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UPDATE 4-3-16: Happy Birthday Doris Day — 92 Years Young Today

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Published two years ago, 4-3-14, but still important:

Before April 3rd is over, I didn’t want to forget to wish Miss Doris Day a very happy 90 years birthday today. What a life! What a career! You kids don’t know it, but Doris was a superstar, a double hyphenate threat on the top of the music charts and the top of the box office. Now she devotes herself to animals. You can go to her website for all the info– www.dorisday.com.

A couple of years ago I had the pleasure of interviewing Miss Day by phone for Parade magazine and for this site. It was one of the great highlights of my career. On that day the Grammy Hall of Fame had named her most famous recording, “Que Sera Sera” as one of the best recordings of all time. I told her she was in, along with Bruce Springsteen. She had no idea who he was, but she was thrilled for him.

Here’s the interview, reprinted. If only the Academy would make some kind of deal with Doris to do a live shoot from her home in in Carmel, California–she doesn’t fly. But then she could accept a much overdue Lifetime Achievement Oscar.

Hooray for Doris Day! Put on one of her records and pour yourself a glass of Champagne– a toast to Doris!

from December 2011:
RF: Paul McCartney interviewed you recently for a British newspaper about My Heart. What was that like?
DD: I think it went well. I’ve known him for quite a while now.
I was out walking my dogs. And the man who works here came and out said, it’s Paul McCartney on the phone.
I said, Alright, tell me who it really is. I didn’t believe it, I thought it was someone playing a game. He said, Will you please tell her that I am, that I want to know her and want to come and see her.
It was Paul and he did come. He came with his new wife. We had hours here. It was really nice.
And he’s really cute.
One night the phone rang around 2:30 in the morning, I thought something terrible happened. He said Hey, what are you doing? I said, Well, I was sleeping. He would call all hours of the morning just to say hello. He got a big kick out of that.
RF: The album, My Heart, was mostly produced by your son, Terry. Most people don’t know he co-wrote Kokomo for the Beach Boys.

DD: And they didn’t win [the Grammy] that year. That was a crime. [It lost in 1988 to Phil Collins’s “Two Hearts”].. That year, that was so terrible. At the table we were really. I thought was an insult. I loved Kokomo. It was so popular
RF: And you covered his song, Disney Girls. How was that?
DD: I loved it. I enjoyed it. If it’s a good song, I love singing so much. It just love it. I get so involved.
RF: Do you sing much now?
DD: I can’t now. I could still sing until I got bronchitis. I had a very, very bad attack a couple of years ago, I thought I would never get over it. That’s why I sound different.
But sometimes I sing along with something, and I think that wasn’t bad. I wonder sometimes if I could start vocalizing.

RF: I’m interested in your technique as a singer. Your phrasing is so elegant and simple. Did you think about what you were doing?
DD: No. I knew the song that we were going to do. We would put them together at my houwse. We would all decide what to do. The words were there, and the words told a story. I can’t say any more than that except I loved singing.
RF:Were they always suggesting songs to you?
DD: They used to tell us what to do. The album I did with Andre Previn, I picked my own then.
RF: A great favorite is Perhaps Perhaps Perhaps, from the Latin for Lovers album
DD: I love that. I loved making that album.
At first I thought I’m going to do this? Me? But I fell in love with all the songs. It maybe one of my favorites of all time.

