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Exclusive: Antonio Banderas In the Mix for “Salvador Dali” Movie from “American Psycho” Director

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Lots of talk and buzz last night at the premiere of Matt Brown’s “The Man Who Knew Infinity” starring Jeremy Irons and Dev Patel. The Merchant-Ivory-like story of India’s premiere mathematician opens tomorrow with gorgeous Devika Bhise (graduate of Manhattans’ tony Brearley School and Johns Hopkins, no less) featured prominently. I almost forget I had the pleasure of sitting next to Devika in January at Lynn Hirschberg’s W Magazine “It Girl” lunch in Hollywood. Now she’s a movie star!

Dev Patel, still just 26, has never stopped working after his memorable debut in “Slumdog Millionaire” at age 17. Between “Exotic Hotel” movies and “The Newsroom,” Patel is on a fast track. He plays Srinivasa Ramanujan Iyengar who went from poverty in India to becoming a Royal fellow at Cambridge University in England during World War I. He died at age 32. Ramanujan is revered in India, director Mira Nair told me last night. “He’s probably second to Gandhi in being a legend.”

The famous producer Ed Pressman, wife Annie and son Sam produced “Infinity” and their next project, fingers crossed, is “American Psycho” director Mary Harron’s take on “Salvador Dali.” Antonio Banderas may play Dali, which sounds like a great idea. (Mark Rylance’s name has been mentioned, too. He’s become an overnight Meryl Streep, but he’s not right for everything.) The Pressmans, by the way, assembled an all star crew to make “Infinity”– you won’t see another movie this sumptuous looking this year.

Also at “Infinity”– the original super model Lauren Hutton, director Simon Curtis, who’s going to make the American version of “The Untouchables,” as well as “Finding Neverland” Broadway star Laura Michelle Kelly, Bob Balaban and wife Lynn, Martha Stewart, and Blaine Trump, ex sister in law of Donald.

Prince’s Unreleased Records Start Coming This Friday with “HitnRun Phase 2”

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Today makes one week since Prince died. Tomorrow, the first of his unreleased albums will be issued as a CD and digital download.

“HitnRun, Phase 2” has been available for streaming on Tidal only. But otherwise it didn’t exist. Tomorrow, the album hits stores physical and virtual on Prince’s label, NPG Records. And yes, someone is actually running NPG since 2013: Trevor Guy.

This evening Trevor posted his own memoriam to Prince on Twitter:

 

NPG could start reissuing or issuing music as it pleases now, and on different labels. “HitnRun Phase One” was distributed by Universal Records. “Phase Two” is coming from Republic/RocNation, which is under the Universal banner and co-owned by Jay Z. It’s already charting at number 7 on Amazon in advance sales of CDs.

NPG also presumably has the rights to a bunch of Prince CDs that are out of stock or out of print and don’t exist anymore. Among them is the “Emancipation” double CD (with “Holy River” and “Betcha By Golly Wow” and Prince’s cover of “One of Us” by Joan Osborne). There’s also “The Gold Experience” with “Most Beautiful Girl in the World” and “I Hate You”; and a bunch of other things including “Crystal Ball”- a 3 CD set of outtakes and B sides that came with a separate CD called “The Truth”– a fourth CD. That whole latter package is a huge archival project. “The Truth” contains the song “3Rd eye” and a great hit called “Dionne.”

And even after all that I count around a dozen or so more NPR albums including “Rave un2 the Joy Fantastic.” I hope Trevor Guy can hire full time archivists as good as the Beatles’ to put all this stuff together properly. I actually recommend Jody Klein and ABKCO or Rhino, each of whom excels at doing packages.

PS There’s also “The Black Album,” Prince’s own bootleg album, which came out on Warner Bros. in November 1994. I have it. It’s not listed in a lot of places.

Exclusive UPDATE: Whitney Houston Official Doc Coming from Oscar Winner Kevin MacDonald and “Sugar Man” Team

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As I surmised the other day, and SCOOPED– the official Whitney Houston documentary will be directed by Kevin MacDonald, Oscar winner for “One Day in September.”

The producers, I am told, are the folks behind “Searching for Sugar Man” Simon and Jonathan Chinn. Distribution in the UK has already been set up with Altitude, the company behind the “Amy” documentary. That’s a lot of Oscar winners involved.

I told you that Showtime is working on their own unauthorized documentary on Whitney, from Nick Broomfield. The Houston insiders on this are asking friends and associates of Whitney to not cooperate with that film. So far most Whitney associates are sticking with the authorized version. Clive Davis is one of them.

The big question is whether the MacDonald film will really get into what happened to Whitney as she descended into drugs. At one point she was living in a crack house in Atlanta with a former pop star. The landlord had to evict them. The summer before she died, she went on an international tour, and lost her voice completely. If MacDonald can get into those crevices, he’ll have a real movie.

