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Pitchperfect stars
Pitchperfect stars







pitchperfect stars

E! News was first to confirm the news Wednesday. It is unclear how long the actor, 33, and the Fancy Sprinkles founder, 35, have been broken up. The source also said the exes “still love and support each other a lot” and concluded, “It’s definitely hard for both of them.”Ī rep for Astin did not immediately return Page Six’s request for comment. The insider added, “Lisa’s business is growing like crazy, Skylar was in Canada working for half the time they were together, and they both just needed some time to recalibrate on their own.” “Pitch Perfect” star Skylar Astin and his girlfriend, Lisa Stelly, have reportedly broken up after more than a year of dating.Ī source gave People some insight into the split Wednesday, saying, “They’re both so busy, but there is no drama between them at all.” That's my face.Anna Camp files for divorce from Skylar Astin Seeing himself on screen - way more times than he imagined he would. "It feels like it didn't happen."īut he does remember one thing distinctly. "The whole day was such a blur," he says. He barely made it, slipping into a seat next to his fellow Treblemakers with 10 minutes to spare. was on a flight with his mom to the West Coast. So, he woke up at 7 a.m., walked across the stage, shook the chancellor's hand and grabbed his diploma before noon.

#PITCHPERFECT STARS MOVIE#

With the movie enjoying success heading into its third week at the box office, Moock still feels the high of the red-carpet premiere in Los Angeles.Īs it happens, it also was the day of Vanderbilt graduation. He just kept telling himself: "Play it cool." And the first weekend of filming, he found himself eating dinner in a Melting Pot with Ben Platt, who plays Benji Applebaum the movie's female star, Anna Kendrick (Beca) and her boyfriend. There was a trailer with a star on the door and his name. In May, he was back in Baton Rouge for filming. "I will remember it forever," Moock says. A week later, he learned he had been cast as a member of one of the movie's two main a cappella groups, The Treblemakers: "This is your date.

pitchperfect stars

It just so happened that Banks, who provided hilariously inappropriate commentary as an a cappella competition announcer in "Pitch Perfect," was set to produce the sequel - and she was looking for singers.Īfterward, he sat in his hotel, turned on some basketball and started writing a 15-page finals paper for his business strategy class, which was due the next day. That friend shared it with a law partner, who is friends with Elizabeth Banks. The uncle had shared the video with a friend who does freelance movies. For about a month nothing much happened, Facebook generating just a few views here and there.īut then, in mid-January last year, Moock got a call from his uncle, a stock broker from Dallas.

pitchperfect stars

That's how a video, "Sweater Weather," in which Moock sang the solo, found its way to social media. He became part of a brotherhood of bass, baritone and tenors whose voices mimicked instruments in remarkable ways.Īnd, as we all seem to do these days, the Melodores were in to recording performances and putting them on YouTube. (He did score a girl's phone number, so that was cool.)īut the journey truly began when Moock, known as "the music guy" in high school, made the decision to attend Vanderbilt and try out for its all-male a cappella group, the Melodores. Or to his eighth-grade self, a curly haired kid whose mom persuaded him to brave the stage in the middle school talent show with a performance of "How to Save a Life," even though singing wasn't cool. Well, one could flash all the way back to the 2-year-old Moock in the Oklahoma City children's choir, who laid flat on the stage in embarrassment and terror when it came time to sing.









Pitchperfect stars