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Beatles Producer George Martin’s Estate Worth Much More than $1.5 Mil, Must Be Off Shore

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What is the Daily Mail smoking? (Well, I ask myself that a lot.) They report today that the Beatles’ producer George Martin, who died earlier this year at age 90, left a 1 million-pound estate! Of course, the Mail is only concerned that one of Martin’s sons was cut out of it. They also say he produced “the Beatles’ early hits.”

Listen, Fleet Street, George Martin made a million bucks in his sleep. His estate must have been parked off shore, in a place like the Cayman Islands. It has to have been more like 50 million quid.

For one thing, Martin produced all of the Beatles albums except for “Let it Be.” (That was a botch job by Phil Spector.) He produced the Anthology albums, as well, plus “Rarities” and several other post-1970 editions.

A lot of that was chronicled by Martin himself in his 1979 memoir, “All You Need is Ears.” He was an employee of EMI through 1965, when he left and started AIR studios. He started getting a 2% royalty on Beatles albums at that time, and indicates in the book that the number rose to 4%. Martin also wrote the score for “Yellow Submarine,” and has publishing and mechanical royalties from that album.

In addition, Martin remastered the Beatles’ CDs when they were first issued in 1987. Years later, he and son Giles constructed the soundtrack for the Beatles’ “LOVE” show in Las Vegas, which produced a best selling album. It was quite literally their invention, and it has sold and sold. Now that it’s downloadable and streaming everywhere, “LOVE” should have made the Martins quite wealthy.

Plus, Sir George had monster hits with the group America. Their “History” album of greatest hits continues to be a huge catalog seller. (He gave them “Tin Man” and “Sister Golden Hair,” which are played non stop on oldies radio.) George got a permanent cut of that action.

And then there’s Martin’s AIR Studios in Montserrat in the Caribbean. This is a huge, thriving business where everyone from Adele to Pete Townsend, and of course Paul McCartney have recorded.

And that’s probably the tip of the iceberg.

A million pounds? Not likely. Sir George was definitely whistling “Baby you’re a rich man” right up to the end. Daily Mail, get a grip.

Emily Blunt Misses Lavish “Girl on the Train” Party But Justin Theroux, Haley Bennett Are Happy Passengers

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Universal threw an old fashioned lavish Hollywood premiere party last for “The Girl on the Train” at Grand Central Station’s Vanderbilt Hall in New York.  It was the perfect location since Grand Central is presumably where Rachel, Emily Blunt’s character, would hang around after arriving from Ardsley and before returning there to stalk her ex husband (played by Justin Theroux). Since Rachel’s a raving alcoholic I doubt she sampled the terrific food we got which is available every day in the Food Hall! (She probably just hit the bars.)

Sadly, star Blunt — who does such a great job as Rachel– was under the weather, so she missed the big gala after a plucky walk on the red carpet with husband John Krasinski. This was a disappointment, as was the absence of Laura Prepon and boyfriend Ben Foster, who also went from red carpet to who knows where. Maybe the foursome thought a party in a train station didn’t sound appetizing but it was quite the opposite considering Grand Central’s soaring architecture.

To the rescue came Justin Theroux (yes, he’s married to Jennifer Aniston) who kind of steals the film from Blunt and her female co-stars Haley Bennett and Rebecca Ferguson (who resembles in this film more than ever Ingrid Bergman). The latter is presumably off getting ready for the new “Mission: Impossible” episode. Edgar Ramirez, so good in “Hands of Stone,” also made the most of the premiere. He’s the red herring in “Train,” and he pulls it off with aplomb.

But Bennett, currently winning the west in “The Magnificent Seven,” was there. She told me: “This is my first day off in two years.” She has five more days before she heads to L.A. for “meetings,” she said, where she will pass on a lot of scripts. (She has a good sense of humor, I like her.) Bennett brought her whole family from Ohio for “Girl on the Train.” They could have taken the train home from Grand Central, but they’re sticking around.

