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Roberta Flack made a thrilling Beatles album in 2012, all covers of their various songs.
I wrote about it a lot at the time. But Sony didn’t promote it, and the album — Let it Be Roberta – disappeared.
Even the Beatles channel on SiriusXM never plays any of it.
But with Roberta’s death this week, “Let it Be Roberta” is finally on the iTunes top 100.
In fact, Roberta has the number 1 album and single on iTunes today. She has about a dozen albums and singles scattered through each respective chart.
My favorite of her albums, “Roberta Flack and Donny Hathwaway” is at number 19. Its two great singles, “Where is the Love,” and “You’ve Got a Friend,” are in the top 40 singles.
What a great tribute to an incredible artist. I hope the American Music Awards, the next televised music special, goes all out for her, Sam Moore, Jerry Butler, Gwen McRae, and Brenton Wood — all the R&B legends who’ve recently passed.
Puck newsletter reports that Kathleen Kennedy will step down from running LucasFilm at the end of the year.
Kennedy, who’s been essential to George Lucas and Steven Spielberg’s successes, has been running LucasFilm for 13 years. She was responsible for the “new” Star Wars movies, the spin offs, and TV series.
But as with Barbara Broccoli and James Bond, Kennedy has done all she can do. She’s 72 years old, and doesn’t want to hear any more agita from fan boys. That’s smart.
Plus husband Kennedy’s husband, Frank Marshall, who was in on all the Spielberg/Lucas work, has made a nice career with documentaries and Broadway shows. That must look very promising to Kennedy.
Kennedy turned LucasFilm into a bargain for Disney, which only paid $4 billion for it in 2012. She has new galaxies to conquer. Onward and upward!
The next person to run LucasFilm? Chewbacca seems like a good candidate. He knows the ropes, and can’t be called a DEI hire.
Rachel Maddow said on her show tonight that MSNBC is making a “bad mistake” by getting rid of Joy Reid. Reid’s show ended tonight.
MSNBC also axed the rest of their non white hosts, which Maddow called “indefensible.” They include Katy Phang on the weekend, Ayman Mohyeldin, and Jonathan Capehart. Maddow also lamented the way producers and other staffers were fired today, taking MSNBC management to task for ugly behavior.
Maddow will return to hosting her show just on Mondays after Trump’s first 100 days are over. She’s honorable but she’s also making a fortune. Giving back some salary might have saved a few people.
MSNBC is still part of NBC, which also announced the exit of Black anchor Lester Holt. Is it all just a coincidence? Or this the last — and misguided — grasp at keeping viewers?
I told you exclusively five days ago that Karla Sofia Gascon, nominated for Best Actress in “Emilia Perez,” would attend the French Cesar Awards in Paris this Friday.
Now I’m told she’s coming to the Oscars on Sunday in Los Angeles, as well.
Netflix will pay her way over from France.
This is a big story because Gascon was ‘canceled’ by the movie community last month after her racist and hateful Tweets were uncovered by a freelance journalist.
At that point, Netflix broke contact with her. Gascon did not attend the Critics Choice Awards or last night’s SAG Awards despite being nominated for those, as well.
Gascon’s past Tweets created a firestorm around “Emilia Perez,” essentially knocking the movie out of Oscar contention despite receiving the most nominations this year.
It’s unclear why Netflix has relented and decided to pick up Gascon’s tab. It may be that the other actresses — Selena Gomez and Zoe Saldana — insisted on it. Saldana has been winning awards for Best Supporting Actress in “Emilia Perez” and is the predicted winner this Sunday.
Will Gascon walk the red carpet and talk to press? It doesn’t seem possible without causing a melee of some kind. We’ll see what happens.
The Oscars are not going to have the Best Song nominees performed Sunday night. So no Elton John, HER, or Selena Gomez.
Instead, they’ve announced formally what’s been an open secret. The show will start with Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande singing songs from “Wicked.” The movie is nominated, of course, but the songs aren’t because they already exist.
So that’s a popular choice which will make everyone happy.
But then it’s a little odd. Lisa (from BlackPink), Raye, and Doja Cat are performing even though they have nothing to do with the Oscars. They’ve just released a disco single called “Born Again.” But it’s not connected to any movie.
Queen Latifah is set to perform, as well. Again, we love her, but she has no connection to this year’s Oscars. She may sing something about Los Angeles in light of the wildfires. Or maybe she sings the In Memoriam.
Anyway, that’s all we know at this time. Let’s just hope there are movie stars and a good script for host Conan O’Brien. Right now, there’s an actual race between “Conclave” and “Anora.” One movie is about the pope, the other is about a sex worker. It’s worth watching the show just for that competition!
Lester Holt is out as anchor of the NBC Nightly News. He’s 65 and has been in the anchor seat for 10 years.
Who will replace him? A bot? AI? Two 22 year old influencers?
Lester will stay with NBC and continue with “Dateline.”
Holt’s time as NBC anchor should not be underestimated. He took over for Brian Williams after his weird scandal in which it was discovered he was fabricating stories about himself.
Lester has been an engaging straight shooter. I watch him all the time. His ratings have always been competitive.
But so is the dwindling network news business. At CBS they’ve replaced the very talented Norah O’Donnell with two men — John Dickerson and Maurice Dubois. Immediately the ratings dropped. The show, unwatchable in its new format, is still being worked on.
Over at ABC, David Muir continues at the number 1 evening news telecast.
Holt will exit around the end of June.
“A smile comes to my face when I think that with Nightly News, and Dateline, I have now anchored two of the most successful and iconic television news programs in broadcast history,” Holt wrote in a note Monday to “Nightly” and “Dateline” staffers. “As a 20-year-old radio reporter on the police beat chasing breaking news around San Francisco, I could never have imagined my career path would unfold in the way it has. What an amazing ride.”
