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Happy 80th Birthday to the Original Soul Man Sam Moore of Sam & Dave Fame

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Today Sam Moore celebrates his 80th birthday. The legendary singer of pop and R&B hits was one half of the great Atlantic/Stax Records duo Sam & Dave, then went on to a brilliant career as a solo act. He was named to Rolling Stone’s top 100 singers of all time, in addition to his place in the Rock and Hall of Fame. Sam has sung for all the presidents– four of them at once, in fact, a couple of years ago at the Kennedy Center. He’s a personal favorite of both Bill Clinton and George H.W. Bush.

Sam will be back at the Kennedy Center this Sunday night to perform for Eddie Murphy’s Mark Twain prize. The night before, Saturday, Sam will be inducted in the Memphis Music Hall of Fame with a celebrated group that runs the gamut from Justin Timberlake to the late Alberta Hunter.

Sam was born in Georgia and raised in Florida. His biggest music success came from Sam & Dave’s mid 60s stampede into Memphis courtesy of Atlantic Records’ Jerry Wexler. Singing songs written by Isaac Hayes and David Porter, Sam & Dave had more than a dozen chart topping hits that are still played today constantly– from “Soul Man” to “Hold On I’m Coming” to “When Something Is Wrong with My Baby.”

He recorded a solo album for release in 1972 on Atlantic, produced by King Curtis with Aretha Franklin playing piano on many tracks. Wexler made the mistake of not releasing it, and Sam’s solo career didn’t take offas planned. The album, “Plenty Good Lovin’,” was finally made available in 2007 and garnered four star reviews from every major publication. Sam also recorded a new album, “Overnight Sensational,” in 2006 with Randy Jackson as producer. All of his “students” and fans clamored to be on the CD, from Bruce Springsteen to Sting to Jon Bon Jovi, Stevie Winwood, Paul Rodgers, and Paul Carrack. It’s a great record.

I met Sam in 1999 when I was planning to film a documentary on R&B legends with DA Pennebaker and Chris Hegedus. “Only the Strong Survive” was released in 2002-2003 with sensational and historic performances of his hits.

It’s no secret that everyone who knows Sam, loves him. He’s a stitch in person, with a great sense of humor and a love of gossip. He reveres his old pals, like Billy Preston and Aretha and Jackie Wilson, and admires his newer ones with great appreciation. Like any 80 year old he can be cantankerous, but Sam Moore is also one of the warmest people in the world. He’s been married to his famous manager wife Joyce since 1982, and they have a big loving family headquartered in Scottsdale, Arizona and spread all over the country.

I do wish Sam and Dave were in the Grammy Hall of Fame with a Lifetime Achievement Award. But Sam has plenty of awards, and a voice that seems to be getting better and better as the years change. He’s a remarkable fellow. Here, following, are a few videos worth watching, and listening to. Happy Birthday, Sam!


Miles Davis Movie Kinda Blue: Oscar Run Put Off in Favor of Spring Release

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EXCLUSIVE At the world premiere of “Miles Ahead,” which closed the New York Film Festival Saturday night, Sony Pictures Classics co-president Tom Bernard told me the film, which stars Don Cheadle, will not have a one-week Oscar qualifying run.

Cheadle also directed, co-wrote (with Steven Baigelman) and produced “Miles Ahead,” which will come out in April 2016. “We’re going for next year,” said Bernard, who already has “Truth,” “Grandma” and “Son of Saul” in this year’s awards race. (Last year Sony Pictures Classics gave “Still Alice” a one-week qualifying run last December and Julianne Moore went on to win the Oscar.)

“Miles Ahead” is a free form, kinetic portrait of Miles Davis – don’t call it a biopic – set during a two-day period in the 80’s when the genius musician took a break from music and indulged in drugs and booze. The film is also sort of a heist caper that involves studio tapes stolen by a slimy record producer, played with mustache twirling menace and panache by Michael Stuhlbarg, who also had a scene-stealing role as Andy Hertzfeld in “in “Steve Jobs,” which was the centerpiece film in the New York Film Festival.

