Thursday, December 18, 2025
Home Blog Page 1788

Beatlemania Continues: Paul, Ringo to Perform on Grammys

0

The CBS-Beatlemania connection continues: Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr will each perform on the Grammy Awards on January 26th. That’s in addition to what I already scooped: Beatle week on David Letterman February 3rd to the 7th. And then of course the Beatles concert special on February 9th, taped January 27th at the Los Angeles Convention Center.

Plus, and let’s not forget, the January 21st release of the Beatles box set of US releases on Capitol Records. That’s the third box set of Beatles CDs after the original 2009 stereo and mono boxes.

The Grammys are shaping up as a blockbuster affair with Keith Urban, Taylor Swift, John Legend, Macklemore and Ryan Lewis, and Kacey Musgraves added to the show.

Meanwhile, Beatlemania events are ever-burgeoning: Martin Lewis is interviewing a great panel at the 92nd St Y in New York including Peter Asher, Donovan, and Billy J. Kramer on February 6th. And there’s a Sid Bernstein memorial concert on February 12th at the Cutting Room to commemorate Sid’s promoting of the first Beatles concerts at Carnegie Hall on that day in 1964.

Pal: Woody Allen Used Carole King Musical as Excuse to Skip Globes

0

“Beautiful: The Carole King Musical,” opened Sunday night on Broadway at the Stephen Sondheim Theater and as expected, Carole King, who lives in L.A., didn’t show.

But other real-life characters portrayed in the jukebox musical – Barry Mann, Cynthia Weil and Gerry Goffin – turned up and even did the red carpet.

You might also have heard there was a shindig going on in Hollywood at the same time and that Woody Allen was honored with a lifetime achievement award – minus Allen. People speculated he was probably at a ball game instead. So where was Woody?

It turns out Allen was at “Beautiful,” and that he and wife Soon Yi slipped into a side door, and sat in their orchestra seat in row L or M. (Jerry Seinfeld was also there although neither he or Allen made it to the after party.)

Woody and Douglas McGath, who wrote the book for “Beautiful,” are pals. The two co-wrote the Oscar nominated screenplay for “Bullets Over Broadway,” which is heading to Broadway as  a new musical by Allen.  Susan Stroman will direct.

McGrath told me his pal came to the Broadway opening of his play as “the most extraordinary act of support, and the only reason I say it’s extraordinary is he doesn’t really like to go to openings and he doesn’t really. And if you’ve seen his movies you know what his taste in music is, and it’s not this, yet I think he had a wonderful time.”

So Woody skipped out on the Golden Globes for your Broadway opening?

“Yes, I think he likes coming tonight for that very reason,” McGrath laughed. “He can say I had to go to my friend’s opening.”

Then we chatted about the book for “Beautiful,” which McGrath said he almost turned down writing.

 “I didn’t want to take the job at first because I thought four living people I’m going to write something about? Forget it. Because they’re all going to be like, ‘no, no, no, my mother wore pants, not slacks. All these things that you’re like, ‘what? That means nothing.’ But they were all very supportive. They gave me all the information and then they would see stuff, and they would give notes but it was never dramatic or like, you have to cut this. It was more like sometimes we did this more than this. They just gave me stuff to help.”

Jake Epstein plays Gerry Goffin, a gifted man who is bipolar and a womanizer, and manages to make him likable. McGrath told me Goffin didn’t ask him to tone down his character flaws.

 “This is what was so interesting to me about Gerry,” McGrath said “He didn’t keep anything from me. He said, ‘Yeah, I did that.’ The original sin for them was that they got married too young, when she got pregnant,” he said. “He had this one impulse to pull him away toward all these cute girls whom he’d been used to flirting with and dating and fooling around with and the other, which was that he loved Carole and didn’t want to hurt her. I never see him as a villain. I saw him as a guy who had a bad thing and he tried to make the best of it and it just got worse.”

Cynthia Weil and Barry Mann, played by Anika Larsen and Jarrod Spector, who went on to write “On Broadway,” “Uptown,” the Animals “We Gotta Get Out of This Place,” “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling,” among other hits, seem too good to be true but in person they’re like the characters on stage. I asked them for the secret of their happy 30-year marriage.

 “We have a deep love and friendship,” Mann explained. They have one daughter, Jenn Berman, who has a radio show on Sirius and a television show on VH1. “She’s a pretty spectacular woman,” Weill said. “She’s our greatest collaboration.”

