Friday, December 19, 2025
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Meryl Streep Drives Herself to Paul Newman Charity Show Featuring Her, Hanks, Clooney, More

So how does Meryl Streep get to the Paul Newman charity show at Lincoln Center Monday Night? She joined Tom Hanks, George Clooney, Natalie Cole, Carole King, Aloe Blacc, Danny DeVito, David Letterman and Shaffer by driving herself in from Connecticut, and driving back. No assistant, no driver, no chauffeur. In fact, I’m told no one brought an entourage to the remarkable show produced by famed impresario Lou Adler for Newman’s SeriousFun (formerly the Hole in the Wall Camps) at Avery Fisher Hall.

Yours truly bought a cheap ticket to the show because the publicist said all the press seats had been given away. So how funny was it when I scoped out those seats and there were three, all empty, off the center aisle, row R? Did I move down from the heavens? You bet. I didn’t want to miss a thing. And the ticket fee? Well worth it as a donation to the camps started by Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward more than 40 years ago.

Streep kicked off the show, making introductions, etc., reminding everyone that his year Newman, a movie icon and philanthropist, would have turned 90! Ninety! Streep was followed by a smattering of Serious Fun kids, performing Katy Perry’s “Roar” like professionals.

This is where Mr. Entertainment himself, Tom Hanks, the Mayor of Entertainmentland, stepped in and took over. He read a long poignant letter from one mother, then mixed and mingled with kids on stage with incredible ease. The kids are amazing, of course, all suffering from chronic diseases, all thriving because of the network of camps around the world.

During the hour and forty five minute show, we heard Carole King — singing better than ever, like it was 1976 all over again– with new soul sensation Aloe Blacc. King sang “Child of Mine” and played “Beautiful” on the piano, accompanying herself. Later she and Blacc turned out a “You’ve Got a Friend” that was so exciting and soulful that Carole was grinning from ear to ear as Blacc did his best Donny Hathaway.

A total surprise in the middle of the show: David Letterman and Paul Shaffer, maybe introducing their new post- Late Night routine. Dave did some very funny stand up, then he and Paul pulled off a musical top 10 list of parody songs written for Paul Newman movies.

More music– from opera great Renee Fleming, and from Natalie Cole, who turned the place out with a rare rendition of “This Will Be.” (Natalie’s making some nice coin from that song as it’s licensed to eHarmony dating for commercials.)

Yes, there’s a wonderful video from Robert Redford about his long friendship with Newman, and their charitable work, and how they made “Butch Cassidy.” Two of the kids sing– Graham O’Shaunhessy has a rich baritone voice. Sixteen year old Gavyn Bailey confidently leads a bunch of kids through “Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head.”

And finally it’s George Clooney. Making a speech about the camps and all the countries from a Teleprompter, he fumbles, recovers– about the number of countries in the world– and quips, “My wife is the smart one in the family.” He gets the biggest laugh of the night.

Remember– I’m not even supposed to be there. But at the cocktail party in Avery Fisher Hall, I chat with Adler, who did a superlative job. He produced “Monterey Pop” in 1968, gave us the Mamas and the Papas, and Carole King’s run of hit albums from 1970-77, and delivered “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” to the world. His son, Cisco Adler, just produced the new Cody Simpson album.

Lou told me he is going to release some “Rocky Horror” 40th anniversary outtakes, and a new DVD of recently discovered Carole King performances from Central Park, 1973. He put Aloe Blacc with King last night and found magic. ALoe Blacc, who I keep running into, is going to really break big in 2015. Did he and Carole rehearse? “Oh yes,” he said, shaking his head. “I asked for a lot of rehearsal. She’s one of my idols.”

We end the evening meeting 12 year old Cassidy Reynolds and her mom, Shannon, from Seattle. Cassidy is a product of the Seattle camp, Camp Korey, where she’s a superstar. She suffers from a rare form of dwarfism, her mom says. This will not stop Cassidy, who should have already been a guest on Ellen DeGeneres and wants to meet Jimmy Fallon. She is precocious beyond her years, a dynamo. She wants to have a career– now- as an inspirational speaker.

From behind her big glasses, flashing an endless smile, Cass looks around the room and says, “I’m on celebrity overload.”

Me, too. And I wasn’t even supposed to be there.

