Friday, December 19, 2025
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“Mary Poppins” Songwriter: Classic Movie’s Author Was “Bananas,” Working with Her “Torturous”

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Sean Penn joined his good pal Emma Thompson for a one of kind night of singing Awards seasons’ event around the Disney Oscar Contender, ‘Saving Mr. Banks’ at the Polo Lounge in the famed Beverly Hills Hotel.  ‘Banks’ tells the story of the turbulent relationship between Walt Disney (himself played by Tom Hanks, who could find himself with a Best Supporting Actor nod) and, P.L. Travers (Emma Thompson, a shoo-in Best Actress nominee).

Travers wrote ‘Mary Poppins,’ one of the most beloved characters in literary lore. Travers and Disney’s complicated back and forth history is woven in with the extraordinary talented Sherman brothers, who composed the music for that score and so much more including ‘The Jungle Book,’ ‘Chitty Chitty Bang Bang’ and many other classics.

‘Banks,’ had its AFI premiere at the Chinese Theater the night before, where nearly 50 years ago ‘Poppins’ debuted.  This night however, belong to he ageless graceful and debonair 85-year old Richard M. Sherman, who along with his late brother Robert, composed these legendary songs and led a sing-along, regaling the crowd as well with his remembrances of those magical and tough times.

Sherman admitted to the crowd that those two weeks spent with Travers were ‘torturous.’  He continued, ‘we were falling apart from this woman.  She was driving us completely bananas.’

What was heavenly however, was hearing him sing, along with the grateful crowd, songs the duo composed such as the pop hits they first wrote for Annette Funicello, ‘Tall Paul,’ songs from The Parent Trap‘s Lets Get Together,’ for Hayley Mills, songs from ‘The Jungle Book,’ and more.  Sherman then went on to sing ‘It’s A Small World,’ by noting that, “People either want to kiss us or kill us for this song.”

That didn’t stop Penn; he was singing that one with Gusto.

Sherman then went on to the Poppins classics including, ‘Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious,’ ‘Chim Chim Cheree,’ and the song that Sherman said “deep in my heart,” ‘Lets Go Fly A Kite. ‘  Emma Thompson, besides being the classiest lady around, sings beautifully and was joined by her fellow cast mates Jason Schwartzman, Bradley Whitford, B. J. Novak and director John Lee Hancock in singing some of the songs alongside Sherman.

The evening was superbly organized by Peggy Siegal and Disney’s Michelle Sewell, whom Disney CEO Alan Horn especially went out of his way to thank.  Besides Penn, Mickey Rooney, Jacqueline Bisset, (sitting beside Sean at the table with Emma,) Carl Reiner, Jane Seymour, Mary Kay Place and Natassja Kinski were the celebs making an appearance, as well as Academy voters.

Horn also mentioned that, “50 years ago, P.L Travers, stayed at this hotel.   She went down the red carpet to her car and then went to work at Disney Studios.”  Sherman told me that Travers indeed was the toughest person he ever worked with.” He added, “It does seem surreal that it’s 50 years later.”

Penn, as he was leaving, turned around and told me that ‘it was a beautiful night, what’s not to love?”  You got that right Sean.

George Clooney, Producer, Brings “August: Osage County” to AFI

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The last time we saw John Wells’s “August: Osage Count” was at the Toronto Film Festival. It looked pretty good, and received a massive standing ovation. But it’s been tweaked since then for its American Film Institute opening.

Last night, George Clooney–who produced “AOC” with partner Grant Heslov, was very funny when he quipped about seeing the excellent adaptation over and over. “I haven’t seen it in two weeks, I’m not sure if it’s changed or not.”

Director John Wells, who cast George in the TV series “ER,'” which launched his career, told me:  “George is really very supportive. He’s just happy he didn’t have to act in it. He likes producing and over our 22 year friendship, we’ve developed a real shorthand.”

Clooney, Heslov and Wells weren’t alone at the Chinese Theater screening. “AOC” cast members Chris Cooper, Juliette Lewis, Dermot Mulroney, and Julianne Nicholson. Missing–but soon to seen when the film rolls out in December– Meryl Streep and Julia Roberts.