Ewan McGregor, a big movie star who is making his directing debut with “American Pastoral,” in which he also stars and is currently shooting, created a lot of excitement on the red carpet. In “Miles Ahead” he plays a pushy Rolling Stone reporter who ambushes the musician at his home to get a comeback story. McGregor, who wasn’t at that morning’s press conference, spent a generous amount of time talking to every journalist on the red carpet.

He raved about Cheadle, that not only had he “created this from nothing and found the financing and found the cast and directed it and acted it but playing one of the most iconic musicians ever… the pressure that must be on your shoulders. At the same time we had very little time, little money and we did it very quickly and we did it with a great deal of fun.”

There are also lots of punches thrown and McGregor is usually at the receiving end. His character’s first encounter results in Miles punching him out. I noted that he’s been getting up regularly on screen since he made “Transpotting” in 1996. “I’ve always been beaten up in movies,” he laughed. “It’s obviously something I’ve got that side to my character I guess. People like to kick the shit out of me in films.”

As for what he learned about Miles, McGregor said, “Like a lot of people I’m more familiar with Miles’ early music. I did a play in London in 1998 called ‘Little Malcolm and His Struggle Against the Eunuchs,’ and our soundtrack was entirely ‘Kind of Blue.”

Also on the red carpet were Miles family members, daughter Cheryl and his nephew Vince Wilburn Jr., who got the movie project rolling when he announced Don Cheadle would play Miles Davis before even met him. “I saw his facial expressions, talked to my cousins and we all said here we are!”

I wondered especially how Miles’ daughter would feel about all the scenes in the film which showcases Miles Davis’s genius but also show him drinking, boozing and beating up his wife Frances, who also attended the premiere.

Frances – who is played in the film by the terrific Emayatzy Corinealdi – is in her 80’s now and is still beautiful. She told me that the film was even made is a miracle. “And I’m still here!” There were so many attempts to make it before that fell apart she said. She’s seen the film but told me she has to see it “again, again and again. It’s very emotional for me,” emphasizing the film’s story was “fictionalized.”

The real story is that she was Miles Davis’s muse. She told me a story how she persuaded Miles Davis to attend a flamenco concert with her. Initially he wasn’t interested. “When we left the theater we went to the Colony record shop and he bought every flamenco album,” she told me inspiring his famous album, “Sketches of Spain.” “I was responsible for that,” she told me. She also worked with Sammy Davis Jr. and Elvis Presley and want back to dancing after she left Davis. A memoir is in the works.

Don Cheadle gamely talked to all the journalists on the red carpet about his passion project even though he had a long day beginning with a morning press conference.

In explaining the unusual structure and energy of the film, he told me on the red carpet he was going for something original and in the spirit of Robert Fosse’s “All That Jazz” and “Lenny.”

“Movies that we felt had a great pacing that moved between now and then, and here and now,” he said. “What mattered to us was that we told the story with forward momentum that was about creativity and that really pushed it at every level and that dictated how we created the piece.”

The editing in the film is seamless; look for it to be recognized awards season, even if that is the year after next.

Cheadle told me, “Having taken eight years to work on it and reducing it from (a budget) of 20 million to 18 million to 15 million to 14 million, I’m trying to continue to find ways to fit into this box. We did a lot of the editing in the script and then we handed it over to John Axelrad after we finished shooting it and he took it all the way home,” he told me. “Our first assembly was an hour and 38 minutes long; the movie is an hour and 40 minutes. We saw the first edit, the first assembly was kind of like, ‘Well, that’s the movie and now we just have to make it.”

I asked Cheadle if he had questions he’d like to ask Miles Davis if he was still alive and they met over drinks?

Cheadle’s answer was perfect since the movie reminds audiences that Davis was scary for most people and anyone who interviewed him was terrified of him and happy to survive the ordeal.

Cheadle laughed, “I don’t think I’d have to ask him anything. He’d tell me.”

