Joshua Jackson and Diane Kruger recently attended the Mytheresa.com dinner together. Mytheresa is a German online retailer, specializing in luxury fashion and accessories, who recently mandated Goldman Sachs to find a buyer, according to Reuters. The "Dawson's Creek" star also recently spoke with Time magazine about a possible Mighty Ducks 4 movie.
Diane Kruger and Joshua Jackson were at the Mytheresa dinner to celebrate the announcement of her as the new mytheresa.com Woman. The dinner was held at the Goldstein Residence on Monday (June 2) in Los Angeles and was also attended by Kruger's "The Bridge" co-star Demian Bichir as well as Academy Award winning director Quentin Tarantino.
Kruger wore a Giambattista Valli dress to the event held at a Los Angeles landmark.
Jackson also recently spoke with Time magazine about his work as a Mighty Duck, as the movie recently celebrated its 20th anniversary.
Jackson said about auditioning for his role in D2: The Mighty Ducks, "God, I might be making this story up, but I think this is true. That this was my first lesson in Hollywood about bad auditions. I went in and I auditioned for Charlie, and then they asked me to audition for one of the other kids, and I think I was pretty upset by it because I didn't understand that that was a good thing. You know, that they were trying to see if you could do anything else. And then - if I remember correctly, the audition process was over and I guess they sort of put all the kids together to see how everybody interacted, and at the end of the day, I'm pretty sure that's how they cast the movie."
Diane Kruger's boyfriend continues to play hockey and said, "I play in a men's league here in L.A. and I still get that stuff all the time. It's hockey. If you're not talking shit, you're not really playing."
The 'Dawson's Creek' actor also gave Mighty Ducks fans hope saying, "I feel like a fourth film should happen, and if there was space for any of the original kids that come back and have a role, I would be surprised that anybody didn't want to do it."
Jackson added, "The next generation should have its own version. Not that we need to come back as adults, but I hope my kids grow up and play pickup hockey and I hope that they have their own movies like my generation had those movies. In that way, yeah, of course, I'd be a part of something like that."