Cooper told me what attracted him to the script by playwright Tracey Letts. Cooper explained, “This kind of writing is what got me into acting in the first place. Essentially ‘August’ is a great and intense study in human behavior. Tracy’s (writer Tracy Letts) writing reminds me of Tennessee Williams, Edward Albee, Arthur Miller, that kind of playwriting. He’s up there with them.”

What’s up next for Chris? “I honestly don’t know. Reading a lot of material. Tracy is a lot to live up to for anybody.”

I asked Chris how about Clooney as a producer. “He came to the set often. He put us all at ease. He’s a real cheerleader…you just want to give him your best effort.”

Juliette Lewis chimed in with, “George is hands on. Grant too. And they’re both funny and cute. What’s not to like?”

Clooney, meanwhile, was going back to see the movie again. Many stars just do the red carpet and leave without sitting through the screening again. But he was going to watch it after seeing it numerous times.

And just keep this in mind: “AOC” could figure greatly in the Oscar race for Picture, Director, Actress (Streep), Screenplay and supporting actors. Streep is stunning in it and Margo Martindale could be a dark horse nominee. Chris Cooper, with his usual subtlety, quietly commands attention in his scenes with Benedict Cumberbatch. Just sayin’….

“August: Osage County,” is set to be released on December 25th.

 

photo courtesy of Getty Images.

“Thor: The Dark World” Opens to $141 Mil Worldwide

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“Thor: The Dark World” opened to $31.6 mil in the US Friday night and is headed to a possible $90 mil weekend. Disney/Marvel should be very pleased. The worldwide take all in is now $141 mil. And that’s just in a couple of days. By Sunday, Thor’s hammer will have reaped a lot of rewards. It’s a good thing that Loki {er, wait, sounds of writer being dragged off…)

UPDATE: “X Factor” EX-Hausted: Thursday Ratings Plummet, Even with Selena Gomez

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Last night’s “X Factor” should have perked up the ratings from Wednesday. Alas, it was not the case. The Simon Cowell hosted program pulled in a frighteningly low 3.64 million viewers, down a million from Wednesday. This was even with Selena Gomez appearing on the show. But she didn’t sing because “X Factor” on Thursday was really a do-over from Wednesday. A technical glitch cancelled all the registered votes. Things are going wrong big time. Is “X Factor” ex-hausted? It sure seems that way. It finished 12th for the evening. It was also wiped out from 9-10pm by NBC’s competing show “The Voice.”

Here’s a video from last night. Honestly, though, how any one can stand this kind of singing anymore is beyond me. I guess I was ruined by last night’s Ronnie Wood-Mick Taylor show. If someone put this “Titanium” on a mixtape for me, I’d be insulted.

Saturday Night Live Has Never Asked Whoopi Goldberg to Host the Show (Exclusive)

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EXCLUSIVE Oscar winner Whoopi Goldberg has never been asked to host “Saturday Night Live,” Tom Leonardis, the president of Goldberg’s production company Whoop Inc., told me last night at the afterparty at Sylvia’s for the documentary “Whoopi Goldberg Presents Moms Mabley.” The documentary was screened at the Apollo Theater, where Mabley was the first woman comic to perform.

Other boldface names at the screening included “Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In” producer George Schlatter, Rain Pryor, Kathy Griffin, Margo Bingham, Phylicia Rashad, Shawn Cornelius, Dick Cavett and Jerry Stiller.

Leonardis, who is also executive producer of the Moms Mabley documentary, makes its debut on HBO Monday, Nov. 18. He has worked with the Oscar, Grammy, Emmy, Tony and Golden Globe winner for 19 years. He told me even before their partnership, when Goldberg was very young, Lorne Michaels never invited the most famous female black comedian to guest host.

Think of it: Whoopi Goldberg has an Oscar, she’s hosted the Oscars, she performs with Billy Crystal and Robin Williams, she runs The View, she has a Tony Award for her acclaimed Broadway one woman show directed by Mike Nichols.

But never Saturday Night Live.

But on the red carpet questions were not about Lorne Michaels but about the Sharon Osborne kerfluffle. The other day Osborne blased all the women on “The View” except for Barbara Walters and said, “They can go f–k themselves.” (Osborne has since apologized.)

