Thursday, December 18, 2025
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Don McLean’s Wife Files for Divorce Citing “adultery, cruel and abusive treatment, and irreconcilable differences”

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Bye Bye Mrs. American Pie. Patrisha McLean, wife of famed singer songwriter Don McLean, has filed for divorce after 28 years and two kids. She cited “adultery, cruel and abusive treatment, and irreconcilable differences.”

In January, Pat called the police and filed a domestic assault charge against the famed singer songwriter of “American Pie” and “Vincent (Starry Starry Night).” In her complaint, Patrisha wrote that Don has access to firearms, has a gun, knives, and a baseball bat in his car. She said he told her “If I have a stroke (over my leaving) I will get my gun and kill you.” She also said that she is Jewish, and that he called her a “Hebe.” She said on January 17, he terrorized her four hours until she called 911.

Later Patrisha assured me Don was not anti-Semitic. But I have my doubts after reading that statement.

McLean has never been a mixer, or someone from the Seventies– like Billy Joel, let’s say, or even Al Green– who wanted to be part of the pop world. He told the Irish Times last year: “I like to be left alone.” Now he’s getting his wish.

Elsewhere in that interview he answered this question– If I wasn’t a singer I’d be . . .An alcoholic.

Pat McLean is neither Don’s first wife nor the woman he was with when he took off like a rocket in 1972. That was Carol Sauvion, to whom he was married from 1969 to 1972. That was when “American Pie” became a million seller and a radio staple. McLean’s prior album, “Tapestry,” was revived with it. (Yes, he had a “Tapestry” album before Carole King.)

Sauvion has never said why she left, but she’s gone on to quite a nice career. She owns the very successful Freehand Gallery in Los Angeles, and hosts Craft in America for PBS. She remarried, and has a son and stepdaughter. Some upscale galleries like Freehand sell artist Gary Rosenthal’s ceramic dreidels. Savion’s does not. (McLean had a hit in 1973 called “Dreidel.”)

In that Irish Times interview, McLean also answered this question– Who do you need to apologise to? Answer: I don’t need to apologise to anyone.

But that doesn’t seem to be true. What a terrible sign off for his career, and for his fans (I was certainly one a long time ago.) I think there’s a chance we’ll one day hear Pat McLean’s full story, and it’s going to be very disappointing.

Janet Jackson Cancels European Tour, Makes Statement with Scarves

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Janet Jackson is obviously unwell. She’s sending messages by wearing thick scarves around her neck in all photos and videos. Why aren’t we getting it?

This week, Janet cancelled her entire European tour. Just two weeks ago she was posting videos, all smiles, very excited to appear in cities like Glasgow, etc. She certainly thought she was doing the tour.


Whatever’s wrong with her throat is unclear, and she has said she doesn’t have cancer. But there are plenty of other things that could be affecting her singing. And the scarves are clearly not just there for warmth.

Will she make the Las Vegas start date of her U.S. tour on May 14th? It’s still two months away, so we’ll send positive thoughts. But the strain of a tour may be too much for her. We’ll wait and see.

 

Cancelled: Carlyle Group-Kennedy Center Chief David Rubenstein Pulls Book at Last Minute

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EXCLUSIVE A lot of people have decided to pull their memoirs from publication at the last minute. Oprah did it years ago, Billy Joel more recently.

Now we can add to that list David Rubenstein, the very wealthy head of the secretive billionaire boys club called the Carlyle Group and self-styled philanthropist who took over the Kennedy Center a few years ago. You may recall it was Rubenstein who ousted founding “Kennedy Center Honors” producer George Stevens, Jr. He’s so rich one of his passions is to restore the public monuments in Washington, DC.

A few years ago Rubenstein signed a contract with HarperCollins for a book called “Beyond Wall Street: Inside The Rise Of Private Equity.” It was listed in all the HarperCollins catalogs and due for publication in 2009. Well, calendar pages flew by, and the most recent date scheduled was for December 2015. But that date came and went. Now I’m told that Rubenstein has pulled the book, even though it was written, edited, and ready to be sold.

I asked, Did he give back the big advance? My spy laughed. Rubenstein could probably buy HarperCollins and have it pulped if he wanted.

So what happened? “He realized it would do more harm and than good to his dealings.”

You could see glimmers of Rubenstein emerging as a personality this year. There was a piece on him from “CBS Sunday Morning.” And there’s a terrific piece about him in The New Yorker this week concerning billionaires and tax breaks.

But it may finally be dawning on Rubenstein that his baby steps into the spotlight are making it harder to do his kind of business. A book would be the tipping point, particularly with a p.r. tour on places like Charlie Rose and NPR.

