIT. DIRECTOR __________ | EIC __________
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DECEMBER 20, 2015 | 5
WATCH THISBid goodbye to the bah humbugs with these festive flicks and TV picks! All airtimes are ET.
Monday, Dec. 21
The Great Christmas Light Fight—season finale (8 p.m., ABC)The Great Holiday Baking Show—season finale (10 p.m., ABC)
Tuesday, Dec. 22
Fixer Upper—holiday episode (9 p.m., HGTV)
Wednesday, Dec. 23
I Love Lucy Christmas Show—1956 TV special (8 p.m., CBS)Property Brothers—holiday episode (9 p.m., HGTV)
Thursday, Dec. 24
A Christmas Carol—1938 movie (9:15 a.m., Turner Classic Movies)
A Christmas Story—1983 movie (marathon begins 8 p.m., TBS)
LIGHT UP THE NIGHTNothing brightens up a room or exterior more (or more quickly) than festive lighting. Flip the switch on these.
TURN ON THE TUNES San Francisco rock band Train, the boys behind “Hey, Soul Sister,” cover Stevie Wonder’s “What Christmas Means to Me,” Elvis’ “Santa, Bring My Baby Back (To Me)” and more, alongside original tunes. Stream the album Christmas in Tahoe free if you’re an Amazon Prime user, or buy the MP3 or CD, $8–$13, at amazon.com.
continued on page 6
1220_Picks.indd 5 12/2/15 3:34 PM
12022015153904 Approved with warnings
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*At 2G speeds, the functionality of some data applications, such as streaming audio or video, may be affected. Straight Talk’s Bring Your Own Phone plan requires a compatible, unlocked phone, activation kit and Straight Talk service plan. User may need to change the phone’s Access Point Name settings. Please note: If you switch to Straight Talk, you may be subject to fees from your current provider. A month equals 30 days. Please refer always to the latest Terms and Conditions of Service at StraightTalk.com
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© PARADE Publications 2015. All rights reserved.
PAGE: 6 CODE: 89A3 BOOK: 16 ISSUE: 12-20-2015
ASSIGNING EDITOR ___________ | MANAGING EDITOR __________ | COPY EDITOR __________ | PHOTO EDITOR __________ | EDIT. DIRECTOR __________ | EIC __________ ASSIGNING EDITOR ___________ | MANAGING EDITOR __________ | COPY EDITOR __________ | PHOTO EDITOR __________ | EDIT. DIRECTOR __________ | EIC __________
6 | DECEMBER 20, 2015
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Thursday, Dec. 24 (from page 5)
Mr. Magoo’s Christmas Carol—1962 TV movie (8 p.m., The CW)
It’s a Wonderful Life—1946 movie (8 p.m., NBC)
Friday, Dec. 25
Scrooge—1970 movie (8:45 a.m., Turner Classic Movies)
Disney Parks Christmas Day Parade (10 a.m., ABC)
Visit Parade.com/lovepop
to discover a new way to send cards to friends and family.
DECK THE
HALLSA doormat here, a pillow there—before you know it, you’re all decked out.
TO ALL A GOOD NIGHT PILLOW, $40, Pottery Barn and potterybarn.com
SANTA BELT DOORMAT, $30, Pier One and pier1.com
MERRY AND BRIGHT TEA TOWELS, set of three, $18, Paper Source and papersource.com
Parade
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12022015153919 Approved with warnings
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© PARADE Publications 2015. All rights reserved.
PAGE: 7 CODE: 89A4 BOOK: 16 ISSUE: 12-20-2015
ASSIGNING EDITOR ___________ | MANAGING EDITOR __________ | COPY EDITOR __________ | PHOTO EDITOR __________ | EDIT. DIRECTOR __________ | EIC __________ ASSIGNING EDITOR ___________ | MANAGING EDITOR __________ | COPY EDITOR __________ | PHOTO EDITOR __________ | EDIT. DIRECTOR __________ | EIC __________
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DECEMBER 20, 2015 | 7
Thursday, Dec. 24 (from page 5)
Mr. Magoo’s Christmas Carol—1962 TV movie (8 p.m., The CW)
It’s a Wonderful Life—1946 movie (8 p.m., NBC)
Friday, Dec. 25
Scrooge—1970 movie (8:45 a.m., Turner Classic Movies)
Disney Parks Christmas Day Parade (10 a.m., ABC)
Visit Parade.com/lovepop
to discover a new way to send cards to friends and family.
