Sunday, December 21, 2025
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The Great Bill Withers, Dead at 81, Singer Songwriter of “Lean on Me,” “Ain’t No Sunshine,” Winner of 4 Grammy Awards

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The great R&B singer-songwriter Bill Withers has died at age 81. Literally, ain’t no sunshine when he’s gone.

Withers’ long list of classic hits includes “Lean on Me,” “Ain’t No Sunshine,” “Grandma’s Hands,” “Use Me,” “Just the Two of Us,” “Lovely Day.”

Bill’s family issued a statement. He is survived by his wife Marcia Johnson and their two children, Todd and Kori. The family statement reads:

“We are devastated by the loss of our beloved, devoted husband and father. A solitary man with a heart driven to connect to the world at large, with his poetry and music, he spoke honestly to people and connected them to each other. As private a life as he lived close to intimate family and friends, his music forever belongs to the world. In this difficult time, we pray his music offers comfort and entertainment as fans hold tight to loved ones.”

Withers, who was very much a loner in the music world, was married twice. His first wife was the gorgeous Denise Nicholas, of “Room 222” fame. They had a tempestuous one year marriage when each was at the top of their fame.

Bill won 4 Grammy Awards. His last one, in 1987, was 15 years after “Lean on Me” came out. But Club Nouveau had covered the classic, and it won Best R&B song.

Daytime Soaps: Self-Quarantining is Answer to Ratings Prayers as “Young and Restless” Adds 768K Viewers, All Shows Rise

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Corona virus is no joke, but it’s the best thing to happen to daytime TV maybe ever.

After OJ Simpson’s 1995 trial destroyed the soaps’ ratings, and the Impeachment hearings threatened to finish the job, afternoon soaps were having their own cliffhanger. Four major shows vanished in 2009-2010: “All My Children,” “One Life to Live,” “As the World Turns,” and “Guiding Light.”

Two weeks ago, “The Young and the Restless” had its run at number 1 broken for the first time since 1998.

But then, the world was sent home. Suddenly no one had anything to do. And apparently a lot of them watched TV.

For the week of March 23-27th, “Y&R” added 768,000 viewers. It returned to number 1.
“The Bold and the Beautiful” picked up 40,000. “General Hospital” was upped by 103,000. “Days of our Lives” went up 152,000.

Here is a unique moment for the remaining four soaps. As long as people are kept home from work, the soaps should rise dramatically in the ratings. If only they could react to it. But the shows tape six weeks in advance, and now they are on hiatus. “Days of our Lives” tapes six months in advance, so they’ve got shows through the fall.

To parse out what’s left of their taped shows, “General Hospital” is cutting back to 4 days a week of new episodes, and showing “classic” episodes on Fridays. “”Y&R” and “B&B” will likely do the same.

Of course, the funny part of fans returning after many years is seeing the same actors still playing those parts from 20 years ago. That actually may prove to be comforting in this unsettling time. It’s unusual, but, yes, comforting to see Deidre Hall hasn’t aged since 1985. But that’s the magic of TV.

Movie Summer is Over as Paramount Moves Tom Cruise “Top Gun: Maverick” to Christmas, “A Quiet Place II” to Labor Day

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Movie summer is over.

Paramount has moved Tom Cruise’s blockbuster-to-be, “Top Gun: Maverick” from June to Christmas. They’ve also sent “A Quiet Place Part 2” to Labor Day. It was supposed to have opened last month.

As well, they’ve sent “The Sponge Bob Movie: Sponge on the Run,” to the end of July.

This leaves just Warner Bros. to decide if “Wonder Woman 1984” and Christopher Nolan’s “Tenet” will open this summer. But remember, they don’t have Cannes as a launching pad, and marketing general will be touchy as Memorial Day approaches.

More importantly, we have to start thinking about what’s ahead for the film world through the summer at least. The Venice, Telluride, and Toronto Film Festivals are in tremendous doubt at this point. Italy is never going to recommend thousands of VIPS arriving in Venice after what they’ve been through this year. Photo calls are the last thing they’re going to want.  As for Telluride and Toronto, things look ominous today.

 

John Mayer Goes After David Geffen with Satirical Song, “Drone Shot of My Yacht” Mocking Entertainment Mogul

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Singer-guitarist John Mayer has gone after entertainment mogul David Geffen. He’s posted a satirical song called “Drone Shot of My Yacht”– just a snippet, but he’s threatening to release a whole record. Mayer is mocking Geffen for posting shots of his mega yacht floating in the Grenadines, far from the corona virus. It’s pretty funny. Geffen took down his Instagram account after getting a ton of criticism.