“Eye in the Sky” Star Helen Mirren Has “Been Deeply In Love with Stephen Colbert for 15 Years”

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Gavin Hood’s edge of your seat thriller “Eye in the Sky” is making headlines as much as it’s ripped from the headlines.

At a press conference yesterday, star Helen Mirren– never at a loss for sharp, newsy proclamations– explained the big kiss she planted on talk show host Stephen Colbert on Tuesday night.

“The thing is I’ve been deeply in love with Stephen Colbert for 15 years. For real,” Mirren insisted, “For real, no, no, for real. Absolutely, and as I was walking out last night I looked out, and I thought, ‘You know what? If I don’t take my opportunity now I’ll never have it again,’” she laughed. “I kissed him.”

Mirren is never boring, which is why we love her. The other shock is that she’s come to identify with the character she plays in “Eye in the Sky,” an Air Force colonel who orders drone strikes in the middle east from the safety of a bunker in Nevada. The whole premise of “Eye in the Sky” hangs on the chilling decision whether or not to blow up a party of terrorists — observed by a state of the art drone — even if it means killing innocents nearby.

If you thought the escape in “Argo” was tension-filled, “Eye in the Sky” goes several steps beyond. You could hear a pin drop last night at the New York premiere with an audience that included Mirren’s co-stars Barkhad Abdi, Aaron Paul, and director Gavin Hood, as well as Dick Cavett, Gay Talese, Tony winner Lena Hall, Michael Pena, Caroline Rhea, Julie Taymor, Elliot Goldenthal, Chuck Scarborough, and “Finding Neverland” star Laura Michelle Kelly.

“Eye in the Sky” has the kind of exceptional filmmaking that I think will keep it in mind all the way til next fall and awards season. It also happens to feature the final film performance of the great Alan Rickman, who died earlier this winter.

Mirren said of Rickman yesterday: “I think Alan would be incredibly proud of this movie. And I think he is very proud of this movie. Let’s put it that way. I think if you looked at his canon of work, and it’s been great work his whole life, I think if he had the choice to say I want that to be my last movie, I’m convinced he would point to this movie.  He was a brilliant first mate and bringing (that) to all these character roles he often played, but that is Alan, the elegance, the wit, the formidable nature of him, the humanity of him, and we have Alan up on the screen and I think that’s such a great thing for his last movie.”

I’m also happy to report that “Eye in the Sky” brings the return of Barkhad Abdi, the Minnesota-raised, Somali born Oscar nominee from “Captain Phillips.” This performance is quite different than the chilling pirate he played with Tom Hanks. It’s comic and intuitive.

For a while after “Captain Phillips” there was a worry that Abdi would get lost in Hollywood. But fear not– Abdi is working all the time including new films with Al Pacino and with Melissa Leo. He’s even opened a hot East African restaurant in Los Angeles called Madinah.

But Barkhad has not yet seen the other movie he opens in tomorrow– Sacha Baron Cohen’s “Brothers Grimsby.” When I asked him if he’d seen the raunchy comedy spoof of spies and football hooligans yet, he just shook his head with a big grin. He seems way too elegant to be in such a film. Luckily, his role is confined to the parts you can watch without hands shielding eyes!

 

Kathryn Reed Altman, Widow of Director Robert Altman, Has Passed Away at Age 91

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This is very sad news: Kathryn Altman, widow of famed movie director Robert Altman, and one of the truly most extraordinary people I’ve known, has passed away at age 91. She was in California, and what I’ve heard is that she probably had a heart attack. It’s hard to imagine that great, funny heart giving out.

For her friends this will come as a shock because 91 to Kathryn was 41 to anyone else. An actress, dancer, and beauty, she was indefatigable, had a unique and lovely sense of humor, and made friends everywhere. She married Bob Altman in 1957, merging their families and having children of their own.

Ironically, Bob Altman died ten years ago this coming November. The Altmans had their ups and downs but they remained a steadfast and devoted couple. When Bob died, Kathryn pulled herself together and made sure her famous husband was remembered in an official documentary, book, and showcase at the Museum of Modern Art. Keeping Robert Altman’s legacy alive became her business.

The Altmans were regulars at Elaine’s, and after Bob died Kathryn continued to be a constant customer. We had dinner together often. Sometimes she’d come in well after 10 or 11 pm. We always laughed because she more stamina and more joie de vivre than people half her age. “She outlasted everyone,” our mutual friend, Broadway producer Judy Gordon told me tonight.

Kathryn’s friends were wide ranging. A lot of the actors on Altman films became her close pals, including Michael Murphy and Sally Kellerman. They all loved her. She gave a great interview last year that you can read here.

