Jamie Lee Curtis: The 60 Minutes Interview
At 66, Jamie Lee Curtis is savoring a new wave of award-winning performances. Her decades-long career was an unexpected one, even though her parents were screen idols Tony Curtis and Janet Leigh.
At 66, Jamie Lee Curtis is savoring a new wave of award-winning performances. Her decades-long career was an unexpected one, even though her parents were screen idols Tony Curtis and Janet Leigh.
The Argentine Supreme Court has found documentation associated with the Nazi regime among its archives including propaganda materia.
Pope Leo, the first U.S.-born pope, will be inaugurated at a mass in St. Peter’s Square next week.
In a Truth Social post, President Trump promises to sign an executive order to lower the cost of medications.
The gift comes comes as President Trump heads to Qatar as part of his first international trip of his second term.
An Ironman athlete, told she’d never walk again after an accident more than six years ago, is now part of an early clinical trial, in which skull and spine implants help patients move paralyzed limbs.
Jamie Lee Curtis and 60 Minutes correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi viewed Hollywood props, costumes and scripts, including the original “Psycho” script once owned by her mother Janet Leigh and the little black dress from “True Lies,” from the Academy Collection.
Vatican City filled with hope and anticipation for new pope; Reporter’s Notebook: Who pays for tariffs?
Next week, 60 Minutes, speaks with tech billionaire Palmer Luckey, who has big ideas about the future of warfare. Luckey is the founder of Anduril, which makes a line of autonomous weapons.
A Swiss research center is trying to use innovative technology to help restore bodily functions for paralyzed patients—and even help Parkinson’s patients walk smoothly again.