Listen: Justin Theroux has been starring in HBO’s “The Leftovers.” He’s not in “The Girl on the Train” to twiddle his thumbs. He’s the break out (if you know the novel, you know what I mean). He’s very good. We did not discuss Brangelina.

Tate Taylor directed “Girl on the Train.” He also directed “The Help.” He’s good with a big cast and a complicated story, as “Girl on the Train” has more going on than an episode of “Days of Our Lives.” But he keeps the tense taut, and Blunt is a delicious drinker. It’s not easy to play an unsympathetic protagonist. Eventually Rachel goes from “being a blur” to getting in focus  thanks to the keen actress.

But my advice, as with all movies, is: stay out of the suburbs. Bad things happen there! You’re safer in New York, where the crime rate is nil and you have a door man. And really, use Uber or buy a car. Paul Simon said Everyone loves the sound of a train in the distance. But wait til you have to find a seat.

Robert DeNiro Making 2nd Movie with “Grandpa” in Title, With Writer of “SpongeBob SquarePants”

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Robert DeNiro will not stop making terrible movies no matter what anyone says. He’s now signed to star in “War with Grandpa,” his second movie with the word Grandpa in the title in a year. The first one was “Dirty Grandpa,” which had an 11 rating on RottenTomatoes. Eleven.

DeNiro is currently starring in “Hands of Stone,” which has struggled to earn $5 million at the box office. He goes a very good job in it, but the movie has not connected with audiences.

“War with Grandpa” is not directed by Martin Scorsese, Quentin Tarantino, or David O. Russell, or any other ‘name’ director. It’s by someone named Tim Hill, whose last feature credit is for a TV movie called “Grumpy Cat’s Worst Christmas Ever” made in 2014. He is best known as the creator and writer of the “SpongeBob Square Pants” TV series.

As the unofficial president of the Robert DeNiro fan club, I am chagrined. For every decent film DeNiro makes, there are five like this one. There is “Analyze This,” but also “Analyze That.” There’s “Meet the Parents,” plus the two sequels. “Grudge Match”? “Heist”? “The Bag Man”? Hello? “The Big Wedding”? “The Family”? The list goes on and on.

Even when the movie is bad, DeNiro is good. And when the movie is a surprise and DeNiro is top notch– as in “Silver Linings” or “Joy”– it’s a pleasure to see him. But these terrible films now weigh down the Oscar winner’s really great films with Scorsese, Michael Mann  (“Heat”), Barry Levinson (sublime “Wag the Dog”), Nancy Meyers (the charming “The Intern”) and so on.

DeNiro should be spending this time of his career working with great writers and directors, making important films. “The War with Grandpa”? Please, no.

Ben Stiller Tells Howard Stern He Was Diagnosed with Prostate Cancer 2 Years Ago

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Here’s a surprise: Ben Stiller told Howard Stern this morning on his Sirius radio show that he was diagnosed with prostate cancer two years ago.

Stiller said it was “immediately aggressive” and had surgery to remove his prostate. He was 48 when this happened. “It came out of the blue for me. I had no idea.”

This would have been right in the midst of Stiller’s mother, Anna Meara, in her decline. She died on May 23, 2015. Stiller’s dad, Jerry Stiller, is more or less retired and living in the family’s New York apartment. He’s 88 years old.

Somehow during this time Stiller was able to act in and direct films like “Zoolander 2.” Good for him. Sending best wishes. Ben told Howard he hoped his openness would encourage more awareness of the disease.

 

Kristen Stewart on Run of Recent Good Film Roles: “I’ve just gotten super lucky lately, yeah”

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Looking sensational with her punk peroxide haircut and micro mini, Kristen Stewart, was the center of attention Monday afternoon at the press conference for Kelly Reichardt’s new film, “Certain Women,” screening at the New York Film Festival. The film features an ensemble of terrific female actors, including Laura Dern, Michelle Williams and Lily Gladstone. The director and female stars (with the exception of Williams) participated in the 30-minute Q&A following the press screening.

Stewart has three films in the NYFF, including Ang Lee’s “Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk” and Olivier Assayas’ “Personal Shopper.” And the 26-year old actress will be honored at a special event Wednesday evening for patrons of The Film Society of Lincoln Center with tickets still available to patrons for $500.