Mayer also posted about jazz great Wallace Roney, who we lost yesterday. See below. Also gone are Ellis Marsalis and Bucky Pizzarelli. Towering legends.

“I had the honor of playing with Wallace Roney in the winter of 2014, during a week-long recording session of improvised music. Wallace was a beautiful soul and a divine musician. He was Miles Davis’ only true protégé, and though he could channel (brilliantly) the spirit of his mentor, he played from his own heart, always breaking quickly through the cloud of the unknown and into deeply inspired territory. Wallace passed away due to complications from COVID-19. My wish is that every soul lost to this disease be remembered as individually as the lives they lived. I’m so lucky to have had the opportunity to make music with him. Rest in eternal peace, Wallace Roney.”

Tony Nominated Broadway Star Nick Cordero Unconscious in the ICU from Coronavirus, Wife Asks for Prayers

Tony nominated Broadway star Nick Cordero is fighting for his life in a Manhattan hospital. His wife, Amanda Kloots, posted to Instagram that he’s in the ICY and unconscious. Nick’s professional background is knockout performances in “Bullets over Broadway” (Tony nomination) and “A Bronx Tale.” He was most recently featured in “Waitress.” He’s one of Broadway’s brightest young stars. But I’ve also known him for a while, interviewed him and had long talks with him and his wife, and he is just the best. So is she. So we are all sending prayers for him to get well ASAP.

“My sweet husband needs your prayers please. Nick has been sick for awhile with what we were told last week was pneumonia. Unfortunately we think he was misdiagnosed and we are waiting to hear if this is in fact COVID. He is scared, in the ICU and now unconscious so his body can get enough oxygen. We are all trying to stay positive and strong knowing that he is in the best care. I miss him terribly. I’m not allowed there to visit of course and can do nothing to help him. Nick is scared too, this has gone from bad to worse. He isn’t allowed to eat or drink, he is very weak and having a hard time breathing. Elvis and I are feeling completely fine. My hubby is fighting like a champ but this is serious. Please stay home everybody. Thank you to everyone who has been helping us so far you know who are and you are all angels.”

View this post on Instagram

My sweet husband needs your prayers please. Nick has been sick for awhile with what we were told last week was pneumonia. Unfortunately we think he was misdiagnosed and we are waiting to hear if this is in fact COVID. He is scared, in the ICU and now unconscious so his body can get enough oxygen. We are all trying to stay positive and strong knowing that he is in the best care. I miss him terribly. I’m not allowed there to visit of course and can do nothing to help him. Nick is scared too, this has gone from bad to worse. He isn’t allowed to eat or drink, he is very weak and having a hard time breathing. Elvis and I are feeling completely fine. My hubby is fighting like a champ but this is serious. Please stay home everybody. Thank you to everyone who has been helping us so far you know who are and you are all angels. 🙏🏻

A post shared by AK! ⭐️ (@amandakloots) on

William Wolf, Esteemed Theater Critic, Former Head of the Drama Desk, Dies from Corona Virus

The great theater critic William Wolf passed away over the weekend. He was in his late 80s. He was a real presence in our lives for decades. William had a tremendous sense of humor and an engaging manner. He was also a gifted critic of both movies and theater. If coronavirus hadn’t felled him he would have been busy as ever this season. I am so sorry that this was his end. As with all the others I’ve written about in the last few days, this was a cruel finale to a great life well lived.

I’m going to reprint what the Drama Desk sent me today:

Author, critic, and educator, William was the 22nd president of the Drama Desk. He also served a term as chair of the New York Film Critics Circle.

William was part of a golden age in magazine journalism in New York. Beginning in 1964, he was film critic for Cue Magazine. When Cue was absorbed into New York Magazine, he became an editor and critic there. In the 1980s, his film criticism and features were syndicated by Gannett.

William is author of The Marx Brothers (1975), a volume of the Pyramid Illustrated History of the Movies, and, with his wife, Lillian Kramer Wolf, of Landmark Films: The Cinema and Our Century (1979). As an academic, he had a long association with New York University, teaching film-related classes in multiple departments. In recent years, he conducted a popular movie preview class at Lincoln Center, where he screened and discussed soon-to-to-be-released motion pictures and interviewed filmmakers and actors.

Throughout his career, William was a prolific interviewer. His taped conversations with actors, directors, and other film and theater artists are included in the Rodgers and Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound at the New York Library of the Performing Arts.

As yet, no funeral or memorial plans are being announced, and Bill’s family hasn’t designated a preferred recipient or recipients of memorial gifts.