RF: Were there songs you weren’t thrilled with?
DD: (Thinks about it) The Purple Cow. Oh my god! When they tagged that one on me, that was it. ‘I never thought I’d ever see a Purple Cow.’ Isn’t that terrific? Great idea. Oh lord! I don’t like to fight with people and say I won’t do that! But you get a long of good things to do. And you do your best with that.
RF: How about some other favorites? How about Que Sera Sera?
DD: I was wondering why it was going to be in that film [Alfred Hitchcock’s The Man Who Knew Too Much]. That was a real mystery. Then I read the script. But at first I thought this was kind of a silly song to be in that movie. But it was good for the movie. And the people liked it anyway in or out of the movie. People could sing it. They could sing it to their children.
RF: What was it like to sing with Les Brown and His Band of Renown? What was it like singing with a big band?
DD: It feels good. And if you know your song, and you like the song, it’s wonderful because people come right up to the bandstand. And it’s great fun. They want to say hello to you.
RF: Did the band kid around with you a lot>
DD: I had a great time. The guys were so nice to me.
They looked after me and helped me, they took all my baggage. They were all like my brothers.

RF: Was it a big change for you when you went solo?
DD: The first time I ever worked alone, I had two shows a night at The Little Club on East 55th St. in New york. I opened it. My mother was with me and my little baby. It was something so new for me. I thought, what am I doing? I was so used to having the guys behind me. But it turned out to be really nice. The people kept coming back! I was surprised!
A lot of the women were the Vogue types, models. They were all dressed up like crazy. They would say, Come on over and have a drink. But I wasn’t drinking. I would go back to my apartment between shows.
RF: You were not a drinker?
DD: No.
RF: All these other singers—Billie Holiday, Judy Garland—had terrible substance problems. How did you avoid it?
DD: Easy. I didn’t do it.
RF: Many other performers would party all night
DD: Party all night? Oh lord! No, no no! I don’t even like parties.
RF: Tell me about your co-stars. What was Jimmy Cagney like?
DD: I loved him. He as a wonderful person, just adorable. Not in that film [Love Me or Leave Me], he wasn’t. Oh he was nasty!
RF: Tony Randall?
DD: He was so superb, so funny. He was always in New York after that. I just loved him. Did we ever [have fun]. We laughed.
RF: Cary Grant?
DD: I enjoyed Cary, He was very different. Very nice. But you don’t sit around and talk a lot between scenes. I think he went outside with that thing you put under your chin, for the sun. Because he didn’t want to wear makeup. All the men hated makeup. At lunch time, I didn’t see him. I used to eating in my trailer. But we didn’t really sit around and talk.
RF: Who did you hang around with? Rock Hudson?
DD: He was always around, he was funny. He named me Eunice, just for fun. I was always Eunice with him.
RF: You had such great chemistry.
DD: We really liked each other.
I was up here—filming the show we had here [Doris Day’s Best Friends, July 1985]—all of a sudden he appeared. At first I didn’t know who he was. I looked at him and I was almost in tears. He was so thin, and just gaunt. It was just unbelievable.
We would walk and laugh together. He was so seriously ill, but he was still funny. It just about put me away. It’s so hard to be funny when you know what’s going to happen.
RF: Jimmy Stewart?
DD: Wonderful. I had a great time with all the gentlemen I worked with. Really.
RF: Looking back, all your co-stars were men. Was there ever a woman you would have liked to be in a movie with? An actress you thought was funny? Or like a Thelma and Louise?
DD: No. Yes if there was a really great script and a reason. But I always thought the women should be with the men.

“American Idol” Free Fall Continues, Down 5% from Last Week

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I don’t take any pleasure in reporting these numbers. But “American Idol” continued its ratings free fall last night, dropping 5% from last week. The show couldn’t muster 9 million viewers– 8.77 mil– and had a 2.1 rating.

Everything beat “Idol”: “Survivor,” “Modern Family,” “CSI,” “Criminal Minds,” the farm report. (Just kidding on the last one.)

This doesn’t include cable, home videos, Netflix, or my nieces’ birthday dinner at Calle Ocho. (Delish!) A show called “The Middle” — I don’t even know what it is– did very well, too. Now that’s saying something.

Tonight comes the 9pm results show for “Idol,” a ratings loser if ever there was one. The sad news will be reported tomorrow.

Watch this video. Is that Meat Loaf’s son?