“Certain Women” with its strong female ensemble cast looks at three flawed but strong-willed women whose lives don’t intersect but somehow connect. Based on short stories by Maile Meloy and set in a small Montana town with a populations of about 7,000, the director told journalists what intrigued her was that, “It was a new landscape to investigate and all the characters were really part of the environment they were in and so it seemed like an endeavor with all these great women characters that were sort of alienated from the people who were closest to them but somehow making connections to people who were strangers.”

There are lots of quiet moments and pauses and focus on everyday moments, elements Stewart said she appreciated about Reichardt’s work.

“The thing I really dig (about Kelly’s movies) is that it takes forever. ‘What’s the most important part? Like show me the moment where something happens?’ And that’s what we’re used to seeing in movies. Look at the stuff that goes on in between stuff, like getting to and fro and stuff like that,” said the actress.

“It’s really vulnerable to not play something. All of a sudden you start reviewing things rather than displaying them. That’s what I love about her movies!”

Stewart spoke about some of the beautiful shots taken at the ranch with her character’s story arc.

“It’s so stunningly beautiful. The character who lives in this environment, it says so much about her because I appreciate physical beauty but not like somebody that lives in Montana and runs a fucking a ranch and wants to really give themselves completely to this in a way that’s really mystical and kind of totally beyond me That shot for me totally functions as — it’s so character defining for her. She wakes up there every morning and that’s what she loves and it’s so beautiful. There’s a reverence to it that’s immediately contagious.”

A journalist asked Stewart what roles most attracted her?

“Good stuff, you know! I typically don’t have to spend more than five minutes in a room with someone to know if I want to explore something with them and I’m just kind of navigating,” Stewart said. “I’ve worked recently with a lot of people I’ve grown up really loving. This is a great thing. I feel super lucky and it’s super conducive to making like good shit and because I think I have good taste,” she laughed “Also At the same time like I really love not like not knowing that something’s going to be good and spending a few minutes with someone and going, ‘Shit you’ve never done this before?’ Well let’s do it now. So there’s no like formula. That’s so not how you’re ever gonna make anything worthwhile. It’s like, yeah I’m really not precious about it. I’ve just gotten super lucky lately, yeah.”

Are the recent movies she’s made more satisfying that Hollywood movies someone asked?

“Totally the same thing. I would never draw attention to the distinction between doing a big movie and a small one because then you’re like, ‘Cool. Why are you doing it? That’s weird,” said Stewart. “I guess you could technically draw distinctions because you have more money to play with,” she said. “Naturally it affects the dynamic a little but at the end of the day, I’ve never approached anything going, ‘Oh, well this is bigger now therefore I’m like less entitled to something meaningful or something.’ That’s what you’d think. But it’s totally not true even if the result of it makes you think it. We were trying.”

 

Photo c 2016 Showbiz411 by Paula Schwartz

 

 

 

 

 

Desert Trip aka #Oldchella “Ticket Dump” for This Weekend with McCartney, Stones, Dylan, Who Etc

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You know, I broke the story of Oldchella, aka Desert Trip. That’s the two mega concert weekends out near Palm Springs, California with Paul McCartney, the Rolling Stones, the Who, Bob Dylan, Neil Young and Roger Waters.

The first three acts mentioned should be getting roughly $7 million a weekend. The other three will get less– between $3.5 mil and $4 million. Plus there are all kinds of VIP packages, meet and greets, or wave and autograph.

But Palm Springs is far away unless you’re on the West Coast or you’re loaded. So build into the price round trip airfare and some kind of accommodations if you’re over 40 and don’t want sleep in a hut or require personal indoor plumbing.

A quick look at Hotels.com reveals plenty of hotel rooms in nearby towns. That’s not an issue.

There are also tons of ticket deals on StubHub.com, Viagogo.com, and Craigslist. If you want to go to Desert Trip this weekend, and have the money, it’s still very possible.

