Friday, December 19, 2025
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Trudie Styler, Daughter Act up A Storm in Off Broadway Workshop

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You can catch one more performance tonight, Saturday, at 45 Bleecker Street Theatre of Chekhov’s “The Seagull” as adapted by famed British director Max Stafford-Clark. It’s really a master class that’s been going on as open rehearsals for the last couple of weeks. Last night, and tonight, are the only set performances for now. Stafford Clark and playwright Thomas Kilroy have revived a 30 year old adaptation of “The Seagull” set in Ireland instead of Russia. It was acclaimed then and it still works beautifully.

Last night, Alan Rickman–who’d been in the original production–was in the audience, along with Sting, who came to see wife Trudie Styler and daughter Mickey Sumner–a very hot, up and coming serious actress–play major roles. (He brought Trudie roses, of course.) This production is done as a staged reading, but it is never boring. On the contrary, the casting is so perfect, and Stafford-Clark has waved a magic wand. Even in this early version, theatre fanatics will be sorry to miss tonight’s show. It’s simply mesmerizing. It’s not just Styler and Sumner, but a strong cast that delivers without missing a beat.

Rickman was very pleased, and raved about Mickey Sumner. (She’s the real thing.) Styler, a classically trained actress (among many other multi-tasking successes) gives a textured and moving performance. Everyone else is top notch, from Rufus Collins to Slate Holmgren, Stella Feehily, and Katie Kirby.

PS Sting and Trudie became grandparents this week–Sting’s singer son, Joe Sumner, from his first marriage to Frances Tomelty, welcomed a baby daughter. His wife, Kate, gave birth to a beautiful daughter named Juliette. The Sumner clan is headed west on Sunday to see the brand new baby and give congrats to the parents.

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Rita Wilson’s Pop Debut Brings Back 70s Crowd: Geffen, Jimmy Webb. J.D. Souther

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Rita Wilson–if she had decided to become a pop star in her 20s, she could have been Linda Ronstadt or Bonnie Raitt. As it happened, she waited a while. On Thursday night, the actress took the stage at Joe’s Pub and in front of friends, family and a few strangers. With a tight Southern California band, she showcased songs from her new Decca album, “AM-FM.” They are all covers of songs she loved from the early 70s.

She had quite an audience, too: David Geffen, Nora Ephron, Brian Williams, Brian’s daughter Allison from “Girls” on HBO, Carole Bayer Sager and Bob Daly, Gayle King, movie and theatre star producer Neil Meron, music producer Jay Landers, and Renee Zellweger were among her guests. Jimmy Webb was there; on the album he plays piano on his famous “Wichita Lineman.” JD Souther appeared on stage, and sang on two of his songs that were Ronstadt staples, “Faithless Love” and “Prisoner in Disguise.”Husband Tom Hanks is off somewhere shooting a movie. But her 21 year old rapper actor son, aka Chet Haze, was in from Northwestern University. Chet’s gotten a rep on Gawker.com for being cocky, but he was the nicest kid imaginable. I think he has to act bad because his dad is also so nice.

Wilson, of course, is completely home on stage. She’s bright and funny. If she said she was nervous, it didn’t register. Some of the songs are just fun, good cover songs. But I thought her versions of “Good Time Charlie’s Got the Blues” and “Please Come to Boston” were excellent. Also especially good, a Patti Scialfa song called “Every Perfect Picture,” which isn’t on the physical CD but you can get on iTunes. It’s a great song.

“AM-FM” boasts an all star group of cameos: Sheryl Crow, Jackson Browne, Vince Gill and Chris Cornell are among the A listers who help out. But Rita gets a lot of kudos–she pulled it off. She’s got the chops. Her sultry voice is well suited to the songs, and her delivery is richly textured. Now maybe she’ll change her name to Rita Haze, and let Chet open for her a deejay. Nicely done.

Earlier: Rita Wilson is a talented actress, Mrs. Tom Hanks, and now even the mother of college rapper Chet Haze. But she’s also always been a singer. This week she released an album, “AM-FM,” a cool 70s jukebox that’s already getting great reviews. Tonight, Rita plays Joe’s Pub in New York. On May 12th she’s at the Greek Theater in Los Angeles. Decca, still in business after all the changes at UMG, is her label. People are going to be surprised how good Ms. Wilson is. And isn’t it nice to still be able to surprise everyone? With Marianne Faithfull, Bebe Buell, and Rita, all of a sudden the adult female singers are fighting back!