UPDATE II: Will Smith “Focus” Did Less Well Than Previously Thought: $18.6 Mil

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“Focus,” the Will Smith movie that already was thought to have underperformed, did worse than we thought. Paramount gave an estimate of $19.1 million for Friday- Sunday. But “Focus” came in at $18.6 million. Remember, most of the trades and the prognosticators were putting it at $20, $21 million. Not even close. “Focus” is probably very weak going into week 2. Watch it drop more than 50%. This is not one of those situations where everyone’s secretly gleeful at the downfall of a star. Will Smith is well liked. I’d like to see him score again. And soon. Will, call Roland Emmerich, Now.

Welcome to New York– the DSK Rape Story, Not Taylor Swift Song, Finally Opening (Watch Trailer Here)

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Taylor Swift sings “Welcome to New York.” But she will want her song off the air the week of March 27th. That’s when Abel Ferrara’s “Welcome to New York” opens here and on VOD. A great performance by Jacqueline Bisset as the put upon wife of a Dominique Strauss-Kahn character is featured. Gerard Depardieu is way over the top in an X rated orgy seguene that starts the film and lasts about 20 minutes– this was the version I saw in Cannes last year. Who knows what they’ve changed? The film is now rated R, as in relief from the X version. The movie has little do with with the actual DSK case and doesn’t really make sense, but at least it causes a sensation. It’s timed to the publicity for Kahn’s ex-wife’s book– Anne Sinclair’s memoir about growing up with a lot of art around her. Be advised: you’ll see more of Depardieu than you ever wanted. You can hum Taylor’s song to yourself or sing out loud.

John Travolta Raising Money for Films Brings in Strange Financial Bedfellows

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How hard is it to get film financing? Just ask John Travolta. For a few years he hoped to play John Gotti, but the project fell apart because no one involved had real money and the key producer was an ex con.

Now Travolta– who’s already moving to TV from film playing Robert Kardashian in American Crime Story–is trying once more. He’s set to star in something called “I Am Wrath.”  The players are an eclectic group. The director, Chuck Russell, formerly known as Charles Russell, hasn’t worked in 12 years but did make “The Mask” and “Eraser” in the mid 90s. “Wrath” has a swollen list of 8 executive producers and 3 actual producers (they’re the people who actually make the movie).

At least one of the EP’s — Richard Rionda Del Castro — comes with questionable baggage. In 2012, Del Castro the head of Hannibal Pictures, was accused of allegedly forging a signature from an employee of Film Finances, the bond company on a 2011 movie no one ever saw called “The Big Bang” with Antonio Banderas. (It went straight to video.)

Del Castro’s only other high profile project was the late great George Hickenlooper’s “Casino Jack,” the 2010 a drama about the life of Jack Abramoff, starring Kevin Spacey. It also went straight to video (although it’s worth a look if you’re a “House of Cards” fan.) Del Castro is the subject of an internet campaign by William Richert, an actor (“My Own Private Idaho”) who directed a 1998 feature called “The Man in the Iron Mask” (not the one with Leonardo Di Caprio). Richert — who says he was burned by Del Castro — wrote in his post: ” Individuals and groups like Rionda and his company, Hannibal Pictures, hurt a whole culture of struggling artists, actors, directors, producers and artisans with their bogus sales reports and false contract listings.”

Rionda is also infamous for suing “Real Housewife” Sonja Morgan. He said she reneged on financing a film.

Some of the other producers of “Wrath” include billionaire Haim Saban’s 25 year old Ness, Richard Salvatore (who comes with money from the Magnolia Bakery)  and Patricia Eberle, who boasts a resume of straight to video B movies — the kind you see for sale in the Cannes market but have never heard of, including “Casino Jack.”

Travolta replaced Nicolas Cage in “Wrath.” The Oscar winner dropped out of the revenge movie (the main character is avenging his murdered daughter, a la “Taken”)– and he’s not picky about his projects, as we know. William Friedkin was the original director, but he left with Cage.

Most recently, Travolta’s “Gotti” project went bust when the producer, Marc Fiore, was revealed in this column as an ex-con with mob ties and a bad history on Wall Street. Some of these productions now have echoes of “Get Shorty,” the Travolta film of long ago in which he played a mobster trying to get a movie made.

Having eight executive producers is not a strange situation for Travolta anymore. Another coming feature, “The Forger,” is set up similarly. Another one, called “Criminal Activities,” has 11 EPs. And “Life on the Line” has a mix of 11 EPs and producers. None of them are likely to bring Travolta back to the Oscars any time soon.