Back to the shenanigans on the red carpet, where a hapless reporter made the mistake of asking Whoopi a question about Jenny McCarthy.“Are you seriously asking me this shit while you’re at my premiere?” Whoopi fumed.

“Let me take care of this,” Kathy Griffin said. “What’s the question? I’ll do this for her.”

The reporter tried again: “Has the dynamic changed since Jenny is on the show?”

“The dynamic’s wonderful. It’s like a family. We go in and there are new topics we get to enjoy together,” Griffin continued in the same vein.

“Wait. I thought they were going to ask you about shoes and trends and nail polish,” Griffin pouted.

“All the things I know,” Goldberg cracked.

The next reporter was not to be deterred. She got as far as “Sharon Osborne” when Whoopi cut her off.

“I’m going to stop you guys right here,” Goldberg said. “I don’t give a shit about any of that stuff. This is my premiere, my documentary, and that’s all I’m talking about.”

I bravely asked Whoopi about the Lorne Michaels’ flack.

“Look! These folks are 15 years late on this question,” Goldberg told me emphatically. “Saturday Night Live has looked like this for 15, 16 years. I don’t understand? Why is everyone up in arms? Didn’t anybody see it before? Clearly not!”

Then Goldberg turned around and apologized to the reporter who asked the first question about Osborne. “I just wanted to – you now, cause I know people are asking me all kinds of crazy questions – so I just thought I would settle it and I didn’t want to direct it at you,” Goldberg told her. “I’m sorry.”

Jerry Stiller told me on the red carpet he hadn’t been following the goings on at “SNL.” He also broke some sort of record and managed to use the word meshuggah about five times in our two-minute exchange. “There hasn’t been black female comic on the show? I’m surprised,” Stiller told me. “How can they be so meshuggahed out? I don’t understand,” he sighed.

Rain Pryor, daughter of Richard Pryor, whose one-woman show, “Fried Chicken and Latkes” has gotten rave reviews, told me on the red carpet that she hasn’t even been allowed to audition for SNL.  “And I’ve tried four or five times,” she said. “Who knows what that’s about? But I think now it’s kind of out there so maybe in that aspect things will change and maybe by showing this documentary it will add a little more history and context to why it is that way and that can change it as well, so that’s what we have to look forward too, right?”

At the after party I spotted Whoopi, who is very down to earth, stand in the buffet line holding a plate of fried chicken and mac and cheese like everyone else.

She told a small group of people some of the difficulties in making the film. “We didn’t have any money. It was an eye opener. I didn’t know you’d have to pay for pictures. They’d want 70 grand (for a photograph). I’d ask them, ‘Who was the last person who asked for these pictures?’ I don’t have it.”

Goldberg mentioned the scene in the documentary where Mabley sings “Abraham, Martin and John,” at the Playboy Mansion for the television show “Playboy After Dark.” In the clip Sammy Davis Jr. has tears in his eyes as “Moms” performed the tribute to the assassinated leaders. Goldberg then went on to praise Hefner for giving her permission to use the clip.

The prices for the archival photographs and material eventually came down when people she contacted realized they were for the documentary she was doing on Moms Mabley. “I was so glad,” Goldberg said. “I’m a happy girl. Now I’m going to eat some chicken,” she told us, and managed to travel two feet when someone else approached her.

By 10:30 p.m. Whoopi was on her way out the door. She said she had to get up at 4 A.M. to catch an early flight to Washington D.C. to meet with Michelle Obama.

This reminded me of scenes in the documentary where Mabley also was a guest at the White House. In the film there’s a photograph of “Moms” sitting with President Jimmy Carter; she’s wearing a pantsuit instead of her usual frumpy housecoat. In another clip, where we only hear her voice, Mabley says President Kennedy has called her to the White House to help solve the problems of the world and to travel with Mrs. Kennedy as her chaperone.

photo c2013 Showbiz411

Rolling Stones Rave: Ronnie Wood, Mick Taylor Begin NYC Blues Club Gig

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Ronnie Wood is about five foot seven and 125 pounds sopping wet. But when he picks up a guitar and plays, it’s just like yesterday. Or better. Ronnie, Rolling Stone Mick Taylor, famed blues keyboardist Al Kooper and Bad Company drummer Simon Kirke blew out the Cutting Room last night in two shows. The first was a warm up. The second was a shredder, dedicated to the music of Jimmy Reed. The Oklahoma blues man’s classics like “Bright Lights Big City” and “Goin’ to New York” couldn’t have sounded newer or deeper in this quartet’s grip.

