Friday, December 19, 2025
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Clive Davis Joined by Dionne Warwick, Alan Parsons at Arista Records Emotional Reunion

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When Clive Davis was the head of Columbia Records, he sent out a promo video (this was in 1973) of him reading the lyrics to Bruce Springsteen’s “Blinded by the Light.” It’s a hoot, but it sold Bruce’s first album.

Three years later, he went to meet Eric Carmen, former leader of the Raspberries, in his apartment in Cleveland to hear a bunch of songs for Carmen’s first solo album. Carmen said in a video shown last night at the first ever Arista Records reunion: “Cleveland? Can you imagine?” Davis heard the hit “All By Myself” and the rest is history.

And the history was all on display last night at the Cutting Room, where former Arista exec Ken Levy and a bunch of Clive “grads” put on an unexpectedly emotional and fun first ever reunion. It’s 42 years since Clive took over Bell Records, kept three of the artists, and built Arista. Barry Manilow’s “Mandy” was the first hit and the golden streak didn’t stop until around 2000, when Davis started his J Records and launched Alicia Keys. Arista went on without him, but not for long.

clive and dionne 3I think Clive was fairly shocked at the turnout last night, and the time his former employees put into this event. First of all, two big artists– Dionne Warwick and Alan Parsons– showed up. The Cutting Room featured an Arista museum with artifacts from hit records by Whitney, Barry, Dionne, Aretha, Rod Stewart, and so on. (It should all go into the Grammy museum.)

There was a cake in the shape of the old combo record/tape player Clive used to listen to his cassette tapes on, of demo songs for the artists. Beautiful.

So many important people from the Arista years were there– Pete Ganbarg (now at Atlantic, where he’s made 21 Pilots a hit), Richard Palmese (rocking on the west coast with Live Nation), Roy Lott, Donny Ienner (who went on to an infamous career with Tommy Mottola at Sony), Clive’s beloved secretary Rose Gross-Marino, Gerry Griffiths– he signed Whitney Houston to her contract, and so on.

Some went back to the Bell days right after Clive came from his fabled run at Columbia Records. The only act Bell really had was the Fifth Dimension (who should be in Halls of Fame). Many warm greetings in the room from all kinds.

(I overheard not a few say “Is that so-and-so? They fired me! I want to say hello!”)

Many people came from Columbia to Arista with Clive after he was fired (a set up, politics, etc) because they believed in him. It paid off.

Clive was overwhelmed. He brought his friends– Nikki Haskell, Beverly Johnson, and Greg Schriefer. His 20 minute speech was so lovely, and heartfelt. Here’s a clip from it. The meat of it starts around 7:17 to 8:52, and you can see what a mensch he is and why these people loved him.

I sat with the publicists– Gwendolyn Quinn, Tracy Jordan, Lynne Volkman, Carol Klenfner, and of course Melani Rodgers. What a gang!

Yes, Whitney’s name was invoked a lot. There was a beautiful in Memoriam section where I saw my old (and much missed) pal Michael Klenfner. Aretha Franklin’s ear must have been burning– she was spoken about a lot.

And so many hits– Clive revived the Grateful Dead, the Kinks, and Santana, among others. It wasn’t all just Whitney. And he presented Patti Smith to the world– the most cutting edge influence ever. Wow.

Box Office: “Jungle Book” Swings to $103Mil Opening Weekend, By the Guy Behind “Swingers”

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Twenty years ago, Jon Favreau made his debut co-producing and starring Doug Liman’s “Swingers.”

This weekend, Favreau directed “The Jungle Book,” and it swung all right– to $103 million for the weekend. That’s $28 million more than Disney’s other current huge hit “Zootopia” did in its first weekend, by the way.

(Just to add in generational clarity: Doug Liman directed “Swingers.” Now he does things like the terrific “Edge of Tomorrow.”)

“The Jungle Book” is second among PG Disney films only to “Alice in Wonderland” (2010). And “Jungle Book” is way ahead of Oscar winner “Inside Out.”

Disney may have problems in their executive suite, but in the movie division, Alan Horn is hitting home runs.

Elsewhere, Lions Gate release “Criminal” was a huge loser, making just $5.8 million. LGF is already in hot water, their stock is sinking. This bad news won’t help. “Criminal” has to be a $40 million bloodbath at the very least.

Not many people ran to see Vogue editor Anna Wintour snarl at her staff in “The First Monday in May,” which opened the Tribeca Film Festival. Twenty theaters, total $105K. A table at Wintour’s Met Ball costs $240,000 by the way.