The elegant after party was at Tavern on the Green and the music was sensational: a jazz quartet performed and the soundtrack featured, of course, music by Miles Davis, Janis Joplin and Marvin Gaye. Don Cheadle, who posed for endless photographs and chatted with everyone who approached him, stayed at the shindig with his wife until nearly 2 a.m.

Photo c2015 Showbiz411 by Paula Schwartz

Janet Jackson’s Stunning Comeback: “Unbelievable” Finishes at Number 1

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Janet Jackson was all but written off for several years until this past summer.

Now this week her new album “Unbreakable” debuts at number 1 with 105,000 copies. Janet’s audience was big on having the CD or the download. Her streaming figures only added about 6,000 copies.

This is in contrast to much younger artist The Weeknd. He had 24,000 streams last week to bring his total to 59,000 including CDs and downloads.

You see, the older audience wants to own the music. It means something to them. The younger audience figures they can listen on their subscription, it’s all disposable.

On amazon.com “Unbreakable” is hanging in there at number 3. On iTunes, it’s down to 22 already.

Janet’s comeback is a nice vindication for her. Her last couple of albums over at Universal were disasters. When she left the stage to get married no one assumed she could roar back. But “Unbreakable” has great reviews. It’s had one minor hit in “No Sleeep.” Now if her team can break one song as a top 100 hit, Janet will have a nice run.

Saturday Night Live Finally Takes on Guns with Amy Schumer Video

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The absurdity of guns in our culture was finally addressed last night by “Saturday Night Live.” After thousands of deaths thanks to crazy public shootings, the show zeroed in on the subject thanks to host Amy Schumer. I loved this video. If Schumer’s fame is going to illuminate this issue, then bravo!

Michael Jackson’s Long Financial Saga with Sony Maybe Coming to An End

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The long — and I do mean loooong– financial soap opera involving Sony Music and Michael Jackson may finally be coming to an end.

Michael’s estate and Sony jointly own Sony/ATV Music, which in turn owns the Beatles catalog. Michael and Sony merged their resources in the mid 1990s. From then until his death in 2009, Michael amassed $320 million in loans using his stake in Sony/ATV as collateral.

Now come reports that Sony has pulled the trigger on an amendment in which either side has the right to buy each other out. Sony either wants to buy Michael’s portion and then sell the whole thing, or just Michael’s stake and call it a day.

Coincidentally, the Michael Jackson estate has just suffered a setback in a lawsuit brought by former Neverland kid Wade Robson. A judge has ruled that Robson can go ahead and sue Jackson’s companies for sexual harassment because Robson was an employee. Robson had previously been denied in his efforts to get money from Jackson’s estate.

Some reports suggested that Jackson’s estate could actually buy Sony/ATV’s half of the company, but that seems unlikely and/or impossible. Sony would love to shore up Sony/ATV as a valuable asset and then leverage it for anywhere from one-to-two billion. The Beatles catalog remains a HUGE gem in the crown of all music publishing. Sony could sell the whole thing and make up losses from its movie and electronics divisions.

The Robson part of it is interesting because the judge is saying Michael’s companies can be sued.

As for the publishing side, the Jackson estate suddenly getting rich from a sale to Sony could affect the ongoing IRS claim of over $700 million in back taxes.

Mike Nichols, Beloved and Missed, Finally Getting Memorial Service

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Mike Nichols has been gone since last November 20th. Even though friends gathered at Campbell’s funeral parlor (lots of celebs) there’s never been a formal memorial service.

Now I’m told that one is in the works. The word is that Lorne Michaels, Brian Lourd, and Barry Diller are somehow involved, and that the tentative date is November 8th. Location is still undetermined but Lincoln Center or a Broadway theater would seem proper.

Mike was beloved and is still sorely missed. You can imagine what a memorial would be like, with music from the likes of Carly Simon and Steve Martin at least, maybe even Simon and/or Garfunkel. Speakers could range from Elaine May to Candice Bergen, Meryl Streep, and a staggering array of stars. Perhaps even Mike’s widow Diane Sawyer would say a few words.

We’re waiting for more exact word. But here’s hoping this happens. New York, and the world, really miss Mike Nichols. We want to say goodbye properly!

