Hollywood vs. The Volcano: Ash disrupts celebs
                  
A volcanic cloud of ash hovering over Europe is causing quite a  scene in Hollywood and beyond.
The ash spat out by an Icelandic  volcano that has left thousands of air travelers stranded is also  affecting celebrities, filmmakers, musicians and even pro-wrestlers.
With  almost two-thirds of Europe's flights grounded, cancellations and  postponements were popping up across the entertainment landscape on  Saturday as Icelandic scientists warned that volcanic activity had  increased and showed no sign of abating.
Organizers of the  Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in Indio, California, tweeted  that some acts were forced to pull out of the weekend event, including  British rockers The Cribs and Bad Lieutenant, Scottish rockers  Frightened Rabbit, and British dance trio Delphic. It also appears  unlikely that British synth singer Gary Numan will make it to Coachella  for his Sunday slot.
"The last thing I expected this morning  when I woke up was to hear that volcanic ash might be preventing us from  flying to America," Numan posted on his Web site. "At the moment, the  very best British Airways are offering us, and this without any  guarantee, is to put us on a Sunday flight that gets into Los Angeles in  the afternoon on Sunday."
However, several performers from  Europe scheduled to perform at Coachella were already across the  Atlantic Ocean or had boarded planes before the volcanic cloud forced a  rash of flight cancellations. Those included Radiohead's Thom Yorke,  Gorillaz, Muse, Hot Chip, Fever Ray and Florence and the Machine.
Whitney  Houston was forced to ditch a plane for a ferry across the Irish Sea to  perform in Dublin. The R&B diva, currently in the middle of her  "Nothing But Love" world tour, opted for the not-so-glamorous boat ride  after no-fly orders shut down airports across Europe. Houston is  scheduled to perform the first of three shows Saturday at the O2 arena  in London.
Although scientists were indicating that travel chaos  could extend into the upcoming week, New York's Tribeca Film Festival,  which is set to begin Wednesday, had yet to receive any cancellations by  late Friday. The festival will feature films from nearly 40 countries  and several filmmakers from Europe had been planning to attend.
Worldwide  press junkets for two of the summer season's most anticipated films -  "Iron Man 2," starring Robert Downey Jr., and "Robin Hood," starring  Russell Crowe - also were still scheduled as planned next weekend in  London, according to studio officials.
Back in Hollywood,  Saturday's blue-carpet world premiere of Disneynature's "Oceans," at the  El Capitan Theatre was already prepared to hit bumpy waters. The film's  French director, Jacques Cluzaud, and producers won't be attending the  debut of their Disney documentary narrated by Pierce Brosnan and  starring underwater creatures. They're stuck overseas.

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