 

I’d give the #1 spot to this girl:

Exclusive: “Breaking Bad” Sequel “Better Call Saul” Intro’s New Characters

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“Breaking Bad” fans are no doubt chomping at the bit for the spin off series “Better Call Saul.” The AMC series will star Bob Odenkirk and Jonathan Banks as Saul and Mike, two of the few people who didn’t get killed in the crossfire of “Breaking Bad.” in prequel roles. They reprise their roles as oily lawyers who will do anything to stay out of court. (Mike, thanks to notes from readers, was indeed killed during “Breaking Bad.”)

Now I’m told Vince Gilligan, Peter Gould et al have added some characters to the new show, which will revolve around the law office and the court.

They include regular players named Burt, Dr. Thurber, Beth, Eddie, and Zak and Luke.  Burt is described as a “Kennedy” type lawyer in a white-shoe law firm. Dr. Thurber and Beth are also supposed to be lawyers. Eddie is a career criminal, a cool guy who speaks Spanish. Zak and Luke are skateboarding twins around 20 years old.

There’s no word yet on whether Aaron Paul or any of the other “Breaking Bad” survivors will appear on the new show. It’s too early to say if this spin off will be a success like “Frasier,” or a disappointment like “AfterMASH.” But I really like Bob Odenkirk, and hope for the best.

Toni Braxton Will Play Darlene Love in Oprah Produced TV Film About “20 Feet” Singer

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Well, this is a little different. Toni Braxton, perennially bankrupt pop R&B star, is going to play Darlene Love in Oprah Winfrey’s TV Movie about the Phil Spector superstar. Darlene has had a Renaissance in the last year because of her participation in the Oscar winning doc “20 Feet from Stardom.”

Braxton is a little old to play Darlene during her Phil Spector days– she’s 46–but the magic of Hollywood will deal with that. Toni has a new album out with Kenny “Babyface” Edmonds. And the two of them were just on Broadway in “After Midnight.”

It will be interesting to see if Oprah and OWN can get the rights to Darlene’s music with Phil Spector, back when she was the lead singer of the Crystals. I’m a little surprised that Toni was chosen, not just because of her age. Braxton is more of a ballads singer. Darlene is a power singer. We’ll see how that works out.

Oprah’s OWN also announced a bunch of new shows, including interviews with Justin Timberlake, Lionel Richie, Whoopi Goldberg, Barbara Walters, and Vanessa Williams on her “Master Class” shows.

Sting, Trudie Styler Add Patti Scialfa, Kevin Spacey to Rainforest Concert

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Some news on the Rainforest Foundation concert April 17th at Carnegie Hall. Sting and his wife Trudie Styler have added more guests to the show. Kevin Spacey will sing (as he did in “Beyond the Sea”) and maybe do his Johnny Carson imitation. (I hope so, it’s hilarious.) Also added is Patti Scialfa of the E Street Band (and also Mrs. Bruce Springsteen.) Patti is one of my favorite rockers, so that should be hot stuff. And no, Bruce will not be there. This is Ms. Scialfa as the solo rock star she deserves to be!

The Rainforest concert is always a family affair for Sting and Trudie. So Sting’s eldest son, Joe Sumner, of the rock group Fiction Plane, will perform. And one of the couple’s two talented daughters, Eliot, a budding rock star herself, will sing one of her many amazing songs.

Also added to the night are two ballet dancers: Alessandra Ferri (ballet dancer) and Herman Cornejo (ABT). They join Sting, James Taylor, Paul Simon, Renee Fleming, Dionne Warwick and Stephen Stills, who’d better sing “Love the One You’re With.”

Sting and Trudie will talk about their 25 years supporting the Rainforest and its indigenous people on “The Colbert Report” on April 10th at 11:30pm. Sting will also perform a couple of songs from his upcoming Broadway musical “The Last Ship,” which starts previews in June in Chicago. The whole saga of the Rainforest Foundation is really stunning. I hope they issue a book soon of their many accomplishments. Sting and Trudie had a lot of foresight 25 years ago, considering the recent climate change report.

