Showing posts with label kate mara. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kate mara. Show all posts

Sunday, July 22, 2007

Kate Mara – Photos and Everything I have written about NY Socialite and Actress

Read part 1 “Can a Socialite become a famous movie star?”

l"> Part 1

Read Part 2 of “Low profile Socialite becomes a movie star”

"> Part 2

Read Part 3 of “Low profile Socialite becomes a movie star cont..”

"> Part 3

Read Part 4 of New York’s Low profile family”

"> Part 4

Read Part 5 of “Low profile socialite sings national anthem”

"> Part 5

Read Part 6 of “The power of Socialite Rank Blog”

"> Part 6

Read Part 7 of “How to stop the leak in confidentiality”

"> Part 7

Read Part 8 of “How to contact Kate Mara”

Part 9

Find out more about the Author of this blog at his website Rob Tencer pr.

Find out more about the Author of this blog at his website Rob Tencer pr.

Monday, July 16, 2007

How to contact Kate Mara

If you’re a fan of Kate Mara Mara, you can use the following contact information for writing Kate a fan letter, and you can even ask for his autograph.

If you’re a filmmaker and think you can afford Kate for your movie, you can write or call his agent or manager or both.

Find out more about the Author of this blog at his website Rob Tencer pr.

Kate Mara
William Morris Agency (WMA)
Kenny Goodman - Talent Agent
One William Morris Pl.
Beverly Hills, CA 90212
USA
Phone: 310-859-4000
Fax: 310-859-4462
http://www.wma.com/
kgoodman@wma.com

PMK/HBH
Jennifer Allen – Publicist
700 San Vicente Blvd.
Ste. G910
West Hollywood, CA 90069
USA
Phone: 310-289-6200
Fax: 310-289-6677
http://www.pmkhbh.com/

Also check out:

Jade Yorker (Kobe Bryant)
TM Talent
Tamara Markowitz
Manager Phone: 732-972-4957
Fax: 732-972-2980
tmtalent@aol.com

Rob Tencer Public Relations
ayepublicrelations@gmail.com
248-808-2270


If you find this information valuable and helpful, please link to this blog, tag this blog on your favourite social bookmark like Reddit, Netscape, Del.Icio.Us, StumbleUpon, Slashdot, and to place my link on your myspace and facebook pages.


Find out much more about becoming famous from the following links:

Using Youtube to become famous

How to be famous


Find an Agent and Become Famous


How to be a famous Latin in the USA


Tips and Tricks for becoming Famous





Find out more about the Author of this blog at his website Rob Tencer pr.

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Kate Mara - the low profile NY socialite is in Teen Vogue

Kate Mara is in the April 2007 issue of Teen Vogue. The photo is from a red carpet event. She was also in the March issue of "WWD Scoop" and was seen March 12,2007 on "Late night with Conan O'Brien" and on March 14th on "The Late Late Show with Craig Kilborn." Her new movie opens at the end of March 2007 called "the Shooter"

Show me another New York High-Profile socialite who has half of her exposure?

Find out more about the Author of this blog at his website Rob Tencer pr.

Saturday, March 10, 2007

The power of socialiterank.com is huge



One day after my comment on socialiterank.com about low profile socialite / actress Kate Mara; she makes the fashion pages of Fashion Wire Daily. See it here! Mark Wahlberg and gorgeous Kate Mara (pictured together). wore a short white silk bustier-top Catherine Malandrino cocktail dress and schmoozed with director Antoine Fuqua and his wife, actress Lela Rochon, and the gaggle of familiar faces that joined them for the premiere. We spotted a very pregnant Jenna Elfman, as well as Djimon Hounsou, Jeremy Piven, Jill Hennessey, and Derek Luke on the crowded carpet.

Find out more about the Author of this blog at his website Rob Tencer pr.

Thursday, March 8, 2007

Low profile socialite sings national anthem at New York Giants game.




