Sunday, December 21, 2025
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(UPDATED) Secrets of “Mrs. Maisel”: Popular Amazon Series Returns with Unexpected Twists, Turns, and Laughs

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Amazon really rolled out the red carpet in New York Thursday night at the swanky Rainbow Room high above Rock Center for “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel,” stars Rachel Brosnahan and Tony Shalhoub, show creators Amy Sherman Palladino and Daniel Palladino.

This was some party– Amazon wasn’t kidding when they pulled out all the stops. Food and drink were abundant. There was a small orchestra playing jazz music from the late 50s. The show’s set designer designed the lighting and atmosphere. Amazon even had lovely young ladies dressed in strawberry pink blazers, black turtlenecks, fake pearls, and gloves guiding guests to the right locale.

Before the Rainbow Room, Amazon screened the first episode of Season 2 at the Paris Theater for the cast, crew, and fans like “Manchester by the Sea” director Kenneth Lonergan and his wife actress J. Smith Cameron, and “Maisel” actors like Kevin Pollack, Michael Zegen, Zachary Levi, Caroline Aaron, and Marin Hinkle. Also on hand Brooke Adams (Mrs. Shalhoub) and her pal actor-director Polly Draper (“thirtysomething”). You know Brooke Adams co-starred in the all time greatest film, Terrence Malick’s “Days of Heaven” (1978). Rent it if you don’t know it.

“Mrs. Maisel” Episode 1 “Simone” will be released December 5th along with nine more installments that everyone will be binge-watching for 24 hours. Here are some secrets: it’s still 1958! Midge, aka Mrs. Maisel, is trying to get over her career-ending scandal and resurrect her stand up comedy act. Husband Joel is still the only family member who knows that she’s moonlighting as a comic. Midge’s manager and bff Susie talks her way out of a hilarious jam with hoodlums recalling “Bullets Over Broadway.”

To say season 2 looks even better than season 1 is an understatement. Who writes faster dialogue, I asked Amy Sherman Palladino, you or Aaron Sorkin? “I do!” she exclaimed. The “Gilmore Girls” creator and her husband are two of Hollywood’s most fascinating people. I’ll have more of an interview with “Mrs. Maisel” herself, the lovely Rachel Brosnahan, next week.

Watch Video Miley Cyrus and Mark Ronson’s “Nothing Breaks Like a Heart” Has Anti-Gun Message and Kneeling Football Players

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Miley Cyrus has a new single out today with producer Mark Ronson. The bluesy-country twangy “Nothing Breaks Like a Heart” is something I’d like to hear on the radio all day. It’s a real song, and Miley performs the heck out of it.

The video contains an anti-Gun message and kneeling football players. There’s also an allusion to Jesus at the end. There’s also a quick stop in a strip club. In other words, it covers all the bases.

Love the song, Miley looks great, Mark Ronson comes through again.

Rex Reed, Movie Critic and Now Performer Extraordinaire: He Once Danced with Fred Astaire, Now He’s At Birdland

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Rex Reed — the only still-practicing, prolifically active octogenarian critic of stage and screen in existence — sprouted yet another career Tuesday night when he made his Birdland Theater debut. It turned out to be a very good place to start: Birdland was his first stop when he hit town as a wide- and starry-eyed collegiate. (Think of Gene Kelly going into his “Gotta Dance.” Later he’d  learn there was a Statue of Liberty and an Empire State Building here.

“At the old Birdland,” he remembered, “I saw June Christy, the entire Stan Kenton  orchestra and The Hi-Lo’s—all on one bill, for the price of a beer.”

His second stop, The Blue Angel, was less successful. Its headliner, Harry Belafonte, was ill, and he was forced to endure “two young people trying out some comedy material,” Mike Nichols and Elaine May. Rex was “crestfallen.”

He dabbled, fearlessly first-person, in the very mediums he’s reviewed with varying degrees of steam heat—on stage in “Rope” and on screen in the still-notorious “Myra Breckinridge”—before turning the corner into Singing Critic.

In lieu of an autobiography, Rex has written a deliciously anecdotal evening of star-droppings, punctuated by stage and movie songs that almost never come up in club acts but mean something to him. His unguarded affection for these songs, the composers and the singers who introduced them—the love and naughtiness of the patter accompanying them—outweighs his breathy but earnest journeyman vocalizing. How he connected which story to platform which songs is the trick here, and it pushes the envelop of cabaret a bit.

Toasting his first real drink in New York (bought his first night at The Blue Angel by its pianist, Bart Howard), he starts with Cole Porter’s “Make It Another Old-Fashioned, Please,” originally ordered by Ethel Merman’s Panama Hattie.