Here’s a clip from the ‘real’ “Jungle Book:”

Music: Beyonce, Alicia Keys Ready to Drop Surprise New Music This Month

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Stay tuned here…

Beyonce is making lemonade out of lemons. Just as I said weeks ago, Beyonce is getting ready to drop new music and a video album (whatever that is) on April 23rd. She released a teaser a couple of days ago. I told you she wouldn’t go out on her tour without something new.

Alicia Keys is hosting “Saturday Night Live” on May 7th. Yesterday she posted a teaser to Twitter– she’s got new music (it’s been a while) and she’s playing a “secret” New York show any minute. I was thinking about Alicia last night at the Arista Records reunion — Clive Davis launched her 15 years ago! Time flies!

Nicole Kidman & Keith Urban are Still Happy, Christopher Walken Has No Cell Phone or Computer

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Nicole Kidman arrived early on the red carpet last night for the Tribeca Film Festival premiere of “The Family Fang.” She came with her husband, country music star Keith Urban — apparently they are still together and very happy despite supermarket tabloid reports to the contrary. (Drat! So much for “inside the shocking $250 mil divorce!”)

“The Family Fang” is a big deal for Kidman, who optioned the book and is also the executive producer. Based on Kevin Wilson’s 2011 bestseller, the screenplay is by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright David Lindsay-Abaire, who wrote “Rabbit Hole,” for which Kidman received an Oscar nomination. (She won in 2002 for “The Hours.”)

Kidman and Bateman play siblings of avant-garde performance artists (Maryanne Plunkett and Christopher Walken) who use their children – often against their wishes – to pull off their outrageous public stunts.

I asked Kidman how she knew Jason Bateman was the right choice to be director?

“I’d seen ‘Bad Words’ and I thought his balance of humor and pathos was really strong, and I think he’s going to have an extraordinary career as a director,” she told me. “I think I’m fortunate to be in his second film. He’s off and running now.”

Bateman told me he’d like to take the Ron Howard route and transition from actor to director. “That’s my dream, that’s my goal, and I’ve told him. I try to pick his brain as much as I can about how he did it, how he does it as far as parlaying his experience and ambition as an actor into being a director and a producer and somebody who runs a company,” he said. “I’m trying to kind of put the little pieces together that might make that a reality one day.”

Asked if he’d read “The Family Fang” before Kidman approached him, Bateman said dryly, “I didn’t no, but that doesn’t mean anything. I’m not well read at all.”

Christopher Walken, wearing a heavy overcoat and scarf on the red carpet, made no pit stops at the premiere, but at the press conference earlier in the day he was talkative and in a great mood.

He revealed he is a Luddite, and doesn’t own a computer or even a cellphone.

“The thing about cellphones it’s like a watch. Everybody’s got one, so if it’s an emergency someone’s got one,” he told me. “There are times, like with a flat tire, that it could come in handy. But my wife always says to me, whatever you do, never look yourself up on the Internet.”

Walken said he became an actor by accident. “I was a dancer and I got a job as an actor. I have no idea how it happened.”

When he started out, Walken said he had a fantasy he would be a stand up comic.

“You know, to be by yourself on a stage and say funny things. I’m very impressed by that when I see it and I suppose I always wanted to do it. I never did.”

Instead, early on, he said, “I started playing troubled, disturbed people, suicidal, villainous, and I may have crossed some kind of line because it’s true: it’s pretty much all I get offered but most actors don’t work much so I can’t complain.”

What is his dream role, the one role he’d like to play?

“I’d like to play a nice man with kids. Have them say, ‘What should I do?’ Do the right thing! That would be nice, hey? And then of course, I’d do something terrible.”

Photo c2016 Showbiz411 by Paula Schwartz

Adam Levine Nearly Marooned By LA Traffic, Makes it to “Sing Street” Premiere

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LA traffic being what it is, screwed up even adorable Adam Levine a bit Thursday night. Adam was meant to host a pre-reception for the new Weinstein Company film, “Sing Street.” He co-wrote a song called, “Go Now,” (not the Denny Laine song) with the film’s director/writer John Carney (“Once,” “Begin Again”). This is Adam’s second go round with Carney. Levine starred in “Begin Again” as well as writing some of the music for that film.

