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The Hard Rock Hotel in Las Vegas is Closing After 25 Years: Memories of Kevin Costner, The Eagles, and George Clooney

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I just heard that the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas is closing after almost exactly 25 years. I went to the opening weekend in March 1995 and wrote about it for New York magazine. A quarter of a century has passed. Amazing.

What do I remember about the opening weekend? A lot. The Eagles played a concert to open the music venue, which was called The Joint. Their famed manager, Irving Azoff, came in during rehearsal, saw the name ‘The Joint’ hanging over the stage and made the manager take it down. He didn’t want the drug reference.

Peter Morton brought in a lot of celebrities for the opening. Among them was George Clooney, an overnight sensation on “ER.” New York Post Page Six columnist Richard Johnson and I played black jack with him. I finally folded, but Richard continued on. A lot of people were just going to sleep the next morning when I came down for breakfast.

But the big ‘get’ of the weekend was Kevin Costner. He was up in the balcony, where there were bar tables, watching the show. Everyone was jammed in. Janet Charlton, the peripatetic columnist for the National Enquirer, spotted him and came running out. She said, “Kevin Costner’s in there and he’s got his hands up some girl’s sweater!”

My curiosity was piqued because Costner was filming “Waterworld,” already rumored to be a gigantic disaster. Word was he’d fired the director, Kevin Reynolds, and had taken over. So I took Janet’s directions and headed into the darkened room. The Eagles were singing “Hotel California.” I settled onto the wooden barstool next to Kevin. The girl turned out to be Kevyn Wynn, daughter of Steve and Elaine Wynn. After introducing myself I asked him all about “Waterworld.” I couldn’t take notes because I was jammed in between the Kevins and the stranger to my right.

After we finished talking, I ran outside into the lounge, pulled out a pad and pen. Merle Ginsberg, another journalist on the trip, was waiting for me. She said, “What happened?” I said, “You be Kevin, I’m me, I’m re-creating the conversation!” The result was a good story for New York’s Intelligencer, the column I wrote with Pat Wechsler. It was called “A Tale of Three Kevins.”

The next day I called Kevyn Wynn, who’d actually been kidnapped two years earlier. Her ransom had been $2.5 million but her dad negotiated it down to $1.45 million. The kidnappers were caught and sent to jail. Somehow, Kevin and Kevyn had met along the way and had become great pals. Maybe they still are. Who knows?

To me, the Hard Rock was much more interesting than the other casino hotels. Because of the rock connection, they had accumulated a ton of memorabilia. I hope it’s going now to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland. The design was cool, too, very David Rockwell before its time. The crowd that came, at least at the beginning, was of a higher quality than say, Ballys, or the Golden Nugget.

Well, all good things come to an end. And so will the Hard Rock. But the memories live on. “Waterworld,” of course, was a bomb, as were “The Postman” and a few others that followed. Still, Costner has prospered and has turned out to be a keeper in Hollywood despite a lot of razzing. The Hard Rock will be renovated and rebranded by Richard Branson and friends as a Virgin Hotel. It’s going to be run by the Mohegan Hotel people from Connecticut, making it the first Las Vegas venue run by Native Americans. And Kevyn Wynn? I guess she’s 52 now (holy smokes!). She’s a celebrity in Vegas, owns a big home in Pacific Palisades, and has a line of luxury slippers. Everything has worked out for the best.

Good News for Soap Fans: NBC Renews “Days of our Lives” for 56th Season, Maybe They’ll Get a Bigger Production Budget

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Good news for soap opera fans.

Unbelievably, NBC has renewed “Days of our Lives” for its 56th season. The show is fourth among the four soaps and is always teetering on the brink of cancellation. But headwriter Ron Carlivati has injected life into the show in the last couple of years. They have a clever overall story going on right now after time jumping one year into the future.

“Days of our Lives” was created by Ted and Betty Corday in 1965. They came to NBC after a long run with CBS and Procter & Gamble. Ted Corday died 10 months after the show went on the air, and for a long time it was run by Betty until their son Ken came into the business.

Susan Seaforth Hayes arrived in 1968, and has been with the show on and off ever since then. Bill Hayes, who became her husband, joined the show three years later. He will be 95 years young on June 5th, and was just featured in a big story with lots of on air time. Good for him!

The other senior cast members include Deidre Hall, who’s been there on and off since 1976, Suzanne Rogers (1973), James Reynolds (1981), 86 year old John Aniston (1985), Drake Hogestyn (1986), and Kristian Alfonso (1983). They may not even be real anymore, just astral projections or holograms.

 

Newly Minted Five Time Grammy Winner Billie Eilish to Perform on the Oscars: James Bond Tie In?

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How to get young people interested in watching the Oscars? Give them their new musical hero, Billie Eilish, age 18. She just won five Grammys of her own (plus two for her brother Finneas) at the Grammy Awards.

Eilish will perform at this year’s Academy Awards on February 9th. It’s unclear what she’ll be singing, but she could debut the theme song for the new James Bond movie, “No Time to Die.” That film opens on April 10th.

