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Rebel Smart: Madonna’s “Jimmy Fallon” Show Revives Album from the Dead on iTunes, Amazon

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Now, you can say it, kids: Madonna is back. Her appearance on Jimmy Fallon’s “Tonight” show was a confirmed success. Her album, “Rebel Heart,” was just about dead on the charts. But this afternoon, “Rebel Heart” is number 20 on iTunes with a bullet, moving from around number 84 to 32 to where it is now. Well played.

There’s more: The original “Rebel Heart” EP of five songs, released in a hurry after Madonna was “pirated” early on, is at number 42. And the song she cleverly performed “Bitch I’m Madonna” is at number 107 out of nowhere. My guess is the song will pick up momentum and perhaps become an unqualified hit. Wouldn’t that be something?

(A friend suggests that they just release the Fallon performance as a video, and skip Madonna’s usual $10 million follies.)

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Even more interesting: The digital download of “Rebel Heart” on Amazon.com is number 37 and rising fast. This means that Amazon customers, who usually like the physical CD, had a big impulse buy after Fallon and just wanted the album. They couldn’t wait for the mail.

click here for my Rocky Horror Picture Show exclusive from March 9th

Madonna and manager Guy Oseary took a page from Barbra Streisand and manager Marty Erlichman. Streisand’s Fallon show propelled her duets CD, “Partners” into the stratosphere. Madonna’s Fallon segment was crafted similarly— Madonna was dressed in accessible way, no crazy nudity or sex talk, just fun, witty stuff. Her comedy routine was a dud, but it was in good fun so no one cared.

Game of Thrones author on who will die this season

The “Holiday” segment– performing her old hit live with Jimmy and the Roots– was a home run. But the coup de grace was the choreographed version of “Bitch” through the NBC hallways. It was ebullient and infectious. The old Madonna is back!
And yes, that’s Madonna’s 14 year old son Rocco in the video:

Scott Eastwood Says He Knows What Broke Up Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher

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Scott Eastwood looks like he’s going to be a lot of fun. On Andy Cohen’s show last night– which is live, and features alcohol– Clint Eastwood’s hot as a pistol actor son told Andy and Jon Cryer that Kutcher slept with one of Eastwood’s girlfriends. “It was the catalyst” for breaking up Ashton and Demi, Scott said. Scott will be invited back again, and often.

Madonna Gets It Just Right on Jimmy Fallon (Watch Videos) Gets Boost on Charts

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Madonna is not a great stand up comedian. But she’s willing to try anything. Her appearance over night on the Tonight Show starring Jimmy Fallon was pitch perfect. She sang “Holiday” unplugged with Jimmy and the Roots on toy instruments. (All pop artists should do this with Jimmy– they come off great!)

She also put on a great version of “Bitch I’m Madonna” that landed just right. I’m impressed, and I’m not kidding. Ironically, “Rebel Heart” is out of the top 100 on iTunes. But this performance gave the album a little boost on iTunes back to Number 32 from almost off the chart.

Don’t Ask Simon Curtis About “Downton Abbey”– He Has His Own Soap Opera with “Woman in Gold”

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“Woman In Gold” director Simon Curtis is bullish on the audiences, not so much on the critics. The Weinstein Company is expanding its hit, “Women in Gold” — about Austrian born Maria Altmann played by Helen Mirren, and her over sixty year fight to regain her family’s art–to 1500 screens across the US this weekend.  Audience response is strong and the exit polls are in the high 90s.  The film was not intended to go as wide as it is, but TWC is gung ho on it.

Origin CEO and Producer David M Thompson tells me his take on why the film is resonating with the audience, says, “Audiences love it because it’s not just about art restitution, but also about emotional healing, and it really does seem to touch people very deeply. It’s an unusual and powerful story of a fight for justice but it resonates for all kinds of people who feel like they have had things stolen from them, or their lives ripped apart and want to try and make things whole again.” 

simon curtisI asked Curtis, whose credits include “My Week with Marilyn,” about his long friendship with Oscar winner Mirren. 