At the moment they’re not writing music. Weil said her husband was writing his memoirs and she was working on a young adult mystery.

“And maybe we’ll work on something together soon cause I miss not working with you,” Weil told her husband. “We haven’t done it for while, writing music, but we will.”

I asked Mann if he was as much as a hypochondriac as he’s depicted in the play?

“Yes, that’s the truth,” Man said. “When I first saw how much of a hypochondriac I am in the show I got a little pissed off and then I realized it was right.” This was a detail that came up in interviews McGrath did with them.

 Then Mann pointed to a white-haired man holding a drink. “Our doctor’s here tonight. He’s over there.”

It turns out not all of the stars of “Beautiful” knew Woody Allen was in the audience.

“Did he like it?” Jake Epstein asked me.  “Woody Allen in the audience? I didn’t know before the show, thank god!

Jeb Brown, who plays music publisher Don Kirshner told me, “I must say that crept into my consciousness now and again on the stage.”

 “Oh, so exciting! My son told me Woody was there,” said Liz Larsen, who plays Carole King’s mother.

Jessie Mueller, who’s star turn as Carole King is a career game changer for the 30 year old actress, told me she also knew Woody was in the theater.

She wore a short, silver sequined dress by Aidan Mattox.

“It’s not so natural woman any more,” she joked about the shimmery dress, referencing one of King’s most famous songs.

I asked her how she found her way into the role of Carole King, someone whose music she was too young too know.

“Slowly and with a lot of help. I still have to figure it out and invest in it every night,” she said. “The first time I met with the musical director, Jason Howland, I sort of came in the room and I thought, ‘How are we going to do this?’ And even taking it on and saying, ‘Yes, I want to play this role because I found her so interesting. I didn’t know how I was going to do.” She added, “I didn’t do it alone by any means. What I was doing was shaped by what was happening around me.”

Muller told me she also did her homework. “Lots of research, lots of listening, lots of watching footage of her singing, to watch the mannerisms and the way she connects with the piano.” She also had to adapt her voice. “We just have different voices, we have different timbres, we have different ranges, but I love stuff like that. I love exploring different parts of my voice. I used to mimic people all the time when I was kid, so it was fun for me, I didn’t want it to be a mimicry but I wanted to touch on certain things, so you felt you had something of the best of her.”

As for the toughest thing about playing King, she told me, “It changes from night to night. Sometimes it’s getting to the heart of the pain because there was a lot of pain in that journey that this show captures, but it’s also sometimes also it’s just trying to capture her joy and her openness because through all the hardships she stayed so open. I think there’s a lot to learn from that.”

Golden Globes White Night: 4 Black Presenters Out of 50

0

The Golden Globes don’t like black people too much. Yes, they gave “12 Years a Slave” Best Picture (Drama). But they passed over the director, Steve McQueen, and the two stars, Chiwetel Ejiofor. They also passed entirely over The Butler, Fruitvale Station, and Mandela. On top of that, from over 50 presenters, only three were black. Two were musical performers and not even actors (although Sean Combs and Usher have acted).

If I were the NAACP or any black group, I’d be horrified. Not only were plenty of black actors in the house– Idris Elba, Lupita Nyongo, Ejiofor among them just in movies and plenty more from TV– there’s a world of black actors and actresses in town famous enough to present an award on a network show. Shame on them. NBC should know better, too. How does this go on and on? Outrageous. Wasn’t this supposed to be the year of the black movie?

Here’s the list. Steve Coogan and Philomena Lee also presented.

Ben Affleck
Drew Barrymore
Kate Beckinsale
Orlando Bloom
Sandra Bullock
Jim Carrey
Jessica Chastain
Emilia Clarke
Sean Combs
Matt Damon
Leonardo DiCaprio
Aaron Eckhart
Chris Evans
Amber Heard
Jonah Hill
Taylor Kinney
Niki Lauda
Paula Patton
Chris Pine
Zoe Saldana
Jesse Spencer
Emma Stone
Emma Thompson
Usher
Christoph Waltz
Kevin Bacon
Julie Bowen
Laura Dern
Robert Downey Jr.
Jimmy Fallon
Colin Farrell
Tom Hanks
Chris Hemsworth
Mila Kunis
Jennifer Lawrence
Melissa McCarthy
Seth Meyers
Liam Neeson
Chris O’Donnell
Margot Robbie
Mark Ruffalo
Kyra Sedgwick
Channing Tatum
Uma Thurman
Emma Watson
Naomi Watts
Olivia Wilde
Reese Witherspoon