But it’s a little early to drop that single. Maybe Eilish can sing a medley of James Bond songs from past movies.

Whatever she does, Eilish will get a lot of good PR for the Academy and for herself. It’s a smart idea from this year’s Oscarcast producers, Lynette Taylor Howell and Stephanie Allain. The latter has a special connection to the music biz: she’s married to Stephen Bray, who collaborated with Madonna on many hits and had his own with the group Breakfast Club.  It’s an interesting move for the Oscars, a pretty good idea.

 

RIP Beloved Soap Opera Actress Marj Dusay of “Guiding Light” Fame, and Star of Memorable “Star Trek” Episode

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Beloved soap opera actress Marj Dusay as died at age 83. She played haughty wealthy matriarch Alexandra Spaulding on the long running CBS soap “Guiding Light” from 1993 til the show’s finale in 2009. During her run Dusay left for a starring role on “All My Children,” but she returned after a couple of years. (Joan Collins briefly filled in for her.) She was also well known to fans of the soap “Capitol” and “Santa Barbara.”

Dusay also made a mark for herself on the original “Star Trek” TV series. She played the role of Kara in a memorable episode called “Spock’s Brain” in which she took the famous Vulcan’s brain for further examination. I assume she gave it back. “Star Trek” fans cite that episode as either one of the best or one of the worst, but it made its mark.

Dusay’s imdb resume covers a lot of roles in episodic TV in the 60s, 70s, and 80s. She was also well known for playing Blair’s mother on “The Facts of Life.” She always played wealthy mothers who disapproved of her children’s choices, only to be brought around, and she was great at it. For soap fans, she will be sorely missed. Condolences to her family.

Radio Out: Legendary New York Deejay Harry Harrison of WABC and CBS FM Fame, Has Died at 89

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The legendary morning radio disc jockey Harry Harrison has died at age 89. He was in ill health for sometime. I woke up to Harry for most of my life, certainly from the late 60s on 77 WABC until his retirement from oldies station CBS FM (this was when it was really oldies and not the current crap from the 1980s).

Harry’s death means that all the great jocks from the most classic lineup are now dead: Harry, Ron Lundy, and Dan Ingram. Even Chuck Leonard is gone. They are survived by “Cousin Brucie” Bruce Morrow.

Harry started his career in 1959 as a WMCA “Good Guy.” But it wasn’t until he joined rock station WABC, 77 on the dial, as morning man, that his career skyrocketed. As the so to speak lead hitter in a line up of stars, Harry ruled the airwaves from 6am to 10am from then until 1980 when he moved to WCBS FM. The writing was already on the wall for WABC, and by the mid 80s most of the jocks moved to CBS FM. He left his daily position in 2003 but returned to a weekly slot in 2004. When the station collapsed in 2005, Harry retired for good.

Yes, Don Imus was popular being shocking. And he left a big footprint in New York. But Harry was where you went for comfort, positivity, and a jump on the morning. You could get through your day with the sound of Harry’s reassuring voice mixing the best pop songs of the day with the headlines. And think of those headlines– Vietnam, Watergate, student riots.

WABC, I should note, played hits of all kinds. This will seem odd to anyone who listens to radio now. Pop, rock, country, R&B were all in one place. It was a magical time. Isn’t it interesting that race relations are worse than ever now that radio is fractured into “genres” — aka segregated by color. WABC was overtaken by hateful conservative talk shows like Rush Limbaugh and Mike Savage. What a shame.

Harry, you will never be forgotten.

Grammy Awards Snubbed Lifetime Achievement Winners Again, With Roberta Flack, Iggy Pop, Chuck D, Philip Glass Ignored

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There are already plenty of articles about how the Grammys spelled Ric Ocasek’s name wrong during the In Memoriam segment, and omitted a number of important musicians who died this past year including Robert Hunter of the Grateful Dead and Mark Hollis of Talk Talk. (Also no introduction to the segment, which was really awful.) For some reason, no awards show can figure out how to do In Memoriam without forgetting someone important.

But it’s what the Grammys do to living people that’s worse. Every year the Grammys announce Lifetime Achievement Awards. They call them Special Merit Awards. For years, there was a ceremony that took place on Saturday night around 5pm, the night before the show. The Special Merit winners were highlighted. The ceremony overlapped with Clive Davis’s pre-Grammy dinner, but at least it took place.

Then three or four years ago, it was decided to scrap that event and have a special TV show at which the Merit winners would be honored. The show airs on PBS. But by doing this, there was almost no mention of the Merit Winner on the Grammy telecast. (And the PBS show gets zero promotion anywhere. It’s a sop.)

