• Posted by administrator
  • 08 Oct 2007

At the Di Modolo Party in Manhattan, silver screen star and beauty icon Catherine Zeta-Jones sat down to talk to reveal exclusively to OK! the secrets for how she and hubby Michael Douglas keep their marriage thriving after seven years.

You just celebrated your birthday — Did you do anything special?
We were in Bermuda and we had a big family munch and then we went out to dinner. It wasn’t a biggie. It wasn’t a big celebration. But when I turn 40, that’s when I’m going to have a huge bash!

How do you keep that spark alive in your marriage?
Well we’re kind to each other. We love each other very much. We have a lot of fun — a lot of fun — together. I lucked out big time.

Between work and children, do you ever feel like it’s all too much?
We take time out for ourselves. It’s very important so that in 20 years we don’t go, “Remember me? I’m married to you.”

Who have you noticed the kids take after more: you or Michael?
I see a lot of myself in both of them to the point where, with my daughter, I can read her like a book. She’s a mini me. I think they’re both a real mix between me and Michael. I think Dylan looks more like me and Carys is a mix of both.

Source: OK!

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  • Posted by administrator
  • 08 Aug 2007

Catherine Zeta-Jones is enjoying life with two kids – so how about having another?

“No,” Zeta-Jones, whose offspring with husband Michael Douglas are son Dylan, 7, and daughter Carys, 4, tells the U.K.’s Tatler magazine for its September issue. “I’d love to but my life is so hectic. I’m very happy with one of each.”

Having told PEOPLE last month that the best part of motherhood was hearing her kids say “Mama!,” the Wales-born No Reservations star, 37, tells the British publication, “They’re healthy, happy, funny … so I’m done.”

Married to Douglas since 2000, the Chicago Oscar winner recalls being young and single – and experiencing a not-particularly auspicious introduction to looking after babies.

At age 17 she was living in London and appearing in a West End production of the musical 42nd Street.

“I had a room in a single mum’s house, with this baby. I’d never changed a [diaper] before and she asked me one morning if I could look after the baby and I was like, What? I’ve got rehearsals at 3, and I don’t know whether I can do it … don’t leave me alone with a child!”

Flash forward to now, and the story is very different.

Continued Here: People

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