Welcome to Leah Marie Online, the very first and most complete site online for the talented and stunning actress, Leah Marie Pipes! For three years, this site has been bringing all the latest news, pictures and more, and it's even visited and recognised by Leah herself. Enjoy the site and keep checking back!
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The gallery currently holds 8,000+ images!
The Deep End Status: Airing on ABC
Role: Beth Bancroft
Director: Timothy Busfield
Official site | IMDb
Sorority Row Status: Completed
Role: Jessica
Director: Stewart Hendler
Offical site | IMDb
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In the gallery, I do not tag images because they do not belong to me unless otherwise stated. If you see any of your images here that you want removed, please email me before taking any legal action, and I promise your images will be removed without delay. This is a non-profit site.
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New interview and belated birthday
There is a new interview with Leah Pipes that has just been released! It's about Sorority Row, so be sure to have a look. Make sure you click the link after the brief intro to read the full interview.
In Sorority Row, Leah Pipes plays Queen Bitch Jessica, leader of the Theta Pi sorority whose quest to be the best includes marrying a Senator's son and covering up the accidental murder of a sorority sister (played by The Hills' Audrina Patridge).
The youngest and least experienced of the actresses chosen for the film's leading roles, Leah Pipes relished the opportunity to get to play someone with a darker edge. With previous experience that included guest appearances on Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles and Angel, and a regular role on the CW series Life is Wild, the 21-year-old L.A. native will next be doing a mid-season legal dramedy for ABC, called The Deep End.
At the film's press day, Leah Pipes told IESB about how she convinced the filmmakers to let her play Jessica, when they kept pushing her to read for the shier, more timid Ellie (which is the role that went to Rumer Willis)
Also, I would like to wish Leah a happy belated 21st birthday! She turned 21 on 12th August, but I was unable to login and post an update due to some problems with my laptop. She's really grown up, and it's amazing, she was only 17 when I first opened this site. Of course since then, she's starred in more television and movies, and become more of a worldwide name. We've all literally watched her grow up on screen, and I am looking forward to seeing a lot more of her.
I just got a message from Leah to tell me she just joined Twitter! This will be an amazing way to recieve updates from her, so be sure to register/log in and follow her.
Some people think that girls don't like horror movies. But in the eyes of Audrina Patridge and her co-stars in the upcoming "Sorority Row," those people are dead wrong.
"It's about a group of sorority girls," the "Hills" star explained to us recently about her theatrical debut. "A prank goes wrong and then no one knows who it is, but there's a killer on the loose."
"There are some pretty sweet deaths in the script, I must say," Margo Harshman, one of her sorority sisters in the flick, added. "There are some pretty twisted, gnarly ones."
"But trust me, reading the script — with how sweet the death scenes are — it makes you want to die," Leah Pipes ("The Sarah Connor Chronicles") laughed. "You have to see them. They are so clever. It's like, 'Wow! I would never have thought of that!' "
"I have two words," volunteered Pipes. "Oral fixation."
"Oh, that's a bad one," Patridge grinned. "It is rated R!"
Although the trailer makes it look like Audrina ends up on the wrong end of one of those death scenes, the girls are keeping quiet about who lives and who dies. According to Patridge, it's these twists that make this movie such a roller-coaster ride.
"Whenever we watch the trailer, we are like, 'Oh my gosh!' " Patridge laughed. "I was always a big fan of 'Scream,' and I feel like 'Sorority Row,' for all [the younger] kids, it's their 'Scream.' There's a killer [and] you don't know who it is. It keeps you guessing."
"I like the house-party scene," Jamie Chung ("Dragonball Evolution") said of her favorite wild and crazy "Sorority" moment. "But no one died."
"Oh! The house party was pretty exciting," Rumer Willis ("The House Bunny") grinned. "There's a trampoline in the middle, and there's girls jumping [in pajamas] with their butt-flaps open. It was incredible! I've never seen anything like it."
And although it's a modern update of an '80s cult classic, these "Sorority" chicks insist that the new movie is going to be even bloodier and better.
"As soon as I read the script, I knew it was a remake of the 1983 film '[The House on] Sorority Row,' so I went and bought it and watched it," Audrina remembered. "It's similar, but very different. I think this one is a lot better than the one in the '80s — it has the same story but it's way better. It's bloodier — definitely gory — and it makes you jump. You don't know who the killer is, so it keeps you thinking and guessing — and you're wrong! It's just a great movie and a great remake, and I think it's going to be a hit."
"And come on," Leah Pipes, reassured of the film's success, added. "We have Audrina Patridge in our movie!"
As you can see, there is a brand new layout here at Leah Marie Online! I really didn't like the last one, the colours were too boring. I used photos from the ShoWest Awards, Leah's most recent event! She looked absoultely beautiful, and I have added no less than 118 photos from the event!
I am also sorry that I have not updated the site in a while. I went to London recently, and I missed the new event and couldn't really get online until now. Here is an article about the event:
"It was an amazing experience," gushes Audrina Patridge of the "Sorority Row" film shoot, brimming with the ebullience of a college girl rushing the coolest Greek house on campus. "The cast is so talented, and everybody did such an amazing job. I'm just so proud of it."
Another reason to be proud of the Stewart Hendler-helmed horror pic: The award that Patridge (as a rah-rah sorority sister with a cheating boyfriend on whom she and her friends play a prank) and her five castmates -- Jamie Chung, Briana Evigan, Margo Harshman, Leah Pipes and Rumer Willis -- collectively snapped up as ShoWest's Female Stars of Tomorrow.
"When I found out I was in shock," exclaims Patridge, "The Hills" star who is appearing in her first nonreality role. "I am so honored because I realize what a prestigious award it is (past alums include Abigail Breslin from last year). I'm so flattered, and it just encourages me to work harder as an actress and push myself to do better."
Evigan, who plays the "honest girl who wants to do the right thing" in "Sorority Row," was elated when she got the news.
"It's the industry's way of recognizing potential talent," says the bright-eyed newcomer, "and for an ensemble cast it's just an honor. Because of this event, our movie can really be seen and put out there."
Evigan credits the on- and off-set camaraderie among the actresses for the movie's encouraging critical response.
"The minute all the girls met, we had a big dinner," she notes of the rehearsal period leading up to the October shoot in Pittsburgh, and uses the words "goofy," "fun" and "loyal friend" to describe fellow castmate Willis.
"We all just clicked immediately," Evigan effuses. "We would all sleep during the day and we would film all night. It was 28 degrees, and we would form these heating packs to keep us warm where we'd huddle together and practice our lines. It was great. I've never had relationships like this before."