DECK THE
HALLSA doormat here, a pillow there—before you know it, you’re all decked out.
TO ALL A GOOD NIGHT PILLOW, $40, Pottery Barn and potterybarn.com
SANTA BELT DOORMAT, $30, Pier One and pier1.com
MERRY AND BRIGHT TEA TOWELS, set of three, $18, Paper Source and papersource.com
Parade
1220_Picks.indd 7 12/2/15 3:35 PM
12022015153818
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PAGE: 8 CODE: 31A1 BOOK: 16 ISSUE: 12-20-15
In their new movie opening ChristmasDay, Daddy’s Home, Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg play two mis-matched dads ardently competing
for something they already have: the love of their kids.
� e tricks and antics they use to win the children’s loyalty culminate in a wild and very early celebration of the holiday. Ferrell is the nerdish second husband of a suburban housewife and stepdad to her two children. Wahlberg is their ne’er-do-well biological father. When he arrives uninvited at Ferrell’s home, dressed in a leather jacket and biker boots and claiming the dominant
paternal role in the family, the fun begins.“Mark knows how to ride a motorcycle
and wear a leather jacket and not look foolish,” Ferrell says. “I can’t. Mark is that guy in real life. I’m much more like the straight-laced guy I play in the movie—well, maybe not that nerdish. I’m perfectly fi ne with my level of masculinity or lack thereof. But I don’t know how to do or fi x anything. Mark probably doesn’t either, but he could fi gure it out in a half hour.”
Keeping it realDaddy’s Home is about divorce and itspowerful impact on families, something
Christ asmADS
Wahlberg and Ferrell both experiencedas children.
“Nowadays there are so many blended families having to cope with a stepparent and a biological parent still involved in some way,” Ferrell says. “� at was the case in my growing up. I was faced with this traumatic [divorce] experience. How do you navigate that?” Ferrell’s parents divorced when he and his brother, Patrick, were in elementary school.
“As a child, I would’ve preferred to have a magic wand, wave it and go back to how it was,” he says. “� e way I coped was go-ing, ‘Let’s make lemonade out of lemons!’ I just tried to make the best of it, maybe because I was the older brother.”
Ferrell, 48, was raised in a middle-class family in suburban Irvine, Calif., a place about as dull as Andy Griffi th’s fi ctional TV haven of Mayberry, he says. His moth-er, Betty Kay, was a schoolteacher and his father, Roy Lee, was a successful musician with the Righteous Brothers.
Ferrell was a good boy, studious and funny, and a popular athlete on the soccer, basketball and varsity football teams of Irvine’s University High School. He went on to the University of Southern Califor-nia and, after graduation in 1990, became a member of the Groundlings improv com-edy troupe. Five years later, he joined the cast of TV’s Saturday Night Live, rocketing to comedic fame. During his seven years on the late-night sketch show, he branched out into movies, notably Elf, Anchorman: � e Legend of Ron Burgundy and Talladega Nights. In 2010 he made his fi rst fi lm with Wahlberg, � e Other Guys, a comedy about a pair of mismatched cops.
Co-stars in the new comedy Daddy’s Home, Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg refl ect
on holiday traditions, their families and their not-so-perfect childhoods.
By Dotson RaderCover and feature photography
by Robert Trachtenberg
D
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© PARADE Publications 2015. All rights reserved.
PAGE: 9 CODE: 31A2 BOOK: 16 ISSUE: 12-20-15
paternal role in the family, the fun begins.“Mark knows how to ride a motorcycle
and wear a leather jacket and not look foolish,” Ferrell says. “I can’t. Mark is that guy in real life. I’m much more like the straight-laced guy I play in the movie—well, maybe not that nerdish. I’m perfectly fine with my level of masculinity or lack thereof. But I don’t know how to do or fix anything. Mark probably doesn’t either, but he could figure it out in a half hour.”
Keeping it realDaddy’s Home is about divorce and its powerful impact on families, something
DSWahlberg and Ferrell both experienced as children.
“Nowadays there are so many blended families having to cope with a stepparent and a biological parent still involved in some way,” Ferrell says. “That was the case in my growing up. I was faced with this traumatic [divorce] experience. How do you navigate that?” Ferrell’s parents divorced when he and his brother, Patrick, were in elementary school.