One of my concert sources says GoldenVoice, the promoter, will gross maybe as much as $150 million. Subtract the $70 million or so going to the acts, plus massive other expenses, and there should be a nice profit. But the ticket re-sellers who bought up the tickets may not be so happy. Golden Voice, my source says, “sold tons of tickets to brokers and secondary markets and now everyone trying to dump tickets.”

Indeed, even Desert Trip’s website shows that tickets are plenitude for the second weekend of October 14-15-16. As for the first weekend, there still seem to be quite a few General Admission passes, plus some packages for seating plus shuttles from the outside to the inside.

Of course, the stars and musicians won’t know a thing about any of this. They’re going to be insulated from whatever is going on at Oldchella. They’ll be commuting by limo or luxury bus from the finest suites in the Palm Springs area (or rented mansions) to the stage and back. God bless them.

What remains to be known is recording rights– video, audio etc. There’s lots to be made, especially if there are surprise guest stars, crossovers, duets, etc.

PS I was graciously offered a press pass, but when I calculated how much it would cost to go there, stay there, return, eat, etc. I decided to wait for the DVD. Should be historic if you’re there!

Exclusive: Friars Club Spent Over $1.5 Mil on PBS TV Special As Questions Swirl About their Finances

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As I’ve reported twice in the last two weeks, the venerated Friars Club on East 55th St. is in awash in questions about its expenses and management. To make matters worse, Bruce Charet — one of their top officers– for sexual harassment by a female employee who says she was dismissed for complaining about being harassed.

On top of that, the club has suspended or terminated several of its top show business members including beloved comics Stewie Stone (suspended) and Jackie Martling (dismissed). Martling sent an email yesterday to insiders informing them that he does not owe the club money, which was hinted at in his abrupt termination letter.

Terminated? From a club founded by and run for comedians?

Now I’ve exclusively obtained the Friars’ 2015 Form 990 tax filing– they are registered as a 501 (c) 3 charity. I told you in previous stories that were questions about the charity.

In 2015, the Friars Club did something unusual. They taped a huge concert at the Kennedy Center in Washington called The 2015 Lincoln Awards: A Concert for Veterans and the Military Family” named, as they say in a press release, for Abraham Lincoln. The show aired on PBS on May 25, 2015 and included appearances — many taped in advance– by First Lady Michelle Obama, Dr. Jill Biden, Bruce Springsteen, Alec Baldwin, Aloe Blacc, Whitney Cummings, Gavin Degraw, Rhiannon Giddens, Nick Jonas, Harvey Keitel, Jerry Lewis.

It was the first and only Lincoln Awards. A look at the expense may explain why: the Friars incurred expenses of $595,774 for entertainment, and another $991,993 listed as “other direct expenses” for the show. An additional $374,058 was paid to MBM Entertainment of Manhattan for “entertainment service.” MBM’s Michael B. Matuzo is listed as a producer of the Lincoln Awards, along with Michael Gyure, the chief executive of the Friars. Matuzo has several credits producing awards shows for television. Gyure has no other credits listed on the Internet Movie Database.

Contrast that with the costs of the 2015 Gala at the Waldorf honoring Robert DeNiro: entertainment cost $255,016 and $638,934– and that show included live performances by Sting and Aretha Franklin.

In the past, the Friars Club is known pretty much for “roasts” of comedians and actors held at places like the New York Hilton or Waldorf Astoria. They also have tribute dinners at their East 55th St. clubhouse.

By contrast with the more than $1.5 million spent on the Lincoln Awards, the Friars gave a little less than $200,000 to a handful of schools for scholarships according to their Form 990. Their total assets and net assets were each down by around $200,000 from 2014 to 2015.

In a bit of creative accounting, $1,406,884 is listed under ‘revenue-Contributions and Grants.’ But just a few lines down, negative $1,344,403 is listed as “other revenue.” Total revenue was only actually $63,000. Revenue less expenses was listed as negative $210,579.

Here’s a quote from an anonymous email that was forwarded to me from “FlyonthewallFriar”: “All we are looking for is some transparency. Even board members are in the dark.”