On Sunday night’s show, the Merit winners were announced in a pre-recorded video. They were not shown live. John Prine was highlighted by a short performance of his song, “Angel of Montgomery,” by Bonnie Raitt. But the others were ignored. Roberta Flack, who is using a wheelchair, came from New York. She cut her time short at Clive Davis’s dinner so she could go home and rest for the Grammys. Alas, the audience had no idea she was there at the Staples Center. Iggy Pop was present, and also not shown. I don’t think anyone came from Chicago. Philip Glass didn’t come. And you didn’t see Chuck D of Public Enemy. (He’s been rightly critical of the show.)

Last year, and I’m sure it was true this year, too, the Grammys made no effort to bring the Special Merit winners to the show. Anyone who came had to pay their own way, and were basically ignored. Because of this, Julio Iglesias and Ozzy Osbourne each skipped the TV taping in May in Los Angeles. This was the same TV taping that newly signed Grammy CEO Deborah Dugan didn’t think was important enough to attend.

The exiting Grammy producer, Ken Erhlich, saluted himself at the end of Sunday’s show with an all-star musical number worthy of Busby Berkeley. Nipsey Hustle, a dead rapper, got a salute. Prince was also saluted, even though he’s had tributes in the past. The show could have made a big deal of Roberta, whose work has influenced so many stars including Alicia Keys and HER. They could have done a segment on Public Enemy, a musical and political force. And Iggy Pop, who invented punk rock. Why even bother coming?

And Philip Glass? Don’t get me started. One of the world’s most important composers, and he was basically ignored.

If there are changes coming with the new production team including Ben Winston, this continuing oversight may be a place to begin.

(Watch) Sting Brings “The Last Ship” to Jimmy Kimmel, Says No Tigers or Magicians in Upcoming Vegas Shows: “I do the magic”

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Sting brought his brilliant musical, “The Last Ship,” to Jimmy Kimmel last night. They talked about the show, currently at the Ahmanson Theater, which will go next to San Francisco, then Washington DC and Detroit. Kimmel also asked Sting about his upcoming Las Vegas residency at Caesar’s Palace beginning May 22nd. “Will there be tigers? Magicians?” Kimmel inquired. “I do the magic,” Sting astutely replied.

I love “The Last Ship.” The songs, the sets, the performers and, of course, Sting on stage. You can’t beat it. Half the songs are stuck in my head all the time. Just gorgeous. Go see it if you can get a ticket!

Oscars Announce New Set of Presenters for February 9th Show Including Two Former “Hamilton” Cast Members

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The Oscars have announced a new set of presenters for the no host February 9th show.

This group includes Zazie Beetz, Timothée Chalamet, Will Ferrell, Gal Gadot, Mindy Kaling, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Anthony Ramos, Mark Ruffalo, Kelly Marie Tran and Kristen Wiig. Two of these are former “Hamilton” cast members: the creator Lin Manuel Miranda, and Anthony Ramos. They’re plugging Miranda’s “In the Heights” starring Ramos, coming in June– and I hear it’s wonderful, btw.

Previously announced Oscars presenters include last year’s winners Mahershala Ali, Olivia Colman, Regina King and Rami Malek.

“We’re excited to welcome these talented artists to help celebrate this year’s movies,” said this year’s producers, Lynette Howell Taylor and Stephanie Allain. “Each brings their own unique energy and appeal to our global audience.”

Final ballots for members to vote go out on Thursday, two days from now. And yes, the Oscars are two weeks early this year, just as the Grammy Awards were. Next year, we return to the normal schedule! And maybe to real food at the awards shows!

Today is the 50th Anniversary of John Lennon’s “Instant Karma,” and The Beginning of the End for the Beatles

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Today is the 50th anniversary of John Lennon’s “Instant Karma.” It was “ritten, recorded, and remixed” on January 27, 1970. It was also the beginning of the end for the Beatles. Paul McCartney was recording his first solo album, “McCartney” at the same time. It was released in April. “Let it Be” was released on May 8, 1970. And that was it. A 50th anniversary edition of “Let it Be” and the reconstituted movie, which no one has seen in five decades, are coming in May, presumably, as well as Peter Jackson’s documentary about the making of “Let it Be.” But first, Happy Anniverary, John.

 

 

 

Justin Bieber Will Donate One Dollar from Every Concert Ticket to Charity That Doesn’t Yet Exist, Also He Has a New Album Coming

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You’ll be happy to know that Justin Bieber is feeling charitable. He’s announced that he’s donating one whole dollar from every concert ticket he sells this spring to his his Bieber Foundation. This organization “is committed to supporting mental health wellness.”

Actually, there is no registered charity called the Bieber Foundation. Anywhere. There is also no mention of Bieber’s philanthropy on his website. Ticket buyers will not be able to take a charitable deduction on their taxes, because Justin will take that deduction, thank you. When he starts the Bieber Foundation. Which will support mental health wellness. On his last tour, Bieber cut it short after walking away.

Also, Justin is releasing a new album on February 14th called “Changes.” The first single, a hit for some weeks now, is called “Yummy.”

On the tour, Justin’s opening acts include Kehlani, and Jaden Smith, son of Will and Jada Pinkett Smith.

And so it all begins.