UPDATED Adam Schlesinger of Fountains of Wayne, Dies at 52 from Coronavirus, Oscar Nominated for Tom Hanks Movie, Wrote “Stacy’s Mom”

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THURSDAY MORNING: There are a lot of tributes all over the internet. Micky Dolenz says:

“Adam was a joy to work with on every level. Smart, creative, sophisticated … the real deal. Tragic loss. There really are no words.”

 

The saddest news is that Adam Schlesinger died today at age 52. The Fountains of Wayne frontman was in an induced coma, which his lawyer lied about yesterday to Variety.

Schlesinger was Oscar nominated for Best Song for the title track to Tom Hanks’s “That Thing You Do!” His most famous Fountains of Wayne song was “Stacy’s Mom.” He wrote the music and lyrics for the Broadway musical based on John Waters’ “Cry Baby.”

As I wrote yesterday, or some day not sure, I met Adam when he wrote and produced the Monkees’ big hit comeback album, “Good Times,” in 2016. Peter Tork was still alive then. He and Micky Dolenz played Town Hall in New York, Adam was there, and we all spent the evening together. He was such a lovely guy, so smart about music, very clever. This is really a terrible tragedy.

Condolences to Adam’s family and friends.

Read The Harrowing Story of How Rocker Alan Merrill, Writer of “I Love Rock and Roll,” Died in NY at Mt. Sinai Hospital

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Joanna Lisanti, wife of Alan Merrill, posted this to Facebook. It is really outrageous. Mt. Sinai Hospital should be ashamed of themselves. Alan died Sunday at age 69. He leaves his wife, Joanna, his mother, famed jazz singer Helen Merrill, cousin actor Jon Bernthal, and numbers of fans, friends, and other family.

From Alan Merrill’s wife:

“Initially I didn’t think I could bear to burden everyone on FB with the announcement of my husband’s death. But since it is now out there, I’d like to say something about the awful truth about the treatment of the virus in a respected hospital, in NYC, in this COUNTRY.

Since I have posted this story many people have asked if they could share to let people know. Yes, please do, I would like as many people as possible to take precautions.

About 2 weeks ago, Alan felt like he was getting a cold and then the flu. I was immediately suspicious, and of course Alan being Alan, he told me I was getting hysterical for no reason. I nonetheless researched about what to do if you get the Cornavirus. Every article I read said that there is no help available unless you have severe symptoms -can’t breathe or you chest really hurts. Otherwise the hospital will not admit you or test you for Covid-19. And this was absolutely true.

There was nothing I could do for Alan except watch him get worse. When he finally couldn’t breathe, was so cold he needed piles of blankets on top of him, and couldn’t sleep, I called an ambulance. The EMTs told me I wasn’t allowed to go with him into the ER, so there was no point in accompanying him. I didn’t know what was going on until an ER doctor called me an hour later. She said as far as she could tell (good thing she’s a doctor) he had the virus but he needed to be tested before he could be admitted to ICU. But that would take at least 10 hours.

Ten hours later I didn’t hear back, so I called Mt. Sinai and was told he did test positive and would be moved to ICU so he could get better attention from the pulmonologists there. At 10:30 a doctor called me and told me they were actually NOT moving him since his body was shutting down because his lungs were too destroyed to work. I asked if he had to die alone, and the doctor said I could come say goodbye. When I got to the hospital I had to argue with 3 different security guards to let me go to the ER. I stood my ground and they went back to fetch a nurse who let me in. This was around 11pm.

The doctor who called me came to meet me and apologized and said that his numbers were now better and he was going to be transferred to the ICU where he could get the care he needed. He was on a respirator and was sedated, so he was not in pain, or at least aware of the pain.

My husband should have been moved to the place where the experts who who were there on the front lines could help him. Every 15 minutes I would ask when he was going to be transferred and they would say in the next few minutes, but that never happened. At around 2:30 am, they were finally ready to transfer him upstairs,
and I left, exhausted, not willing to battle another group of security guards in ICU.

I walked 3 blocks towards home and the doctor called me to say he was gone, his heart and lungs just stopped beating from all the pressure they were under.

So the net net is he was only allowed in the hospital until he was most certainly dying, and then he languished in ER for 14 hours while they tested him for corona, which he obviously had, and struggled to find someone to take him upstairs to ICU. Maybe if he was there, he would have had a fighting chance at least for those 15 hours, but of course we will never know. And now I have to grieve alone in quarantine.

I also want to relate that I asked the doctor if I should be tested since I was around Alan for two weeks. He said if I came in looking like I did, the hospital would not let me in. However, if I couldn’t breathe, I should come in and then they would admit me and test me. So essentially you have to be near dead to get help. I know there is no cure, but surely there is something they can do to alleviate the risk your lungs being destroyed, like sending oxygen to people’s homes?

