Thursday, December 18, 2025
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Woody Allen’s Smash Broadway Opening: Film’s Oscar Winner Dianne Wiest “Loved It”

Dianne Wiest won the second of her two Oscars (so far) for Woody Allen’s “Bullets Over Broadway” in 1995. (The first was for “Hannah and Her Sisters” in 1987.) So who would be more critical watching Marin Mazzi take over for the musical version of Helen St. Clair in the Broadway version of “Bullets”? But Wiest, who not only came to the opening night show but went to the lavish party at the Metropolitan Museum, was over the moon with compliments.

“Watching the show tonight, if I hadn’t known better, I would have felt that Woody wrote it for the stage and adapted it to the movies. It felt that right up there.” How did she like Mazzie uttering her famous line, “Don’t speak”? “I loved it and I loved her,” said Wiest, as she stopped near the Temple of Dendur to take pictures with the cast.

Wiest wasn’t alone. Among the first-nighters for Susan Stroman’s genius directing and choreography were Barbara Walters, Elizabeth Berkley, Marlo Thomas, Elaine May and Stanley Donen, “Beautiful” musical writer Doug McGrath, Regis and Joy Philbin, Michael and Laurie Gelman, and ABC’s Art Moore. That last five had a mini-reunion from the “Live with Regis” show.

Who knows more about musicals than Stanley Donen, who directed “Singing in the Rain”? He couldn’t stop praising the show.

Woody Allen and Soon Yi brought their 14 year old daughter Manzie, a very poised, articulate and attractive teenager. Had she seen the show before? “Oh yes,” she said, many times. Sister Bechet, the couple’s eldest daughter was present for a family night.

The party in the Temple of Dendur was the first ever Broadway after show premiere at the Metropolitan Museum, by the way. It’s the height of elegance.

By the way, everyone had a laugh about yesterday’s preposterous story in the Daily News about “Bullets” being about the Cotton Club and Woody not having black actors.

“Bullets” has nothing whatsoever do with the Cotton Club. There’s a passing reference to it. The News screwed it up, and then lemming website managers picked up the story without checking.

Someone sitting across from me at the show said, “I’m still waiting for the Cotton Club.”

In “Bullets,” you’re not in the Cotton Club at all. You’re in midtown, at a Broadway theater and at a nightclub run by Nick (Vincent Pastore, Pussy from “The Sopranos.”) Playwright David Shayne (a singing, dancing, totally surprising Zach Braff) wants his play produced so badly, he’s willing to let it be funded by Nick  and secretly re-written by low level gangster Cheech (Nicholas Cordero in a knockout sort of Broadway debut). David falls hard for Broadway star Helen (Marin Mazzie) even though he has a patient girlfriend at home (Betsy Wolfe).

Woody and Susan Stroman have woven two dozen songs from the 1920s into the fabric of the movie’s story. The songs fit seamlessly, sometimes with additional lyrics or a little dialogue. But mostly, they are gorgeous jazz pop numbers of the era. Aside from the Carole King musical “Beautiful,” this is the best score of the season among new musicals. I’d rather hear these songs than any more from “If/Then” or “Bridges of Madison County.”

Stroman serves up her usual brilliant platter of dances. Really, you have to see them, one more clever than the last. There’s a dance routine with the gangsters that’s an instant classic. And many others are just jaw dropping. You wonder how Stroman comes up with these ideas. One of them involves bouncy cushions in formidable looking ottomans and the overweight second banana in David’s play.

“Bullets” hums with fun. It’s goofy, with Woody Allen jokes tucked into larger laughs. There’s a lot to love. And when the cast, having wrapped up the plot, finishes with “Yes, We’ve Got No Bananas,” it’s just the right nutty non sequitur. I’m looking forward to seeing it again. Soon.

 

 

Mystery of Murdoch’s Winter Disappearance Explained: “Fell On My Head”

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Remember, I asked back in February, where is Rupert Murdoch? He’d been missing from social media, from almost all media, for several weeks by mid winter. The original piece I did noted his strange absence. He missed a lot, including Fox Searchlight’s Oscar win for “12 Years a Slave.”