She says of being a Hollywood couple: “I never really was [one] because he was always fighting the system. All that red carpet stuff is so tough. He didn’t enjoy it, but he sure did his best to be part of it, he knew how important it was to the film.

“If anyone asked which his favourite was, his answer was always, ‘My films are like my children, and my favourite one is always the one that needs me most.'”

You’re reading this and thinking, well she was 91. Yes, but it doesn’t matter. We could have had 10 more years of Kathryn and never have been bored. A real light goes out in the world with her departure.

To her daughter Konni, and to all her kids, and friends around the world, my deepest condolences.

“Divergent: Allegiant” So Far Scares Up a Zero in Reviews, Spells Trouble for Lions Gate

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“Divergent: Allegiant” the third and final episode of Lions Gate Films’ last young adult film series, is in trouble. So far the film has scared up a Zero as in “0”– goose egg– among critics. There are 11 negative reviews posted, not one positive.

The movie opens March 18th.

One reviewer called it “More like Redundant.”

Lions Gate stock is selling around $23 right now, which is better than its low on February 5th of $16, but far from its high of $41 in the last year.

It doesn’t help that their current release “Gods of Egypt” is a disaster. That sandals and slinging saga has made $23.4 million in 11 days. How they’ll ever get to $140 million is a mystery.

If “Allegiant” really bottoms out on release, LGF will really be in trouble. Their other two releases so far for 2016– “Norm of the North” and “The Choice”– are better not spoken about.

 

Review: “Zootopia” Hops to Early Oscar Hopes and Big Box Office

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When Hollywood pundits make an Oscar 2017 predication, most insiders smirk it off. Here’s the exception, “Zootopia” has the lock as the best-animated feature for the year. News flash, Disney has a new box office queen. Sorry Elsa from “Frozen,” you have been dethroned. The new way adorable queen is a bunny and her name is Judy.

“Zootopia,” is the highest grossing Disney film ever, making 73 million dollars in its opening weekend alone and the gross keeps soaring. The film has already grossed over $235 million globally since opening overseas in mid-February.

The intricate and lush visuals, the perfect script, which incorporates the simplistic charm for children and quippy cleverness for adults, which includes numerous references to old feature films, one arc in particular which I will not spoil here, all weave into timely stories. The writers hit these points, including race relations, women’s equality in the work force, self worth issues and more with finesse and sensitivity.

The three credited directors and eight writers have created a spunky bunny from a small town carrot farm with 247 siblings no less, named Judy Hopps (voiced by Ginnifer Goodwin.) July is way confident in every bone in her flexible rabbit body that she can fulfill her dream by becoming a police officer in the nearby colorful city of ‘Zootopia.’ What follows is her buddying up with a tricky, fast talking fox named Nick Wilde, (Jason Bateman,) and the adventures that ensue.

The cast is perfect, including Idris Elba, JK Simmons, Jenny Slate, Bonnie Hunt and more. Disney insiders tell me that they knew it was a hit, but the fact that it’s now dethroning “Frozen,” as the most successful film of all time for them, was not expected. So filmmakers, get your Oscar speeches ready.

Paul McCartney Remembers George Martin: “A true gentleman and a second father to me”

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Paul McCartney has posted this to his website:

I’m so sad to hear the news of the passing of dear George Martin. I have so many wonderful memories of this great man that will be with me forever. He was a true gentleman and like a second father to me. He guided the career of The Beatles with such skill and good humour that he became a true friend to me and my family. If anyone earned the title of the fifth Beatle it was George. From the day that he gave The Beatles our first recording contract, to the last time I saw him, he was the most generous, intelligent and musical person I’ve ever had the pleasure to know.

It’s hard to choose favourite memories of my time with George, there are so many but one that comes to mind was the time I brought the song ‘Yesterday’ to a recording session and the guys in the band suggested that I sang it solo and accompany myself on guitar. After I had done this George Martin said to me, “Paul I have an idea of putting a string quartet on the record”. I said, “Oh no George, we are a rock and roll band and I don’t think it’s a good idea”.  With the gentle bedside manner of a great producer he said to me, “Let us try it and if it doesn’t work we won’t use it and we’ll go with your solo version”.  I agreed to this and went round to his house the next day to work on the arrangement.

He took my chords that I showed him and spread the notes out across the piano, putting the cello in the low octave and the first violin in a high octave and gave me my first lesson in how strings were voiced for a quartet. When we recorded the string quartet at Abbey Road, it was so thrilling to know his idea was so correct that I went round telling people about it for weeks. His idea obviously worked because the song subsequently became one of the most recorded songs ever with versions by Frank Sinatra, Elvis Presley, Ray Charles, Marvin Gaye and thousands more.