To be continued…

“Birth of a Nation” Star-Director Nate Parker Refuses to Apologize for Scandal That Could Kill His Movie

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Nate Parker had a great chance tonight to end the controversy around his past, and save his excellent movie “Birth of a Nation” from becoming a casualty. Parker could have used “60 Minutes” as form for apologizing to the family of the young woman he was acquitted of raping in 1999 as a student at Penn State.

Instead, Parker declined. “I don’t feel guilty,” he told Anderson Cooper. “I do think it’s tragic…but I also think…at some point I have to say it, I was falsely accused. I was vindicated. I was proven innocent.”

Parker and his co-writer, Jean Celestin, were accused of raping a young woman. Parker was acquitted. Celestin was found guilty but that was overturned on appeal. The woman committed suicide in 2012. “I was devastated,” he told Cooper, when he head the girl committed suicide. He said he heard about it in the news. “I feel terrible that this woman isn’t here. I feel terrible her family had to deal with that. But apology, no.”

The public is aware of the incident. “Birth of a Nation” posters have been defaced with the word ‘rapist.’ That’s not good, and it colors the entire experience of the movie. And that’s too bad, because this is a movie that must be seen, it’s too important to ignore. Without this scandal, “Nation” would be an easy Best Picture nominee. Before the scandal broke, the movie was considered the front runner to win. Now, not so much.

“Birth of a Nation” is coming this Friday, October 7th. How can audiences separate their feelings about Parker from the historical importance of the movie? And who is giving Parker advice? Whoever it is has not been able to give Parker something to say that appeases anyone. The “60 Minutes” interview could have turned this around, but it hasn’t. What a shame.The stakes are high financially– $17 million spent by Fox Searchlight plus promotion means “Birth” has to clear $50 million. And the stakes are high for Parker because this will follow him forever until he seems more contrite. I am disappointed no one has explained that to him.

 

 

Ava DuVernay on Her Oscar-Buzzed Documentary “13th” And Why She Won’t Make a Film About Oprah

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Ava DuVernay’s powerful documentary “13th” about racism, mass incarceration, corruption and monetization of the prison system received standing ovations at all three screenings Friday night when it kicked off the 54th New York Film Festival in Lincoln Center.

 

Ms. DuVernay was tireless in promoting the film, beginning with a press conference following the first critic’s screening Friday morning, and the red carpet in the evening where she spoke with everyone, including the writers at the end of a long line. By Saturday morning when she participated in a Q&A at a BAFTA screening she had gone hoarse. “Sorry I sound like a man,” she told the Brit audience. “I love men but I don’t like sounding like one.”

 

Meanwhile, on Friday during her red carpet duties she got called way half way through to introduce the film at the early screening. She promised she would be back and she was good for her word.

 

Looking elegant and beautiful in a slinky blue gown, the “Selma” director told us, “My feet are really killing me and I hate to be a diva but I have a little bit of a knee problem,” by which she meant she was anxious to get going. Instead the gracious and brilliant director gave lengthy and thought provoking answers to questions posed by the few journalists left at the end of the line:

 

 

When was the moment that you realized that you had to make this film?

 

AD: This is a film that I always wanted to make. It was always something that was inside of me. When Netflix offered me the opportunity to make a documentary about whatever I wanted I knew what I wanted it to be. I grew up in Compton around a steady police presence, a very, very deep police presence, a lot of interactions with the criminal justice system through your neighbors and friends in my community and so I had been formulating and thinking about these things for a long time so I’d say this is a story that’s been with me for many, many years.

 

 

What was your stylistic purpose?

 

I tried to keep this as simple as possible, because I wanted the highlight to be less style and more on the substance of what our experts and analysts are trying to communicate.

 

What did you learn making this?

 

I learned a lot of new information. I think the information that I learned the most that I knew nothing about was ALEC (American Legislative Exchange Council). Everything else I was aware of both through experience and through study and being a student of this space, mass incarceration and the prison industrial complex. Everyone has passion, and that’s one that I’m very passionate about. I’ve made films about it prior. There’s a storyline in my television series that deals with it in an elongated way. My second narrative film, “Middle of Nowhere,” was all about this issue and its relationship to families.