Here Are All The “New” Michael Jackson Songs, Including Rip off of “A Horse with No Name”

All the songs from Michael Jackson’s posthumous “Xscape” album have been available for eons on YouTube and other places. Not only that, one of them is a total rip off of America’s 1972 classic “A Horse with No Name.” I’d like to know what it cost to license those rights. What a payday for Dewey Bunnell. He must be thanking his lucky stars. I hope his lawyer and his music publisher got him seven figures.

“Slave to the Rhythm” — there was a controversy about this track because one of Michael’s kids gave it to Justin Bieber, who then released his own bootlegged version with his vocals added. I wrote about that at least 18 months ago. Now it’s back.

You can make your own “Xscape” album at home, for free. Start with these tracks:

 
“She Was Loving Me”
 

“Xscape”

“A Place with No Name” — from America’s “A Horse with No Name”

“Slave to the Rhythm”

“Do You Know Where Your Children Are”

“Blue Gangsta”

Rock Hall Mess: Lots of Seats Available, Inductees Either Not Coming or Not Performing

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Next week’s Rock and Roll Hall of Fame show looks like it’s going to be a mess. Many of the inductees are fighting, some aren’t coming, and many aren’t playing.

On top of that, there are roughly 2,900 seats at the Barclays Center on Stubhub.com right now. Plus, on Ticketmaster, I was able to locate many good seats at face value in sections close to the stage. The 200 sections in the upper tier are at this point pretty open.

The only place tickets aren’t being sold are on the floor, where Jann Wenner is conducting his usual expensive dinner for what remains of the record business. In recent years, Wenner has start bringing in corporate friends as the record companies have consolidated and vanished.

Of the nominees, Linda Ronstadt isn’t coming at all. Cat Stevens is still considering his options. KISS won’t perform because they’re all fighting with each other. Nirvana can’t perform because Kurt Cobain is dead. That leaves Peter Gabriel, and Hall & Oates.

It does seem like Bruce Springsteen will be there to induct his E Street Band. Tom Morello will be on hand, too. So it’s likely they will all perform together.

Not coming: Brian Epstein, the Beatles’ long dead manager. I’m told his family ( he had a family) weren’t even invited. Paul McCartney or Ringo Starr could show up to induct him. Epstein is getting in this year because of the Beatles’ 50th anniversary. But Ringo’s probably miffed because he’s the only Beatle not in the Hall of Fame as a solo act.

Meanwhile, April 10th is also the opening of Woody Allen’s “Bullets Over Broadway” on Broadway. Most media attention will be focused there, since the Hall of Fame doesn’t sound so promising.

You can watch the whole thing on HBO a couple of weeks later. For, essentially, free.

 

TV Ratings: “How I Met Your Mother” Finale Hits Series High

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Some people didn’t like it, but everyone watched it. “How I Met Your Mother” went out on a high last night. The show scored almost 13 million viewers and a 5.3 rating. In total viewers, they were still edged out by “Dancing with the Stars” on ABC. But “HIMYM” did beat “The Voice.”

In other ratings news, Jimmy Fallon is still considerably ahead of David Letterman, and way ahead of Jimmy Kimmel in the late night wars.

As a complete non sequitur, I will tell you this: I was a huge “Dallas” fan during its original run. I didn’t quite care for it when it came back on TNT. The new producers tried to make it very slick, and got away from the basic soap opera that made “Dallas” a cheesy success. But this season has been very, very good. It’s largely due to Linda Gray and Patrick Duffy, who are still playing the hell out of Sue Ellen and Bobby. But also the story telling this season is very much back to the tone of the old show. They still need to bring back Val and Gary from “Knots Landing.” But as a pure guilty pleasure, “Dallas 2.0” is good stuff.