Here’s how Rita describes her song choices from her press kit:

1. “All I Have To Do Is Dream” (written by Boudleaux Bryant)

“Growing up listening to songs like this, I inadvertently learned how to harmonize. I’d be on the beach and singing with my friends and we’d say, `Okay, you take the high part, I’ll take the low part,’ without even realizing that what we were doing was harmonizing. So I recorded this as sort of a `thank you’ to all those artists for teaching me how to harmonize.”

2. “Never My Love” (written by Richard Addrisi and Donald Addrisi)

“This song was so reassuring to me when I was younger — the idea that you could fall in love with someone and honestly communicate your insecurities to them. You could say, `What if this happens? What if that happens? What if you fall out of love with me?’, and the response could be, `Never, my love. That’ll never happen.'”

3. “Come See About Me” (written by Holland-Dozier-Holland)

“It’s a very, very covered song, but it’s a great song. There can’t be too many covers of it. I love that this woman is aching for this guy and making her feelings known. It’s not clear whether she ever does get him to come see about her, and in that way the song is much more subversive than the melody suggests.”

4. “Angel of the Morning” (written by Chip Taylor)

“As a woman listening to this song today, I see it completely differently than I did as a kid. When I was younger I thought, `This girl made the wrong choice — she gave it up, and now the guy’s dumping her.’ But hearing it now, I see it as an older woman saying to some guy, `Don’t worry, I’ll drive myself home. I’ll be your angel of the morning. I won’t let you see me crying.’ The lyrics might resonate for women who are searching for something that they’re just not getting: that emotional connection. It’s about the compromises that you make so you won’t have to spend a night alone.”

5. “Walking in the Rain” (written by Barry Mann, Cynthia Weil, and Phil Spector)

“I love this song for its innocence. It’s about dreaming what the guy you’ll fall in love with someday is going to be like. I think we’ve all done a lot of fantasizing like that. I remember thinking, as a young woman, `Gosh, will I ever meet that person? Will I ever get the chance to have a soulmate?’ For me, this song reminds me that if you never give up hope, you just might meet the right person.”

6. “Wichita Lineman” (written by Jimmy Webb)

“This song is like an Edward Hopper painting — so evocative of loneliness. It’s got one of the greatest lines ever written: `I need you more than want you, and I want you for all time.’ The lyrics say so much about communication, about what you choose to say and not to say. And it’s about the people you take for granted, whether it’s the Wichita lineman or somebody serving you a cup of coffee. Everyone has these lives, and they’re all meaningful and important. They all have longing and people they love. It’s about human experience and how we’re all connected, we’re all the same. This was the first track we recorded and the first time I met Jimmy Webb. Here’s one of the greatest songs ever written, and the songwriter is playing piano for me. I was humbled. I still am, and forever grateful.”

7. “Cherish” (written by Terry Kirkman)

“Terry was the lead singer for the Association but also wrote `Cherish.’ He came to the studio while we were recording, which was nerve-racking. When you’re playing something you’ve recorded for the person who wrote it, you hope that they’ll like it. I was so pleased because Terry said, `I’ve always wanted to hear the song this way.’ I think he liked the simplicity of our version.”

8. “You Were On My Mind” (written by Sylvia Tyson)

“There’s a line in this song that goes, `I went to the corner just to ease my pain.’ When I was a kid I always thought they were talking about Oakcrest Market, which was a neighborhood store on Cahuenga in Hollywood. We used to say, `I’m bored, I’m not feeling good, I’m going to go down to Oakcrest, get a fudgesicle and read an Archie comic behind the ice cream cooler.’ That’s what the song meant to me back then; that was how you eased your pain. You’d go down to the store and get a Coke. We used to take bottles and cash them in so we could buy candy with them.”