This is just one of the many memories I have of George who went on to help me with arrangements on ‘Eleanor Rigby’, ‘Live and Let Die’ and many other songs of mine.

I am proud to have known such a fine gentleman with such a keen sense of humour, who had the ability to poke fun at himself. Even when he was Knighted by the Queen there was never the slightest trace of snobbery about him.

My family and I, to whom he was a dear friend, will miss him greatly and send our love to his wife Judy and their kids Giles and Lucy, and the grandkids.

The world has lost a truly great man who left an indelible mark on my soul and the history of British music.

God bless you George and all who sail in you!

Paul

Broadway: “Disaster!” Is Anything But One– a Juke Box Hit for Kids from the ’70s

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Wanna feel old? The curly haired thirteen year old boy who comes off as a solid professional, funny and with a great voice, is the son of Brian Littrell, of the Backstreet Boys. Wait? Is that possible?
But is “Disaster!” being a success possible? Jukebox musicals are always derided and few are hits– think “Smokey Joe’s Cafe” or “Motown.”

But Seth Rudetsky and Jack Plotnick’s parody (with Drew Geraci) of ’70s disaster movies (The Poseidon Adventure, Towering Inferno) — set to carefully selected Top 40 pop and disco hits– turns out to be too much fun not to love.

Plus, the all star cast of Broadway vets– Roger Bart, Kerry Butler, Kevin Chamberlain, Adam Pascal, Faith Prince, and Rachel York– is like a dream come true.

And then there are the newcomers– Baylee Littrell (the literal Backstreet Boy), Jennifer Simard (who pretty much steals the show as a gambling addicted nun), and the stunning Lacretta Nicole (she could sing the whole show and I wouldn’t have minded).

The 30 plus songs are not throwaways. The key to the show is that they’ve been woven into the script very smartly. They include hits by Carly Simon, Harry Nilsson, Michael Jackson, Donna Summer, Helen Reddy, Gloria Gaynor, Free, and so on. There’s no list in the Playbill, but basically it’s like listening to oldies on WCBS FM if they were organized around a central story.

The story is that Bart’s Tony is a low life producer who’s parked a tacky, leaking casino boat with no safety systems off a pier on the Hudson River. He’s using a nitwit chorus girl with long legs (York) who’s got her twins on board (Littrell, playing a boy and girl– hilarious). There’s a nun (Simard) who’s come aboard to save souls, an inquiring Times reporter (Butler) and her ex boyfriend who’s working on the boat (Pascal). There’s also a suburban couple with a lot of secrets (Chamberlain and Faith Prince, who’s going to make a strong case for a Tony nomination).

At first, “Disaster!” seems a little on the nose, and somewhat like a show that might actually be on a cruise ship. The choreography in the early scenes feels like it’s lifted from a bad ’70s variety show– it’s a little frantic. But once things settle down, the fun kicks in. And the second act just gets better, better, better.

Opening night brought out Gloria Gaynor herself, as well as Rosie O’Donnell, Ana Gasteyer, Tina Fey, Rachel Dratch, Neil Patrick Harris, and Matthew Broderick, among others.

My favorite moment– during intermission, Rosie said to Brian Littrell: “It’s so great to see you! How’s your little boy?” Littrell replied: “He’s fine. He’s on stage. He’s the kid in the show!” Rosie nearly fell over. Time flies! So does “Disaster!”

Sacha Baron Cohen’s Next Movie May Be “The African American” About Kidnapped White Man Growing Up in Black Country

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EXCLUSIVE Sacha Baron Cohen’s next movie, after “The Brothers Grimsby” may be  “The African American,” which he is developing. He says: “It is about somebody who is white and gets kidnapped and grows up in an African country. And then gets taken back to America so he’s an African American.”

Cohen wore a cowboy shirt and hat at the screening of his new raunchy new film, “The Brothers Grimsby” Tuesday night at the Regal Union Square. The film is a spy spoof about Nobby Butcher (Baron Cohen), an idiot soccer fanatic with a dozen or so kids, and his younger M16 agent brother Sebastian (Mark Strong), who were separated as young boys.

Baron Cohen came out before the screening and started to get the audience sing along with him to a made up cowboy song with lyrics that went, “The Jew Down the Way,” and much of the crowd sang along.

“Any Jews here?” Baron Cohen asked? “Jesus Christ,” he replied when shouts of yes rang out. “Are there any non-Jews here tonight?” The shouting was just as loud.

