Saturday, December 20, 2025
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“Hamilton” Filming with Original Cast Began Yesterday, Continues Through Tomorrow

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EXCLUSIVE Lucky theatergoers who had tickets for “Hamilton” yesterday and for tomorrow night will be part of history.

The 11 time Tony winner is filming with all of its original cast members for posterity. Lead actors Lin Manuel Miranda, Leslie Odom Jr., and Phillipa Soo are exiting the show on July 9th.

The show taped yesterday’s performance and will also tape tomorrow night. Some filming will go on today, which has caused the cancellation of Odom’s record release party tonight.

What will happen to this filmed version is unclear. Most Broadway shows tape a performance for posterity, for the Lincoln Center library. But the original cast version of “Hamilton” done right is probably worth a lot of money. A real feature film is likely 8 to 10 years away.

Box Office Flop for Matthew McConaughey Slave Movie About White Savior

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It must have been thought of the “Schindler’s List” of American slavery.

But “The Free State of Jones” has turned out to be something quite unlike that. And over the weekend, the film starring Matthew McConaughey flopped. With at least a $50 million budget, “Jones” took in just $7.7 million.

The film was written and directed by Gary Ross, who’s made many fine movies including “Pleasantville.” “Free State of Jones” is based on a true story about Newt Knight, a white Mississippi farmer who led a slave revolt against the Confederacy during the Civil War and liberated Jones County.

The story of Knight has been widely debated over the years for its historical significance. But it definitely happened, and it might have been a compelling story for a movie. But the film’s execution left reviewers unimpressed– it has a 40 on Rotten Tomatoes.

“Free State of Jones” also comes at a tricky time in Hollywood, following first the Oscar winner “12 Years a Slave,” followed by an outcry about diversity when no blacks or black films were nominated last year.

Then there’s the looming release of “The Birth of a Nation,” Nate Parker’s much ballyhooed slave story that won kudos at Sundance this year. Fox Searchlight is releasing that film this fall with big Oscar intentions.

And “Birth,” unlike “Jones,” is made by a black director, has mostly black actors, and centers its attention on a black hero. “Jones,” on the other hand, looks like a movie about a white savior of slaves depicted by Matthew McConaughey.

I can’t say anything about “Jones” critically since I haven’t seen it. But I do know it’s hard to take something like this seriously when the movie’s star is appearing commercials for luxury cars, driving around with show hounds in the back seat. That doesn’t help Ross’s intentions, I’m sure.

“Free Stae of Jones” doesn’t have much of a future in the foreign market, which I’m sure the producers knew going in. So this may just turn out to be hard lesson.

Steven Tyler Launches New Single, Says Aerosmith Band Members Want “Farewell Tour”

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On Friday, Steven Tyler launched a new rocking funky single called “Somebody from Somewhere.” It’s title track from his first ever solo album of the same name, due on July 15th.

Last week Tyler told Howard Stern that Aerosmith would go on a final tour of some kind once his solo project is over. In fact, Aerosmith had dates book already for the fall.

But what I’m hearing is Tyler’s band mates– Joe Perry, Brad Whitford, Joey Kramer, and Tom Hamilton– are agitating for a big long worldwide farewell tour. Think of it as a big cash out with no end in sight– a la The Who or Cher. And this way Aerosmith could go out with a bang, while Tyler could have his solo career. Farewell doesn’t mean it’s over. In rock nothing is really over. Look at the Rolling Stones.

In the meantime, I like Tyler’s single. This was supposed to be a country album but I doubt it will really be that. It’s just going to be him doing his thing, which is always very cool.

PS Tyler starts his “Out on a Limb” tour on July 2nd. He previewed it a few weeks ago in New York, and it’s not to be missed. It’s the summer of great rockers– Tyler, Sting and Peter Gabriel, Paul Simon, Paul McCartney.

TV: “Game of Thrones” and “Veep” Come to Surprising Season Endings, and Maybe a Twist

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I don’t claim to be a “Game of Thrones” expert by any means. But the last episode of this season, called “Winds are Changing,” was pretty damn good. The production values on this show are better than a lot of movies– certainly better than “IDR”– and if the below the line people don’t win a lot of Emmys I’ll be surprised.