Park & Recreation’s Nick Offerman in Play Version of “Confederacy of Dunces”

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No one can get a movie together of “A Confederacy of Dunces.” But now there’s a play version coming to off off Broadway in a dramatic adaptation of the John Kennedy Toole popular novel. Nick Offerman, from “Parks and Recreation” (and the husband of Megan Mullaly) will star as Ignatius Reilly. The play opens in Boston at the Huntington Theater on November 11th. David Esbjornson directs from a script by Jeffrey Hatcher.

“Confederacy” was written by O’Toole before he committed suicide in 1969. Ten years later his mother brought the book to famed writer Walker Percy. Percy took it to his publisher, and in 1981 the book finally saw the light of day. It won the Pulitzer Prize and has become a modern classic. There have been countless efforts to make a film. For a short time before his death. John Belushi was tipped to play Ignatius. But nothing has ever gotten off the ground. Offerman seems like a good choice. Let’s wish them luck.

Michael Jackson: Member of First Band He Signed to Own Label Dies in Mysterious Fall

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UPDATES: Word is filtering out that Maxwell fell and broke a glass of wine. A freak accident. Meanwhile, Jerry Greenberg tells me that “We’ve lost a great, great person. She was so sweet.” Greenberg says he signed Brownstone after stopping them from going to RCA. He say that Destiny’s Child opened for them toward the end of their run.

EARLIER: Reports everywhere today that Charmayne Maxwell, a member of the 90s singing group Blackstone, died in a mysterious fall over the weekend. She was 46 years old. Blackstone was the first and most successful group Michael signed to MJJ Records in 1994 with his label president, the legendary Jerry Greenberg.

Maxwell’s husband, record producer Carsten Schack (known as Soulshock, a Danish born musician) says he came home and found Charmayne (Maxi) bleeding and unconscious. It seems like she fell and sliced her neck on a piece of glass. Police say there’s nothing suspicious so far. Keep refreshing.

Brownstone received a Grammy nomination for the record “If You Love Me” in 1995.

Four years ago, Nicci Gilbert, one of the other members, told an interviewer about Jackson: “…we auditioned for him. We met Jerry Greenberg first. I can’t tell the full story because we are doing a book; that’s going to be exiting. The short story is that we met Jerry Greenberg, we auditioned for him, and he said he had someone else that he wanted us to meet. At the time we did not know who it was. We auditioned for a second time in a pitch black conference room. After the second audition was over, we discovered that Michael was there; of course we were extremely excited. Later on, we were told that Michael fell in love with us and wanted us to be the first artists signed to his record label.”

Gilbert added: ” I remember the first time that I met him. He gave us the advice that, like Coca-Cola; we should always conduct ourselves as a brand.”

Watch Elton John and Nile Rodgers Jam at Annual Oscar Party– $5.8 Mil Raised

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Sir Elton John and David Furnish raised $5.8 million for AIDS research and programs last Sunday night in Hollywood. The annual Oscar party was for the Elton John AIDS Foundation. Nile Rodgers and Chic put on a blistering show, and Elton jammed with them.

I made this little homemade clip from my Samsung S5. “Mad Men” actor Jared Harris was going crazy dancing up a storm on the side of the stage. There were plenty of celebrities in the magical tent EJAF sets up across from the Pacific Design Center. Elton and David are the best goodwill ambassadors in the world. (Yes. I can’t believe I actually have conversations with Elton John. I’m always humming “Honky Cat” in my head!)

Sir Elton did tell me something interesting over the weekend. Of new pop stars Ed Sheeran and Sam Smith clowning around together: “They remind me of me and Rod Stewart back in the day, just having fun!”

Please donate to www.ejaf.org. They are the premier AIDS health group in the world.

PS Elton wears a lot of interesting rings. But he has to take them all off to do this:

William Shatner Had a Great Time at Palm Beach Ball, Promoted Priceline

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Well, it looks like William Shatner had a great time in Palm Beach last night at the International Red Cross Ball. He mixed and mingled with co-hosts Shirley MacLaine and Wayne Newton, chatted with the press about Leonard Nimoy, and promoted Priceline.

Shatner told Channel 10 that Nimoy “had a good, long life. He did a lot of things. He inspired a lot of people. He was loved by a lot of people and he loved a lot of people.”

He also said that he’d used Priceline to get flights to West Palm Beach. (If you believe this, you also think it’s 82 degrees today in New York.)  He said: “I hold Priceline as a banner whenever I travel because you get some great seats, great cars (and) great hotels from Priceline.”

Shatner will not be attending the funeral of his co-star Leonard Nimoy, with whom he has been associated in fame and fortune since 1967. He said earlier “I feel really awful” about it. Nimoy, who went into the hospital last week, died on Friday.

