Thursday, December 18, 2025
Home Blog Page 1762

SUNDAY UPDATE Box Office: “Divergent” Falls Short with $56 Mil

0

UPDATE SUNDAY 12:30PM “Divergent” actually made only $56 million, falling way short of expectations.

EARLIER I knew “The Hunger Games.” And “Divergent,” you are no “Hunger Games. ”

Indeed, “Divergent” made $22 million last night. The tween action hit, first in a series, will be happy with a $60 million weekend. But it is no “Hunger Games.” The first of those films made $67 million on its opening night, one night, baby. “Divergent” is going to make a fraction of what “The Hunger Games”
made, but no one’s sneezing at it. The budget was around $100 million. Lions Gate will make money. Maybe for part 2, “Detergent” or whatever it’s called, they can make a better movie.

Last night Brian Williams featured a women’s book club on “NBC Nightly News” that not only read “Divergent” but talked about it like it was the tablets from the mount. Williams sounded very thrilled at the discovery that women in their 20s and 30s were reading a Young Adult book. I find it very discouraging, actually. Was public education for that generation so bad that adults can only handle books written for teenagers? Considering all the great female writers of adult level books– from Margaret Atwood to Doris Lessing, Nadine Gordimer, not to mention Mary Gordon, Laurie Colwin, Lorrie Moore, and so on–I’d like to hope for more sophistication, not less, from this readership.

Meanwhile. “The Grand Budapest Hotel” is steaming along — a big hit, and for more sophisticated enjoyment. And “Mr. Peabody and Sherman” is chugging along, I’m sure much to the delight of Jay Ward’s heirs. I really miss the Bullwinkle store on Sunset Boulevard across from the Chateau Marmont. I hope you can buy the original “Sherman and Mr. Peabody” shows and “Rocky and Bullwinkle” on DVD. But it was such a pleasure in the early 90s. I think it’s a taco stand now.

MSNBC Collusion? Ronan Farrow Interviews NY Times Reporter Who Trumpeted Sister’s Sex Abuse Claims

1

UPDATE: Ronan ended the interview saying he was “jelly” over Kristof’s 1 million Twitter followers. This means “jealous,” I think. Really? Really? This is on a national TV network?

This is what Spy magazine used to call “log rolling in our time.” Ronan Farrow is just about to interview Nicholas Kristof on his high school call in show on MSNBC. It was Kristof who gave a forum to Farrow’s sister Dylan when she wrote her “open letter” about Woody Allen allegedly  abusing her in 1992. Kristof is also best pals with Ronan and Dylan’s mom Mia Farrow, traveling with her on various world mission adventures. Kristof is talking to Ronan today about Michele Obama visiting China. Of course, only shut ins and coma patients are watching “Ronan Daily” right now, but yikes! Is anyone in charge at MSNBC??? Are they kidding? Kristof is in the studio with Farrow, who doesn’t introduce him by saying “This is the guy we used to try and destroy my father.” Or this is the guy who’s BFFs with my mom. Here’s a nice pic Mia and Kristof:kristof-blog-nick-and-mia

Radio City Scraps Big Budget Rockettes Show That Was Supposed to Launch Next Week

1

Whoops! Radio City Music Hall will not be hosting “Hearts and Lights” starting next week as planned. The big budget Rockettes show was supposed to launch in previews on March 27th with an opening a week later. “Hearts and Lights” was the big Easter show for Radio City. But Madison Square Garden productions just sent out a notice saying they were not ready. The show has been postponed until 2015.

Here was the description from last September’s press release:

“This 90-minute show, written by Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award winner Doug Wright features a heartwarming journey through New York City, thread through eight production numbers of dynamically different Rockettes choreography, dazzling costumes and innovative technology including 3D effects, elaborate animatronics and GPS elements. Heart and Lights is set to an unforgettable soundtrack of original music coupled with songs by some of the most influential musical artists of the past 50 years. The production presents groundbreaking technology that will immerse audiences in the magic of live theater in a way only Radio City can deliver.”

So much for that! I guess they’ve got some giant Easter eggs in storage, and maybe a chocolate bunny for the Rockettes to dance around!

“American Idol” Hits New Low, Falls to 8.3 Million Viewers

58

“American Idol” continued its descent into death spiral last night. The show fell to 8.3 million total viewers, with a 1.9 in the key demo. An 8.3 is very startling for “Idol,” which not so long ago had 10 or 11 million. Fox execs said not too long ago that the show was “winding down” and now it’s come to pass. Will Fox cancel it? I think it’s a strong possibility. It’s not the fault of the judges. And Jennifer Lopez performed last night! You’d think she would have brought in a few peeps. But JLO has also reached the “mature” phase of her career. She’s not the draw she used to be. And the 1.9 rating in the key demo? Ouch! That’s another all time low for “Idol,” which had been up around 2.7. It means no young people are watching the show.