“As a child, I would’ve preferred to have a magic wand, wave it and go back to how it was,” he says. “The way I coped was go-ing, ‘Let’s make lemonade out of lemons!’ I just tried to make the best of it, maybe because I was the older brother.”
Ferrell, 48, was raised in a middle-class family in suburban Irvine, Calif., a place about as dull as Andy Griffith’s fictional TV haven of Mayberry, he says. His moth-er, Betty Kay, was a schoolteacher and his father, Roy Lee, was a successful musician with the Righteous Brothers.
Ferrell was a good boy, studious and funny, and a popular athlete on the soccer, basketball and varsity football teams of Irvine’s University High School. He went on to the University of Southern Califor-nia and, after graduation in 1990, became a member of the Groundlings improv com-edy troupe. Five years later, he joined the cast of TV’s Saturday Night Live, rocketing to comedic fame. During his seven years on the late-night sketch show, he branched out into movies, notably Elf, Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy and Talladega Nights. In 2010 he made his first film with Wahlberg, The Other Guys, a comedy about a pair of mismatched cops.
“My parents made life feel safe for me,” he says. “My father lived in the same com-munity and once the [divorce] dust settled he made a point of being very involved in raising us. We had a dad who was still in the picture. I was lucky.”
Mark ‘the Monkey’Wahlberg, 44, was not so fortunate. Growing up in a tough part of Boston’s Dorchester neighborhood as the youngest and small-est of nine kids born into a working-class family, he wore hand-me-down clothes and shared a bedroom with his five brothers. His nickname, which he hated, was “the Monkey” because, as a little boy, he dragged a stuffed monkey around with him.
Wahlberg’s mother, Alma, was a nurse’s aide. His late father, Donald, was a truck driver who held down two jobs to make ends meet. Wahlberg and his
dad were unusually close. When he was 10 his parents divorced, his dad moved out and Mark began getting into trouble.
“I still had a great relationship with my dad,” he says. “He did everything he could just to put food on the table. I admired that my dad was up at 3 every morning and went out and worked. I bounced back and forth between living with my mom and living with my dad. We only lived a couple miles apart.”
Even before his teen years, Wahlberg was headed down a troubled path, skip-
ping school, sneaking out of the house at night and drinking. He dropped out of school for good before he was old enough to drive. He robbed, stole cars and sold drugs. He was
arrested three times. Finally, at 16, he was convicted for assault and robbery and sentenced to Deer Island prison in Boston Harbor.
“It wasn’t until I got locked up that I woke up and realized that I wanted to turn my life around,” he says. “I real-ized that in order to have a good, honest,
Go to Parade.com/12dads to read about the top
Christmas movie fathers of all time.
1220_Feature3.indd 9 12/3/15 10:50 AM
12032015105552
© PARADE Publications 2015. All rights reserved.
PAGE: 10 CODE: 31A3 BOOK: 16 ISSUE: 12-20-15
10 | DECEMBER 20, 2015
decent life I had to do the work. I had to be willing to change. I had to start right there, from the bottom. When I started really doing good things, good things started happening for me.”
And happen they did. After his release, Wahlberg briefl y joined New Kids on the Block, his brother Donnie’s boy band, before fi nding solo success as rap star Marky Mark. He leveraged that to become the world’s most famous and sexi-est male underwear model for Calvin Klein. His notoriety be-came his ticket to Hollywood and he soon found critical success, at 24, as a movie actor opposite Leonardo DiCaprio in � e Basketball Diaries.
Wahlberg has since become one of the world’s top movie box offi ce draws, with starring roles in Boogie Nights, Lone Survivor, � e Gambler, � e Departed—a performance that earned him an Oscar nomina-tion—and the Ted fi lms, his blockbuster franchise co-star-ring a foulmouthed teddy bear.
Family menWhile Wahlberg and Ferrell are both children of divorce, they’ve each managed to maintain healthy marriages themselves—not the norm for Hollywood celebrities in their 40s.
“Well, I’m just lucky in terms of my wife, Viveca,” Ferrell says. He married the Swedish art auctioneer and sometime actress Viveca Paulin, 46, in 2000. � ey live in Southern California with their three sons, Magnus, 11; Mattias, 8; and Axel, 5.
