Saturday, December 20, 2025
Home Blog Page 1519

Broadway: Jennifer Hudson Leaving “The Color Purple” Next Month, Heather Headley Coming In

0

Oscar winner Jennifer Hudson has done yeoman service playing Shug Avery in the revival of “The Color Purple.” Now it seems she’s leaving the show on May 8th, a week after the Tony deadline. (She’ll definitely get a Tony nomination for Supporting Actress in a Musical.)

Heather Headley, star of “Elton John’s AIDA” and others, will succeed JHUD in the role. Everyone else, including Cynthia Erivo, is staying.

After she takes a rest I hope Jennifer is going to make a new album. And I’m sure there are movies waiting for her. She’s one of a kind, a superstar, and she’ll be around — I hope– a long, long time. Jennifer says, ““I owe so much to the Broadway community and our audiences. My heart is full as I say to Broadway, ‘until we meet again.’”

Exclusive: Tony Bennett’s 90th Birthday Celebrations Will Be Fitting for a Legend

0

So this is what I am hearing: Tony Bennett’s 90th birthday celebrations will be fitting for a legend of his stature and fame. And boy, they should be.

First up, sources say, is an invite only black tie party at the Rainbow Room on August 3rd, Tony’s actual birthday. Will he sing? Is the Pope– you know? Expect people to come back from summer vacations just to be there. Nothing more swell than Tony Bennett at the Rainbow Room, right? And think of that guest list.

Then, you’ll recall that Tony told me a while back he wanted to play Central Park. Well, it’s too complicated, even for a 70 year old. You can’t control the weather, the whole thing could be a bust. Soooo…

The new plan is Radio City Music Hall on September 15th. A lot of Tony’s famed duet partners will show up, it should be something else. Lady Gaga, I’m guessing Aretha, and who knows. All the big guns will be out. Tony’s 85th at the Metropolitan Opera is still being talked about. So you know this will be the all-timer.

That’s the Thursday night before the Emmys out in Los Angeles. Expect to see a lot of tired faces landing at LAX on the morning of the 16th!

Nothing’s been announced but it should be shortly. I don’t know what we can do with Tony. We’re going to have Saran Wrap him or something, put him in a Zip loc bag. There’s no New York without Mr. Benedetto!

(Listen) Paul Simon’s Terrific New Single “Wristband” Recalls His Wittiest Songs

0

Paul Simon’s new single “Wristband” recalls his wittiest, jazziest songs like “50 Ways to Leave Your Lover” and “Cecilia.” The (truly) legendary singer songwriter’s new album, “Stranger to Stranger,” is out on June 3rd from Concord.

Simon produced the album with his long time collaborator Roy Halee (who goes way back with him four decades).

Here’s the info I got this morning from Concord:

“It’s about getting you to actually hear something in a new way. It’s about making music that sounds old and new at the same time; music with a sense of mystery,” Simon explains of his and Halee’s experimentation on the album.

The first song written for the album, “Insomniac’s Lullaby,” led Simon to the musical possibilities first suggested by Harry Partch – the 20th century American composer and theorist who created custom-made instruments in microtonal tunings. To capture the sounds of Partch’s unusual instruments such as Cloud-Chamber Bowls and the Chromelodeon, Simon took his equipment to the laboratory at Montclair State University in New Jersey, where the original Harry Partch instrument collection was being curated.

An experimental session with the percussionist in Simon’s band and a group of Flamenco musicians provided the initial rhythmic premise for Stranger to Stranger and supplied the grooves that were the basis for four songs on the album – “The Riverbank,” “The Werewolf,” “Wristband” and “Stranger to Stranger.”

Stranger to Stranger’s collage of sound also includes the Italian electronic dance music artist Clap! Clap!, whose album Tayi Bebba, blending African field recordings and EDM, Simon admired. Clap! Clap!’s sound can be heard on three tracks: “The Werewolf,” “Wristband” and “Street Angel.”

“Sound is the theme of this album as much as it’s about the subjects of the individual songs. If people get that, I’ll be pleased,” explains Simon. “The right song at the right time can live for generations. A beautiful sound, well that’s forever.”