Box Office: “Steve Jobs” a Massive Hit, “Pan” Strikes Out, “Everest” Stutters, “Walk” Skips

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Weekend box office: “Steve Jobs” filled every single seat where it played this weekend, and then some. In its four locations, Danny Boyle’s Universal film was an enormous hit with a total of $521,000. You can only guess what will happen when it goes wide. Until we see how “Spotlight,” “Hateful 8,” and a few others do, “Steve Jobs” is the big deal of 2015.

There are lots of studio flops though. Even Universal has one in poor “Everest.” Hugh Jackman’s “Pan” is a strike out with $15 million– that’s one tenth of what it cost. “Black Mass” from Warners may not be strong enough to make any meaningful Oscar stand– except for maybe supporting actor Joel Edgerton. It does look like people are skipping “The Walk” from Sony.

“Sicario” is doing nicely from LionsGate– it’s a nice title. Sounds like an exotic dish. “The Intern” didn’t get great reviews but it’s turning out to be a nice hit for Warner Bros., Robert DeNiro and Anne Hathaway. And “The Martian” is Fox’s triumph for the season. It’s already up over $100 million with no sign of retreat. Also, “The Martian” will get some awards action soon enough.

Beloved New Film “Brooklyn” with Saoirse Ronan Already Being Turned into TV Series

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Irish treasure Saoirse Ronan is getting well-deserved Oscar buzz for her performance as a 1950’s immigrant in “Brooklyn,” which screened the other evening at the New York Film Festival. Ronan, who received an Oscar nomination at the tender age of 13 for “Atonement,” is playing her first Irish character, Ellis, who sets sail for America to look for a better life and finds herself torn between two countries as well as two men.

“Brooklyn” is based on the Colm Toibin novel and adapted by Nick Hornby (“High Fidelity,” “An Education,” “About a Boy”). Irish director John Crowley (“Intermission”) told me on the red carpet at Alice Tully Hall that the film “is a very small story but it has scale” and that Ellis’s journey hopefully suggested “more than the actual size of one woman’s story.” He hoped also it humanized the story of migrants, which gives it a particular modern-day relevancy.

The cast features stand out performances by Julie Walters, in a hilarious turn as the owner of a boarding house for Irish women, and Emory Cohen as Ellis’s American love interest, a plumber who has a thing for Irish women. (Domhnall Glee is her Irish love.)

On the red carpet the director told me about plans to spin off “Brooklyn” into a television show that, “there’s a plan in the pipeline” but it was very early and no names were attached yet for the cast. “We’re trying to get this out in the field first,” Crowley told me, adding that he might get involved as well. “It’s a great idea and everybody is intrigued by it.”

Another real find in “Brooklyn” is Emory Cohen, who has the intensity of a young Marlon Brandon. “He’s like an old fashioned movie star isn’t he?” the director said to me on the red carpet. He saw the young actor in Derek Cianfrance’s film “The Place Beyond the Pines” and called Cianfrance to ask about him. “I found him amazingly powerful but scary. ‘Oh my god! Who’s the kid? He’s just a damaged kid or is that acting?’ And it’s acting,” Crowley said. “It’s a very different style of performance to what he’s doing in ‘Brooklyn’ obviously.”

On the red carpet, Ronan who looked ethereally beautiful and all grown up in a Valentino gown, said about playing Ellis that she had beens looking for the right part to play as her first Irish character. She’d read other scripts over the years but this was the first one that felt like the screenwriter, Nick Hornby, who happens to be English, captured the Irish spirit and heart.

The experience her character went through also resonated with Ronan, who lived in London for a year and a half around the time they were filming “Brooklyn.”

“I was right in that sort of state of homesickness and not quite knowing where I could kind of settle, you know? Cause you know, you float about for a little bit and I was very much in that mindset when we made the film. So everyday it was like you’re staring at yourself in the mirror and it’s like an inch from your face and you can’t look away. It’s a very vulnerable place to be in.”