Ratings: Downton Abbey Shock Episode: Up 22% Over Last Year

0

The second episode of “Downton Abbey” was a shocker: Anna was raped, a situation that caused a scandal in Britain when the show aired this fall. But that didn’t deter viewers. “Downton” was up 22% over last season’s second episode. The Crawleys scored  7.94 million viewers. Their household rating was a very healthy 4.7. This means that the PBS Masterpiece drama finished third in narrative TV to “The Good Wife” and “The  Mentalist.” ABC and NBC would love to have the “Downton” numbers. Bravo!

Pamela Anderson Unplugged: No Cell Phone, Computer for 2 Months

0

Pamela Anderson: you have to like her. She’s hot, for one thing. Still hot, maybe getting hotter. She also loves good classic rock. I follow her on Twitter, and she’s constantly sending out #nowplaying alerts. She likes Clapton, the Allman Brothers, Beatles.

She told me this weekend at Sean Penn’s Haiti event that she really picks those songs. But she doesn’t send out the Tweets. She has someone who does it for her.

And here’s the big headline: “I’m off of everything. I don’t carry a cell phone, I don’t have a computer. I’m not reading the internet. I haven’t for two months.”

How does it feel? “Fantastic. I’m not missing anything. And I feel so much better.”

Yesterday’s song of the day? “One Way Or Another” by Blondie.

Keep going, Pam! PS Pam just remarried her third husband, Rick Solomon. She was previously married to Tommy Lee and to Kid Rock, of course.

 

NY Film Critics Expel Armond White After Annual Heckling Incident

0

Armond White is out. The freelance film writer has been expelled from the New York Film Critics after he made a jackass of himself last week at the annual dinner. White, who was drunk, became loud and obstreperous, yelling a bunch of nasty things at Harry Belafonte and then director Steve McQueen.

It’s an annual occurrence.

White always makes a scene, whether he’s speaking from the podium or sitting in his seat. I watched all this from my table with concern. White is like the crazy aunt who gets drunk at Christmas and starts yelling at her family. I don’t take it seriously. But this year he was particularly awful, especially since Belafonte had just given a beautiful speech. What can you do? He’s become too much of an embarrassment for the NYFCC.

It’s particularly sad because White is African American. He’s very smart. He represents diversity and a contrarian opinion. These things are always needed. But you can’t keep insulting the guests. They won’t come back! I wish he’d been suspended for one season, like Alex Rodriguez. But  no one asked me.

The group did suspend NY Post critic Lou Lumenick for one year. He revealed voting totals in his column.

Exclusive: Scorsese Adding Adam Driver to Next Film “Silence”

1

Exclusive: Adam Driver is the newest cast member of Martin Scorsese’s “Silence.” He’s joining Andrew Garfield and Ken Watanabe in the Japanese thriller set in the 17th century. Scorsese told me last night at HBO’s annual star-a-thon post- Globes party that shooting will commence next summer. First, of course, Scorsese has to finish up a winter of Oscar promotion for ‘The Wolf of Wall Street,” which has turned into a gigantic hit at the box office.

Driver, of course, is the breakout star of HBO’s “Girls,” which had its season premiere last night. He will also be a big deal later this year in “Tracks,” with Mia Wasikowska, The John Curran-directed romance/ adventure is — I know this is early, but true– on tracks for the 2015 Oscars. It’s a wonderful film.

Scorsese and his “Wolf” crew, including Jonah Hill, were graciously invited in by HBO, which also had actors and directors from other studios who weren’t giving big parties. Mad Men star Elisabeth Moss came with her Golden Globe– the first actual award she’s received for her trenchant portrayal of Peggy on the hit show. Many of the “Girls” stars were in attendance including Zosia Mamet with boyfriend actor Evan Jongkeit, Allison Williams, and Jemma Kirke.

Meanwhile, Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson were there, but split up to work the room. Tom spent a lot of time with our favorite Hollywood grande dame, Barbara Davis, and insisted I take their picture. Rita chatted with Judd Apatow, who told me he’s getting ready to direct “Train Wreck”– sadly his wife, one of my favorite actresses, Leslie Mann, will not be in it. We did talk about how well “This is 40” is doing playing on HBO. It’s been an enormous hit.