Adam left Universal Studios where he was filming “The Voice,” over the hill as they say here, to come to the London Hotel in West Hollywood in especially heavy rush hour traffic. He bounded in just in time to introduce the film. Before that, Weinstein’s David Glasser intro’d Adam Levine as “our favorite “Carney” alum.” (That is, unless Keira Knightley is around.)

Levine said, “I didn’t have to much to do with this, it’s all John. I co-wrote the song, “Go Now,” in the film. John wanted me to tell you guys that he’s a brilliant director, a genius and a visionary. Seriously he’s one of my favorite people in the whole world, I love him so much, this movie is fantastic and I’m honored for my small part in it.”

Carney praised Adam and introduced members of the cast, all mostly newcomers except the terrific British actress Lucy Boynton and “Transformer’s” Irish native Jack Reynor.

Carney was asked if his next film will incorporate music? “Not sure what I’m doing next, but I always seem to gravitate towards that.” I asked Carney afterwards about how a small town Irish boy is making it so big in Hollywood. “I live in Dublin. LA is way too much for me. But grateful to be here when I am, always.”

“Sing Street”– based in 1980’s Dublin– tells the story of a music loving 14 year old Connor (Ferdia Walsh-Peelo) and his strained home and school life, falling in love with a beautiful, albeit damaged girl named Raphina (Boynton) and his quest to start a rock band to win her affection.

“Sing Street,” has ginormous heart, bursting with sweet romance and beyond appealing enchantment. All are woven into the innocence of youth, touching relationships between friends and brothers (played by Reynor,) and teenage tribulations. Carney’s artistry binds them all together in a poetic, lyrical, humorous and touching way. “Sing Street” is a must see, with fantastic pop music to enjoy and add to your playlists!

Warren Beatty Dramedy — Still No Title– Gets First Screening Next Week in L.A. EXCLUSIVE

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EXCLUSIVE The untitled Warren Beatty movie gets its first public screening mext Tuesday in Pasadena. A spy sent along some of the info including an actual description of the film.

Fox will release this film later this year, starring Lily Collins, Alden Ehrenreich, and Beatty with a big supporting cast. As I wrote this week, Beatty doesn’t want to go to film festivals, so this may be how they test the film in advance. I have a good feeling about this one. Fingers crossed. Any members of the test audience can email me, confidentially, at showbiz411@gmail.com.

PS As I’ve said before, also, Beatty may have chosen very wisely in Ehrenreich as his leading man. He already acquitted himself well in the Coen Brothers movie, and he’s up for playing young Indiana Jones.

warren test screening

Review: Bart Freundlich’s “Wolves” Has the Spunk and Tension of “Whiplash”

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A few ‘name’ people showed up tonight for Bart Freundlich’s “Wolves” like Ethan Hawke, and Katie Couric. Maybe they’d heard Freundlich, who’s made five films, is the husband of Julianne Moore. Or maybe they liked Freundlich’s earlier films, like “The Myth of Fingerprints.”

“Wolves” turns out to be the “Whiplash” of Tribeca, full of spunk and so much tension that even as it navigates a couple of cliches (gambling debts sinking a family, coming of age angst) you are rooting for everyone.

Michael Shannon and Carla Gugino are a struggling Manhattan middle class couple with a teen son (Taylor John Smith, 20, in a breakout performance) who’s a basketball star in his senior year of high school. Shannon is a ne’er do well novelist teaching creative writing at a community college. Gugino has  mid level job at a department store. They’re hoping Anthony, the son, can get a sports scholarship to a good school, maybe Cornell.

So that’s the set up. Except failure pervades Shannon’s teacher, he drinks and gambles. We meet him just as he’s gambling his little family’s tenuous future. He has a good guy brother (Chris Bauer, excellent) who will help him, to a point. But otherwise, he’s sinking. Gugino sees it, still loves him, but loves her son more.

Freundlich pulls it off because he’s invested these people– you’ve seen them before in other situations– with a lot of texture and depth. Plus, Taylor John Smith as the basketball hero is a find. He just gets away with playing 18, and seems like a high school kid. He’s also got a mentor in veteran actor John Douglas Thompson as Socrates, who keeps his advice to a minimum but comes to Anthony’s aid as needed.

Freundlich is smart not to lay anything on too thick here. Emotions are kept in eheck, but the realities of the situation are honestly felt. Like Anthony, you feel the director has found his spot on the court at last, and is scoring time after time.