________________________________________________________________________

click here for tickets to see the Legendary Soul Man Sam Moore on April 1st at the City Winery!

_________________________________________________________________________

Watch Billy Joel on “Jimmy Fallon”– First Talk Show Appearance in 17 Years

1

Billy Joel made his first late night talk show appearance in about 17 years last night on the Tonight Show starring Jimmy Fallon. This means he missed most of David Letterman’s run and all of Jay Leno’s two runs. Why? Who knows? But here he is with Jimmy, and it’s brilliant:

Sting Adds Paul Simon, James Taylor, More Stars to Rainforest Concert

0

The Sting- Paul Simon show is not over. Simon is set join Sting at the annual Rainforest Foundation concert– this is the 25th anniversary– set for April 17th at Carnegie Hall. Simon isn’t the only act on the roster. The show will also feature James Taylor, Dionne Warwick, opera great Renee Fleming, hornmeister Chris Botti, and Ivy Levan. Ivy is a star in the making. She recently joined Sting on “Late Night with David Letterman” for a wild version of the Beatles “Drive My Car.”

To purchase tickets for the Silver anniversary celebration of the Rainforest Fund, please visit www.carnegiehall.org or call CarnegieCharge at 212-247-7800. To purchase benefit tickets and packages, please email rainforest@eventassociatesinc.com or call 212-245-6570.

I am told the show– even before this list was known– was already on its way to being sold out. So hurry!

“Law & Order SVU” with Alec Baldwin Clobbered in Ratings

Alec Baldwin didn’t help the ratings of “Law & Order: SVU.” In fact he probably hurt them.

Although NBC heavily promoted Baldwin as guest star his appearance was not a draw for the favored show. “L&U SVU” finished a distant second in total viewers to CBS’s “Criminal Minds.” And in the key demo, it was third, following ABC’s “Modern Family.”

In January, “L&O” was hitting a 2.0 share in the key demo and scoring 7.5 million viewers without Alec. With Alec, the show did a 1.5 in the key demo and 5.82 million viewers. More than a million “L&O” fans tuned out that episode.

The answer may be that Baldwin is simply not a draw for ratings. “30 Rock” was never a high rated show. One insider suggests that women, who watch “Law & Order” for Mariska Hargitay as a strong female lead, don’t care for Baldwin’s recent much publicized antics. I won’t list them all here again.

In any case, the episode was very good, and Baldwin was excellent as a belligerent New York reporter cast in the memory of the late Mike McAlary. Maybe more people will see the rerun.

 

NY Post, UK Daily Mail Try to Kill L’Wren Scott After She Commits Suicide

4

Is there a hell? Is there some kind of punishment for real evil? There’d better be. In the last day and a half, both the New York Post’s Page Six and the Los Angeles bureau of the UK Daily Mail have tried to kill L’Wren Scott. Even though she’s dead. They’ve certainly done what they can to piss all over a women who never did anything to them, was loved and admired by her friends, and was obviously in so much terrible pain that she committed suicide on Monday.

The New York Post’s Page Six has declared that all the other members of the Rolling Stones “loathed” Scott and implied that they’re happy she’s dead. They compared her to Yoko Ono, even though Scott had nothing whatsoever to do with the Rolling Stones, never tried to sing on a record or appear in a Stones video. Ono is often accused–wrongly– of breaking up the Beatles. The Stones are very much together.

The whole story proposed by the Post is ludicrous. There are pictures of L’Wren Scott on Wire Image with Patti Hansen (Mrs. Keith Richards) and with Jagger’s children Jade, James, and Georgia. Everyone is smiling. Patti Hansen is embracing Scott and they each have big smiles. No one’s pointing a gun to anyone’s head.

It actually seems like there was a lot of respect among the disparate members of Mick Jagger’s family for Scott. Immediately after Scott’s death was announced, Bianca Jagger, Jade’s mother, Mick’s ex wife, Tweeted her condolences and asked for respect for her.

Meantime, the Daily Mail decided to quote the Post, then belittle Scott some more. A person, hardly a human, named Jan Moir, wrote that Scott was unknown to anyone in England. Moir says Scott was only famous because she was Mick Jagger’s girlfriend, and basically, who cares anyway?

This Moir is just an idiot, and maybe there will be a quick route to hell for her. But seriously, as far back as 2000, L’Wren Scott was already the biggest name stylist in Hollywood. We featured her in Oscar magazines dating from 200o to 2004. It had nothing to do with Mick Jagger. Everyone knew her name even then.