The 90 minute show wasn’t enough. And the rumor is that more guest stars will join them Friday and Saturday, like Keith Richards and perhaps Gary Clarke, Jr. Carmine Appice and Billy J. Kramer were each in the audience tonight, as was Ron Delsener, Sirius XM’s Steve Leeds, rock photographer Bob Gruen, comedian Jim Gaffigan, May Pang, Rolling Stones pr maven Fran Curtis with agent husband Brian Dubin, and a bevy of New York rock elite.

Actor Chris Noth introduced the evening–he’s an owner of The Cutting Room. A total non sequitur guest: Mary Kate Olsen with her much older boyfriend Olivier Sarkozy. She is extremely tiny. I’m not sure but she may have ordered off the children’s menu. Also on hand: Simon Kirke’s actress daughter Jemma Kirke. You may know her as Jessa on “Girls.”

I took the picture attached (c.2013 Showbiz411). I’ll try and put up a video later. Watching these guys was sort of amazing. Wood and Taylor are like the engine of the Stones. Watching them you see (apart from Keif) why that band is still humming. Kooper, a legend, played on Blood Sweat and Tears classic album “Child is Father to the Man.” Kirk– Bad Company, need I say more?

Heaven.

 

Roman Polanski Skypes Into Jackie Stewart Press Conference, Talks Racing, Liked “Rush”

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“If you found a genie in a bottle, what would your three wishes be,” a woman asked “Rosemary’s Baby” and “The Pianist” filmmaker Roman Polanski this week at a press conference for his documentary “Weekend of a Champion,” at the Crosby Street Hotel. She prefaced her question with, ” You’re an idol to everyone.”

The LAPD doesn’t share her sentiment. The reason Polanski wasn’t at the screening was because they have had a decades-old warrant out for Polanski’s arrest from sexual intercourse with a minor.

Polanski was beamed in by Skype. The stage was shared with Bret Ratner, whose RatPack Documentary Films is giving the 1971 documentary about one weekend in 1971 when racing champion Jackie Stewart was preparing for the Monte Carlo Grand Prix, new life. Also on stage was the titular character of the film, racing legend Stewart, who is still a puckish and ebullient presence and who now does racing broadcasting.

Back to the genie in a bottle.

“Three wishes,” Polanski mused. None of them was a get out of jail card.

“I don’t know if that genie could do miracles,” Polanski said. “I would see Jackie winning another race. I would like myself to do a good movie. And I wish for my son to get out of his stupid teenage period.”

The rest of the press conference was a lively mix of reminiscences, banter, laughter and sorrowful reminders of a different age and time when they were both celebrities at the top of their game.

For the first time, Stewart asked Polanski why he wanted to make the documentary.

“In those times I was a great enthusiast of motor racing,” Polanski replied. “I love motor racing. You took me to see your testing, maybe of tires,” Polanski said, “and I wanted to do a movie about a friend. How do you look at yourself when you see this film?” Polanski asked Stewart, adding, ” I see myself silly.”

“Me, I look at myself, and I think, ‘Oh God, he needs a haircut,” Stewart replied. “The sideburns. The longer the sideburns the faster you went,” Stewart laughed.

“They looked really good and they were a symbol of the period,” Polanski said. “When you look at the film only some old kakers like us now don’t wear them.”

Polanski said he always remembered Stewart as a safety champion, fighting for red lights at the back of cars, higher barrier, better fire extinguishers and medical support staff.

“When we were racing, in that period, if I had raced over a five-year window, let’s say from 68 to 73, there was only a once out of three that I was going to survive,” Stewart sad. Two out of three I was going to be killed. A terrible batting average and yet nothing was done by the governing body, by the track owners, by the officials.” He added, “It took an enormous about of pressure with the drivers coming behind me.”

“We said that in the 60’s and 70’s motor racing was dangerous and sex was safe,” Stewart said. Polanski laughed.