“I was Helen’s assistant in the 70’s when she was doing a Shakespearean production in London. I used to open her fan mail and make her cups of tea. Which is pretty much what I did on this film too. So to work with her properly now is a joy.” So where are the paintings now?  Simon answered, “Both Adele’s, Maria’s Aunt Adele Bloch-Bauer painted by Gustav Klimt, are currently in New York, one at it’s permanent home, the Neue gallery, and the other at MOMA.  I don’t know where the landscapes are. “  

I asked why he thought some of the critics were so tough on the film?  

“Most of the critics who have been tough on it have been men.  Helen is the lead and the driving force of this film. So who knows about that?  Audiences love it though.  Seems to me that the pool of critics aren’t reflective of the audience.”  Simon’s wife, Downton Abbey’s Lady Cora Grantham, aka Elizabeth McGovern, plays a cameo in the film.  He told me that, “Elizabeth just took her parents to the Sherman Oaks Arclight, and she paid for the tickets. Of course her parents loved it.” 

Curtis is figuring out his next project, so there’s no breaking news yet. He’ll be happy to get his wife back from ”
Downton Abbey” and have a break. But the “Abbey” American love affair is actually his fault. It was Curtis who made the call to Masterpiece Theater’s Rebecca Eaton after she’d turned down the show. He told her, “Elizabeth is making this series, and it’s really good.” Eaton took a second look, and bought Julian Fellowes’ now legendary series.

Even though Curtis’s influence runs far and wide, he knows nothing about the details of the show’s finale. “Don’t ask me!” he says, laughing.  He has his own family drama to sort out with the “Woman in Gold” characters.

“Hey, it’s a love story of American Immigration,” he says.  I’ve given my heart and soul to this. When, ‘My Week With Marilyn,’ came out, it got mixed reviews too and that was tough.  Now people are talking about that film as one to live up too.  So if I have to choose between reviews and audience response, I go with the audience.  Every time.  That exhilarates me.” 

Change: Tom Cruise Doesn’t Fight Back as Internet Swells With Stories About Not Seeing Daughter Suri

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Wasn’t it only last year that Tom Cruise was suing magazines over stories about him not seeing daughter Suri?

How things have changed: Google Cruise’s name and you will find 78 stories about Tom not seeing Suri for a variety of lengths of times– anywhere from a year to 540 days.

But no one has said anything. Bert Fields, attack dog lawyer for Cruise, has said not a word about anything. By now, Bert would be seething in every corner. There’s been no word from publicists denying the stories. In the old days, Pat Kingsley– who ran interference for Cruise– would have immediately set up photo ops of Tom and Suri playing on swings, shopping, holding big stuffed animals, eating ice cream etc.

This time: it’s a blank, a dead hole.

What’s going on? It does seem that Tom has let the cult of Scientology block him from seeing Suri. What kind of person doesn’t see a 7 year old for more than a week? month? three months? It’s either a year or that 540 days. And this is a person with resources beyond description: private planes are to Tom Cruise what the A train is to us plebes. Not only that: Katie Holmes moved to Calabasas, California, a 30 minute drive in traffic from Cruise’s Beverly Hills manse. It’s not like they live oceans away from each other.

When Katie first hooked up with Tom in 2005 and had Suri — who turns 9 next week– they all lived with Cruise’s sisters and mother. All of those women had joined Scientology and jumped on Cruise’s gravy train. Tom’s sister Lee Ann came to New York and met with me, then sent me a “gift” of a three panel Scientology indoctrination in a box. I cherish it to this day. Suri knew all those people until Katie “escaped” from Cruise over July4th weekend in 2012. She hasn’t seen any of them either, ever again.

Scientology is clearly not for families. Today’s headlines are about how cult leader David Miscavige had a private investigator spy on his own father. Everything is open for discussion now thanks largely to Lawrence Wright and Alex Gibney’s book and documentary, “Going Clear.” What remains to be known is how the movie going public will react to Cruise “disconnecting” from his 9 year old because crazy people have told to do it.

You’ve got to feel sorry for Tom. He joined Scientology to get something family like out of it. And now he’s had 3 failed marriages and he’s separated from his youngest child. Those couldn’t have been his goals.