 

Photo c2016 Showbiz411.com

Famed Writer Gay Talese, 84, Sells Sex and Murder Book to Spielberg, “American Beauty” Director

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Gay Talese, the most dapper journalist in the world, is 84 years young. The famed for New York Times reporter and Esquire writer, and best-seller on the book charts, has just sold a book about sex and murder to Dreamworks and Steven Spielberg. The director will be Sam Mendes, Oscar winner for another Dreamworks movie many years ago called “American Beauty.”

“The Voyeur’s Motel” is the name of the movie, and it’s based on a piece from this week’s New Yorker that comes from a book of the same name which Gay will publish in July. The book is not long– 240 pages– but it details Gay’s correspondence with a man named Gerald Foos beginning in 1980. Foos bought a motel in Aurora, Colorado simply to spy on his guests having sex. He had two wives, and each of them helped him do it. At some point he says he witnessed a murder but never reported it.

Foos is still alive, and now has after all these years authorized Talese to write the story. Talese has his own questions, since after believing the murder story, there’s no record of it anywhere. Did Foos hallucinate it? Did it really happen? That whole aspect is chilling because the entire saga is so fascinating. Talese at 84 remains at the top of his game. I think this book is going to be a huge hit, and the movie will be, too. I’m sure Tom Hanks is already vying for the role of Foos. (Every good actor in Hollywood will want to play him, and the wives will be big roles, too.  Diane Lane, that’s you.)

By all means, read The New Yorker piece. You won’t be able to put it down.

Exclusive: McCartney, Stones, Who, Dylan Eyed for Coachella Fall Mega Classic Rock Fest

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UPDATE SAT MORNING APRIL 16TH 8:47AM EST: My scoop about Coachella and huge rock stars was summarily ripped off by the LA Times faster than you can say “Sam Zell.” Rolling Stone and Billboard followed. Nice. Next time the LA Times is sold or censored by some publisher, I’m going to take the publisher’s side. Cowards. Well, at least they know how to read. PS Rolling Stone even took my ‘mega’ into their headline.

Here’s the original story:

APRIL 15TH 10:27AM EASTERN: The Coachella Music Festival starts tonight out in Indio, California with its mix of indie rockers, rappers, and a few stars like Guns n Roses, Chris Stapleton, Ellie Goulding, Disclosure, and Of Monsters and Men, and Halsey sprinkled in for the kick ass, young crowd.

But I’m told that the Coachella organizers want a fall festival, in October, and are in the process of booking mega classic rock stars. I do mean Stars, too, as Paul McCartney, the Rolling Stones, The Who, Bob Dylan, Elton John and Roger Waters of Pink Floyd may all converge on the area. McCartney, you may recall, opened Coachella in 2009.

The names are real, so are the offers, and this is happening.

Sting and Bruce Springsteen are other names in the mix. Other big rock acts with historical significance are being contacted, too. So far no R&B stars have been mentioned but I can’t believe Stevie Wonder or Earth, Wind & Fire wouldn’t be considered.

Get your hotel rooms now.

Coachella chief Paul Tollett just said in an interview out there that a fall festival was “doable,” and of course a Columbus Day weekend blow out would be the perfect autumn offering. Coachella accommodates upwards of 50,000 guests.

 

“Live” From Not-Tribeca: Patti Smith and Ethan Hawke Talk Meryl Streep, Vincent D’Onofrio, Chet Baker, and Peanut Butter Sandwiches

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How about this? Neither one of us be the moderator and we’ll both be ourselves,” legendary poet/rocker Patti Smith told Ethan Hawke as they took the stage for a talk Thursday afternoon at the SVA Theater in Chelsea as part of the Tribeca Film Festival.

 

During an entertaining hour of improvised conversation on far ranging topics that included acting, process and discipline, they also name-dropped Vincent D’Onofrio, Sam Shepard, Gregory Corso and Philip Seymour Hoffman, who had contributed something to their lives.

 

 

Smith mentioned she had just seen Hawke’s Chet Baker film, “Born to Be Blue.”

 

“We’re sort of like abstract friends right? So I haven’t seen him since I’ve seen the movie. I love this film,” she said. “It moves like methadone. I never had methadone but I know a lot of people on methadone and it’s like that. It has a motion, it has a rhythm that’s true to the drug.”