Now we know the answer. The octogenarian fell, as many senior citizens do, and fractured his spine. He reveals this episode in his new Fortune magazine interview.

He tells Fortune: “I had a very bad month in January and February… I fell on my head.

“It was just stupidity… I’d put on some boots to go for a hike around San Francisco… and I went down and hit my head very hard. And I got… a hair fracture across my spine. I landed on a carpet, but on my head. I’ve never had such pain in my life.

“A friend of mine sent a friend of his, a neurosurgeon, down to see me, who quickly said I didn’t have any concussion. After that, I just went to my ranch and rested for three weeks.”

Did the fall knock some sense into him? Since the accident he’s spoken favorably of Hillary Clinton.

NYDaily News Does Mia Farrow’s Dirty Work: Bullets Over Broadway is Not About the Cotton Club

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We live now in an era where something whispered into a gullible ear becomes repeated by lemmings on the internet until World War III breaks out.

Mia Farrow knows this very well. She set this in motion today,planting an item in the NY Daily News that Woody Allen’s “Bullets Over Broadway” must be racist. Says she via they: “they don’t want blacks in the cast and it’s all about the Cotton Club.”

I am MYSTIFIED by the stupidity involved here. “Bullets Over Broadway” is based on a 1994 film. It has NOTHING to do with the Cotton Club! It’s called Bullets over what? BROADWAY! The movie, and the musical, is about an aspiring Broadway playwright and his backers. The musical added music from the 1920s, some of which was played at the Cotton Club. And at the Stork Club, the Copa, your grandma’s living room. and Lindy’s and a dozen other places that were popular.

But it’s not about the Cotton Club or set there !! Please pay attention lemming websites who will just repeat the Daily News smear. Planted by Mia, no doubt.

The show: opens tonight, it’s a hit.

Woody Allen is not a racist. His three children– Satchel, Bechet, and Manzie– are named for black jazz musicians. Really.

“After Midnight” is about the Cotton Club. Half the cast and orchestra are white. Now what do you want to do?

NY Daily News Confidential: you’ve been used.

Public: you’re being used.

Mia, Ronan: drop it already.

 

Stephen Colbert Will Succeed Letterman, Chelsea Handler in Line for Late Late Show

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Stephen Colbert has been announced as the successor to David Letterman. I did tell you one year ago that Letterman would retire and would be replaced by either Colbert or Jon Stewart, each of whom is already signed to CBS via Viacom on Comedy Central. Stewart will now get a nice pay bump for deferring to the Letterman-like Colbert. It remains to be seen if Colbert, who plays a character on his own his show, will do well as himself.

Part 2 of this change will be moving out Craig Ferguson from the Late Late Show the show following Letterman. It does seem as though Chelsea Handler will be first in line for that spot. Would a Handler LLS from Los Angeles, where Handler lives, or New York? That remains to be seen. It would make the first woman to host a late night talk show since Joan Rivers.

And what of the Ed Sullivan Theater? Will the new Colbert show come from that venue? It’s more identified with Letterman than with Sullivan at this point. Also, Letterman’s music side is almost a business unto itself. Paul Shaffer isn’t ready for retirement. And the music production, starting with Sheila Rogers, is legendary. Will CBS chuck all that, even though Colbert has no background in that area?

Wait and see…

Tony Bennett: Long Awaited Lady Gaga Duets Album Coming in September

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EXCLUSIVE (c2014 Showbiz411) It’s been delayed a couple of times. But that doesn’t mean anything’s wrong. Just timing. But the legend of legends Tony Bennett tells me that his jazz duets album with Lady Gaga will be released in September.

Bennett and daughter Joanna, founder of the First Time Film Festival, were guests of Kevin Spacey at last night’s annual dinner for the Museum of the Moving Image.