9. “Good Time Charlie’s Got The Blues” (written by Danny O’Keefe)

“This song is about people who can’t escape their own patterns of unsuccessful behavior and create a better life for themselves. In the original song, Charlie is a guy, but to me it’s a female Charlie. We all know those party girls who are past their prime. Everybody’s leaving town, and they’re left behind because they made all the wrong choices or they just don’t want to change. They’re saying, `No, no, no, I just want to party, I want to have a good time, I don’t want to have any responsibilities.’ Sometimes people live so much in the moment, they aren’t aware when life is passing them by.”

10. “Love Has No Pride” (written by Eric Kaz and Libby Titus)

“As a young woman driving around and listening to this song, I heard it as a lesson: Be careful, because you can make mistakes, and you might make that one last mistake that there’s no coming back from. To me the song is asking, `How far do you take it?’ The romantic in me said, `I would do anything. Love would have no pride.’ But there’s a difference between what you think would do and the reality of what you’d actually do. When you’re young, everything is so black and white. But as you get older, everything becomes a lot more gray. You become less convinced of the need to be right.”

11. “Please Come To Boston” (written by Dave Loggins)

“When I first heard this song I thought, `What’s with this girl?’ In my mind she’s got this gorgeous musician boyfriend who’s left Tennessee and said to her, `Hey, I’m up here in Boston. Come up here. You’re an artist too. You can sell your paintings, I’ll play music, and we’ll start our life together.’ And she says, `No, no, you’re coming back to Tennessee.’ Then he gets to Denver and he’s singing, `We’ll move up into the mountains so far that we can’t be found, and throw “I love you” echoes down the canyon’–so not only is he a musician; he’s a romantic too. And she still tells him, `No, I’m not going.’ Then he asks her to come to L.A. because now he’s made it; he’s got a house that looks over the ocean and a view of the city. Here’s this guy saying, `I’ve made it and I still love you, and I want you to come be with me in L.A.’, and she just says `No’ again. I thought to myself, `You’re an idiot, woman.’ But I also felt sorry for the couple in the song, because why can’t they work it out? As I got a little older I realized that maybe she didn’t want to leave her comfort zone. Maybe she didn’t want to test her abilities or talent as a painter. There wasn’t anything keeping her there other than her own insecurities and her own inability to take a risk. At the same time I thought, `Why does the woman have to always follow the guy around? Why couldn’t he just come back and be happy in Tennessee?’ Today the song seems much more complex, more about choices and compromises that you have to make as you get older. I love it because it’s like a tragic love story. It’s about people who love each other but just can’t be together.”

12. “Will You Love Me Tomorrow” (written by Gerry Goffin and Carole King)

This song was so important to me as a young woman, and the lyrics are so universal and timeless. They don’t belong to just one particular phase of life. For a woman of any age, there’s the vulnerability that comes with saying, `Okay, this feels really good and I’m going with it, but I’ve been here before. Is this guy going to be here tomorrow or not?’ I have a lot of friends who are single and they’re still dealing with that experience. `Look, we’re here, we’re in this moment. Will you love me tomorrow?’ Sometimes there isn’t a clear answer.”

13. “Faithless Love” (written by J.D. Souther)

“I first met J.D. Souther in the `70s, when I was working at the Universal Amphitheater. I thought to myself, `Holy crap, you’ve written some of the best songs I’ve ever heard in my life.’ I didn’t understand how he could write poetry that was so visual to me. `I’m standing in a hall of broken dreams.’ The imagery in this song is just so powerful. `The night rolls in like a cold, dark wind’ — we all know that feeling of loneliness. I always thought of it like, `Everything’s fine, everything’s great. But now I’m alone at night in my bed, and I’m scared. I know it’s something in me, so how do I fix it? How did I get here, and how can I change it?’ I love the complexity of emotion in this song and, melodically, it’s just stunning.”

14. “The River” (written by Joni Mitchell)

“I think `River’ is about being conscious of what your limitations are but having no control over them, and how that gets you into trouble. It’s about the moments when you’ve said the wrong thing and then wish you could take it back.

There’s nothing worse than being alone at Christmas, detached from the happiness that everyone else is experiencing, knowing that you’re nowhere near being able to access that happiness. I think we’ve all had moments of feeling disconnected. We’ve all had that feeling of, `I totally blew it, it’s all my fault. I’m not getting that one back. Why didn’t I keep my mouth shut?'”