“She has an unreal level of
understanding this business,” he says. “So much of the work is out of town for three months at a time. I’ve never heard her saying, ‘Really? You have
to leave again?’ She’s totally egoless about my work. She doesn’t play the guilt card. We take time every year to go off to Sweden during the sum-mer with the kids. I don’t work then. It’s an important time for us to be away.”
Wahlberg also boasts a suc-cessful Hollywood marriage, to fashion model Rhea Durham, 37. Before their marriage in 2009, they had three children
togther: Ella, 12; Michael, 9; and Brendan, 7. Grace, their youngest child, is 5.
“Sometimes marriage can be diffi cult,” he admits. “We both come from homes of divorce, but we want our marriage to be successful. We work at it.
We’ll go to couples counseling. We want to love and support each other, raise our kids and be there for each other in the good times and the bad. We both believe the same things, and we married for the same reasons. She was already Christian, but she converted to Catholicism so we could marry in the church. � at’s where I proposed, in the church. When you take those [marriage] vows, you take them very seriously. For me, [keeping them] starts with my doing the right thing in my own home, being a good example, making sure that my kids are raised the right way and do the right thing in the community and the church.”
Catholicism plays a defi ning role in Wahlberg’s life, and he makes no attempt to hide it. “I feel very welcomed within my church and the parish commu-nity,” he says. “I feel comfort . . . peace . . . love.”
In September, he acted as host to Pope Francis at the World Meeting of Families in Philadelphia. At the event, he half-jokingly apologized for having been in the raunchy movie Ted. “Holy Father, please forgive me,” he said to the pope. “I’ve always hoped that the good Lord has a sense of humor when it comes to many of the movies I’ve made.”
Christmas traditions Like Ferrell, Wahlberg’s chief complaint about the demands on his life is that he is not able to spend more time at home with his family.
“I wish they made more movies in L.A.,” Wahlberg says. “It would be nice to be
able to get up in the morning, get the kids to school, drive to work, come home, hang out with my family and sleep in my own bed.”
He’ll be in his own bed this Christmas.
“My wife is very much about the holidays,” Wahlberg says. “Everything has to be special and perfect. So on Christmas morning, when the kids are opening their gifts, I’m picking up the wrapping paper, put-ting it in the trash, and then I spend the rest of the day put-ting toys together and trying to get the stuff to work. My back will be killing me because the night before Christmas I’ll have spent hours in the garage putting gifts together, a bike or a go-kart or a playhouse, something.
“Seeing my kids get into the Christmas spirit, I’ll re-member when I was a kid and how important it was to us that my parents, no matter what, scraped money together to make Christmas a special, wonderful time. We’ll have a great Christmas!”
At the Ferrell home, it’s a big Swedish Christmas party “and Tomten, the Swedish Santa, visits,” Ferrell says. “It has been rumored that I’ve played Tom-ten on occasion, but don’t tell my kids. We give a gift to each child, but Tomten makes you earn it. Perhaps someone knows a little song? Or, for the little kids, can you count to fi ve? You have to do something. � e kids love it! I’ll sing ‘Jingle Bells.’ � at’s one of our traditions.”
At both households—make no mistake about it—Daddy’s defi nitely home.
“We click,” Will Ferrell says of Mark Wahlberg. “We literally work the same way, playing all the scenes
as real as possible. We don’t ever ‘wink’ at the camera.”
PR
OP
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1220_Feature3.indd 10 12/3/15 10:50 AM
12032015105552
© PARADE Publications 2015. All rights reserved.
PAGE: 11 CODE: 31A4 BOOK: 16 ISSUE: 12-20-15
We’ll go to couples counseling. We want to love and support each other, raise our kids and be there for each other in the good times and the bad. We both believe the same things, and we married for the same reasons. She was already Christian, but she converted to Catholicism so we could marry in the church. That’s where I proposed, in the church. When you take those [marriage] vows, you take them very seriously. For me, [keeping them] starts with my doing the right thing in my own home, being a good example, making sure that my kids are raised the right way and do the right thing in the community and the church.”
Catholicism plays a defining role in Wahlberg’s life, and he makes no attempt to hide it. “I feel very welcomed within my church and the parish commu-nity,” he says. “I feel comfort . . . peace . . . love.”
In September, he acted as host to Pope Francis at the World Meeting of Families in Philadelphia. At the event, he half-jokingly apologized for having been in the raunchy movie Ted. “Holy Father, please forgive me,” he said to the pope. “I’ve always hoped that the good Lord has a sense of humor when it comes to many of the movies I’ve made.”