Tony told me the album, still called “Cheek to Cheek,” will hit stores or downloading systems, or whatever in September. The album will absolutely make the Grammy Awards deadline of September 30th. Expect to see Tony and Gaga everywhere as the new fall TV season hits.

“Cheek to Cheek” was supposed to come out this past January. Then it got pushed to March. But frankly, they had to wait until Gaga’s ARTPOP album and coming tour were out of the way. By September, ARTPOP, for better or worse, will be in the rearview mirror.

“Wait til you hear her voice,” Tony told me of Gaga last night. “She’s a real singer.”

The great crooner, still in his prime, will turn 88 years young in August. Is he on tour? “We’re always doin’ our thing,” he affirmed. He ain’t kidding! I just looked it up: Tony has at least 16 big dates scheduled between now and mid-summer. And there are more being added every day!

Kevin Spacey Rushes to Aid of Collapsed Museum Honcho to NYC Testimonial Dinner

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If someone important fainted at a big political event on “House of Cards,” you’d suppose that Frank Underwood wouldn’t rush to his aid. Or, if he did, he might suffocate him before EMS could get there.

Luckily, that’s not what happened last night at the annual gala for the Museum of the Moving Image. Before the evening got too far underway, museum chair and former NBC and RCA chief Herb Schlosser, age 88, dropped like a stone during cocktails. And before paramedics could even be called, Kevin Spacey, the night’s honoree, ran to his rescue.

Unlike Underwood, Spacey was genuinely concerned. Schlosser, I can report, went to the ER and was later released. Still, during his keynote speech, the first thing Spacey did was ask how he was to the crowd. It turns out he’s just playing a psychopath on TV!

Spacey’s really a nice guy, as we learned not just from that episode but from several friends and co-workers who came to toast him. Among them: Samuel L. Jackson, Chaz Palminteri and wife Gia, Peggy Siegal, Ron Delsener, Denis Leary, Kate Bosworth (who came with husband Michael Polish), Penn Badgley, Dana Brunetti, and Beau Willimon. At the dinner but not speaking: legendary Tony Bennett with daughter Joanna, newly mortal Mike Bloomberg, Sony Pictures Classics head Michael Barker, and Netflix chief Ted Sarandos.

All the celebs were seated for dinner and stayed through til the end, except for Leary, who appeared on stage on cue and then left the building. He missed hobnobbing with Spacey, Jackson and Palminteri at the head table. Leary also missed Spacey’s spaced out talk at the end of the night, which contained so many “f words”– as in “f—ing this, f—ing that” that a drinking game upon hearing the word would have left everyone under the table. “F—ing hey, Kevin, it’s a black tie event.”

Maybe that’s how they talk at the Old Vic.

 

 

Hillary Clinton Book Due in June–Flashback Exclusive– Ghost Writer Revealed

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I told you back on June 11, 2013 that Hillary Clinton’s new book would be ready for release on or around June 1st 2014. Today comes the announcement of a June 1st release. Not bad. I also told you all about the ghost writer, Ted Widmer. Here’s the story from almost a year ago:

Exclusive: Hillary Clinton is busily writing her new book, due from Simon & Schuster probably on June 1, 2014 according to an amazon.com entry. The book will cover her time as Secretary of State, no doubt including the events of Benghazi. The goal is to clear the air and have everything in place for her 2016 campaign for president. So who’s writing Hillary’s book? Or ghost-writing it? I can confirm that the person doing the heavy lifting is Edward “Ted” Widmer, 50, a former speechwriter for Bill Clinton with some heavy credentials. It’s still unclear how he will be billed.

Widmer, a Harvard grad who wrote for the Lampoon, has a long association with Brown University, where he’s held the post of Director of the John Carter Brown Library. Between 2001 and 2006, Widmer was inaugural director of the C.V. Starr Center for the Study of the American Experience at Washington widmerCollege, where, according to his bio, “he created numerous programs designed to enliven the teaching of American history and politics to diverse groups, ranging from Muslim college students in historically anti-American regions of the world to elementary students in under-financed public school districts of the eastern shore of Maryland.”