The famed singer of “Killing Me Softly” and many other hits had suffered for years from ALS. I sat with her two years ago at Clive Davis’s birthday dinner here in New York and she was unable to speak.
That alone was tragic, as no one in music had a voice like Roberta’s. It was smokey and silky. She was a classically trained musician.
Roberta Flack wouldn’t have broken through if it hadn’t been for Clint Eastwood. He used her recording of “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face” in his movie, “PLay Misty for Me,” in 1971. The record took off, and the rest is history.
Roberta won 4 Grammy Awards, and had 14 nominations. She won Record of the Year back to back in 1973 and 1974 fpr “First Time Ever I Saw Your Face” and “Killing Me Softly with His Song.”
Among her hits were many duets with Donny Hathaway and Peabo Bryson. Her “Roberta Flack and Donny Hathaway” album is a desert island disc, one of the greatest albums ever made in pop or R&B. The album featured “Where is the Love?” and maybe the best cover of Carole King’s “You’ve Got a Friend.”
For decades Roberta was so successful that lived in New York’s premiere address, the Dakota Apartments, where she was a neighbor of people like John and Yoko, Lauren Bacall, and Leonard Bernstein.
But Roberta didn’t write her own songs, so her finances drained after she couldn’t perform anymore. (This is why there must be a Performance Royalty bill. Every time her music is heard on the radio, she gets nothing.)
A few years ago, Roberta was able to move to an assisted living facility. But with a trusty aide she was still able to get out a little bit for music event.
What a life! What a musician! And Roberta in heaven will see old pals like Sam Moore, Jerry Butler, Brenton Wood, and so on — all of whom have passed away since January 1st. We are losing the greats!
“Chanel wants desperately to be in the celebrity game.”
This is what a friend of mine in Paris who knows the fashion world told me last week.
But that friend, and most of us, are unaware that Chanel quietly laid off 70 top people in the US last month.
Only a few sites and newsletters reported it. The New York Times ignored it.
Nevertheless, Chanel will proceed this Saturday with its annual pre-Oscar dinner at the Beverly Hills Hotel. London flack Charles Finch invites all the stars who are in town. There’s a red carpet. Finch holds forth like he’s the captain of the Love Boat. We will see pictures of this self-serving exercise on social media that night.
The main thing is that the party costs a huge amount of money, maybe a million bucks. The laid off Chanel execs will be happy to know this is where their salaries are going while they await their unemployment checks.
A statement issued last month from Chanel read: The decision to reduce headcount follows previous moves to limit spending and will help Chanel “better adapt to the current economic challenges.”
PS The Chanel Finch party will ignore the recent destructive wild fires in Los Angeles. There’s no fundraising component. Same with Vanity Fair’s post-Oscar party, although they say they’re giving money to the Motion Picture Fund and a group called baby2baby.
AZT was the initial drug that saved the lives of AIDS patients. Here’s the data.
Nevertheless, “Cheers” actor Woody Harrelson — looking stoned, as usual — perpetuated lies on Joe Rogan’s podcast.
He said that AZT had killed “friends of mine.” He blamed Dr. Anthony Fauci, who in reality saved millions of lives by pushing through AZT as the main treatment for AIDS. He then saved millions more with the COVID vaccine.
Harrelson is no genius, we know that, he’s like Beavis and Butthead rolled into one. But he represents a huge chunk of gullible, misinformed Americans who live off “alternative facts” and support unfounded conspiracy theories.
Woody actually says, ““AZT was very toxic, and they finally had to yank it. And now they use different chemical cocktails, but like, Fauci did some extraordinarily evil s**t, and he knows what he did.”
It’s shocking, because he allegedly lives in the real world and knows smart people. But there he is, acting dumber than his character on “Cheers.”
In the same interview, Rogan also just makes up stuff. He says the cause of RFK’s voice problems — a condition called spasmodic dysphonia — was having gotten a vaccine. This is incorrect but it’s the kind of disinformation Rogan spreads to his uneducated audience.
Watch Harrelson’s publicists try and walk this back today. Good luck with that!
Edward Berger’s “Conclave” won Best Ensemble at the SAG Awards and heads to the Oscars in the lead for Best Picture. If it wins, it’s a Best Picture without a Best Director because Berger wasn’t nominated.
Amazing. Berger should have been nominated for Best Director. “Conclave” is a great work, just like his last film, “All Quiet on the Western Front.” Best Picture winners rarely don’t have a nominated Director. Most recent examples were “Wings,” “Driving Miss Daisy,” “Coda,” Green Book,” and “Argo.”
“Conclave” won Best Drama at the Golden Globes, as well.
Universal’s Focus Features can pat themselves on the back.
This year, the SAG Awards are a tricky predictor for the Oscars. Academy voting already closed, so these award may not be an omen. On the other hand, SAG is the biggest chunk of Academy voters. This means they may have also voted for “Conclave” for the Oscars.
Completely dashed hopes for “The Brutalist.”
Demi Moore won Best Actress for “The Substance” and gave an emotional speech. She and Mikey Madison will face off next Sunday.
Best Actor was a surprise. Timothee Chalamet beat Adrien Brody. Chalamet could be the youngest male Oscar winner next week for playing Bob Dylan. Brody won most of the previous awards this season. But the actors in the Guild obviously appreciated Chalamet’s singing as well as his acting.
Apologies to “Anora,” which was on the fast track and may yet pull it out. All other titles are off the table.
“Conclave” is still playing in theaters. Go see it with an audience!