Christmas traditions Like Ferrell, Wahlberg’s chief complaint about the demands on his life is that he is not able to spend more time at home with his family.
“I wish they made more movies in L.A.,” Wahlberg says. “It would be nice to be
DECEMBER 20, 2015 | 11
able to get up in the morning, get the kids to school, drive to work, come home, hang out with my family and sleep in my own bed.”
He’ll be in his own bed this Christmas.
“My wife is very much about the holidays,” Wahlberg says. “Everything has to be special and perfect. So on Christmas morning, when the kids are opening their gifts, I’m picking up the wrapping paper, put-ting it in the trash, and then I spend the rest of the day put-ting toys together and trying to get the stuff to work. My back will be killing me because the night before Christmas I’ll have spent hours in the garage putting gifts together, a bike or a go-kart or a playhouse, something.
“Seeing my kids get into the Christmas spirit, I’ll re-member when I was a kid and how important it was to us that my parents, no matter what, scraped money together to make Christmas a special, wonderful time. We’ll have a great Christmas!”
At the Ferrell home, it’s a big Swedish Christmas party “and Tomten, the Swedish Santa, visits,” Ferrell says. “It has been rumored that I’ve played Tom-ten on occasion, but don’t tell my kids. We give a gift to each child, but Tomten makes you earn it. Perhaps someone knows a little song? Or, for the little kids, can you count to five? You have to do something. The kids love it! I’ll sing ‘Jingle Bells.’ That’s one of our traditions.”
At both households—make no mistake about it—Daddy’s definitely home.
PR
OP
ST
YLIN
G B
Y W
AR
D R
OB
INS
ON
/WO
OD
EN
LA
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; F
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1220_Feature3.indd 11 12/2/15 3:32 PM
12022015153904 Approved with warnings
1 in 6 people struggles
with hunger in America.Join the Feeding America nationwide network of food banks to help
provide meals to people in need. Visit FeedingAmerica.org.
© PARADE Publications 2015. All rights reserved.
PAGE: 12 CODE: 75A1 BOOK: 16 ISSUE: 12-20-2015
E N I E B E L A TU
Ask MarilynBy Marilyn vos Savant
How did our flippant habit of referring to Christmas as Xmas ever get started?
—J.C., Ocala, Fla.
Many people are offended by the abbreviation and assume it’s a modern abomination. But, in fact, it’s at least 1,000 years old and was not meant to be disre-spectful or used that way. What appears to be an X in our modern Roman alphabet is actually the Greek letter chi, the first letter of the word Christos, meaning Christ. Two possibilities for the shortening: Use of the name of Christ in another word may have looked unseemly, or it may have been done for a religious reason. Either would mean that we now see the abbreviation as the op-posite of what was intended.
12 | DECEMBER 20, 2015
Send questions to marilyn @ parade.com
Complete 1 to 81 so the numbers follow a horizontal or vertical path—no diagonals.
77
75
5
7
11
These words follow a rule: beech, fir, pear, plum.
These words don’t follow it: birch, cherry, elm, palm.
Can you find the rule?
Answer: true, right, proper, correct, accurate.
Can you place each unused letter below into an empty box to form five words that are synonyms?
TRPCA
ETRTE
A CCC EE G H I OO P RRRRR T UU
Answer: Words have a homophone—an unrelated word that sounds the same
(beach, fur, pair or pare, plumb).
Can you place these two-letter blocks into the grid to form 10 rows of 10-letter words? (For example, one of only two blocks could start the last word: UN or US.)
AL AM AT BA BO CE CI CO DO EM EN EN EN ER EX FL HB HT IG IG IL IL LL LU LY ME MI NA NE NG NI NS NT NT ON OO OR PE PU RA RE RI ST TA TE TI TR UN US YA
Answer: illuminate, experiment, reputation, conscience, neighborly, tremendous,
ballooning, flamboyant, straighten, unilateral.
Mindbenders
1220_AskMarilyn.indd 12 12/2/15 3:24 PM
12022015153802
Client
Ad/Project Name
To Appear In
Bleed
Trim
Safety
Scale
Job # Filename
SETU
P
AHA_1418641_Page HeartUnderPressure7.25x10.25.indd
Ad Council
Heart Under Pressure
Magazine Full Page
7.25” x 10.25”
7” x 10”
6.5” x 9.5”
None
Studio Artist
Size Fold Color Print
Issue
Scale
Art Director
Copy Writer
Production Mgr.