Madonna “MDNA” Tour Will Have No Album on the Charts

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And that’s it. Madonna’s “MDNA” is gone from the top 50 of any charts as of this week. Hitsdailydouble.com has dropped it out of its top 50. Amazon.com has the physical CD at number 63. All versions of the downloadable album are gone from view. iTunes has it around number 250. Apparently, very few people downloaded the album at all. Madonna, though she likes a youthful outlook, belongs to the class of artists who are not big on the digital side. “MDNA” is now officially gone, three weeks before Madonna begins her international tour in Israel. The only way to have saved “MDNA” would have been to reissue it with something new. But Madonna wouldn’t have much time to rehearse her show and cut new tracks. The tour will go on without a promotional tool or a song on the radio. It’s not the best way to do things, but if Madge features a lot of hits in the show, she’ll be alright. If the tour set list is heavy with songs from “MDNA,” it may be a problem. At least Guy Richie doesn’t have to worry that too many people heard the nasty things Madonna sang about him. As for the tour, Madonna’s website indicates lots of tickets still for sale. But there are many sold out dates, and comments of great enthusiasm from her core fans. If only they’d bought the album. PS amazon is still selling versions of it for five bucks.

Josh Brolin Wanted for Erin Brokovich-Type Movie about Ford Trucks and Firestone

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EXCLUSIVE: The landmark settlement of cases from the Ford-Firestone lawsuits of 2000 is coming to the big screen at last. Originally Michael Douglas had optioned Adam Penneberg’s book, “Tragic Indifference,” with the idea that he’d play maverick attorney Tab Turner. But time has passed, Douglas is older and busy with other projects. The film was originally at Warner Bros., but is now in turnaround. 2929 Productions and Douglas’s company, I am told, are going forward now that they have a great script. They’re hoping Josh Brolin will play Turner, the lawyer who would not stop until he got justice for the victims of the rollover cases–Firestone tires were blowing out and making Ford Explorers rollover. There were several famous victims including Donna Bailey, who is now 51 and completely paralyzed. All the players are hoping to get the film made this year as Bailey’s health is always precarious. The role is Oscar bait for 40 year old actresses–and names mentioned already are Cate Blanchett, Laura Linney, and Nicole Kidman. Douglas is also said to be very keen to get “Tragic Indifference”– currently known as “Bloody Highways”- into production. The movie is a thrilling possibility, along the lines of “Erin Brockovich,” “Michael Clayton,” and “Silkwood.” So far Jonathan Demme’s name has been at the top of the list for potential directors. Meantime, Turner — who hails from Little Rock and lives in San Diego — has been spending his time in Brooklyn Supreme Court negotiating a settlement with the Arab Bank for American Jews killed in explosions in Israel. The CBS documentary unit has been following him around. It’ a great “60 Minutes” piece.

How Old Timer Harry Dean Stanton Steals “The Avengers”

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“The Avengers” : I can’t tell you exactly what happens plot wise, other than Nick Fury calls in his favorite Marvel super heroes to fight something–aliens, I guess. Loki, half brother (or step, not sure) of Thor, is the lurking enemy, played at a higher level than any cartoon character before him by Tom Hiddleston. And frankly, that’s the beauty of Joss Whedon’s blockbuster of a movie. All the actors are top notch. Their characters have been drawn very sharply, with just enough background given to each one that the audience can identify with them whether or not they’ve ever read a Marvel comic.

There are lots of “Easter eggs” too–85 year old Harry Dean Stanton nearly steals the movie as a security guard who stumbles on The Hulk as he falls into a building from space. Stan Lee himself makes Hitchock like appearance toward the end. Veteran actor Robert Clohessy is a perfect New York cop. Gwyneth Paltrow makes a couple of cameos as Pepper Potts, shoeless for reasons unexplained. Clark Gregg has a nice turn as a federal agent.

But the special effect are super- and the 3D really seems to mean something. You really feel like you’re in a comic book. And again, the writing — for this sort of thing–is snappy and fun. Robert Downey Jr as Iron Man gets to quip a lot–asking Thor, “Is this Shakespeare in the Park?” as the super heroes agonize over their lot in life. There are lots of asides from everyone, giving “The Avengers” the same kind of energy that made Sam Raimi’s “Spider Man 2” so much fun.