Jon Snow (Kit Harington) ended last season dead, came back to life slowly this season, and now seems poised to take over. He doesn’t say a lot, which is probably a good idea. He has powerful women competitors in Cersei (Lena Headey) and Daenerys (Emilia Clarke), that’s for sure. And maybe now we know who is father was, I’m not sure.

A lot of people died, and we’ll be sorry to see them go. Maybe some of them escaped the explosion. We don’t know. Some went out the window. They’re not coming back. I do think Tyrion (Peter Dinklage) will rule the whole deal in the end, but I’ve never read the books.

Meanwhile, “Veep” is very sad tonight. Is Selina Meyer really out of office? The season finale could have been the series finale the way they wrote it. God forbid. “Veep” is the best comedy certainly and the whole cast and all the writers need awards immediately. With their schedule, I guess we won’t see “Veep” again until after we really have a woman president. Now that should be interesting! Julia Louis Dreyfus is so terrific– and she got to mimic Maggie Smith’s “What is a weekend” line when she asked “What we walking on?” (The answer: “Grass.”) Also, “I’ll need stamps.” Great stuff.

The surprise twist? Martin Mull has it and I guess that’s the plot of the next season. If you’re too young to know who Martin Mull is, I beseech you to find his recordings and TV appearances.

RIP: Bill Cunningham, Bernie Worrell, Wayne Jackson, Ralph Stanley, NYC Record Stores

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Death never takes a holiday.

There’s a lot of ink today about BILL CUNNINGHAM, who died yesterday at age 87. Bill was the New York Times’s indefatigable street fashion photographer. He gained international renown but he didn’t want anything, just to do his job and ride his bike. He was seen often at the corner of 57th and Park, snapping away. The results would turn up in the Style section. How did he find all those people, wearing all that stuff? He had a magic eye. Bill didn’t like people to pay attention to him. I knew him pretty well, but when we ran into each other by accident, in public where people didn’t know who he was, he would kind of shy me away– he would have cringed in horror if I’d said aloud, “Do you people know who this is?” He was a New York Living Landmark and there will never be anyone like him again. He will be sorely missed.

Three great musicians died this week– RALPH STANLEY, BERNIE WORRELL and WAYNE JACKSON. Ralph Stanley was a bluegrass legend, and much awarded for his contributions to country, blue grass and folk. Bernie Worrell was a founding member of George Clinton’s Parliament and Funkadelic, a keyboardist extraordinaire. His work on those albums is also legendary. But you may know him from the Talking Heads albums as David Byrne moved the group from New Wave to funk and African sounds. Bernie and Adrian Belew became the Talking Heads band, and you can hear them on songs like “Burning Down the House” and “This Must Be the Place.” He was amazing and beloved.

WAYNE JACKSON was the trumpeter half of the Memphis Horns with saxaphonist Andrew Love. They are now both gone. Jackson played that trumpet on every record you like and dance to on oldies radio and Sirius XM Soul Town– every Stax/Atlantic record hit that Jerry Wexler could put him on from “Hold On I’m Coming” to the “In the Midnight Hour” to “Soul Man” and both Aretha and Otis’s versions of “Respect.” It’s a stunning legacy. Click on that link you just passed. His discography will completely blow you away.

A sad note: Sam Moore, of Sam & Dave fame, lost a daughter this week. Tangela Brown was hit by a car in Miami. She was ten days shy of her 55th birthday. Also known as a “Mama Tan,” this proud mother and grandmother was so popular that her funeral yesterday brought out Miami luminaries like R&B great Betty Wright. So far no charge have been filed against the driver of the vehicle, and the Miami Herald hasn’t reported a thing.

