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Celine Dion Deciding On Song for New Album (Including One by Sia): “I have 4 albums of music right now”

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Celine Dion just announced her new “Courage World Tour,”  which will begin on Sept 18th in Quebec City,  at an event at the Theatre at the Ace Hotel for press and fans.

Clever and quippy, Celine first showed a cheeky video of her ending her longtime Vegas residency, with the requisite Elvis impersonator and drag queens leaving Vegas.  She beautifully performed her hits “I’m Alive,”  “Ashes” and “My Heart Will Go On,” followed by a live streamed Facebook Q and A, then questions from the crowd.

The tour will include 50 cities in the US and Canada and is produced by Concerts West/AEG Presents.  Celine said that her new album set to be released in November, has 48 songs that “I love dearly, but I need to pick only about 12.  I have 4 albums of music right now.”  She also said she’s listening to Sia, who wrote a song for her new album. Celine noted that she also loves LP (Laura Pergolizzi) and wants her to write a song for her, “since I don’t write my own music.”

Celine, who just turned 51 on March 30th, was treated to an impromptu rendition of “Happy Birthday” from the crowd which visibly moved her.  Celine explained that her main focus is always that, “I never want to disappoint my audience.” Even with this mini concert, she was truly mesmerizing.

Tickets go on sale on Friday, April 12th.

For tickets and information visit celinedion.com.

 

photo by Kevin Mazur-GettyImages

Doris Day Turns 97 Today: Here’s My 2011 Interview with the Movie and Music Legend

Doris Day never gave a lot of interviews in her later years. Today she turns 97. I was lucky to speak with her on the phone exactly 8 years ago, as she was turning 89. She should have a Lifetime Achievement Oscar by now. She always said she wouldn’t come down to L.A. from Carmel, but they could have done a video hook up. Anyway, she continues to be a remarkable person, a great artist and philanthropist.

Back in 2011, she actually gave four interviews. I was so lucky to be chosen for the internet. Paul McCartney, of all people, did the print interview. Her voice was smooth as silk. Listen to those famous recordings. It will give you peace in this troubled time. And think of this: all the singers who wanted to act, all the actresses who wanted to sing. She did it all. And was perfection.

 

from December 2011:
RF: Paul McCartney interviewed you recently for a British newspaper about My Heart. What was that like?
DD: I think it went well. I’ve known him for quite a while now.
I was out walking my dogs. And the man who works here came and out said, it’s Paul McCartney on the phone.
I said, Alright, tell me who it really is. I didn’t believe it, I thought it was someone playing a game. He said, Will you please tell her that I am, that I want to know her and want to come and see her.
It was Paul and he did come. He came with his new wife. We had hours here. It was really nice.
And he’s really cute.
One night the phone rang around 2:30 in the morning, I thought something terrible happened. He said Hey, what are you doing? I said, Well, I was sleeping. He would call all hours of the morning just to say hello. He got a big kick out of that.
RF: The album, My Heart, was mostly produced by your son, Terry. Most people don’t know he co-wrote Kokomo for the Beach Boys.

DD: And they didn’t win [the Grammy] that year. That was a crime. [It lost in 1988 to Phil Collins’s “Two Hearts”].. That year, that was so terrible. At the table we were really. I thought was an insult. I loved Kokomo. It was so popular
RF: And you covered his song, Disney Girls. How was that?
DD: I loved it. I enjoyed it. If it’s a good song, I love singing so much. It just love it. I get so involved.
RF: Do you sing much now?
DD: I can’t now. I could still sing until I got bronchitis. I had a very, very bad attack a couple of years ago, I thought I would never get over it. That’s why I sound different.
But sometimes I sing along with something, and I think that wasn’t bad. I wonder sometimes if I could start vocalizing.

RF: I’m interested in your technique as a singer. Your phrasing is so elegant and simple. Did you think about what you were doing?
DD: No. I knew the song that we were going to do. We would put them together at my house. We would all decide what to do. The words were there, and the words told a story. I can’t say any more than that except I loved singing.
RF:Were they always suggesting songs to you?
DD: They used to tell us what to do. The album I did with Andre Previn, I picked my own then.
RF: A great favorite is Perhaps Perhaps Perhaps, from the Latin for Lovers album
DD: I love that. I loved making that album.
At first I thought I’m going to do this? Me? But I fell in love with all the songs. It maybe one of my favorites of all time.