 

What did you learn about yourself making this film?

 

I learned that, I don’t know, I can take a lot but I don’t know how much more I want to take, you know, creating the bloody Sunday sequence in “Selma” and having to call action and direct people to beat each other up and be hurt was not an easy thing and to look through hundreds of hours of footage of violence and prejudice and racism was also really difficult thing. I don’t think it’s particularly healthy. I think it was necessary and I’m glad I did it. I don’t know how soon I’ll be doing it again.

 

 

 

What’s the next chapter in the evolution of race relations in this country do you think?

 

It’s going to be up to us as a country to decide. My hope is that on Netflix more people would see it than if it was in a theater and that it will spark conversation, especially as we go into our elections and we interrogate and really demand answers from the candidates as to what they’re going to do to assist us in what we as a country decide that we want. But in order to do all of that people need to know what the problem is. I don’t think enough people are aware of the issues, so that’s why we try to do a deep dive into it so that you can’t walk out of here saying you don’t know about it anymore. You know. Now that you know you are no longer innocent. You know. Silence is consent, and so the hope is that folks speak, folks act and that we can make a change together.

 

What’s the role of music in your films? And what do you think is the role of art in activism and how oppression can bring out incredible art?

 

 

Music is a big part of my film making process. It’s part of the tools that I use. It’s equal to cinematography and production design and performances and research and all those things whether it’s narrative or documentary, so the music on this is very intentional. It’s actually part of the fabric of the unfolding of the plot so to speak. Every time you hear music in this film we have artists that have been talking about issues of incarceration and criminal justice throughout the decades but no one has listened, so you have Nina Simone, you have negro spirituals, you have hip hop, you have soul. You have all these black artists who have been trying to express our disdain and express dissent and continuing to do so, so that’s the idea behind it.

 

And it’s a fantastic time that we’re in. The Black Lives Matter movement is no longer a moment. It’s a movement. And as all movements are it exists on multiple planes, not just politics, not just culture, not just historical context, but also an artistic context. You know you look at Kendrick in music. You look at the great literature… You look at theater, at what Lin-Manuel is doing. You look at film, what Ryan Coogler is doing. And I hope that I can be a part of that…. I just came from the New African-American Museum of History and Culture in D.C. The architecture that David Adjaye made in the form of an African crown is what that building is structured on, based on. These are vibrant artistic endeavors during a vibrant, political time and I think they go hand in hand and I’m happy to be a part of it.

 

“And I got to get out of these shoes,” Ms. DuVernay said, before being button holed on a final question, which was whether she would consider making a biopic of Oprah Winfrey.

 

“I don’t think so,” she said. “No. It’s hard to make movies about your friends.”

 

Photo c2016 Showbiz411 by Paula Schwartz

 

 

 

 

Box Office: “Snowden” Stiffs, “Masterminds” Has No Relativity, Beatles Keep Soaring

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The box office is in for the weekend, and Tim Burton’s  “Miss Peregrine” is the story– the fanciful tale over-performed, taking in $28.5 million. That’s more than expected and more than Friday’s take indicated. Nice. On the flip side, “Deepwater Horizon” sunk with $20.5 million, less than the multiple of its Friday income of $7 million.

“Masterminds” was finally released by the formerly bankrupt Relativity, and it was not masterful. The total for three days is $6.6 million. It must have cost something– $40 million? We’ll wait for a DVD.

Oliver Stone’s “Snowden” has not worked out the way I thought it would. Open Road has $18 million. They might not break even. I liked this film a lot and thought it would do better. But the notion of Snowden as a hero just doesn’t play in the hinterlands. And “Citizenfour” may have soaked up the audience. On the other hand, we learned a lot. Joseph Gordon Levitt gave a great performance, too.

The one bright spot: the Beatles have made over $8 million worldwide with Ron Howard’s “Eight Days a Week” documentary. How do you like that? This was supposed to be  Hulu release. But fans wanted to see it in the theaters on big screens. Rock on!