If his voice wears especially well on “No Love, No Nothin’,” that’s because the lady who introduced it in 1943’s “The Gang’s All Here,” Alice Faye, taught it to him at four in the morning in the backseat of a limo on the Pennsylvania turnpike. The New York Times had sent him to Philadelphia to catch the closing night of “Good News” and interview Faye before its Broadway bow.

That Times ticket also took him to Marlene Dietrich’s dressing room prior to the opening of her one-woman show. On the floor was an old scrubwoman in a raggedy bandana scouring the toilet, insisting Ajax was best for the job. It was Dietrich. When the piece ran, the headline saluted “Dietrich, Queen of Ajax.”

Among the Names littering Rex’s road of life are Dinah Shore, Walter Matthau, Ginger Rogers, Hoagy Carmichael, Polly Bergen (“My best friend in the whole world”), Tennessee Williams, Joan Collins, Johnny Weissmuller (who kept a plane load of MGM stars awake with his Tarzan yells).

He finds places for fine songs from films that failed: “Changing My Tune,” one the Gershwins wasted on 1947’s “The Shocking Miss Pilgrim,” a Betty Grable movie that flopped because she wasn’t allowed to show her legs (“Her legs used to go to war, on American planes”), and “That Winter Night,” in which an out of water and snowbound Esther Williams was to sing in “The Duchess of Idaho”—until Louis B. Mayer saw it and ordered her back to the pool.

Very much sans roller skates, Rex did Gene Kelly’s big number from 1955’s “It’s Always Fair Weather”— Comden & Green and Andre Previn’s “I Like Myself”—and, unlike Bob Fosse in 1953’s “Give a Girl a Break,” he didn’t wind up in the East River doing Ira Gershwin and Burton Lane’s “In Our United State.”

Doris Day occupied a good portion of the program with her Eveready animal-abuse antenna. He also sang “Blame My Absent-Minded Heart” the song Jule Styne wrote for her in 1949’s “It’s a Great Feeling” and the one song for a Doris Day movie she always wanted to sing and didn’t get to: “A New Town Is a Blue Town” from “The Pajama Game.” John Raitt gave it a robust, all-stops-out rendering in the movie; Rex brought it down to a more do-able Day level.

At the Cannes Film Festival, Rex admitted he wanted to dance with Fred Astaire but had a problem with that: “I don’t know how to follow. I only know how to lead.” Astaire brushed that off matter-of-factly with “After all those movies I made with Ginger Rogers, I know how to follow,” and off they went.

He owned up to his marked partiality for singers who were also songwriters by saluting Mel Torme with “A Stranger in Town” and Anthony Newley (his first interview subject in New York) with “There’s No Such Thing As Love.” The latter was a bouquet to cabaret veteran K.T. Sullivan in the audience, celebrating her 19th wedding anniversary with hubby Stephen Downey.

His 11 o’clock anecdote was a hilarious story involving Lana Turner, Ann-Margret, Jimmy Stewart and a Tulsa high school teacher, and that led to the last of the ditty dozen—the act’s best-known song, “Hooray for Hollywood.”

Hooray indeed, Rex!

Ethan Hawke Suddenly Jumps into Tight Lead Actor Race for Oscars with 2 Wins for “First Reformed”

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I’ll bet the Oscar prognosticators are having heart attacks.

First they were crazy about Ryan Gosling in”First Man” as their Lead Actor in Oscars 2019.

Then for weeks they were all over Bradley Cooper to win Best Actor for “A Star is Born.”

Next came Viggo Mortensen, for “Green Book.” And then Rami Malek picked up steam from “Bohemian Rhapsody.”

Last week, it all turned to Christian Bale, bulked up and unrecognizable as Dick Cheney in “Vice.”

On Monday Ethan Hawke won the Gotham Award for Best Actor in “First Reformed.” He got a lot of applause. Would this make him an Oscar contender? No one knew, but it seemed unlikely.

Now he’s won the NY Film Critics Circle. Ethan must be taken seriously now. He’s going to dethrone one of those other actors, I think. I don’t know which one.

Ethan has two acting Oscar nominations– one for “Boyhood,” and the other for “Training Day.” They’re each in Supporting. He also has two writer noms, for co-writing Richard Linklater’s “Before Sunrise” and “Before Midnight.”

He started out as a kid actor in “Dead Poet’s Society.” Since then he’s had one terrific performance after another. This past year it seemed like was everywhere. He was in “Juliet, Naked.” He wrote and directed a little gem called “Blaze.” He just turned 48 and his clip reel is astounding. Some of my favorites are “Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead” and “A Midnight Clear.” There are dozens more including a lovely turn in the remake of “The Magnificent Seven.”

So as much as all the other actors in the semi-finals are great, and all should be included, Ethan Hawke’s new rise to dominance is very cool, and welcomed.

Netflix Is On Its Way to First Oscar with Alfonso Cuaron’s “Roma,” Critics First Choice for 2019

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When “Roma” first played at festivals this past Labor Day, the word went out: it’s going to win the Oscar.