“It’s pretty white,” Baron Cohen said, looking out at the audience. “Not as white as the Oscars but still.”

Baron Cohen then listed the cast of “The Brothers Grimsby”: “Mark Strong is great. We got Rebel Wilson and my wife Amy Adams.” Baron Cohen’s wife is Isla Fisher who does have a likeness to Adams. Baron Cohen rattled off Gabourey Sidibe’s name. “Black Oscar nominated actor. I’m not racist, officially,” he said. “Who else we got? And we got Penelope Cruz who I must say I tried very, very hard and eventually I persuaded her not to get her breasts out for this.”

After the screening Baron Cohen returned for a 35 minute Q&A. During the raucous session he explained that the story’s inspiration came about from wondering what would happen if James Bond had an idiot brother.

“Who would be the kind of opposite of James Bond,” he said. “James Bond is a complete loner while this guy is obsessed by family. James Bond is a womanizer. This guy is a one-woman man.” Noted Baron Cohen, “You looked at all those kind of spy movies, and the spies are these guys who always say nothing and who sleep with lots of women. Part of this movie is Nobby’s attempt to humanize his brother.”

Someone in the audience noted that Baron Cohen’s film all have social and political messages. How was he going to keep his work alive?

“Well, listen, I don’ know if it should be kept alive firstly. Secondly we’re in an interesting period in cinematic history that everything now is about box office and it’s about the opening weekend,” said Baron Cohen, who added, “I now make movies to sort of with the philosophy of if I see them in 20 years, will I think, ‘all right, I’m proud of that one or I’m embarrassed by that one rather than is it a hit at the box office.’”

The Borat actor then brought up ‘Bruno. “The film hits a nerve even if it takes a while to find its place.” Baron Cohen said, adding the day it came out, “I woke up the morning and thought, ‘What the fuck am I doing?’ It seemed so extreme. At that point no major studio movie about gay people actually had a plot where the gay people were not dead at the end of the movie. And in our movie they were totally living happily after. They couldn’t be officially married at that time. Weirdly enough the film needed time to settle in. It’s actually been received better now.”

“The Brothers Grimsby” – and there’s no telling how the world will see it in 20 years – has Daniel Radcliffe infected by the blood of a Palestinian/Jewish kid with HIV.

Did Baron Cohen get permission from Daniel Radcliffe?

“I haven’t heard from Daniel Radcliffe, but I have received a letter from his lawyer,” said Baron Cohen.

Also widely reported is the scene from “Brothers Grimsby” where presidential candidate Donald Trumps gets infected with the virus and develops full-blown AIDS. Baron Cohen said he decided to add it in the film. “Basically once Donald Trump made that comment about Muslims, we put that little bit in.”

Someone asked Baron Cohen how he got co-star Mark Strong, a well regarded actor, to do some of the incredibly raunchy scenes. “It’s tricky but it’s a leap of faith,” he said. “He’s got incredible respect as an actor and suddenly I was putting him in an elephant’s vagina, and about three quarter’s of the way through the film he said, ‘Listen Sacha, I just realized, you’re putting me through the most embarrassing and humiliating situations ever.”

“And I go, ‘Yeah, that’s right, but there’s still elephant sperm,” to contend with, said Baron Cohen to Strong. “It was difficult for him because he’s classically trained.” Also the script was mainly improvised. “He was convinced that he could not know how to improvise. He’s actually a brilliant improviser and a great foil.” Added Baron Cohen, “The amazing thing about him is he grounds the movie. He makes the movie feel real,” he said. “The studio wanted to a get a number of bizarre sort of famous people to play my brother, but all of them – we tried a lot of them out – and they were winking at the camera” and “and he came in with this unique and real action hero persona we wanted.”

It turns out the theme of separated brothers is personal to the comic. “My dad has a brother who cut out on him so I’m really interested in how that affects families.”

Baron Cohen talked about South Africa and what a powerful place it is. “Racism is still there. It’s still evident” and that he had an “incredible love for the people.” He said it was the inspiration for his next film, “The African American,” which he is developing. “It is about somebody who is white and gets kidnapped and grows up in an African country. And then gets taken back to America so he’s an African American.”

At the end of the Q&A Baron Cohen hung around to pose for photos and talk to enthusiastic fans for at least another half hour.

When a young boy asked Baron Cohen to pose for a selfie the comic asked, “How old are you?”

The boy replied: thirteen. “Oh my god!” said Baron Cohen. “Did you get traumatized tonight? You okay yeah?”

As Baron Cohen was leaving I asked him about why he turned up in a cowboy hat and shirt. He said, “That’s how we dress in London.”