 

Mariah Carey, Kanye West’s Record Label Gets Big Overhaul

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The record business keeps spinning: Island DefJam is no more as of today. This is not an April Fool’s joke. Universal Music has made some big changes to Mariah Carey and Kanye West’s record label. Island and DefJam are splitting up, with Island going west. DefJam will be run by Steve Bartels, one of the hardest working guys in show biz. Barry Weiss, who had been president of Island DefJam after coming over from RCA a few years ago, is stepping down.

And there’s more: not only is Island heading west, but so is the label still known as Motown. They will both be separate record labels. Motown isn’t really Motown anyway, as we all know. Those days are over. But the woman who will be running it, Ethopia Habtemarian, is very popular. Karen Kwak, also a great player in the UMG family, will be overseeing everything. As she should!

If success is 99% about showing up, then Steve Bartels is really successful. A jolly easy going “big guy,” Steve loves his artists and support them like crazy– even when Kanye West wanders into his office one day and announces he’s dropping an album called “Yeezus” in five days! (Or as I call it “Meezus.”) Kanye, Mariah and all of the DefJam are lucky to have him. And of course, Steve is a graduate of the Clive Davis School of Music Execs. He has good training.

Rosie O’Donnell to Get Much Deserved Honorary Tony Award

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Good news! Rosie O’Donnell will receive a much deserve honorary award at this year’s Tony Awards. She’s getting the Isabelle Stevenson award for her incredible contributions to musical theater– specifically her Rosie’s Theater Kids foundation and Maravel School for theater on West 45th St. This school is such a gem. Kids from all over New York come there on afternoons after school for theater training. The Maravel school has literally changed the lives of hundreds of kids over the last few years!

Congrats Rosie!

Here’s the release:

Rosie O’Donnell will be presented with the 2014 Isabelle Stevenson Award for her commitment to arts education for New York City’s public school children.   In 2003, Rosie’s For All Kids Foundation launched Rosie’s Broadway Kids, which is now known as Rosie’s Theater Kids (RTKids).  Rosie’s Theater Kids is a non-profit arts education organization which continually provides training in dance, music and drama for students attending public school in New York City.  RTKids serves students who otherwise would not have the opportunity to experience theater, positively changing the trajectory of their lives by providing comprehensive classes in music, dance and drama; thoughtful mentoring; and structured academic guidance.   Dedicated to enriching the lives of children though the arts, their goal is to inspire excellence, motivate learning, uplift the human spirit, build confidence, and spark a lifelong appreciation for the arts. 

 

RTKids provides a number of programs, including:

·         PS Broadway – An in-school program for NYC public school fifth-graders.  During the year, RTKids staff members teach dance and music as part of a 15-week program that serves 22 schools throughout Manhattan.  Every class of students takes a free trip to see a Broadway musical and participates in a question-and-answer session with performers, directors, conductors and members of the production’s technical staff.  Each semester this program is wrapped up with a school assembly where the students perform for their peers, parents and teachers.

·         ACTE II (A Commitment to Excellence) – A scholarship program in which outstanding graduates of PS Broadway have the opportunity to receive further training in free after-school classes in ballet, tap, jazz, voice and drama.   The program includes a Summer Intensive program that provides group classes and private lessons, preparing students for a final performance for family, friends and industry professionals.

·         Spotlight on Fitness (SoFit) – Developed in collaboration with a school-based health care program and the NYC Department of Education, SoFit is a physical education program that fulfills state and local curriculum requirements in both the arts and physical education.

·         A+ (Arts Plus) – This program provides supplementary tools to enhance the academic achievement of the ACTE II Students at the secondary level. A+ includes after-school tutoring, High School admission guidance, private coaching and preparation for performing arts school auditions (both high school and collegiate) and professional PSAT and SAT preparatory classes.  To date, with the individual coaching and assistance from RTKids, 100% of the 8th grade students were placed in competitive New York City performing arts high schools for the past two years.