Everyone mourns in their own way. Actor Eric Roberts attended the Oscars three days after his mother died last week. And when Michael Jackson died, his father attended the BET Awards a couple of day later with a Jackson impersonator.

 

“Downton” Season 5 Ends Tonight: Lily James, Allen Leech Are (May Be) Leaving

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update: with spoilers So “Downton” is losing Rose and Branson. The season 5 finale was so well executed and hit every mark, from the “Golden Girls” stories to the nearly interminable Bates-Anna murder saga. Who will Fellowes introduce? Will Matthew Goode’s Henry Talbott be the match for Mary? All done with such zip and grace, including the mini plots of this episode. Well played. The finale episode should win the Emmy for Best Drama, hands down.

EARLIER “Downton Abbey” season 5 ends Sunday night in the US with some farewells. Newly married Rose, played by Lily James, is moving to New York with her Jewish husband, Atticus. (There they will meet Zelda and Scott Fitzgerald, and be caught up– off camera– in the Roaring 20s.) James is about to open in “Cinderella” with Cate Blanchett and is also making an exit, although she can return at any time. Show creator Julian Fellows has left the door open.

Then there’s Tom Branson, the chauffeur turned son-in-law played by Allen Leech. Branson wants to move to Boston, where he has a cousin. (Tom will meet Joseph P. Kennedy and get caught up in Democratic party politics– maybe. Or he will strike out and return with an American bride no one likes.) Leech has had a taste of Hollywood this season, making a strong appearance in “The Imitation Game.” Fellows is also writing him out, but he can return, too.

Into the mix comes Matthew Goode, straight from “The Good Wife” and also “The Imitation Game.” A big ticket name, Goode arrives at “Downton” as Mary’s possible end game to replace Matthew Crawley (Dan “I’m so sorry now” Stephens.) Goode plays Henry Talbot, and I dare say he’ll be running the estate by the end of Season 6. Goode has been waiting a while for a breakthrough role; I hope this it.

Fellowes will have to come up with a romance for Edith (Laura Carmichael) and somehow add in a young woman with the Crawleys to replace Rose, who replaced Sybil. Ah, Poor Sybil. Jessica Brown-Findlay thought she was leaving the show for the Big Screen. But in quick order her successor– Lily James– has gotten their first.  I’ll bet she wishes Sybil had taken better care of herself during that pregnancy!

Last Sunday’s episode, of Rose marrying Atticus, was beautifully written, as usual. There were a couple of times I caught myself laughing out loud. Of course, I’m not so sure about the Sinderbys, the wealthy Jewish family Fellowes has invented.  Their rise to status after leaving Russia in 1850 seems sketchy. And the actor who plays Lord Sinderby looks more like Yul Brynner than a Hebrew. My own family left Poland for London around that time, and I assure you their descendants didn’t look like Lord Sinderby or Atticus by 1924. But, hey…

Both Maggie Smith and Penelope Wilton  are coming to town this week for the premiere of “The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel” so maybe we’ll get some answers about Season 6. I’d have to guess that Isobel (Wilton) marries Lord Merton, he dies and leaves her everything. She marries the doctor and they buy the Abbey. Who knows? And what of Isis? The poor dog died. What will replace him? And will Lord Grantham realize the new dog can die, too?

We’ll be watching the big finale tonight.

UPDATE Will Smith “Focus” Lowest Opening ($19 Mil) Since 2008 For Former Box Office Star

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UPDATE SUNDAY 11:40am: Total was $19 million. It was at least $1 million less than any predictions other than mine below. Everyone said $20 mil or more. If Smith didn’t get at least $10 million of it, that would be fine. The domestic total should come to around $65 million. Let’s hope for better things in December with “Concussion.”

EARLIER: Will Smith didn’t stay in “Focus” last night. His latest film opened to $6.465 million, his lowest opening since 2008. That disaster was the awful, depressing “Seven Pounds.” Since then he’s been in “Men in Black 3” and “After Earth.” The latter opened to $9.8 million and and sank quickly, ending up with a domestic box office of $60.5 million.

It’s unclear whether “Focus” will have better legs. Right now predictions are a weekend finish of $19 million if lucky. But it’s clear that the affable Smith, who radiates charm and is certainly a welcome presence on movie screens, has to re think what’s going on here.

Once he was the go-to star for July 4th weekend. That isn’t the case anymore. It’s odd that he passed on the sequel to “Independence Day,” one movie that fans would clamor to see him in. Perhaps his attitude toward aliens has changed since then.