RF: Were there songs you weren’t thrilled with?
DD: (Thinks about it) The Purple Cow. Oh my god! When they tagged that one on me, that was it. ‘I never thought I’d ever see a Purple Cow.’ Isn’t that terrific? Great idea. Oh lord! I don’t like to fight with people and say I won’t do that! But you get a long of good things to do. And you do your best with that.
RF: How about some other favorites? How about Que Sera Sera?
DD: I was wondering why it was going to be in that film [Alfred Hitchcock’s The Man Who Knew Too Much]. That was a real mystery. Then I read the script. But at first I thought this was kind of a silly song to be in that movie. But it was good for the movie. And the people liked it anyway in or out of the movie. People could sing it. They could sing it to their children.
RF: What was it like to sing with Les Brown and His Band of Renown? What was it like singing with a big band?
DD: It feels good. And if you know your song, and you like the song, it’s wonderful because people come right up to the bandstand. And it’s great fun. They want to say hello to you.
RF: Did the band kid around with you a lot?
DD: I had a great time. The guys were so nice to me.
They looked after me and helped me, they took all my baggage. They were all like my brothers.

RF: Was it a big change for you when you went solo?
DD: The first time I ever worked alone, I had two shows a night at The Little Club on East 55th St. in New York. I opened it. My mother was with me and my little baby. It was something so new for me. I thought, what am I doing? I was so used to having the guys behind me. But it turned out to be really nice. The people kept coming back! I was surprised!
A lot of the women were the Vogue types, models. They were all dressed up like crazy. They would say, Come on over and have a drink. But I wasn’t drinking. I would go back to my apartment between shows.
RF: You were not a drinker?
DD: No.
RF: All these other singers—Billie Holiday, Judy Garland—had terrible substance problems. How did you avoid it?
DD: Easy. I didn’t do it.
RF: Many other performers would party all night
DD: Party all night? Oh lord! No, no no! I don’t even like parties.
RF: Tell me about your co-stars. What was Jimmy Cagney like?
DD: I loved him. He as a wonderful person, just adorable. Not in that film [Love Me or Leave Me], he wasn’t. Oh he was nasty!
RF: Tony Randall?
DD: He was so superb, so funny. He was always in New York after that. I just loved him. Did we ever [have fun]. We laughed.
RF: Cary Grant?
DD: I enjoyed Cary, He was very different. Very nice. But you don’t sit around and talk a lot between scenes. I think he went outside with that thing you put under your chin, for the sun. Because he didn’t want to wear makeup. All the men hated makeup. At lunch time, I didn’t see him. I used to eating in my trailer. But we didn’t really sit around and talk.
RF: Who did you hang around with? Rock Hudson?
DD: He was always around, he was funny. He named me Eunice, just for fun. I was always Eunice with him.
RF: You had such great chemistry.
DD: We really liked each other.
I was up here—filming the show we had here [Doris Day’s Best Friends, July 1985]—all of a sudden he appeared. At first I didn’t know who he was. I looked at him and I was almost in tears. He was so thin, and just gaunt. It was just unbelievable.
We would walk and laugh together. He was so seriously ill, but he was still funny. It just about put me away. It’s so hard to be funny when you know what’s going to happen.
RF: Jimmy Stewart?
DD: Wonderful. I had a great time with all the gentlemen I worked with. Really.
RF: Looking back, all your co-stars were men. Was there ever a woman you would have liked to be in a movie with? An actress you thought was funny? Or like a Thelma and Louise?
DD: No. Yes if there was a really great script and a reason. But I always thought the women should be with the men.

Aretha Franklin’s Long Lost “Amazing Grace” Concert Film Is Must-See Simply for the Singer’s Pure-Throated Genius

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Last night we went where few have ventured– Battery Park City, to the former Winter Garden, where Meredith Publications– the now just ended owner of Time Magazine–has set up headquarters. In their beautiful sixth floor screening room, Neon Films premiered Aretha Franklin’s long lost “Amazing Grace” concert film shot in 1972 by the late great Sydney Pollack.

“Amazing Grace” is finally coming to theaters in New York and Los Angeles this Friday, followed by a nationwide rollout next week.

For last night’s power screening, legendary music mogul Clive Davis hosted and spoke to the the crowd, which included famed songwriter Valerie Simpson, legendary drummer Bernard Purdie, who played with Aretha for 25 years and is in the film, as well as Aretha’s niece Sabrina Owens Garrett, and a couple of Aretha’s close friends, choreographer George Faison and Billy Bennett, widower of Aretha’s great manager, Ruth Bowen.

Not one, but two, pastors spoke, each of whom had done the same at Aretha’s funeral last August including Dr. William J. Barber, II.

This film has always been a flashpoint with Aretha– she didn’t want it released, and shut it down several times in recent years before she died. She either saw something she didn’t like in it, or she was unhappy with the financial situation. But with her death, the film is now here, and it must be seen, if only to show off the pure-throated genius that she possessed.

