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What a life! Winner of two Tony Awards on Broadway, Gallagher was best known to TV audiences as the star of the ABC soap, “Ryan’s Hope.” She played wise matriarch Maeve Ryan from 1975 to 1989 when the show ended.
One of Gallagher’s Tony Awards was for the revival of “No, No, Nanette,” the massively successful musical.
But it was “Ryan’s Hope” that became the cornerstone of her career. She won three Daytime Emmy Awards as Best Actress for playing Maeve with a lilting Irish accent. She was clearly from the stage world, and on a whole different level than most TV stars during daytime or primetime.
The sort of plodding Oscar season got itself a jolt the last few days.
Into the mix comes Timothee Chalamet, singing and playing guitar in James Mangold’s Bob Dylan movie, “A Complete Unknown.”
The Searchlight film doesn’t open until December 19th, and reviews are held until December 10th.
But “Complete Unknown” has started screening for the press, and the times they are a-changing.
Chalamet’s stock is off the charts. In a heavy field of actors, the “Dune” and “Willy Wonka” star has pulled ahead to lead the pack that includes Adrien Brody, Ralph Fiennes, Colman Domingo, and Daniel Craig.
If Chalamet wins, he will tie for youngest to win Best Actor. Ironically, the current prize holder is Brody, who was also 29 when he won for “The Pianist.”
All those other names I mentioned — and plenty more — have turned in great work this year. Fiennes, especially good in “Conclave,” has been nominated in the past but never grabbed the statue.
But Chalamet may help director Mangold repeat his “Walk the Line” triumph from 2005. Reese Witherspoon won her Oscar in that movie, for playing June Carter Cash. You’ll recall that Reese performed her songs herself and learned how to play the auto harp. Mangold has evidently used a page from that playbook for Chalamet and Dylan.
“A Complete Unknown” also joins the roster of potential Best Picture nominees which include blockbusters “Gladiator II,” “Wicked,” “Dune Two” and indie films like “Conclave,” “A Real Pain,” “Maria,” “Emilia Perez,” “The Brutalist,” and “Anora.”
The awards picture is coming into focus quickly now.
The Kennedy Center Honors will be hosted this year by the great Queen Latifah.
Latifah is a great choice since she was recently inducted herself, and also because she’s a CBS star (of “The Equalizer”). She’s essentially the new LL Cool J.
This may be a historic Kennedy Center Honors since it’s likely to be the last for a while involving the White House. The Bidens will host the inductees and other guests, and then attend the show.
But once Donald Trump and co arrive, we’ll probably go back to the scenario of his first administration. No inductee will agree to be hosted, Trump will disavow the whole enterprise anyway. No one wants him sitting there with Elon Musk and Melania waving from the presidential box.
Trump’s only interest in “culture” is something that benefits or advances his personal wealth and agenda. By next year’s Honors he will have probably deported millions of people, created internment camps, slashed the NEA budget, closed libraries, and threatened most creatve people’s livelihoods.
This year’s inductees include Francis Ford Coppola, Bonnie Raitt, Arturo Sandoval, what’s left of the Grateful Dead, and a tribute to NY’s Apollo Theater. Still not in: Liza Minnelli, Jane Fonda, Denzel Washington, and so on.
Brady Corbet’s three-and-a-half hour epic, “The Brutalist,” wants very badly to be a masterpiece. I can’t blame it. It looks like a masterpiece, it’s long, and rises to enormous heights many times during its showing. You could say it’s like a piece of Brutalist architecture.
“The Brutalist” comes to theaters on December 20th. It has a lot of rave reviews simply for its existence. But it’s unclear how it will be received when actual people see it.
At this time of year, what you need to know first is that Adrien Brody will be nominated for an Oscar after waiting twenty years since he won for “The Pianist.” Brody plays a character named Lazlo Toth, who has nothing at all to do with the real person named Lazlo Toth. That man is a Hungarian born geologist who became infamous in 1972 for vandalizing Michelangelo’s Pietà statue in St. Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican. It was a cause celebre at the time. Toth was deported to Australia, where he lives today.