Traffi c
Last Modifi ed
PER
SON
NEL
CO
NTE
NT
Fonts
Placed Graphics
Location
Inks
Helvetica Neue (65 Medium, 95 Black, 76 Bold Italic, 75 Bold; Type 1)
EKG_grid_Flat.psd (114 ppi; CMYK), AC_Logo_CMYK.eps, CCC_CMYK_V.ai Cyan Magenta Yellow Black
sjongsurasithiwatStudio
6-3-2014 11:39 AM
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H. Musson
sophia jongsurasithiwat / hmusson
This Ad Prepared By UniWorld Group, Inc.
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Uncontrolled high blood pressure could lead to stroke, heart attack or death. Get yours to a healthy range before it’s too late.
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Check. Change. Control.™
Dear Sam,
I thought we were in this together, but apparently I was wrong.
You’ve been ignoring me for a while. We don’t go for walks as often as we used to. You barely eat anything green anymore. And you don’t realize the daily pressure you put me under. It’s just too much.
I QUIT! Sincerely,
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S:6.5”
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B:10.25”
© PARADE Publications 2015. All rights reserved.
E N I E B E L A TU
Ask MarilynBy Marilyn vos Savant
How did our flippant habit of referring to Christmas as Xmas ever get started?
—J.C., Ocala, Fla.
Many people are offended by the abbreviation and assume it’s a modern abomination. But, in fact, it’s at least 1,000 years old and was not meant to be disre-spectful or used that way. What appears to be an X in our modern Roman alphabet is actually the Greek letter chi, the first letter of the word Christos, meaning Christ. Two possibilities for the shortening: Use of the name of Christ in another word may have looked unseemly, or it may have been done for a religious reason. Either would mean that we now see the abbreviation as the op-posite of what was intended.
PAGE: 13 CODE: 75A2 BOOK: 16 ISSUE: 12-20-2015
Send questions to marilyn @ parade.com
Numbrix®
Complete 1 to 81 so the numbers follow a horizontal or vertical path—no diagonals.
79
13
65
23
59
27
53
51
41
39
29
77
75
5
7
11
DECEMBER 20, 2015 | 13
These words follow a rule: beech, fir, pear, plum.
These words don’t follow it: birch, cherry, elm, palm.
Can you find the rule?
Answer: true, right, proper, correct, accurate.
Can you place each unused letter below into an empty box to form five words that are synonyms?
ETRTE
A CCC EE G H I OO P RRRRR T UU
Answer: Words have a homophone—an unrelated word that sounds the same
(beach, fur, pair or pare, plumb).
Can you place these two-letter blocks into the grid to form 10 rows of 10-letter words? (For example, one of only two blocks could start the last word: UN or US.)
AL AM AT BA BO CE CI CO DO EM EN EN EN ER EX FL HB HT IG IG IL IL LL LU LY ME MI NA NE NG NI NS NT NT ON OO OR PE PU RA RE RI ST TA TE TI TR UN US YA
Answer: illuminate, experiment, reputation, conscience, neighborly, tremendous,
ballooning, flamboyant, straighten, unilateral.
Mindbenders
1220_AskMarilyn.indd 13 12/2/15 3:24 PM
12022015153802
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© PARADE Publications 2015. All rights reserved.
PAGE: 14 CODE: 91A1 BOOK: 16 ISSUE: 12-20-15
14 | DECEMBER 20, 2015
Around the
MA
RK
BO
UG
HT
ON
PH
OT
OG
RA
PH
Y; S
TYL
ING
BY
TE
RE
SA
BL
AC
KB
UR
N
Here’s an easy way to add sweet, tart heat to the classic holiday ham. The secret is gochujang (go-choo-jang), a thick, fermented chile paste from Korea that many food watchers predict will soon rival
sriracha in American kitchens. (You can � nd gochujang at ethnic markets and at amazon.com.) Thanks to Korean-American chef Edward Lee, owner of the restaurant 610 Magnolia in Louisville, Ky., for this simple, spicy recipe.