Indeed, it almost takes a few viewings to really appreciate what Aretha’s got here at age 29, in 1972. She is already 5 years past “Respect” and the glory years of Atlantic (although she was still having chart hits, one after the other). Her producer Jerry Wexler is with her, and so are the incredible musicians who toured and recorded with her including Purdie and Cornell Dupree. So it’s a gospel show rooted in popular music. Or vice versa. Take your pick. Certainly two of the highlights are Carole King’s “You’ve Got a Friend” and Marvin Gaye’s “Wholy Holy.”

But the pure gospel numbers in the 80 minute show, powered by the uber-talented Reverend James Cleveland (who died way too young at age 58 in 1991) that just take your breath away. It’s such a gorgeous sound that emanates from Aretha’s throat, it’s almost hard to believe she’s human. She is other-worldly and knows it. There’s a twinkle in her eye because this is her favorite music.

Kardashians Return with Lowest Premiere Ratings Ever, “Walking Dead” Exits with Lowest Season Finale Ever

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When we last saw the Kardashians, they finished Season 15 of their vapid, idiotic yet profitable show with just 850,000 viewers. It was a new low for them. So last night’s return at 1.29 million must seem like a miracle to them– except when you look at the numbers.

Last night’s season premiere was down from Season 15’s premiere of 1.36 million. The K’s are in decline. As this season progresses, the numbers will tumble. It’s hard to imagine anyone is still interested in these people. Fewer and fewer are, that’s for sure. We’ll see what happens.

“Walking Dead” closed out its latest season with its lowest finale ever. They were down to 5 million viewers. Their weekly average was lower than that– around 4.5 million. They’re now pulling the same number of viewers as “The Young and the Restless,” which, of course, has a few more zombies (mostly running CBS Daytime).

Other numbers from last night: “Veep” pulled in 530,000 viewers, but that number should increase a lot with three day DVR viewing. The episode was hilarious. “Billions” is averaging a very nice 820K viewers per week. Again, Sunday night’s episode was top notch. Kevin Pollack should get a Guest drama nomination for playing Taylor’s pronoun-clueless dad.

 

HBO Takes Richard Wright’s Famous Novel “Native Son” to the Guggenheim for an A List Premiere

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The long arm of Sundance reached to New York’s iconic Guggenheim Museum tonight as HBO celebrated “Native Son,” directed by first timer Rashid Johnson. The movie– which opened at Sundance in January distributed by A24– debuts on HBO this Saturday.

You will want to watch this exceptionally energized “Native Son” because Johnson and Pulitzer Prize winner Suzan Lori Parks moved it into the now from the 1930s. Suddenly Bigger, played with Emmy nomination certainty by Ashton Sanders (“Moonlight”), is contemporary but with the same problems he had in the 1930s. He lives in poverty and on the periphery of society. Sanders is a marvel at conveying his fear of straddling both worlds.

All the performers are top notch, with Kiki Layne and Sanaa Lathan leading the pack as Bigger’s girlfriend and his mother. Margaret Qualley has all the breezy socialite qualities as the girl in the mansion who crosses the line. Nick Robinson is impressive as the rabble-rouser boyfriend.

Moving “Native Son” into contemporary times was a challenge, and the filmmakers meet it well. Frankly, “Native Son”– the book– may not be so well known to young people today. It should be. This should only increase awareness of it. The story hinges on a single violent act that really startled the audience last night at Peter Lewis Theater in the Guggenheim. Some of them laughed from shock at first, then settled down to realize what had happened, why, and the consequences.

Producers of the film were smart to move it from A24 to HBO only because this “Native Son” will have a bigger, faster impact on the prestige cable service. HBO has made the movie into an event. Don’t miss it.

Mel Gibson Fans Would Have Be “Dragged Across Concrete” to See Latest Film, Not Playing Anywhere, Made $137K Abroad

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Mel Gibson has fallen a distance since the days of “Braveheart” or “Lethal Weapon.”

According to available numbers, his latest movie, “Dragged Across Concrete,” has made around $137,712 total in four countries including Russia.

In the US there are no numbers. Distributor Summit Pictures is just pretending “Concrete” was never poured. It’s currently playing in a handful of ArcLight theatres– fewer than 10 as far as I can tell.

On Rotten Tomatoes, “Concrete” has a 74% rating.

Meanwhile, you can rent it on Amazon for $6.99. The DVD is available on April 30th. It was just released on March 22nd.

Gibson has gone the way of John Travolta and Bruce Willis, just releasing product like wet spaghetti thrown against the wall. If it sticks, fine. If it stinks, fine, too.