The other deaths today are two New York record stores, Rebel Rebel and Other Music, in opposite ends of Greenwich Village. There are just a couple of record stores left in Manhattan, everything is pretty much gone (Book stores, too). This is unbelievable to me, although it’s 20 years in the making. I spent my formative years in Bleecker Bob’s, and the Golden Disc, etc.– where people had conversations and you made new friends. Nothing was “swiped” (Tinder) although maybe somethings were “swiped.” Well, you can always stand in front of a bank or a CVS and see if anyone will talk to you. (LOL.) Other Music was a cool store because it opened in the shadow of Tower Records (that building is still vacant on Broadway and West 4th) and was a pleasant alternative. I always loved the Rebel Rebel logo. There’s still Second Hand Rose Music at 48 East 12th St. Great selection and terrific people.

Adele’s “25” Hits Spotify But 7 of Her Top 10 Songs Come from Old Albums

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Such big news a few days ago! Adele’s “25” was made available on Spotify. What would happen?

The answer is: not much. The single “Hello” was already on Spotify, so that wasn’t news. But the rest of the album– surely that would take off.

Instead, as of this morning, about 48 hours in. of Adele’s top 10 streamed songs, seven come from old albums. Only “Hello,” “When We Were Young,” and “Send My Love (to Your New Lover)” come from the “25” album. “Hello” is her top streamed song with about 539 million plays.

But the second and third biggest plays are for “Rolling in the Deep” and “Someone Like You,” followed by “Make You Feel My Love,” “Set Fire to the Rain,” “Turning Tables,” “One and Only,” and “Rumour Has It.”

“Send My Love” is the number 10 track, with just 41 million streams. It’s number 21 among the top 50 tracks in the US.

Did Adele wait too long? Does it matter? She’s sold at least 10 million actual albums and downloads. Streaming may just be icing on the cake. And also, who needs to stream “25” if they’ve already got it? Not that many people, apparently.

Box Office: “Independence Day Resurgence” Worse Than Predicted at $41.6 Mil

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Box office: “Independence Day: Resurgence” did less well than predicted over the weekend. The number looks like it’s $41.6 million. Fox was hoping for at least $43 million. The settled number may be even lower when the figures come in on Monday. The movie cost $200 million. Everyone involved is praying the Chinese like it anyway!

Just to give some idea of how the sequel really crashed: twenty years ago the original film had a five day opening weekend over July 4th weekend. But just the Friday- Sunday part came to $241 million. In 2016 dollars, that’s $371,351,954.39.

So that’s a frightening statistic. Fox will be fine, with Stacey Snider taking over and a bunch of good looking films including Warren Beatty’s “Rules Don’t Apply” and Jon Hamm in “Keeping Up with the Joneses.” Plus, Fox Searchlight has a potential Oscar winner with “The Birth of A Nation” this fall.

As for “IDR,” failure doesn’t preclude Roland Emmerich from making more potential blockbuster losers. His next one is called “Moonscape,” for Universal, plus he has an “ID” 3 on his mind, a movie version of “Stargate,” and so on. The man who made the ridiculous “2012” and “The Day After Tomorrow” will just keep going, no matter what. Nothing succeeds like excess!

“Hamilton”: Hillary Clinton’s Presidential Campaign Offers $3500 Tickets-Flights-Hotel Package for Two Lucky Winners

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Want to see “Hamilton” on Broadway? You know it’s the hardest ticket since…like, ever.

Well, presumptive Democratic candidate for president Hillary Clinton is offering to pay for you and a guest to see the show. You might even meet her, besides!

The campaign is holding a free sign up contest on her website for a $3,500 package that includes the tickets, plane fare, hotel. You don’t have to contribute to the campaign to register, but if you do, it might help your chances!

It’s unclear if this is for the same July 12th matinee that will be used entirely for fundraising purposes. “Hamilton” has added that performance just for HRC and DNC. For those tickets, you have to donate to the campaign.

Here’s the pitch:

When I first saw the musical Hamilton last year, I was blown away. It’s an incredible feat of storytelling about the fight for the heart and soul of our very nation. It’s a look at history that feels immediately relevant today. It’s a beautiful piece of art with empathy to spare.

So Roger, I want you to experience a performance with me next month. Will you add your name to be entered for the chance to be my guest?