Broadway: Larry David’s “Fish in the Dark” Offering Deep Discounts for Jason Alexander’s Matinees

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Right now, Larry David’s “Fish in the Dark” is officially sold out. While it won’t be winning any Tony Awards, the very funny comedy starring David and Rita Wilson is raking in millions at the Broadway box office. But now Broadwaybox.com is offering $105 orchestra seats for matinees in June once Emmy winner Jason Alexander takes over playing Larry, er, Norman. Jason played a version of Larry in “Seinfeld” of course as George Costanza. I thought the show would be even hotter a ticket with Alexander. For some reason, though, the producers are discounting some of his performances. It looks like there are about 35 good seats at each of the offered performances. I’m going to buy a couple myself today.

‘Gigi’ Is Now a Disney-fied Musical So Vanessa Hudgens Isn’t Being Paid to Be A Concubine

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It may be a little hard to explain what’s going on in “Gigi” to the kids in the audience. Disney “High School Musical” star Vanessa Hudgens is very perky, and the whole enterprise could be a Princess story except for one little detail. Right up to the end, Gigi is being negotiated for by rich, young Gaston to be his mistress, not his wife. In the new version that opened on Broadway last night, they try to make light of that. But there’s no mention of a wedding or an engagement for over two hours. It’s all about how much Gigi will get from Gaston to sleep with him.

Maybe that’s why “Gigi” in this version doesn’t quite work or make sense. The sludgy direction tries to play up the Disney aspects with great costumes and sets that could be used, more effectively, for a production of “Hello, Dolly!” It’s the most inoffensive show of the season, all meringue and no mystery. Even the fact that Mamita, Gigi’s grandmother, is a former courtesan is sort of swept aside. She’s just had a lot of past romances. And a lot of good hats.

The real meaning of the new “Gigi” will probably go right over the heads of the little girls in the audience. After all, at the eleventh– really 11:30– hour, Gaston proposes to Gigi, so all that wrangling about his getting her a big apartment and supplying maids and chauffeurs in exchange for sex no longer matters. He’s going to put a ring on it once the curtain is down. (It would more interesting to see the next act.)

Vanessa Hudgens, who used to be part of a tabloid act with Zac Efron, is the linchpin here. She’s a plucky ingenue even though she’s on the small side. Her voice seems like it almost works until it doesn’t. She goes into songs with a lot of energy but has trouble landing them. She seems like she could be a sexy concubine until she doesn’t. I had no idea why Gaston was so interested in her except that she was approximately his height. But this is a fantasy for 13 year old girls.

The outstanding players here are the ‘elders’– Victoria Clark as Gigi’s Mamita, Howard McGillin, looking a little mummified, as the local dandy, and Dee Hoty as Gigi’s haughty aunt. When they’re on stage the show’s pulse picks up. But it’s never racing, trust me. The best number is “I Remember it Well” between Clark and McGillin, done sort of as a lost number from “Follies.” Otherwise, this Lerner & Loewe concoction is memorable mostly for “Thank Heaven for Little Girls,” which in this version has been drained of its lechery.

For opening night, Mary Louise Parker brought her adorable daughter, Ana Gasteyer was in the audience and so was Andrew Rannells, and there were plenty of lovely people in the Neil Simon Theater like the amazing Kristine Nielsen from “Vanya and Sonya and Masha and Spike.” But I did feel sort of sad because “Gigi” succeeded the much better “Last Ship,” Sting’s musical, which was full of passion of fight and meant something important.

 

Stars of “Twin Peaks” Rally Round David Lynch, Even Laura Palmer

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Some of the actors who starred in “Twin Peaks” made a little video supporting director David Lynch. “Twin Peaks” without David Lynch is…bad news. Showtime apparently wouldn’t give Lynch the money he asked for to make the revived version of the beloved series. And really, you can’t have “Twin Peaks” without him. Many familiar faces in the video, but no Kyle Maclachlan or Michael Ontkean. Good to see Peggy Lipton…

Mariah Carey at Crossroads as Publicist Leaves Three Weeks Before Las Vegas Debut

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Mariah Carey has some decisions to make this morning. Her Las Vegas debut at Caesar’s Palace is on May 6th. That’s in three weeks. Yesterday, according to Page Six, her publicist of 15 years, Cindi Berger, resigned. Mariah, meantime, is being photographed in all kinds of vacation locales, but not in Las Vegas. You do the math.