Beyonce Will Sell Over 500K Copies of “Lemonade” This Week, But Prince Will Sell That Many Copies Too

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Beyonce is on track to sell over 500,000 copies of “Lemonade” from digital downloads this week. That’s pretty good since the sales week begins on Friday, and “Lemonade” wasn’t really available until Monday morning. Counting in streams, according to hitsdailydouble, “Lemonade” could get up to over 600,000.

But wait! Then there’s Prince. When he died last Thursday, he sold 200,000 CDs and downloads in 24 hours until the cut off for last week’s chart.

This week? Prince is selling well over 500,000 total copies of several albums. The top sellers according to hits:
Prince, The Very Best Of (Warner Bros.) 210-230k
Prince, Purple Rain (Warner Bros.) 115-130k
Prince, The Hits/B-Sides (Warner Bros.) 50-60k
Prince, Ultimate (Warner Bros.) 33-38k
Prince, 1999 (Warner Bros.) 27-30k

Streaming for Prince is another issue. He’s not on Spotify, so he’s losing sales there. But his iTunes downloads are huge. And there are many albums and singles not even available. The future is strong for his catalog. But what a shame!

Oliver Stone’s “Snowden” Trailer Arrives, Film Likely Headed to Toronto Fest

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Oliver Stone’s “Snowden” trailer is here, and it looks very, very good. The film launches on September 16th, which means a Toronto Film Festival premiere is likely. That’s where they will get the biggest bang. Also because it’s in Canada, maybe Eddie Snowden himself will show up! (Unlikely. Look what happened on “The Good Wife.”) Nicolas Cage is featured in his first decent movie in 20 years. Exciting.
 

 

Broadway: “Tuck Everlasting” Hits the Bottom of the Tony Awards Season Barrel

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You know, I’m pretty fair to most Broadway musicals. I wasn’t wild about either “American Psycho” or “Waitress,” but there were excellent things about each that mitigated the problems. Let them live, not everything can be “Hamilton.”

But in a season of “Hamilton,” to see an effort full of cliches, riffs on other shows, ham-fisted treacle– come on, there’s only so much I can take. “Tuck Everlasting” is not very good, it’s just inches from terrible.

The only things that separate it from total disaster are some of the cast. Carole Carmello and Fred Applegate are stars, and they shine even when the material is working against them. Terrence Mann is the A Rod of Broadway musicals.

They barely survive this show. Mann, in particular, seems to have been recycled in scenes from “Pippin” and “Into the Woods.” (Was he also in “Seussical”?) I couldn’t tell sometimes if director Casey Nicholaw, who made “Something Rotten” a fresh show and a send up simultaneously, was trying for some kind of satire.

But I think he’s serious with “Tuck,” based on a novel and two movies about wood nymphs who discover magic water that lets them live forever. This is both a blessing and curse, as they have witnessed a century of friends and family coming and going.

The show felt like a century, what with tired, retreaded songs (some of the worst I’ve ever heard, my least favorite since “The Bridges of Madison County” and “If/Then.”) They’re uninspired, corny, and tuneless.

Some of the performers were wooden than the woods they traipsed around in). (Good sets, I will concede.) I won’t name names. But maybe there are so many shows running that producers can’t find really good singers. I was shocked by the range here from wonderful (Carmello, Michael Park, and newcomer Sarah Charles Lewis) to the other extreme. The actor who plays Tuck– Andrew Keenan Bolger– may be playing Tobias from “Sweeney Todd.” (He’d be very good in that role.) He looks like he’s about to burst into “Not While I’m Around.”

The plot doesn’t help. The non-aging family sets its sights on Lewis’s Winnie, who is 11. (And 11 in real life, too.) You’ve got Tuck, 17 on stage (but 30 in real life, 103 in nymph years) lusting after her. Very very creepy. Michael Park’s Angus also seems inappropriately matched to her. (He’s around 45.)

When Winnie goes missing, her stern recently widowed mother (who looks way too old to have an 11 year old) and her caricature of a nutty grandmother send a detective (Fred Applegate, who steals the show) and his bumbling son to find her. Cliches smack into each other from every direction. It doesn’t help that the choreography looks like summer stock.

Nicholaw’s edgy and sophisticated work is just thrown out the window. Maybe this is the season of homespun, corny, hackneyed material. (God help us.) But these shows cost $150 and up for tickets. You can’t compare this to something like “Hamilton,” work of genius. It’s like three giant steps backward.

Who was there? Ron Howard. Don’t know why. Alfred Molina, with girlfriend Jennifer Lee (“Frozen” the movie and the forthcoming musical). Michael Urie. WABC Radio host Joan Hamburg. The producers didn’t want press at their after party at Tavern on the Green, and I don’t blame them.

Tonight’s New York Times review is by Charles Isherwood, who’s been handing out positive reviews to shows that Ben Brantley would murder if he had the chance. I don’t know what’s going on– is it an advertiser thing? But his review tonight worries me.

One last thought: why can’t Carolee Carmello have a great show, and win a Tony? She’s too good for this stuff.

Michael Strahan Leaving Live with Kelly on May 13– Quickie Divorce for Sake of Audience

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Michael Strahan is out.