Ronan has a lovely Irish accent and someone asked if people just wanted to be in her presence just so they could listen to her talk. “Yes. I charge them now. It’s like I’m giving it out for free. I can’t do it anymore.”

Photo c2015 Showbiz411 by Paula Schwartz

Box Office: No Flash in the “Pan” as $150 Mil Movie Bombs, Few Take the “Walk”

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It’s not easy out there at the box office. The big misses are BIG. “Pan” is a total dud, costing probably $175 million. Warner Bros. says $150 mil but you know how it is. On Friday night “Pan” made just over $5 million. Hugh Jackman stars as Blackbeard, so “Pan” has made $3.8 million in Australia. But its prospects in the US are slim at best. I don’t know how Joe Wright, who’s made only stodgy literary movies that have attracted small audiences (Atonement, Hanna, Anna Karenina), got to helm a $150 mil action movie. I guess that’s why I don’t run a studio.

Over at Sony, things are not happy. Robert Zemeckis’s “The Walk” has great reviews and no audiences. Why? There’s no buzz and no excitement. Could it be lack of marketing? First of all, the title is terrible. How about “High Wire Act”? The title sounds like someone’s taking, you know, a walk. Very exciting. Second, there was no build up. “The Walk” just appeared.

The general audience wasn’t really prepped sufficiently. Maybe I missed it, but I feel like I wasn’t bombarded with information about Phillippe Petit or Joseph Gordon Levitt. There should have been a great TV commercial campaign with Leon Russell’s “Tightrope” playing in the background. Awards and nominations may revive it.

Ironically, Sony could have had “Steve Jobs,” which had a monster limited opening for Universal last. Fans of the Sony hacked emails will recall the whole back and forth between Amy Pascal and Scott Rudin. Sony’s loss is Universal’s gain, big time, with Oscar and box office the main buzzwords around this film. Sony now has to really pony up on James Bond “Spectre.” And even then the rewards are only partial. One bright light: Sony Pictures Classics will release “Truth,” a great film with a lot of potential. SPC also has the astounding “Son of Saul.” But those movies are the purview of Michael Barker and Tom Bernard, not Tom Rothman. We’ll see what happens.

UPDATE Sam Smith James Bond Theme Falls Off US iTunes Chart After 2 Weeks: Writing on the Wall?

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UPDATE “Writing’s on the Wall” and off the charts. The Sam Smith single is gone from the US iTunes top 150 after 16 days. It’s still number 2 in the UK. But something went wrong stateside. The single has almost no radio play at all, too. After Smith’s big hits earlier in the year, it’s surprising that radio hasn’t embraced his newest release. But they haven’t. Meanwhile, I did read Daniel Craig’s interview in Time Out London. Very melodramatic. But also very English and woe-is-me. Misinterpreted. He loves playing James Bond, he’ll be back. Good lord.

PREVIOUSLY It’s two weeks since Sam Smith introduced his James Bond theme song “Writing’s on the Wall” to what seemed like rabid fans.

Alas, the party was brief. The theme song for “Spectre” is now at number 124 on iTunes for the US. And if you by Spotify, no one is streaming the song in the US.

“Writing’s on the Wall” is a modest hit in the UK. It spent one minute at number 1 on their charts, then fell to 8 on UK iTunes.

This is certainly not what happened with Adele’s “Skyfall,” which was a monster hit from Day 1 and eventually won the Academy Award. The Smith song doesn’t seem like an Oscar entry– unless it rebounds after “Spectre” is released November 6th.

Is the writing on the wall for “Spectre”? Something seems to have gone wrong. Not only is the song not a hit, but star Daniel Craig is slagging the whole Bond enterprise in advance interviews. Why is he so unhappy? James Bond has made him richer than he could have imagined, and a household name. It made it possible for him to do Broadway shows in recent years.

Maybe Daniel doesn’t like the song either. No one’s asked him about it yet.

Music meantime PS: I sure hope Drake paid big time for his sample of “Why Can’t We Live Together” by Timmy Thomas (Glades Records). “Hotline Bling” is pretty much based on it. Timmy Thomas, the writer, is very much alive.