Stranger to Stranger – Track List:

1. The Werewolf
2. Wristband
3. The Clock
4. Street Angel
5. Stranger to Stranger
6. In a Parade
7. Proof of Love
8. In the Garden of Edie
9. The Riverbank
10. Cool Papa Bell
11. Insomniac’s Lullaby

Ellen DeGeneres on Mississippi ‘Religious Freedom’ Law: “I Could Buy That Governor’s Mansion, Flip It, and Make a $7 Million Profit”

I don’t usually repost from “Ellen.” But what she said yesterday about the racist law in Mississippi was so elegant, funny and succinct, I thought I should. I don’t understand how a state that has fought 200 hundred years of claims of racism, where terrible murders have been carried out in the name of racism, could approve this “Religious Freedom” law in 2016. Are the people just crackers? Are they just backward beyond redemption? That law is just an extension of their regular racism, except this time it’s against gays instead of blacks. The whole country should cut them off financially.

Anyway, Ellen DeGeneres has this just right. She could buy that Governor’s mansion, flip it, and make a $7 million profit. She should, too, just to show them.

Megyn Kelly Leaving Fox News? Not So Fast. She Has a $6Mil Book Contract with Rupert Murdoch

Before everyone starts writing goodbye notes and throwing farewell parties for Megyn Kelly, keep in mind something important: Kelly has a $6 million book deal with Rupert Murdoch’s HarperCollins. FoxNews and Harper Collins are corporate cousins.

The publisher very likely had the chance to top any bid that came in on Kelly’s book, as Random House’s Crown Publishers was the underbidder last February according to reports.

While Kelly may have teased Variety with the hopes of getting a raise on her next FoxNews contract, something tells me she’s cemented into the Murdoch empire. I don’t see her writing a book for HarperCollins with a $6 million advance with a chapter called “How I Left Fox News for CNN.” Call me crazy.

And also, really, the history of talent migrating from Fox to CNN is not as good as the opposite. Paula Zahn ring a bell? But Greta van Susteren, Bill Hemming– they went to Fox from CNN.

But Kelly could be signalling something. It’s possible she’ll pack up and go. But it’s more likely she’d wind up on ABC News, where Barbara Walters is done, and Diane Sawyer is in semi-repose. Kelly would be a killer on ABC World News Tonight.

Arista Records– Home of Whitney, Aretha, Dionne– Planning A List NYC Reunion Gala

0

Clive Davis started Arista Records in 1974. He built it on the bones of Bell Records and turned it into a powerhouse for 25 years.

Now I’m told next Saturday Arista will be celebrated in an invite-only reunion gala at the Cutting Room. The party’s been in the works for five months, says Ken Levy, former Arista VP of creative services. “Two hundred people are coming, we’ve had to turn people away, and there are no plus 1s,” Ken tells me.

Clive is coming, so is Dionne Warwick, Alan Parsons, and some members of Crash Test Dummies. (They had a huge one off hit called “Mmmmmm.”) There’s a rumor Aretha Franklin may stop by.

There’s also an Arista Museum being assembled in a separate room. “People are sending in all kinds of artifacts,” Ken told me. “The Whitney Houston estate is bringing some things for display. Eric Carmen is sending things, too.” Carmen had a major solo career on Arista beginning with “All By Myself.” At one time, Arista was home to the Kinks, the Grateful Dead, Carly Simon, Graham Parker, a raft of people from Stiff Records, Lou Reed, Dave Edmunds, and Gil Scott-Heron.

Arista was one of the great sorta indie labels, like A&M and Sire, run by a real music man (Davis) and responsible for launching dozens of famous artists and sending executives out into the record biz. It would have continued past 2000 with Davis except for the shortsightedness of people who came in to run BMG, the larger company. They wrecked it. Davis, however, started J Records, had hits with Alicia Keys, Santana, Rod Stewart, and Jennifer Hudson. The rest is history.

The first Arista hit:

Merle Haggard, Country Poet of the Common Man, Dies on His 79th Birthday

0

The great country singer songwriter Merle Haggard has died at age 79.

Between 1966 and 1987, Haggard and his band had 38 number 1 songs on the Billboard country charts thirty three more hit the top 10.My favorite of his songs, “Today I Started Loving You Again,” has been covered by 400 different performers including the Everly Brothers and Rufus Thomas.

Here’s a great obit from the Bakersfield, California newspaper.

 

High Profile Bankruptcy Trustee for Solyndra, Mike Tyson, Joe Francis, Becoming Mormon Missionary in Zimbabwe

0

todd neilson“The Book of Mormon” is a Broadway musical set in Uganda. It’s a wild hit because it also sends up the whole world of Joseph Smith, founder of the Utah-based religion. After three years you still can’t get a ticket to this show.

Yet, no one has been deterred from doing similar missionary work in Africa. The newest name is R. Todd Neilson, Hollywood’s most renown and controversial bankruptcy trustee, based in Century City, Los Angeles. He’s also the internal trustee for Solyndra LLC, President Obama’s $80 billion clean-technology program gone bad.