BTW: the game was televised nationally on NBC prime time.
Kate Mara starts Giant rout in style

By Ken Palmer
Giants Insider
Date: Oct 30, 2005

Kate Mara was fabulous. Wellington Mara’s granddaughter has sung the national anthem countless times before Giants games. But never under this bright a spotlight. However, there she was, decked out in a number 89 Giants jersey with the name ‘Duke’ on the back, beautifully belting out our national anthem in front of close to 80,000 fans.

“I’ve sung the national anthem so many times here, but this time was the most important and most special,” she told TGI in the stadium tunnel moments after her stirring performance. “I knew he was watching up there.”

Mara was backed – literally and figuratively – by 36 of her cousins, which she said was “really special.”

GM Ernie Accorsi was extremely impressed by Mara’s rendition and told her so afterward.

“I was crying and I wasn’t even singing,” Accorsi said. “How could she do that? I said to her it was magnificent. I told her she did a magnificent job.”

Mara said once she got started, the nerves disappeared.

“I was more nervous that I was going to cry during the moment of silence,” she said. “It’s been a really emotional week. It’s been an amazing week, all the stories about my grandfather. I was more nervous that I was going to start crying before I sang.”

While obviously a tough situation, Mara said she never even thought about passing up the opportunity.

“I wanted to do it for my grandfather as a thank you,” the 22-year-old said. “I wanted to do it for him.”

While sad he’s gone, Mara knows that her special grandfather will always be a part of her life.

“He meant everything to me,” she said. “He’s my hero. Every Sunday is like a reunion for our family. It’s hard to know he’s not going to be here with us, but we know that he’s going to be watching and he’ll be there in spirit.”…

Somewhere above, Wellington Mara is smiling down on all his Giants. Mr. Mara certainly loved to beat the Redskins. The Giants not only beat, but embarrassed the boys from DC on Sunday, in as fitting a tribute to their beloved owner as ever.

“It means the world,” Accorsi said of the victory. “He’s such a powerful influence in everybody’s life.”

“He was a great guy,” added former Giants and current Redskins DT Cornelius Griffin. “I loved playing for him. He was always around his players. That meant a lot to him. He’d come and talk to you no matter what.”

Mara always said his favorite game was the 1986 NFC Championship Game, which was part of the moving video tribute displayed on the stadium’s big screens during halftime. He might now have a co-favorite.

“It was pretty special for us, it really was,” John Mara said. “I never in my wildest dreams expected them to pitch a shutout. I just wish he could have been there to see it.”

After the game, Eli Manning presented Mara with the game ball.

“It was pretty special,” Mara said of the gesture. “I said, ‘don’t do this to me. I don’t know if I can hold my emotions any more than I have this week.’ Obviously it’s very gratifying.”

Jeremy Shockey symbolized the thoughts of the Giants when he pointed to the heavens while running out on the field before the game.

“It was obviously a very emotional game,” Shockley said. “We know he’s up there smiling, but in the same sense he’s probably saying get ready for San Francisco.”…

While so much has been made of all of Wellington Mara’s generous and loving ways, he sure knew a little something about football at the same time.

While he was a staple at practices, he especially loved being involved in the Giants draft meetings.

“It was his favorite time of year,” John Mara said. “Day after day, he would sit there as reports were read on every prospect. No matter how remote they were, he didn’t want to miss anything and he loved interacting with our scouts. He identified with them because he had been one himself for so many years.”

giants.scout.com/2/459561.html

Find out more about the Author of this blog at his website Rob Tencer pr.