Marvin Gaye Was Killed 35 Years Ago Today, But He’s Still The Man with “Lost Album” Finally Released in Its Entirety

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Marvin Gaye was killed 35 years ago today. But he’s “still the man” as Motown has just released “You’re the Man,” his “lost album.” This collection was recorded in 1972 between the successes of “What’s Going On” and what turned out to be “Let’s Get it On.”

“You’re the Man” has been released before, at least some of it, in various incarnations. It was splintered off into box sets and b sides and Motown collections. But now it’s available it in its entirety. You can see why Marvin shelved it. Despite amazing vocals and terrific songs, it lacked cohesion as an album. After the high of “What’s Going On,” this album was pedestrian. There was no theme. In the past it would have sufficed. But to Marvin it must have sounded like a step backward.

But dip into “You’re the Man” anywhere and you’ll find gold. “The World is Rated X” is masterful, and could have fit into “What’s Going On” easily. “Piece of Clay,” had Marvin lived long enough to tour in his older years, would have been a show stopper. “You Are That Special One” is a slammin’ Motown masterpiece. “I’m Going Home” is Marvin at his funky best.

I can’t wait to have the physical CD in my car.

Many have tried to make Marvin Gaye movies without luck. I hope someone tries again, but just the Sixties through this period, when Marvin was a shining star. He deserves a polished legacy, and to be revered forever.

RIP Shelley Lazar, Queen of Rock and Roll Tickets, Age 69, the Mother Hen of Rock Stars, Fans, Groupies, Press

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Shelley Lazar was the mother hen of rock and roll. She worked her way up and made a business out of ticketing rock and roll concerts, especially Paul McCartney’s. I am sad to report that she died this morning from cancer at age 69.

Everyone loved Shelley. When there was a big show she was there to take care of you. She loved the music and she loved the artists. There will never be anyone else like her. In 2008 she sold her company to Ticketmaster but that didn’t mean she went away. She loved the business too much. She took care of everyone: fans, groupies, press.

I always worried about Shelley. Back in June 2011 we were at a performance of “Spider Man: Turn off the Dark” on Broadway. Shelley fell on the stairs coming down the aisle of the American Airlines Theater and broke her wrist. I tried to catch her, so did a couple of other people. She got up and brushed herself off before she was taken by ambulance to a hospital.

Everyone will say this: Shelley has a VIP ticket in heaven. Yes. But she had one with all the people who knew her. Her death is a real loss, coming in a week of losses. She will really really be missed.

photo courtesy of Richard Kerris

Rapper Nipsey Hussle, 33, Shot Dead in Front of His L.A. Clothing Store After Tweeting “Having strong enemies is a blessing”

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Rapper Nipsey Hussle, age 33, is dead. Ermias Davidson Asghedom was shot dead in front his clothing store in South Los Angeles. A short time before, he Tweeted: “Having strong enemies is a blessing.”

Evidently, not.

Asghedom picked his name as a twist on Nipsey Russell, the late great comic. But there’s no laughing here. Russell was long time gang member. He was also a Grammy nominee, for what that’s worth.

He had a child with actress Lauren London. Before Nipsey, she dated Lil Wayne, who’s spent a lot of time in jail.

And the beats go on.

Matthew McConaughey Going the Way of Johnny Depp? “Beach Bum” is Lowest Opening of Career, Latest Box Office Failure

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It’s been five and a half years since Matthew McConaughey starred in “Dallas Buyers Club” and won an Oscar. It was not a hit movie, only making $27 million. But vindicated McConaughey as an actor and instigated the phrase “McConaissance.” The quirky Texan actor was on a roll. He also had a show stopping appearance that year in “Wolf of Wall Street,” which added to the illusion.

This weekend, MM starred in Harmony Korine’s “Beach Bum.” They made $1.6 million total, a total throwaway. And not the first nor the last. McConaughey has jumped on a train occupied by Johnny Depp and Nicolas Cage. He has name value as a celebrity, but none has an actor. His movies are all flops in one way or another.

Of course, nothing will beat “The Sea of Trees,” but that was only released into 2 theaters. Of all MM’s wide or semi-wide openings, “Beach Bum” is the worst. But do recall “WHite Boy Rick,” “Serenity,” “The Dark Tower,” and “Gold.” And we shan’t omit “Free State of Jones.” MM’s only actual hit was “Magic Mike” in 2012, which crossed the $100 million mark, but was also an ensemble piece.

This is why we see MM in Lincoln car commercials, which have paid the bills and turned him into the Ricardo Montalban of our generation (“deep Corinthian leather”).  Is there a way out of this? How about a reboot of “Crocodile Dundee”?