Really? “Roma” is a foreign language movie, from Mexico, spoken in Spanish, and shot in muted black and white. It has no stars of any kind, except director Alfonso Cuaron.

And yet, today “Roma” picked up its first Best Picture award from the NY Film Critics Circle. More will be coming. The mantra, Roma is the winner, has been repeated more often than “Impeach Trump.”

Part of the “Roma” phenomenon is that PR whiz Lisa Taback, trained at Harvey Weinstein’s heel, has turned the Netflix PR department into Hannibal’s army. Netflix bought Taback’s independent PR agency and brought everyone in. They weren’t going to take ‘no’ this year.

If Netflix, Taback, and Cuaron win, they will have beaten powerhouses Warner Bros– with “A Star is Born”–and Universal with “Green Book” and “First Man.” Ted Sarandos is not kidding around. “Roma” could actually win Best Picture and Best Foreign Film, or at least be nominated as such. Only Harvey Weinstein pulled that off in the past– for “Life is Beautiful.” He also got “Il Postino” nominated for Best Picture.

Meantime, “Roma” pulls out all the stops. Critics just received a massively heavy book about the film published by Assouline. I am expecting paella any day now!

Donald Trump May Have Broken IRS Law By Not Distributing Any Percentage of Funds He Placed in Tax Free Charity

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EXCLUSIVE “Donald Trump may have broken the law…” I know, you’re thinking, how quaint.

But the Donald Trump Foundation– now under investigation by NY State and soon to stand trial– has a legal issue.

The Trump Organization contributed $502,400 to the Foundation in 2017 according to recently released tax forms. But the Trump Foundation in turn didn’t disburse one penny of it, or the other $271,356 it received in unspecified donations. The information comes straight from the Foundation’s recently filed Form 990.

According to IRS rules, private charities must disburse at least 5% of the money they’ve taken in in one year. This is so donors can’t just park money in a tax free account. The Trump Foundation currently has $1.7 million in assets, but hasn’t given any of it away.

From the IRS: A foundation that fails to pay out the distributable amount in a timely manner is subject to a 30 percent excise tax under section 4942 on the undistributed income.  The tax is charged for each year or partial year that the deficiency remains uncorrected.  An additional 100 percent tax is triggered if the foundation fails to make up the deficient distribution within 90 days of receiving notification from the IRS of its failure to make minimum distributions.

So let’s see what the NY State Attorney General’s office, as well as the IRS, concurs about this latest chapter.

New York Film Critics Vote: “Roma” Wins Best Film, Director; Ethan Hawke Best Actor, Regina Hall Best Actress, Regina King Best Supporting Actress, Richard E. Grant Best Supporting Actor, “Eighth Grade” Best First Feature

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All roads lead to “Roma,” trust me.

The votes are coming ever 20 minutes or so from the New York Film Critics. Keep refreshing…

Alfonso Cuaron‘s “Roma” is Best Picture. He’s Best Director.

Ethan Hawke is Best Actor for “First Reformed,” Regina Hall is Best Actress for Support the Girls,she’s the first black woman to win Best Actress from the NYFF. And it’s 2018. Wow.

Regina King is Best Supp Actress for “Beale Street,” Richard E. Grant wins Best Supporting Actor for “Can You Ever Forgive Me?” He’s on his way to an Oscar.

Paul Schrader has won Best Screenplay for “First Reformed.” He and Ethan Hawke repeat their wins from Monday at the Gotham Awards.

 

Exclusive UPDATE: “Seventeen” Magazine Is Ending Monthly Schedule (Told You 3 Wks Ago), Joining “Glamour,” “Redbook”

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We’ve learned the truth at Seventeen: I told you on November 2nd that Hearst would shut down the 74 year old magazine.

An announcement was made very, very quietly on November 14th. No one has mentioned it, not event the New York Times. The news was confined to Folio (which gave me credit) and WWD (which did not).

Seventeen, according its website in another buried announcement, will fade to black. They may have quarterly issues, or bi-annual ones. Or none. They’re not saying for now. I say, they’re done.

Hearst under new CEO Troy Young has already killed Redbook. Seventeen’s death comes at the same as that of Glamour, at Conde Nast.

See a trend here? Glamour and Seventeen are for teens. But they don’t read magazines on paper. If they read at all. As for Redbook, I thought it had shut down years ago.

Hearst will exit from more mags before this over. They have Good Housekeeping, Harpers Bazaar, Esquire, Marie Claire, and Oprah to think about. But they also have a lot more including Elle, Cosmopolitan, Town & Country, and a bunch of fitness oriented books, and shelter magazines..

My guess is that Cosmo is next. Then Harpers Bazaar, Marie Clarie, and Elle will somehow merge. Elle Decor, Town & Country, Veranda, and House Beautiful would somehow be next.