Who knows if Toth has been told that Corbet borrowed his name and nationality? But that’s where the comparisons stop. Corbet’s Toth arrives from Hungary in the US after surviving the Holocaust. He’s had to leave behind his wife (Felicity Jones, excellent) and battle scarred niece (Raffey Cassidy), but promises to reunite with them swiftly.
In the US Toth heads for Philadelphia where he has an American cousin named Attila who’s assimilated beautifully. He’s become Catholic and has a trophy wife. His furniture store business is booming. It’s an ugly name, Attila, and strange that he hasn’t Americanized it. Alessandro Nivola creates a whole world for this character that you wouldn’t mind finding more about. He’s a charming schemer.
Thanks to Attila’s networking, Lazlo meets a wealthy man named Harrison lee van Buren (Guy Pearce) from ugly Doylestown, PA who wants to build his own Rockefeller Center — a huge complex. He buys into Lazlo’s vision of a harsh, unwelcoming series of structures astronomically expensive and not really welcome in the wilds of Pennsylvania. Harrison’s son, played with sinister, slow building edginess by Joe Alwyn, is suspicious of the whole thing.
And it does, after the 15 minute intermission, when Lazlo and Harrison journey to Italy to get just the right slab of marble for their project. Up to that point, “The Brutalist” seems to be unfolding in the direction of greatness. But when the film resumes, terrible things happen, the kind of things you might to warn friends about before they return to their seats. This is not a feel good movie, and Corbet wants to remind us with a mallet.
There’s a lot of great filmmaking in “The Brutalist.” Sometimes it feels like Corbet is making a Terrence Malick film. In an era when there is little original material out there, Corbet can only be praised for creating this totally fictitious yet totally possible community. Even as it grows darker and darker, “The Brutalist” has a mesmerizing quality. And in the end, who is the Brutalist anyway? The architect with an unending vision? Or the millionaire who enables him?
Corbet swings for the fences, that’s for sure. Brody and Jones are outstanding. No one plays emotionally haunted like Brody. His trick is to get the audience on his side even though you’re not sure you agree with him. Pearce is disturbing. The rest of the cast is outstanding, although again I wish Attila had come back into the picture. Will you make it through the whole nearly four hours? Undoubtedly, although repeat viewing may be better served at home.
Special mentions to Daniel Blumberg for the powerful score, Lol Crawley for a kind of architectural cinematography, and whoever did the credits sequence. Saul Bass is in heaven, applauding.
“Wicked” is number 1 at the box office this weekend. But it’s not a smash hit.
Total weekend number came to $114 million, a lot less than you’d think it would get considering the hype.
Also, each day of release this weekend showed a decline.
That’s not a surprise. “Wicked” is for families and girls. It’s ultimately a confusing movie that serves its fan base from the Broadway musical. But does it register as a new movie? That seems unclear.
No matter, “Wicked” has picked up $50 million internationally. So that helps. A big lift will come during the holidays since we’re lacking holiday blockbusters.
“Gladiator II” also arrived with disappointing receipts, just $55 million for its opening weekend. This is a real Best Picture nominee, with Ridley Scott maybe directing his final film.
Only last week fans of “General Hospital” were angry about departure of actress Kelly Monaco. After 21 seasons Monaco was forced out of her role as Sam McCall. This week, her character was killed on screen.
Tonight actor Chad Duell has posted his exit notice after 14 years. Like Monaco, Duell was thought to be part of the permanent company.
But “General Hospital” has been bleeding ratings and money for some time. Monaco was reportedly offered a big pay cut, but said ‘no’. Duell likely got a similar offer and declined to take it. It’s unlikely he’s leaving for another show (you never know). Demographically, he’s the soap’s only under 40 lead.