Stewart also spoke how in those days there weren’t expert medical people to attend to injured drivers, even at the Grand prix races. The doctors who rushed to the drivers might even be gynecologists. “Racing drivers were amateur gynecologists but to have that specialist as the chief medical officer that was the bizarreness of the time,” Stewart said.

Polanski recalled the 70’sas a much more exciting, stimulating and happier time. “Particularly in London, with people like the Beatles, Rolling Stones, racing drivers, photographers, they crossed particularly every day life,” he said. “It was an entirely different society, different period, different moods, it seemed somehow more joyful. If you looked at early parts of this movie we just showed, beyond the race, you see all smiles in those times.”

Polanski learned at the press conference that Stewart was dyslexic. The former race driver credited his condition with his success. “I can’t recite the alphabet,” Stewart admitted. “However, a dyslexic, because he/she can’t think like the clever folk, you think outside the box and you find new ways of doing things,” he said. “If you went to Harvard you’re taught to go around one superhighway. The highway’s very congested. If you take the rural road I’s less competitive and you get through it easier.” He pointed out his son Mark, who helped edit and produce “Weekend of a Champion,” and said he also had dyslexia.

Both Polanski and Stewart were asked if they’d seen Ron Howard’s racing film “Rush.”

“I’ve seen Rush,” Polanski said. “At the beginning I thought, ‘Oh my God, I’m going to walk out of it but I had somehow sat through it and it gets better and better and finally after, I would say, a few minutes of patience it gets you really involved and very satisfying. I think it’s a great couple of actors looking exactly like the fellows we knew. It’s a very good movie I think. I think that that movie does not enjoy the success it deserves. It’s a really nice motor racing movie.”

Stewart agreed. “The actor that plays Niki Lauda, I think he’s so good I’d like to see him nominated because he was better than Lauda at Lauda. He studied him so clearly. His walk, his expression, and the manner in which he lived his life, this guy really caught it. I hope he gets a nomination. But I liked the film.”

Stewart added, as for the three wishes, “One of my three wishes is that Roman could be here today.”

The audience, who included filmmakers James Toback and Bennett Miller clapped in agreement.

After the press conference I spoke to Mark Stewart, a film and television producer, who told me he was very involved in the film editing of the documentary.

“Roman and I both had a clean reel,” he said. “His was slightly damaged and mine wasn’t, so we got the two together and then managed to get a good, clean version of it so that we could digitally re-master it,” the 35-year-old producer told me. “We kind of talked about it, toyed with the idea and then eventually I think Roman just said, ‘Yeah, we’re going to do it.” So over a couple glasses of wine, a nice long lunch in Paris, we came up with the idea and here we are today.”

is mother Helen, who’s very much a presence in the documentary, Mark told me was in fine form and that his parents have been happily married 50 years although she was not at the screening. Mark has a brother Patrick, who was also a car racer, but he’s always been more interested in making films. His next production is “Last Man on the Moon,” about Apollo 17 Commander Eugene Cernan, now 78, who was virtually the last man on the moon. The film will be out next year.

But to see his mother and father so young and vibrant in “Weekend of a Champion” Mark told me “was brilliant.”

Editta Sherman, Famed Photographer of Hollywood Legends, Dies at 101

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A note: Editta Sherman died this week. I met her when she was a young 90 back in 2001. I featured her in the special Oscar issue of Talk magazine for the 2002 Oscars. (Yes, Talk!) Jen Prodan, who worked for Talk, came with me and wrote the piece. Editta was larger than life. That she went on for 11 more years, still taking pictures, is amazing. We took some photos for that shoot, but I don’t know where they are. If I find them, I’ll put them up. In the meantime, here’s Jen’s story.

Number 1208 in the famed Carnegie Hall apartments looks like a movie set that might have been found on an old Hollywood studio back-lot: a black-and-white checkerboard floor runs from mirrored wall to mirrored wall. A cast-iron spiral staircase circles up to a loft aerie laden with various props and framed photographs.  A 50-year-old GA Century camera made of leather and mahogany waits beneath a bank of windows overlooking the backdrop of a rainy midtown Manhattan. And in the center of a veritable swarm of photographers, make-up artists, agents, writers and hangers-on, is celebrity portraitist Editta Sherman. At nearly 90 years old, she epitomizes this romantic era of Tinseltown, when actors and actresses truly were stars in the celluloid firmament.