Yesterday I spoke with his wife, who assured me Widmer would call back after taking their son to the mall. He did not return the call or an email. Sources say that Widmer has conceded that Clinton–though she hasn’t said so directly– is “incredibly organized and planning her campaign.”

(NOTE: Widmer wrote to me late Thursday with this addition: “I have neither said that or anything like it to anyone, nor is it something I believe.”)

Widmer sounds like the right man for this job. The tone and revelations of Hillary’s book are going to be crucial to her campaign. Widmer should get a nice fee, too. Clinton’s last book fetched an $8 million advance. This one, say some reports, could be as high as $14 million–although in book publishing that would be ridiculous and impossible to earn back.

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Rock & Roll Hall of Fame 2013: $6 Mil in Income, $0 to Musicians or Anyone Else

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It’s the same story I’ve been writing for about 15 years now.

The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame prepares for tomorrow night’s extravaganza at the Braclays Center. The non profit Hall of Fame Foundation charges thousands of dollars for prime tickets, gives just two passes to inductees, and makes enemies left and right.

Let’s remember: they’re inducting the late Brian Epstein, and Rolling Stones original manager Andrew Loog Oldham. The latter refuses to attend. For the former, no one from his family is invited.

Tickets start at $3,000 to sit on the floor. For the public, there are at least 2,000 tickets circulating on the web. (Not all of the Barclays is being used.)

Here are the numbers from the 2013 tax filing Form 990:

Total assets: $9.6 million

Total income for 2013: $6 million.

Total amount spent on musicians or anyone in the world: Zero dollars.

Salaries: $500,000 approx. That’s $392,728 for CEO Joel Peresman and $100,000 to office workers.

Donation to the actual Rock & Roll Hall of Fame: $75,000.

Rent: $72,000*. *The offices are at Rolling Stone magazine, which is owned by the Rock Hall’s primo chief Jann Wenner, who rules the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.

Travel: $10.207.

Still not in the Hall: Lou Reed, Chicago, Moody Blues, Chubby Checker, Billy Preston, Todd Rundgren, Ringo Starr, Sting, Bon Jovi, Rufus and Carla Thomas, Carly Simon, J Geils Band, and so on.

 

Cat Stevens (Now Yusuf): The Tonight Show Songs, With a Bonus Extra

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Here are Cat Stevens’ two performances from last night. “Wild World” was his first real hit in the U.S. circa 1971. “The First Cut is the Deepest” was one his first album but wasn’t his own hit. The song was covered by many artists, and eventually Rod Stewart had a huge hit with it.

“The Wind” is a bonus extra.
Yes, he’s wearing a Cat Stevens t shirt. It does seem like Yusuf is accepting his old career more. He still hasn’t had an official concert in New York despite the 2006 private show at Jazz at Lincoln Center. Unfortunately, security at such an event might be too expensive. What a shame.

UPDATE Cat Stevens aka Yusuf is On Jimmy Fallon Tonight; Read My 2006 Interview

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UPDATE: Introduced as simply “Yusuf,” the singer wore a blazer over a Cat Stevens t shirt. He sang his classic hits “The First Cut is the Deepest” and “Wild World.” Jimmy held up a “Tea for the Tillerman” album. Yusuf sounded and looked grand. So nice to hear his voice.

EARLIER Cat Stevens, known as Yusuf Islam now, is in the US. He got his visa, and he appears tonight with Jimmy Fallon. He’ll be at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame show on Thursday.

Here’s my 2006 story and interview:

Cat Stevens is back. Well, his name now is Yusuf Islam, and we’ll call him that, but old habits are hard to break, and you know, he was our Cat for a long, long time.