Wednesday, March 7, 2007

New York's Low Profile Socialite family of Kate Mara


Giants win one for Mara
By Tony Moss
NFL Editor
Philadelphia, PA (Sports Network) - You knew the New York Giants were going to play with emotion on Sunday, but did anyone expect anything like this?
The G-Men came out and destroyed the Washington Redskins, 36-0, offering a positive conclusion to a difficult week defined by the death of owner Wellington Mara on Tuesday.
Giants running back Tiki Barber, who had visited Mara on Monday, talked following the legendary owner's funeral on the subject of how badly he wanted Sunday's win.
Boy, did he deliver.
Barber rushed 24 times for a career-high 206 yards and a touchdown, with his yardage total just 12 off of the franchise record. After his 4-yard touchdown scamper in the fourth quarter, Barber ran to the Giants' sideline and handed the ball to Tim McDonnell, one of 36 Mara's grandchildren that were in attendance on Sunday.
"I think there was emotion all week, in particular on the field today," said Barber. "It's hard to figure out what you're going to do or how you're going to react in a situation like we experienced this week, but I think we did what Mr. Mara would have wanted us to do, which is carry on, play the game to the best of our abilities, and go beat a big rival in the Redskins, and go get first place in our division. I think everything worked out the way it should be."
Even before Barber and company got around to honoring Mara with their play, the Giants franchise established the tone for the day's proceedings.
Kate Mara sings the national anthem with her family behind her as the Giants honored Wellington Mara's legacy.
The team wore a patch with the initials "WTM" on their jerseys, and the flags at the Meadowlands sports complex were lower to half-staff. Prior to the game, a moment of silence was held in memory of Mara. That was followed by the singing of the National Anthem by his granddaughter, Kate Mara - who wore a No. 89 jersey with Mara's nickname, "Duke," on the back. Kate Mara was accompanied on the field by 35 of Mara's other 39 grandchildren.
With that backdrop, the Redskins scarcely stood a chance.
Washington was held to 125 total yards and seven first downs on the day, suffering a shutout against a team that came into the day ranked near the bottom of the league in defense. The loss by the Redskins, coupled with a defeat for the Eagles in Denver, gave New York (5-2) sole possession of first place in the crowded NFC East.
"It was very fitting," said Giants head coach Tom Coughlin. "Mr. Mara loved a great defense and he loved to run the ball...We tried to get back to what Mr. Mara would want and that's focusing on football."
Following the victory, quarterback Eli Manning (12-of-31 passing, 146 yards, 1 TD, 1 INT) presented the game ball to Mara's son, John, who serves as Executive Vice President/Chief Operating Officer for the Giants.
Asked what his late father would have thought about Sunday's rout, Mara said, "I think he would have been pretty pleased to be honest with you. He would have had a big smile on his face and he would have been pretty pleased."
You must believe that the first-place Giants and their ecstatic fan base are echoing that sentiment at the moment.
A grab bag of news and notes from Week 8 of the NFL season:

this story can be found at:

http://www.sportsnetwork.com/default.asp?c=sportsnetwork&page=nfl/misc/moss/scrimmage_103005.htm

Find out more about the Author of this blog at his website Rob Tencer pr.

More about the low profile socialite Kate Mara


Here is some more about Kate Mara's acting career:

Since her 1997 television debut, Kate Mara has managed to appear in almost two dozen films and television shows. The actress, who was raised in Bedford, New York, kicked off her acting career at an exceedingly early age when she starred in one play after another at a variety of theater camps and after-school programs. Kate made her professional debut at the age of 13 in an episode of Law and Order, and followed that up in 1999 with small but pivotal roles in Random Hearts (opposite Harrison Ford) and Joe the King (opposite Ethan Hawke).

Appearances in several sitcoms and one-hour dramas followed -- including Ed, Nip/Tuck and Everwood. But it wasn’t until Kate landed a key role alongside fellow newcomer Aaron Stanford in Tadpole (2002) that both viewers and critics sat up and took notice of the up-and-coming actress. Kate cemented her star status with her electrifying turn on the fifth season of the hit Fox show 24 as analyst Shari Rothenberg (affectionately dubbed “New Edgar” by fans of the series). At the top of this hard-working actress’ pile of credentials is three high-profile films: Zoom (2006), with Tim Allen, We Are… Marshall (2006), with Matthew McConaughey and The Shooter (2007), with Mark Wahlberg.

Read a more definitive bio of Kate Mara in the comments to this blog.

Find out more about the Author of this blog at his website Rob Tencer pr.

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