Today, however, Editta finds herself on the other side of the camera lens. Ever the consummate professional, she stands at the ready in a burgundy vintage 1950s dress, two-inch heels, a glittering ruby-and-diamond necklace and a smile. As the make-up artist paints her lips a sultry red, her agent offers words of encouragement: “It’s Editta’s Hollywood! It’s Oscar! They’ll probably give you one next year!” However, she doesn’t seem to require much prodding: With a saucy kick of a rhinestone-encrusted heel and a flirty swish of her hemline, she lets out a cheeky, “Olè!”.  Whether sitting elegantly in a chair or lying on the floor, Editta is poised and natural in front of the clicking camera, surrounded by hundreds of her portraits of celebrities from a golden age of Hollywood gone by.

“I’ve been [in Carnegie Hall] 50 years,” Editta gestures broadly as she pours two champagne flutes of Diet Coke, and settles in to discuss her six decades as portraitist to the stars. Dubbed the “Duchess of Carnegie Hall” by author Bill Cunningham, Editta’s studio played host to a bevy of Hollywood’s best and brightest, from Jessica Tandy and Hume Cronyn to Susan Strasberg and Paul Newman to Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. “[Once] I was photographing [Bela Lagosi], and he was going out, and Somerset Maughm was coming in. They both greeted each other at the door. I couldn’t get over it.”

A second-generation photographer, Editta spent her childhood in a studio with her father, a professional photographer and an Italian immigrant. “I spent a lot of my young years in the studio helping my father,” she says. “It was my job to help him, and I used to watch him when he had his clients [come] in, the way he operated. He taught me a lot of things.”

At age 19, Editta landed her first job as a photographer’s assistant in Union City, New Jersey, taking pictures of young children and babies. Not long after that, she was introduced to her husband, Harold Sherman, an inventor and recording engineer for Dictaphone—10 years Editta’s senior.

“It was love at first sight,” she says with a quiet smile. Editta and Harold were married a year later and, suddenly, Editta found herself thrust into a whole new world—one of Hollywood and celebrities that would soon prove to be prophetic.

“I was shy in those days. [Harold] knew the people, the contacts,” she says. “It was a nice experience in those days. I was just getting started. When I got into [my husband’s] studio…there was a different clientele. I learned a great deal from him. He was an inspiration to me.” Regardless of the awe that struck her whenever her husband would take a meeting with someone she knew from the tabloids or movies, Editta’s focus was on her ever-growing family. “It was just a hobby, taking pictures.”

However, in 1943, circumstances forced Editta to turn to her hobby as a means of support. Diagnosed with diabetes years earlier, her husband Harold had become too sick to continue working at the Dictaphone Corporation. So, in 1943, Editta moved her family to Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts where she set up a small studio in her dining room.

“Most of my work started on Martha’s Vineyard. Frank Morgan [Professor Marvel/The Wizard in 1939’s The Wizard of Oz] came in on his yacht for a couple of days, and so he dropped in. His wife said he [was] never away from his pictures, not even on vacation.”

After returning to Manhattan two years later, Editta slowly began to build a reputation for herself—an extraordinary accomplishment for a woman in an industry ruled by men. “They didn’t give me as much credit. Of course, it was the 40s.  I was very young, for one thing, and here I was dealing with professional men.”

However, with the help of such famed screen stars as Raymond Massey and Tyrone Power—two of Editta’s earliest and most favorite portrait subjects—word of mouth proved to be the best form of self-promotion. During one sitting with Peyton Place star Lloyd Nolan, Nolan asked if she would like to do a portrait of fellow actor and friend, Charles Laughton. Editta, ever the enthusiast, immediately said yes.

“So [Lloyd] goes right to the phone, and calls [Laughton] up and says, ‘Get over here and get your picture taken.’ [Laughton] says, ‘I understand I’m to come over and have my picture taken. I might be cock-eyed drunk.’ I said, ‘That’s fine.’