Neilson– a former FBI agent– has been involved in cases in recent years including Mike Tyson, Joe Francis of “Girls Gone Wild,” Ponzi schemer Reed Slatkin of Earthlink, Death Row Records, the estate of pop star Billy Preston and so on. The internet is bursting with cases that involve Neilson, whose reputation, for better or worse, now precedes him.

But now in public filings, Neilson is resigning from one case because he says he’s moving to Zimbabwe for 18 months to do missionary work for the Mormon church. Harare is a long way from Hollywood and creature comforts.

Coincidentally, Neilson’s former partner Wayne Elggren did the same thing in 2003. The partnership ended, which sent Neilson into another firm.

Fortune magazine was one of Neilson’s most vociferous critics on Solyndra. The magazine wrote: “…when Neilson took his talents to Solyndra, he blew it. Big time.” Neilson, who tenaciously fights with celebrities for years over their bankruptcies, concluded in just four months that Solyndra was clean.

Will Neilson save bankrupt souls? He couldn’t do it in Los Angeles, but maybe in Zimbabwe he’ll have more luck.

 

Janet Jackson Cancels Rest of Her Tour, Now Says She’s Planning Family at 49

0

Janet Jackson has finally cancelled her Unbreakable tour for good. The reason this time? “My husband and I are planning our family.” Janet is 49 years old. She’s already cancelled the tour for a variety of health reasons concerning her throat. At one point there was a rumor she had cancer. Now Janet and husband Wissam al Mana are planning a family. Janet has no children from previous marriages and relationships, but a great Urban Myth was that she’d had a baby and it was raised somewhere in the Jackson family. The real story? Who knows? Time will tell.

Rumer Willis Conquers Famed Cafe Carlyle: Bruce and Demi’s Daughter is the Real Deal

0

You know, Hollywood kids have it tough. They grow up in the shadow of a famous parent, sometimes two. Rumer Willis, eldest of Bruce Willis and Demi Moore’s three daughters, had it tough from the get go. Each of her parents is a Big Star, always in the news. Rumer was tabloid fodder as a teen, and grist for the gossip mill. Didn’t think she’d make it, didya?

Rumer competed on “Dancing with the Stars,” went into “Chicago” on Broadway, and there were no jeers. Now it turns out she’s a top notch singer, with a lovely cabaret voice that can belt with the best of them. She is also unafraid, poised, professional and ready for her closeup. And yet, here she is on stage at the Cafe Carlyle, intimate setting and stage that belonged to Bobby Short, Elaine Stritch, and still Woody Allen’s clarinet. You cannot fake it here. (Some big pop stars wouldn’t last very long in this room.)

There were no celebs in the audience Tuesday night as Rumer kicked off her run at the Carlyle. (The Hollywood gang will come when she settles in.) She has a crack three piece combo (James Sampliner, Danny Weller, Dan Berkery), an excellent arranger (Christopher Lloyd Bratten) and a gay best friend-life partner-music producer (Tye Blue) right out of a rom com.

Rumer, as she told us, is about to turn 28. She is full of confidence and maybe brings to the songs some world weariness after running around Hollywood and US Weekly. Her voice– take Demi Moore’s sexy scratchy tones and mellow them out with a young Bruce Willis purring to Cybill Shepherd in “Moonlighting” — and it works. Rumer also presence (she’s the good kind of tall) and has a killer smile. (Well what did you expect?)

Her song choices range from standards to Broadway to a couple of cool rock numbers. She can handle Liza Minnelli (“Maybe this Time”). She sort of found common ground between Amy Winehouse (“You Know I’m No Good”) and Billie Holiday (“God Bless the Child”). Fiona Apple worked (“Criminal”) although I preferred her take on Doris Day (“Perhaps”).

Rumer has a nice modulation, and can handle smoky, ironic, and sweet. There’s an intelligence at work here, too. She and her buddy made a variety show duet of “Class” from “Chicago,” too– which was understated. No “Chicago” jazz hands. Rumer said, “I played Roxie but I think of myself more as Velma.” Frankly she reminded me of another Demi– Lovato.

Rumer ended the set with a Brandi Carlile song I don’t know (you all probably do)– called “The Story.” Rumer should cut it, retitle it “I Was Made for You,” and get it out as a single on iTunes. That’s a hit. Some smart record label should get over to the Carlile and sign her up ASAP. The rumer is, she’s got it.