The best table: Helen Mirren, husband Taylor Hackford, CAA agent Fred Specktor, publicist Stan Rosenfield, and super woman Peggy Siegal. Dame Helen comes to Broadway, they confirmed, in spring 2015 with her West End hit, “The Audience,” in which she once again plays Queen Elizabeth.

Elsewhere at the HBO shindig, I ran into four star actress Tony winner and Oscar nominee Janet McTeer. She rarely ventures to L.A. but is in town for a few days for meetings. For my money, McTeer might be the only actress in her age group equal to Cate Blanchett. On Broadway she peels the paint right off the walls. In movies. she’s been a dynamic presence in “Albert Nobbs” and “Tumbleweeds.” An Oscar win is in her future!

 

Golden Globes Up Slightly from Last Year

0

The ratings were actually down for the 2014 Golden Globes. The three hour show received a 6.5 rating  in the 18-49 demo, up slightly from 6.4 last year. According to tvbythenumbers, the Globes preliminary show only had 2.4. In total viewers, they pulled 20.9 million. But “60 Minutes” was close behind with 16.98 million viewers from 8 to 9pm following football. More to come after the “Downton Abbey” ratings come in…

Golden Globes Mean Little for Oscars as Academy Usually Shows

0

The Golden Globes? After all that noise– and what a boring show with Tina Fey and Amy Poehler gagged from joking about the HFPA–it all means little when it comes to the Oscars.

The winners from last night who will translate over to the Academy Awards– Cate Blanchett and Jared Leto. But Matthew McConaughey and Jennifer Lawrence–good as they were– will likely not repeat themselves. Neither will Amy Adams or Leonardo DiCaprio.

Vying for an Oscar for Best Actor are Bruce Dern and Robert Redford. If they split the vote, the winner will be Chiwetel Ejiofor. Tom Hanks, so eloquent in “Captain Phillips,” will settle for a nomination.

Best Supporting Actress will now turn to Lupita Nyongo and June Squibb. Oprah Winfrey, if she’s nominated on Thursday morning, should win.

Best Picture: The Globes endorsed “American Hustle” and “12 Years a Slave.” They actually passed over “Gravity.” The Oscar for Best Picture is wide open again, I think, with “Gravity” losing gravitas. “Inside Llewyn Davis” and “Nebraska” move down to 10th and 9th, I think. We’ll see. “Philomena” may be the surprise of the season.

Exclusive: Bono Says New U2 Should Come in June, New Single Soon

0

The new U2 album should come in June. So says Bono, to me, at the Weinstein Company party following the Golden Globes. Bono and U2 won the Globe for their song “Ordinary Love” from the movie “Mandela.” The group held court on a platform of couches, entertaining friends including Usher on Sunday night before taking off to an after party said to be at 1Oak on Sunset Boulevard.

The group had just played at Sean Penn’s Haiti fundraiser on Saturday night with a young Haitian singer named Anaelle Jean-Pierre. I sat with Bono at the Weinstein party and praised him for his passion about politics, Mandela, Africa, etc.

“We’re persistent, I’ll say that,” he replied with a rueful chuckle. “I don’t think we’re the only ones who care. I think lots of people do. They just don’t have the opportunity.”

Bono told me the group was busy finishing the new album. “We’re still working some things out,” he said. In the meantime, they will release a new single in the next few weeks. It’s called– and this is exclusive– “Invisible.” “It’s not what you expect,” Bono told me. “It’s not your typical love song.”

The guys were joined by Guy Oseary, their new day to day manager, who seems like he’s doing a bang up job. Oseary is almost as tireless and tenacious as Bono, Edge, Larry and Adam. They’re a good match.

Also at the hot hot hot Weinstein party: Christoph Waltz, Bruce Dern, Laura Dern, Idris Elba, Meryl Streep, Julia Roberts, Rashida Jones, Taylor Swift, Bradley Cooper and the newly engaged Robin Wright (ex Penn) and Ben Foster. Robin showed me her engagement ring– tasteful, elegant– and her much deserved Golden Globe for “House of Cards.” “Will you hold onto it for me, it’s heavy,” Robin asked me. Ben said he was so happy for his fiancee “my heart is jumping out of me.” He thumped his chest.