After Harold’s early death in 1954, Editta persevered, continuing to take portraits of Hollywood’s stars as a means of supporting her five children. Editta developed a signature style of portraiture photography that allowed her to truly capture the essence of the person on the other side of the lens. Her ease with the camera propelled her into the spotlight, and she soon became one of the top celebrity photographers in the country.

With more than 2,500 photographs of everyone from Elvis Presley to Christopher Plummer, Editta rubbed elbows with the most famous actors of her time. Naturally, she has her favorites.

“Tyrone Power, of course, was one,” she says coyly of the swashbuckling film star with whom she had a very close working relationship.  “I used to do the ballet, [and] one time I did it here for Tyrone Power. He [sat] down and he smoked a cigarette. When I got finished [he said], “That was wonderful, Editta. He was in love with me.”

“That one,” she says, pointing to a portrait of Yul Brynner on the crowded far wall, “was [taken] right before he died. He couldn’t go on because he was in such bad shape, and yet he would.  He came here and could hardly sit. I didn’t know how bad he was.”

With a bastion of Hollywood’s most famous celebrities behind her, what does the future hold for Editta Sherman? Aside from making guest appearances with her photographs, she’d like to continue taking celebrity portraits—but only if the stars are “known.” Anthony Hopkins tops her list, along with Pia Lindstrom because “she’s the daughter of Ingrid Bergman.” Tom Cruise, she muses, would “like to come, I’m sure, and see some of the old stuff.” She’d also like to publish a book of all of her photographs; a book where Henry Fonda, Lillian Gish, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. and Mary Martin might all be remembered in their days of youth. “Time goes on,” she says with a sigh as she looks out the window at a rain-soaked Manhattan, a lovely picture in itself. “Time goes on.”

“X Factor” Returns And Loses 2 Million Viewers Since Before World Series

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Oh gosh, the poor ” X Factor.” Before the World Series, Simon Cowell’s show on Fox was averaging 6.5 million viewers. And that was on a good night. Most of them were my age (over 49) and just didn’t have the energy to get up and change the channel.

Last week, “X Factor” returned after its time out on the mound. On Tuesday October 30th the show had 4.76 million fans from 8 to 10pm. At 9pm “The Voice” came on and scored over 11 million peeps. Oy vey! Mark Burnett must have called in help from “The Bible.” Because the trouncing was biblical.

Last night, Wednesday, “The X Factor” declined more, to 4.51 mil. It was beaten by just about everything except the nightly farm report. Even “Law & Order SVU” knocked it off between 9 and 10pm.

Tonight: Selena Gomez is a guest star. I don’t know if that will help. It’s like three months too late. The “Royals” singer Lorde is the star of the week. Selena Gomez is so pre-World Series. Around noon EST Friday we’ll know if Selena helped. Otherwise, I think “X Factor” may need Megyn Kelly as a guest judge if it wants to return.

Tom Cruise Testifies Katie Holmes Left Him to Protect Suri From Scientology

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Tom Cruise testified under oath in September at a deposition that Kate Holmes left him to protect daughter Suri from Scientology. He also admitted that Suri, unlike his two other children, is not studying Scientology. Cruise also conceded that he didn’t see Suri from August through late November 2012 and missed her first day of school.

That’s not all. The revelations are thanks to good reporting from RadarOnline.com. They unearthed the deposition in a lawsuit Cruise brought against Life & Style magazine, and its publisher Bauer magazines. Life & Style published an article claiming Cruise had “abandoned” Suri. Cruise sued. The deposition was taken in September. Bert Fields’ office represented him in the deposition. Life &Style/Bauer is represented by Elizabeth McNamara.

RadarOnline.com has posted some of the papers, and will have more tomorrow. McNamara managed to ask the most revealing questions ever with Cruise–about his marriage, children, Scientology, etc. It’s more than just fascinating. It actually made me feel bad for him a little bit. Scientology seems to have wrecked his life, and he has no idea of it.  You wonder when he gives the answers if he knows what they mean.

But here’s the main thing. McNamara gets Tom to concede that Katie Holmes left him to protect their daughter from Scientology. He admits that she has never again spoken to anyone in his family since she left, including his two older childen. There is a long discussion of suppressive persons and what that means in Scientology.

More to come.

Here’s a link to the deposition: http://amradaronline.files.wordpress.com/2013/11/depo20001.pdf