It’s hard to say goodbye to magazines even if you don’t read them because they represent a huge part of our lives if you’re over a certain age. But if you’re under 30, the magazines probably seem like Gramaphones. And they can be found, for free mostly, on the internet. Why pay $8.99 and lug it around?

RIP.

Exclusive from July 2018 UPDATE Margaret Atwood Will Publish “Handmaid’s Tale” Sequel in 2019

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UPDATE: The book will appear in September 2019. The new title is “The Testaments.” I told you most of this back in July:

 

When Margaret Atwood published “The Handmaid’s Tale” in 1985, little could she imagine the popularity it would engender in the next century.

The TV version of her novel, starring Elisabeth Moss, has become a cultural touchstone. It’s also won a lot of awards and has just finished its second season.

So now what? I can tell you that Atwood has finished a continuation or sequel, and we’ll see it early next year. I’m told it could be called “The Other Handmaid’s Tales.” The new book comprises testaments of three of the handmaids from the original book. I don’t know if the folks at Hulu know about it, but they will be jumping for joy at this news. “The Handmaid’s Tale” has put them on the map.

Meanwhile, come December there will be a graphic novel of “The Handmaid’s Tale,” just in time for Christmas. Canadian artist Renee Nault is the illustrator. Both books will published by legendary editor Nan Talese, who has been Atwood’s editor for all of her career at Doubleday.

 

illustration of the Handmaid’s Tale from Renee Nault website.

New Sex Scandal at CBS with Former CEO Les Moonves Involves 2 Names from Soap Operas: Joshua Morrow, Eva LaRue

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Actor Joshua Morrow’s been working for CBS since 1994. That’s when he started playing Nicolas Newman, scion to local billionaire Victor Newman (Eric Braeden). Morrow has not been off the show in the last 24 years.

But last summer his character suddenly went from being a likeable young dad with no particular currency to an overnight brilliant businessman. His character suddenly got a new corporation to run, and new, dazzling sets. Fans were shocked and continue to register surprise on social media. Where did this Nicolas 2.0 come from?

It might not be a coincidence. According to the New York Times, Morrow had a special meeting earlier this year with Les Moonves, the CEO of CBS Television. Morrow was at best a supporting player on “The Young and the Restless.” Moonves has expressed dislike for all soaps, killing off 55 year old “As the World Turns” and 60 year old “Guiding Light” without regret. It’s unlikely that he’s ever shaken hands with Braeden. (Moonves appears in passing only in Braeden’s memoirs.)

So how did Morrow wind up getting a meeting with Moonves? According to the Times, Morrow’s agent, Marv Dauer, was in the middle of a complex situation with Moonves last winter when the CBS CEO was being investigated for sexual misconduct. The Times says Dauer’s client, Bobby Phillips, had been sexually attacked by Moonves in 1995. Now in 2018 she was looking for some payoff maybe–a role in a CBS show– and Moonves was trying to oblige her account of forceable oral sex surfaced. Was Dauer blackmailing Moonves?

“I wouldn’t even know how to blackmail someone,” Dauer told the Times. “Not in my wildest dreams. Yes, I did try to get my clients parts. That’s my job. That’s what managers do.”

Still, while he was back channeling between Phillips and Moonves, Dauer was sending his clients in to meet Moonves. Another was a D list actor named Philip Boyd, who’d had a short run on Tyler Perry’s “The Haves and Have Nots” on cable, but otherwise showed no sign of becoming a star. Since his Moonves meeting, Boyd — according to the imdb– has moved up from bit player to second male lead in some TV movies.

Another soap opera name also turned up in the Times story. Dauer represented Eva LaRue, who’d had a long run on ABC’s defunct “All My Children” in the early to mid 2000s. Then she moved into a long run on CBS’s “CSI: Miami” until the show was cancelled in 2012. Since then, according to the imdb, she’s struggled to find a new home, although did turn up briefly on CBS’s “Criminal Minds.”

In the Times story, Dauer persuaded Moonves to attend his 75th birthday party last spring, where the CBS exec was introduced to LaRue. She told the Times, “It’s been way too long since you’ve worked for CBS.” After the party, Dauer wrote to Moonves: “Thank you again so much for attending — I don’t know if there’s any way to express how grateful I am.” Dauer added in the email that Ms. LaRue was excited “that you would like her back working on your network! After they announce the new pilots I will start looking for things and bother you.”

Morrow, La Rue, and Boyd all became collateral damage in the Times story because Dauer found himself with a bit of leverage over Moonves. In the end, his original client, Bobby Phillips, got nothing, and returned to obscurity as Moonves’s long ago victim. Dauer’s other clients made out well, it seems, and probably knew nothing about what was going on.

Great reporting from the Times on an industry where everything, and everyone, is for sale.