—Alison Ashton
��GOCHUJANG-GLAZED HAM
Position rack in middle of oven. Preheat oven to 375°F. Whisk together ½ cup gochujang, ½ cup apple juice, ¼ cup maple syrup, 2 Tbsp espresso or strong coffee and 1 tsp Worcestershire sauce. Cut ¼-inch-deep slits 2 inches apart on the surface of 1 (6- to 7-pound) bone-in cooked ham in a crosshatch pattern. Place ham fat-side-up on a baking sheet, and brush generously with gochujang mixture. Bake 1 hour and 25 minutes, basting every 20 minutes. If ham browns too quickly, tent with foil. Remove ham from oven; let stand 10 minutes. Place remaining gochujang mixture in a small saucepan; bring to a boil. Slice ham and serve on a platter with gochujang sauce. Serves 12.
With
to Spice It Up With Gochujang
HolidayHolidayHoliday
HeatHeatHeatHeatHeatHeatHeatHamHamHam
3MORE WAYS
Add a dollop to meatloaf
or chili.
Stir into mayonnaise
to create asandwich spread or
dipping sauce.
Swirl a dash into melted butter and
drizzle over popcorn.
YOU COULD WIN
Win a gift basket of Chung Jung One gochujang and other goodies! To enter, visit Facebook.com/parademag and tell
us about your favorite spicy food.
1220_ATT.indd 14 12/2/15 3:27 PM
12022015153919 Approved with warnings
© PARADE Publications 2015. All rights reserved.
Endorsed by Professional ChefsEnjoyed by Real-Life Chefs
With the award-winning taste of GOYA® Green Olives, your holiday appetizers will be
unforgettable. Grown in the warm Spanish sun, these olives will bring a tangy and
distinct taste to your dishes. GOYA® Green Olives, the perfect quality ingredient
for real-life chefs. For more great recipes and coupons, visit goya.com
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The ChefsBest® Excellence Award is awarded to brands that surpassquality standards established by independent professional chefs.
INGREDIENTS
1 cup GOYA® Extra Virgin Olive Oil
1 orange, zested and juiced
2 tsp. fi nely chopped fresh rosemary
1 tsp. GOYA® Minced Garlic, or 2 cloves garlic, fi nely chopped
¼ tsp. hot pepper fl akes
1 jar (6.75 oz.) GOYA® Manzanilla Olives Stuf ed with Minced Pimientos, drained
2 jars (4 oz. each) GOYA® Fancy Pimientos, drained and sliced
1 pkg. (12 oz.) queso blanco (white cheese), cubed
Serves 15 | Prep time: 10 min. | Total time: 30 min., plus marinating time
Marinated Oliveand Cheese Skewers
DIRECTIONS
1. Add olive oil, orange juice and zest, rosemary,
garlic and hot pepper fl akes to small saucepan
over medium-high heat. Cook, stirring occasionally,
until mixture is warm and garlic is fragrant, about
2 minutes.
2. Place olives and pimientos in medium, non-reactive
bowl. Pour warm olive oil mixture over olives
and pimientos; set aside until cool. Stir in cheese;
cover with plastic wrap. Refrigerate at least 4
hours, or up to 3 days.
3. Alternately thread cheese, olives and pimientos
among thirty 6” skewers. Transfer to serving
plate; drizzle with marinade.
© PARADE Publications 2015. All rights reserved.
Photo
Cre
dit:
Kev
in L
ynch
Sta
nd U
p T
o C
ance
r is
a p
rogra
m o
f th
e Ente
rtain
men
t In
dust
ry F
oundatio
n (
EIF
), a
501(c
)(3)
charita
ble
org
aniz
atio
n.
Tony Goldwyn
Stand Up To Cancer Ambassador
Twenty years ago, my mother was diagnosed with lung cancer. She had very few places to turn, and lost a diffi cult struggle.
Today, we are on the brink of real breakthroughs in lung cancer research and there are signifi cantly improved treatment options.
And yet, more than 30% of all lung cancer patients still don’t
know about the therapies, specialists, and clinical trials
available to them.
Lung cancer is a formidable foe, but we are fi nding new
ways to fi ght it. Please visit SU2C.org/LungCancer for
questions to ask your health care professional and to learn about options that
may be right for you.
MY MOM DIDN’T HAVE MANY OPTIONS. TODAY’S LUNG CANCER PATIENTS DO.
SU2C.org/LungCancer
© PARADE Publications 2015. All rights reserved.