The soap, which debuted in 1962 in ABC, has had a tough time recovering from last year’s actors’ and writers’ strikes They’ve changed writers and course corrected several times. They let go of two popular but expensive actors — Roger Howarth and Michael Easton — unceremoniously, One actor came in and got very popular fast. He was killed off before a contract could be issued.
Other veteran “GH” actors whose characters have gone missing include Kin Shiner and Lynn Herring. Long time star Leslie Charleston left after suffering unspecified illness two years ago. Eighties leading man Tristan Rogers appeared to exit without much fanfare, also this month.
Ordinarily when networks start getting rid of actors in the key demo they’re signalling that they want to cut audience interest so that cancellation can’t come back to bite them. CBS and Procter & Gamble did that with “As the World Turns” and “Guiding Light” a decade ago. Network execs want to see fans screaming “Cancel this show!” so they can.
Who’s next to go at “General Hospital’? And PS, winning an Emmy Award isn’t a get of jail card. Robert Gossett, cousin of Oscar winner Louis Gossett Jr., won a Daytime Emmy in 2023 working part time and playing a jazz musician on the show. He already got his walking papers.
Peter Scanavino must be having a good weekend, wherever he is.
The veteran “Law & Order SVU” actor was the featured player on Thursday night’s show as ADA Dominic “Sonny” Carisi.
The episode — about a hostage taking in a deli –clicked in a big way with the audience. They pumped up ratings by a stunning 1 million, putting SVU in the 4.3 million range. It was the highest rating of the fall season for this show by far.
If the Emmys rewarded acting from broadcast shows, Scanavino would be nominated for Best Actor. Juan Campanella directed the episode called “Cornered,” written by Julie Martin and David Graziano. Something just clicked on all fronts, and “Cornered” turned out to be a classic episode. Not bad after 26 seasons!
What will the fallout be for Carrisi when “SVU” returns next year? There should be a lot of related developments for the show and for the character!
Last night the two big releases of the moment did booming box office business.
“Wicked” pulled off a total Thursday-Friday opening of $46 million Add another $52 million or more and the $100 million weekend is a sure thing.
“Gladiator II” came in with $22 mil for Thursday-Friday. Another $30 million for Saturday and Sunday gives the Paramount hit a Colosseum sized success.
“Gladiator II” has nothing to worry about. Internationally it’s added $87 million in foreign territories. “Wicked’ doesn’t roll out around the world fast, and numbers aren’t in yet for the few places it opened last night.
Two big studios– Universal and Paramount — battling it out is so nice, just like the old days! Those two, plus “Dune Part Two,” should be guaranteed for Best Picture nominations. All the best for the Oscars broadcast on March 2nd
There will be no sequel to the George Clooney-Brad Pitt twofer “Wolfs,” which Apple TV sank to the bottom of the ocean this summer.
Collider.com reported the news exclusively today via one of their podcasts. Then Deadline.com, in typical fashion, blared the news all over the place without a link back to Collider.
Apple studios had an entertaining action comedy here that would have played in theaters and then on streaming. There are two massive big name stars involved too. If they’d promoted it right, there could have been a sequel that would have built on the original premise. And Amy Ryan was in, too!
But Apple killed “Wolfs” for no reason. By yanking its theater release, Apple indicated to the audience that the movie was no good. What a weird business this has become. Clooney and Pitt should buy the rights back, make sequel and turn it into a TV series.
The pop star took several years off since his short run of a heyday, cancelling shows and disappearing from the public.
Earlier this year, Mendes announced his return with a new album. He released three advance singles – a third of the album — all of which died on impact.
Now the album, called Shawn, has sold just 25,000 copies in its opening week. The mostly shirtless singer has had trouble reconnecting with his audience largely because of a public discussion about his sexual preferences. Alluding to being gay has evidently chased off the young girls who would be his record buyers.
Mendes now has to figure out what’s next. His last album, “Shawn Mendes,” sold 185,000 copies in its first week. But that was 2018. Six years have passed. His fans went through school and graduated. He didn’t leave them with any catalog of nostalgia. So he’ll have to rethink his career.