 

 

Smith had a Chet Baker story. She tried to get the jazz artist to improvise on Elegie, a requiem for Jimi Hendrix, which was on Smith’s 1975 debut album Horses. Smith recited the last lines, “Trumpets, violins, I hear them in the distance.” She wanted Baker to improvise at the end of the song with trumpets and violins. “And he said he’d do it to, but then his agent got a hold of the whole thing and demanded $5,000.” Smith said on a $20,000 budget for the whole album they couldn’t afford him. “I was still working at the Strand bookstore and I was making like $2,000 a year.”

 

Even though Baker is not on the record, Smith said when she hears the song, “He’s there in my head. I hear like an echo of him on the record,” she said, “so if you ever hear this record and hear the last song just throw some Chet Baker on it and then it will be perfect. Five thousand bucks! I got it now, Chet!”

 

 

Ethan Hawke mentioned that early in his career he co-starred with Vincent D’Onofrio in “Baal,” Bertolt Brecht’s first play, and that D’Onofrio gave him good career advice. Hawke added that he heard Patti Smith had visited Brecht’s grave.

 

“I love Brecht,” Smith said. “I went to visit his grave. It was snowing. It was freezing cold. I had my clarinet with me,” she said, “so I sang him a little song. I played really bad clarinet, and I felt like Brecht was saying, ‘Okay, okay, go!”

 

 

 

Smith said when she was younger she thought she’d be in the theater. “I always dreamed of being in ‘Mother Courage.’”

 

Hawke enthused, “You’re getting old enough for the part.”

 

Smith mentioned how she saw Meryl Streep perform the title role in Central Park, twice.

 

“I couldn’t believe how awesome she was. The strength she had but also her movement, her body language. I mean she’s only a couple of years younger than me, but she’s so physical,” Smith said. “I don’t think she has arthritis.”

 

Smith than exclaimed, “Acting is so hard! It’s the worst fucking job in the world! Fourteen-fifteen hours at a time, a lot of time just sitting seven hours in make up. Then there’s a technical problem they have to do it over, and then they have to put the nose on again. Then they have to shoot it the same scene for 40 different angles, and if it’s Michael Mann, you know, 75 angles.”

 

 

Hawke asked, “Is being a rock star all it’s cracked up to be?”

 

“A minor version,” of being a movie star said Smith. “For me, it’s like, I got nine guys and me in a tour bus. We all have our bunks. We go from town to town. You have a 14-hour ride from Czechoslovakia to being in some field in Poland, and then you stumble out and then, you know, then you go on the stage and you do your thing and stumble up the stage and eat a peanut butter sandwich and get back on the bus, so it’s a great life!”

 

 

Smith mentioned that she just got in from Europe the previous night. “I’m in such a strange state and time zone,” she said. “If I seem slightly inarticulate it’s just because a my brain’s speaking French. Even though I don’t really speak French.”

 

She added that she’d watched two episodes of the British detective show, “Endeavor,” dubbed in French, which kept her up all night.

 

“My television detective addiction really started with Vincent D’Onofrio,” Smith said. She would watch “Law and Order: Criminal Intent,” starring D’Onofrio while she was on the road in Europe, but never in English since she didn’t own a television set. “Finally I just went and bought a fucking TV and started watching it at home.” Later she even appeared on one of the final episodes. “They had nothing to lose,” said Smith. She played a professor of antiquities. “I was putting my all into it,” said Smith, adding that she was “projecting and being slightly Shakespearian.” D’Onofrio quoted director Stanley Kubrick who had told him during a scene in “Full Metal Jacket”: “Just step back a little and maybe half that or give a quarter of that and then you’ll have your character, so I got the idea.”

 

Later when she got a scene in “The Killing,” she said she hoped she would play a homeless person or a crack head, something “cool” like that she said. Instead she played a prim neurosurgeon in a lab coat, holding a clipboard. “So I remembered Kubrick and D’Onofrio,” she said. “I was completely dismissive of these two detectives that in real life I loved so much, acting like I had little time for them,” she said. “I only had to do it once or twice,” she laughed.

 

 

 

To a question by someone in the audience Smith said she had no pre-performance rituals.

 

“If I’m going on stage, whether it’s a 100,00 people or a 100 people, usually when I’m like off stage, I’m laughing and joking with people, or I’m helping my daughter with a problem,’ Smith said. “Somebody has their dog backstage, and someone will go, ‘Patti you have to go on, and I’ll go, ‘I’ll be right back, and I do what I’m suppose to do. I don’t have an onstage persona. I’m just the same old person. I just drift on stage. I don’t really get stage fright or anything. I just, you know, go on, here I am, do my thing and then go off and get a peanut sandwich and coffee and that’s that.”