You can bring a friend — and don’t worry about the cost of tickets or flights. The campaign will cover it, so you can focus on enjoying the show!

Enter now, and I might see you at the theater!

Thank you,

Hillary

I don’t know if Donald Trump can get a whole Broadway show for himself, but he can certainly afford to treat lucky winners to tickets. The Presidency as game show! You gotta love it!

LA Theater: Abby Mueller, Sister of Broadway Star Jessie, Opens as Carole King in “Beautiful”

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Carole King’s sister is crushing it as the Pantages in Hollywood. Well sister of the stage Carole–Abby Mueller, sister of Jessie Mueller, Tony award winner for Broadway’s smash, “Beautiful.” Abby Mueller has taken over the role for the national tour. On Friday night she wowed the packed opening rapturous crowd last night. The sisters are part of a veteran Chicago theater family, actor parents Roger Mueller and Jill Shellabarger and their two actor brothers Andrew and Matt, (Abby’s twin). They are what the NY Post cheekily coined, “the closest thing we have to the Von Trapp family.”

Abby proved to be up to the task in a gargantuan way, warbling Carole’s songs with pure heart and sheer vocal talent which earned her a five minute standing ovation. The rest of the cast all were equal to her brilliance. Douglas McGrath wrote the book, which shines the light on Carole’s early marriage and creative partnership with the now late Gerry Goffin, as well as the friendly rivalry between them and the also married songwriting team of Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil. The Manns, who where there last night, proclaimed Abby’s performance as “extraordinary.”

The locals had fun with Carole’s line that she was moving to LA after her divorce from Goffin, “a place called Laurel Canyon,” where she would write the classic “Tapestry” that prompted hoots from the audience which included Carole’s daughter Sherry Goffin Kondor, Cheryl Tiegs, famed director Stanley Kramer’s widow actress/producer Karen Sharpe Kramer and their daughter actress/director Kat Kramer, actresses Brooke Bundy and Carole Cook, Leeza Gibbons, “DWTS” Edyta Sliwinska, songwriter Diane Warren and more. (Speaking about the prolific and supremely sublime Warren, when are we going to have the musical of her life and her super stellar career? No brainer on that one, it would be an instant smash. Broadway theater producers… you listening?)

Back to the wonderful “Beautiful.” If you live in LA or visiting, you must see this production which runs through July 17th. And the Pantages has even more A list shows lined up; “Cabaret” is next, then “Newsies,” followed by “Hedwig And The Angry Inch” as well as performances by The Monkees, Willie Nelson and Alice Cooper and more. Next year, “The King and I,’ “Finding Neverland,” “The Bodyguard,” “The Book of Mormon,” and the smash “Hamilton.” Bravo Pantages for keeping Broadway Theater thriving in the heart of Hollywood. For now though, go see Abby/Carole and feel the earth move under your feet, (pardon the earthquake pun LA readers!)

“Independence Day: Resurgence” A Bust in the US, Studio Pins Hopes to China with Chinese Actors

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“Independence Day: Resurgence” is a bust in the US with a $16 million Friday opening and a predicted $40 mil weekend. It’s a $200 million movie, so that ain’t good.

But 21st Century Fox has hedged its bet. “IDR” opens in China this weekend, too. And even though China has no civil rights and dog meat eating festivals, it’s now the place where the big studios pin their hopes for making some dough on bad films.

To ensure that “IDR” will do well– even without Will Smith– the studio and the filmmakers were clever enough to feature several Asian and Chinese actors. A young actress who goes by Angelababy– her real name is Angela Wing– plays Rain, one of the movie’s stolid ingenues. Chin Han plays Commander Jiang. Ron Yuan, Grace Huang, Ben Wang, and Stephen Oyoung are also featured. There are extras too. Their presence will no doubt be played up as “IDR” opens in China and elsewhere in Asia. It’s a smart movie financially, and inadvertently helps play a part in diverse casting. Everybody wins!

If only “IDR” had a script and other actors who were memorable, the movie might have been a hit in the U.S.