Scott’s close friends are too upset to defend her. No one can speak for her yet, except Cathy Horyn’s lovely piece in the New York Times. But what is going on here? Why so much anger toward a woman who wasn’t really a celebrity, didn’t ask for anything, and died under the worst circumstances? Disgusting.

PS In the very same Daily Mail yesterday, pictures of Jerry Hall, Mick Jagger’s ex and mother of four of his children, hosted a baby shower for Jade Jagger’s pregnant 21 year old daughter. Jerry has no connection to Jade other than she was her step-mother 15 years ago. So why would she do that? Maybe because these people are human beings, not cardboard cutouts in someone’s imagination. I think these Jagger women are a lot smarter than the people who are making up stories about them, that’s for sure!

Broadway: Disney’s “Aladdin” Is A Surprise Throwback Hit

Well, I am surprised. Even though I laughed out loud at the 1992 animated “Aladdin” with Robin Williams, I didn’t think I wanted to see it as a Disney-fied musical. I was wrong. “Aladdin” — directed by Casey Nicholaw (“Book of Mormon”) is the best Disney live musical  since “Beauty and the Beast.” It’s alternately charming and spicy, with plenty for kids and a lot for adults. Plus it has an amazing score by Alan Menken with the late Howard Ashman and Tim Rice. They use all of the songs that were in the animated film plus a bunch that weren’t included.

And there’s a nicer surprise in the form of James Monroe Iglehart, who plays the Genie (Robin Williams’ part from the movie) like Luther Vandross in Las Vegas. Last seen on Broadway in “Memphis,” Iglehart is absolutely superb in every way. Of course, this big man puts fear into the audience right away as he tap dances (learned for this show), and swirls around the stage effortlessly. I thought he might induce a heart attack. But he is the motor that enlivens “Aladdin” and he’s on his way to a Best Featured Performer at the Tonys, etc.

When the Genie performs “Friend Like Me” late in the first act, the audience cannot help but be on its feet. Yes, I know opening night is full of friends and family. But I think this happen every time. It’s an old fashioned Broadway show stopper. And you don’t want to Aladdin and the Princess’s magic carpet ride. It’s a little bit of theater magic. Even the most jaded adults around me were asking “How do they do that?” while the actors sang “A Whole New World.”

The rest of the cast is also enchanting, starting with Adam Jacobs as Aladdin, and on through several excellent character actors–Brian Gonzalez, Jonathan Freeman (playing Jafar live after playing him in the 1992 movie), and Don Darryl Rivera. Then there’s Aladdin’s trio of pals, who nearly stop the show with their own clever number in Act 2–Jonathan Schwartz, Brandon O’Neill, and again Brian Gonzalez.

A special added treat: the Sultan is played by veteran actor Clifton Davis, whose real claim to writing the great Jackson 5-Gloria Gaynor hit “Never Can Say Goodbye.”

And yes, the audience ate it up, including Sting and Trudie Styler, Tina Fey with husband and daughter, Al Roker and Deborah Roberts with their two kids. I happened to be sitting across the aisle from Broadway legends Joel Grey and Harvey Fierstein and I can tell you they loved “Aladdin”– Harvey was sitting behind Joel and kept hitting him as they cracked up.

That’s because “Aladdin” is very much a real musical, with songs you can sing, an overture, wonderful costumes and sets, and energetic, pleasing performances. It’s not just for kids, adults will dig it. It’s refreshing after months of darkness.

So throw “Aladdin” into the Tony pool along with “Beautiful,” “Bullets over Broadway,” “Rocky,” and maybe “If/Then” and definitely “A Gentleman’s Guide to Murder.” A good season after all.

Great Mark Ruffalo-Keira Knightley Film Gets Strange Name Change, to Close Tribeca

The best film seen at last fall’s Toronto Film Fest was John Carney’s “Can a Song Save Your Life?” Now for some reason it’s been re-titled “Begin Again.” Why? The original title summed up the unique tone of what could be a big hit and an awards contender next fall. The other news is that “Can a Song Save Your Life”– er, “Begin Again”– will close the Tribeca Film Festival.

I’m worried about this film. With wonderful, catchy songs by Gregg Alexander and Danielle Brisebois, this movie — from the director of “Once”– is a charmer beyond all limits. Ruffalo plays a crazy former record exec down on his luck who’s discovered Knightley. It’s set in New York, making it “Once”-like with a new flavor. There’s an unexpectedly terrific performance from the ubiquitous Adam Levine of Maroon 5 and “The Voice.”

Last fall, everyone at Toronto was excited about this film. So we’ll “Begin Again” — whatever that means– and hope that Tribeca will start to build word of mouth for this gem.