Please know that I write this not for sympathy, but to let you know the reality of this disease and our country’s lack of preparation for it.

I urge you to REALLY take this seriously, and when the time comes, show your anger to the officials who knew this was coming and did nothing to prepare.

Alan I can’t even begin to imagine the ways in which I will miss you. I am sure that you are so happy that you are finally getting the credit for writing one of the world’s most beloved anthems. Your family and the world is sadder without you.

UPDATE: “Search has ended for today” for Famed Artist and Photographer Peter Beard, Missing in Montauk Since Tuesday Night, Will Resume Tomorrow

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5pm Wednesday update: East Hampton/Montauk police have ended the search for today for Peter. They will resume at 6am tomorrow. I’m sorry to say this doesn’t sound good. If only Peter were on one of great adventures in Africa. He was indomitable. Is. Sending positive thoughts to his family. If anyone has positive stories about Peter, fun and scandalous, please contact me at showbiz411@gmail.com.

Earlier:

First, I can’t believe Peter Beard is 82, or that he has dementia. The famed artist and photographer shot and loved beautiful women, stalked wildlife with his camera. He is and was and has been a fixture on the New York nightlife parade my entire life.

But Tuesday night he went missing from his home on the Montauk cliffs. They say he “wandered away.” A dramatic exit for Peter? There could be nothing less. But let’s pray and hope he’s ok.

Peter’s wife now and for a long time is Nejma. They have a daughter, Zara. His second wife was model Cheryl Tiegs, from 1981 to 83. No kids. Before that he was married briefly to Minne Cushing, of Newport society, in 1961. The wedding was lavish and featured over and over in magazines.

In the 70s, Peter was a man on the prowl in New York, star of Andy Warhol’s scene, fixture at Studio 54. His girlfriends and lady friends ranged from Lee Radziwill to Candice Bergen to a long list of models including Lauren Hutton, Carole Bouquet and so many others including beauty Maureen Gallagher, whom he lived with while married to Nejma. Believe me, there’s enough to write two books.

Now we wait, and reminisce about all the items we wrote about the crazy life of Peter Beard. Let’s hope he’s ok.

Kennedy Center Chaos Continues as National Symphony Orchestra Sends Legal Letter to Rubenstein, Rutter Over Firings

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The members of the NSO sent a legal letter today to David Rubenstein and Deborah Rutter of the Kennedy Center over the firing of the symphony orchestra. The Kennedy Center was just announced as the recipient of $25 million to maintain itself when they made this egregious decision. I told you that the Kennedy Center is well funded and can certainly afford to pay the orchestra during this time. Rubenstein is a multi-multi millionaire. Rutter makes $1.3 million a year. Salaries for executives at the Center are almost $5 million a year. This is shameful behavior.

Here’s the release from the NSO:

Washington, DC—Today, the musicians of the National Symphony Orchestra released a statement firing back at Kennedy Center President Deborah Rutter’s decision to furlough the musicians, making their last paycheck April 3rd. Rutter also threatened to take away the healthcare of the musicians past May. The announcement comes on the heels of the news that the Kennedy Center would receive a $25 million grant as part of the coronavirus stimulus package.

On Tuesday, the musicians sent a legal letter to Kennedy Center management, challenging the legality of the decision to furlough them. The letter notes in part:

“In particular, we write to respond to the Kennedy Center’s position, as expressed on our call yesterday, that it unilaterally can “suspend” the parties’ entire collective bargaining agreement (“CBA”) because of “exigent circumstances” on one week’s notice. That position is baseless.”

Said Steve Wilson, bassoonist and Co-Chair of the Orchestra Committee:

“On the same day that President Trump signed the stimulus package that would send $25 million to the Kennedy Center for, among other expenses, employee compensation, Kennedy Center president Deborah Rutter illegally decided to stop paying us, and refused to promise to continue our healthcare past May.

“We were glad to learn yesterday that the Center has now decided that it will cover ‘full healthcare benefits for all furloughed employees.’ But it is unfortunate that Rutter and Kennedy Center management have opted to violate our contract and federal labor law rather than come to us to discuss a collective solution.

“We understand that the COVID crisis affects everyone. That’s why we have, throughout, been willing to collaborate and discuss ways to work with Kennedy Center management during this challenging time. Illegally breaking our contract isn’t an option here.

“Much smaller and less-resourced organizations than the Kennedy Center have managed to take care of their workers. We’d hope that the Kennedy Center – part of the federal government – could be a standard-bearer, rather than leading the race to the bottom.”