Last night he returned to the U.S. and the stage, playing a nice long set at the Allen Room at Jazz at Lincoln Center for invited guests including rocker Patti Smith and a heavy mix of folks from the media like New York Times pop critic Jon Pareles, filmmaker Albert Maysles, rock impresario David Spero and writer Daphne Merkin.

The show, taped for KCRW-FM, was interspersed with a conversation with that radio station’s Nic Harcourt.

But you know, it wasn’t until after the mesmerizing, emotional show that I got to ask Yusuf a tough question: Does he regret denouncing author Salman Rushdie and appearing to endorse the fatwa, or death sentence, leveled at him by Ayatollah Khomeini?

“I never said it,” he replied, smiling. He used his two index fingers to show polar opposites. “We were just poles apart,” he said of Rushdie. “We disagreed. But I never said such a thing.”

Nevertheless, Yusuf — who by then had been out of the spotlight for many years and had become a dark, mysterious distant figure — gained the hatred of American radio stations. There were mass bonfires of his albums staged by extremists. It was a bad time.

But Yusuf is far from being a dark, mysterious figure at all. At the Allen Room he was dressed in jeans, suede desert boots, a nice T-shirt and vest. His hair, once jet black and wavy, is straight, short and gray. He sports a scruffy gray beard as well.

He is Muslim by a choice he made in 1978 — ironic since his brother, also raised Greek Orthodox, converted to Judaism around the same time, or so I am told.

Yusuf is also slight, and in good shape considering he will turn 60 next spring. He has a wide smile, which makes him very charming still, and his singing voice, I am happy to report, is intact, as is his guitar playing.

When he opened his mouth to open with an old song, “The Wind,” there was an electric sensation sent through the room. No one’s heard his voice live since 1978. It was like an old friend had returned from the dead.

Still, he’s sorry about the Rushdie business.

“It was 17 years ago,” he said, shaking his head. Rushdie had criticized the Muslim religion in his book, “The Satanic Verses.” Many in Iran considered it blasphemy. Yusuf said to me, “All we want is peace.” Well, it was a heady time.

So how did Cat Stevens (born Steven Georgiou to a Greek father and Swedish mother) leave his career as a rock star and become a Muslim? The short answer is that he was swimming in Malibu and started to drown.

“I was drowning in Malibu,” he said, and he promised God that if he lived he would change his life. It was a big life, too, full of rock amenities like gorgeous girlfriends. Carly Simon was one before her marriage to James Taylor, and Stevens wrote “Lady D’Arbanville” about actress Patti D’Arbanville.

“I had to deflate myself,” Yusuf said to Harcourt last night in during an interlude in the concert. “I had to come back to life.”

One surprise: He said his mother actually chose his wife for him. “I had a choice of two women. She decided.”

On stage last night, with the New York skyline shining behind him, Yusuf mixed songs from his new album, “An Other Cup,” with old hits like “The Wind,” “Oh Very Young,” “Father and Son,” and “Peace Train” — which he dedicated to the memory of Ahmet Ertegun.

The new songs, especially “Indian Ocean,” which is about the 2004 tsunami, are melodically beautiful and lush. But the old songs really packed an unexpected punch. Yusuf’s long absence from the scene works well for him. Hearing his old music is like receiving a bottle of Fiji water in the desert.

But didn’t he miss us all those years, I asked?

“I had a family and a life, and I did a lot of charity work,” he said. Two years ago he picked up a guitar for the first time since his retirement thanks to his son, Muhammad (he’s inherited the hair, by the way).

“I said, ‘Hello, I know you,’” the singer recalled.

One reason he returned: “The Muslim world now is artless,” he said. “I wanted to show that there is creativity. It’s not grim.”

If we’re lucky, Yusuf will tour with his band, maybe to small venues. For now, though, he’s returning to London after doing a little publicity and testing the waters. My guess is he’ll be back soon, and he is very, very welcome.

Who knows? This may be a renaissance in the making. He says he recently spoke to Simon for the first time in years. “She called to say she’d named her new album ‘Into the White,’ after my song,” he said, proudly.