He’s leaving “Live with Kelly” on May 13th. They’re getting a quickie divorce for the sake of the audience.

I’ve known Kelly Ripa since she started with Regis. I don’t believe for a minute that she was mean to Strahan or forced him out. Michael Gelman has been a steady force at that show for over two decades. This is not their fault.

I think Strahan probably felt constrained and wanted to do different things. The whole thing has been handled as badly as Ann Curry’s exit from Today, or a dozen other instances. All that PR expertise and no one knows how to take care of these issues. Amazing.

The search for a co-host can go on all summer and into the fall. Ripa can do the show blind-folded. If she were really smart, she’d ask Regis to come back and help out, make a big deal of him. He and Gelman are still very friendly. Getting Regis back even for a bit would be the coup of the century.

Prince: Sister Says There’s No Will (Scooped Here First), Files to Open Probate

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I told you two days ago that Prince had no will. Now CNN Money reports from Minneapolis that Prince’s sister has filed to open probate. She says no there is no will.

It is beyond amazing that Prince had no plan for his estate, his archives, his business. He was incredibly litigious. He sued record companies, he sued fans for downloading, uploading. And all those lawyers who came and went — none of them managed to get a will drawn up.

Prince’s memoir goes into the probate case. The deal he signed with Spiegel and Grau at Random House is now part of his Estate. Until an executor is named, and the estate is settled, there’s no book.

Ditto for everything else. Warner Music and all the other record companies will just make their payments into the Estate until it’s settled. All those crazy clickbait stories you read around the web– ignore them.

Beyonce Has the Top 6 Singles on iTunes, and 8 out of the Top 10 Tracks

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The lemonade is sweet this morning.

Beyonce Knowles can say she has the top 6 singles on iTunes. Two more in the top 10, make 8 out of 10 all together.

Not bad.

The “Lemonade” album finally hit number 1, succeeding Prince’s greatest hits. But Prince still has a bunch of albums in the top 20. And a a dozen or so single tracks.

At this rate, her fans will be able to sing along with the new songs when Beyonce starts her tour tomorrow. I wonder if she’ll bring her bat?

iTunes_Top_100_Albums_2016_-_2016-04-26_11.25.04

Kelly Ripa Is Back: “Our Long National Nightmare Is Over” Now She Knows How Johnny Carson Felt

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Kelly Ripa is back at work. After Le Scandal of ABC not telling her they were moving Michael Strahan to “Good Morning America,” Ripa has cooled off. Now she knows how Johnny Carson felt when Joan Rivers didn’t tell him she was leaving for her own talk show.

Did Ripa overreact? A little. ABC can’t cancel “Live.” It’s a syndicated hour. The affiliates will not give it back for “GMA” to be extended. Also, with Disney, “Live” is too solid a long term hit. Disney doesn’t want that bad publicity. Ripa has been with them since she was about 21, on “All My Children.” Squandering her would be a huge mistake. I think she should be thrilled. She gets rid of Strahan, who she didn’t like, and can bring in guest hosts from now til the fall. When she and Michael Gelman choose a replacement, it will be big ratings again. I think it’s win-win for her. And Strahan? At GMA, he will be a feature reporter. He’s not replacing George Stephanopolous. 

Here is what she said:

“Guys, guys, guys. Guys, guys, guys, our long national nightmare is over. Please, be seated. Look, I am not — I’m going to be completely honest. I’m fairly certain that there are trained professional snipers with tranquilizer darts in case I drift too far off message. OK. I first want to honestly, sincerely thank you for welcoming me back to the show. The show of support through this bizarre time has been really overwhelming. I really — I needed a couple of days to gather my thoughts after 26 years with this company, I earned the right and let’s be honest. I know half of you called in sick to be here, so we get each other.”

She didn’t stint on taking her time to give an opinion. “I gained some perspective. I always speak from the heart. I didn’t want to come out here and just like say something I might regret,” she told viewers. “So what transpired though over the course of a few days has been extraordinary in the sense that it started a much greater conversation about communication and consideration and most importantly, respect in the workplace. And since we’re being honest, I don’t consider this just a workplace. This is my second home. This is a place that I’ve devoted myself to not just because of you, our loyal viewers, but because of all of the producers and the crew who work on this show. We have an incredible team.”

Ripa added: “We are incredibly devoted to one another. We are family,” she said. “Apologies have been made and the best thing to come out of all of this, you guys, is that our parent company has assured me that Live is a priority.”

The crowd applauded. “Guys, calm down. They didn’t say anything about Christmas bonuses. But there is a commitment to this show and that the people that work here and most importantly to you, the viewers, who have watched us every day for 30 years. I am thrilled for Michael. I’m thrilled for you. This is a tremendous opportunity and I couldn’t be and we couldn’t be prouder of you. And everything we accomplished together. So back to the show, this is entertainment. It’s supposed to be entertaining. So let’s get back to what we do best and start the show. Oh, wait. Incidentally, I just want to say one thing. My dad who was a bus driver for 30 years thinks we’re all crazy. And I think he’s right.”

 

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