Mariah recently signed a new contract with Epic Records-Sony Music, her original home, after a long run with Island DefJam. But her last couple of albums have been non-starters, most especially a soap opera that dragged on with the last one, “Me I Am Mariah.”

No one knows who her manager is at the moment, after she went through Randy Jackson and Jermaine Dupri and a non event with ATO, the company partly owned by Dave Matthews. Mariah remains signed to CAA’s Rob Light, one of the smartest people anywhere, but it’s unclear if she listens to him.

Now comes a scramble. If she can’t get Berger to take her back, Mariah could try and line up with Fran Curtis and Rogers & Cowan. She represents Elton John and the Rolling Stones, among others. For Vegas, Carey needs a team in place. She also needs to get her well known tuchas to Caesar’s for some heavy duty rehearsal. May 6th is right around the corner.

Broadway Review: “Hand to God” Writer Takes His Own Bow– “I am an American playwright!”

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The path to the Tony Award season took a curve last night as Richard Askins’ original play, “Hand to God,” was such a hit that it took everyone by surprise. Most surprised, I think, was playwright Askins, who jumped on stage during the standing ovation at the end of opening and made a very off the cuff, not usually seen speech to the audience.

The gist of it was “I am an American playwright,” and “this is an American play.” At a time when British imports like Peter Morgan’s “The Audience” and Simon Stephens’  “The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night” are the hits of the pre-Tony season, Askins– from Texas– is an anomaly. Raised in a Christian family, and more recently a bartender in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, Askins is a live wire who realizes he’s written a bit of genius. “Hand to God” is totally original, funny and angry and sad, and sure to leave a mark not only this spring but for some time to come.

To say no one really knew what was coming– can be underscored by the fact that few celebs showed up in the rain for opening night. I saw Andrew Rannells, and Jennifer Westfeldt, Daphne Rubin Vega and producer Jean Doumanian. Let me put it this way: Shubert head Bob Wankel and Nederlander chief James Nederlander Jr. had a lot of time to chat with each other.

But this morning, just wait while publicist Rick Miramontez is fielding calls from famous people who “must” see this show. Steven Boyer, the nominal star, is a very likely Tony nominee. He is just stunning as Jason, the put upon teen son of Margery (also stunning Broadway debut from Geneva Carr) who teaches puppetry at the local church. In her puppet class are Timothy (Michael Oberholtzer) and Jessica  (Sarah Stiles), respectively a sullen good looking kid and a sullen, introverted girl. The church is run by Pastor Greg (the always good Marc Kudisch) who has a thing for Margery.

There is one more character: Tyrone, a blue grey sock puppet worn by Jason. Tyrone is inanimate but he takes on a life of his own. Think Mel Gibson in “The Beaver” if that movie had been any good. At one point Tyrone, operated by Jason, and a female puppet created by Jessica, have quite graphic full on, soup to nuts sex on stage while their humans have a completely separate conversation. The play deserves awards just for this scene. I doubt it can be shown on TV. But it’s a show stopper.

“Hand to God” is hilarious, so don’t think otherwise. But it’s also a full three act (well, two acts) play, with fully realized ideas about religion and mortality, Big Ideas and small ones that are philosophical and mordant. It’s not a glib play, though. Director Moritz von Stuelpnagel very adroitly steers away from clownishness or scenery chewing. He’s got this extraordinary ensemble on a tight leash and never lets up.

The Tony season really gets more clarified now as all these actors, the play, and the director will be a big part of the mix. Boyer is going to be up against Alex Sharp, Bradley Cooper, Nathan Lane and Bill Nighy for Best Actor in a Play at the very least.  And we haven’t even seen “Wolf Hall” yet.