The movie is sort of organized around Tony Stark/Iron Man (Downey) but he’s not unduly the central figure. All the characters get equal time. Mark Ruffalo does reinvent Bruce Banner aka The Hulk. Chris Evans makes Captain America much more interesting than he was in own movie. Sam Jackson–as Nick Fury–carries off his part as ringleader of The Avengers like it’s “Aliens on a Plane.” Jeremy Renner is going to bring archery back to summer camps this summer (“The Hunger Games,” too). Stellan Skarsgard is just right as a mad scientist.

The audience loved it– loved it–and so did my family. “The Avengers” will top $500 million worldwide today, and for once, it feels right. It’s just good old fashioned entertainment. What a relief!

Exclusive Birthday Pic of Mariah Carey-Nick Cannon Twins

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Here’s a cute photo (click inside) sent by Mariah Carey. Happy Birthday to her twins: “Monroe and Moroccan celebrated their first birthday party with Mommy, Daddy and several close friends at the Plaza Athenee in Paris on April 29. Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon made sure a festive time was had by all. The memorable occasion was complete with custom made French pastries, lots of balloons, toys and confetti.

Mariah is wearing a beautiful J Mendel gown and photo was taken by Bill Boatman.”

Previously:Mariah Carey is in Paris right now celebrating her wedding anniversary with Nick Cannon and the first birthday of her twins. She might as well just stay there. I am told that amfAR, the AIDS research fundraising group, wants her as their big celebrity performer next month in Cannes. Past performers have included an eclectic range from Kylie Minogue to Wyclef Jean, Dita von Teese, and Janet Jackson. (The best one was in 2002 with Elton John and Sam Moore, among others.) Carey’s received the amfAR offer, but so far nothing’s been decided because she’s finishing up a new album and has other commitments. Meanwhile, the Cannes Film Festival is getting wiser about amfAR siphoning off celebrities from the festival on the second Thursday of the festival. This year, Nicole Kidman will premiere at the same time in Lee Daniels’ “The Paperboy.” This means the red carpet at the Palais could be just as busy–or busier than the one up at the Eden Roc in Antibes where amfAR stages its aggressive auction and dinner.

Greed Loses: Golden Globes Put In Their Place by Court

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The Hollywood Foreign Press has lost its lawsuit against Dick Clark Productions. The HFPA–paid over $6 million a year to license its name by NBC–had contended that Dick Clark had no right to negotiate with NBC without them. Today senior US District Judge A. Howard Matz ruled that he disagreed with them. The ruling follows. This is a blow to the HFPA, a greedy group that has suffered numerous scandals over the years. The ruling means The Golden Globes are now in the backseat. Dick Clark Productions can produce the show through 2018, and continue to make deals with NBC as long as the network wants  the  show. The HFPA will have to accept their deals.

In the end, it was just a story of greed. The HFPA consists of about 80 people, many of whom have no credentials and don’t see all the movies every year. In past decades, they were broadcast on cable, then moved to CBS. CBS kicked them off the air during a scandal involving “actress” Pia Zadora, and NBC picked them up. I’ve written over the years about the group’s many crazy stunts, their domineering attitude, and the questionable credits of certain of their members. In the meantime, they’ve used the annual fee they receive from NBC to bankroll their arrogance. The movies they’re supposed to see, and the choices they make, are no different in the end than dozens of other critics’ groups. There’s nothing special about the HFPA. But they’ve managed to turn it into a tax free business.

Now this smug little group is no longer in the drivers’ seat. It’s interesting, too, because their judgment stems from an agreement made by an ex-member, Mirjana Blaricom. She was the head of the HFPA until the current gang forced her out in the mid 90s. She then started the Satellite Awards. It must be a sweet victory for her to see her old friends hung on their petard–and by her design. Bravo.

 

The Real Soul Man Not Happy with TV Land Version

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Sam Moore is not happy. My friend (and one of the subjects of a documentary I helped make 10 years ago) is known throughout the world as the “Original Soul Man.” In 1966, he and Dave Prater, as Sam and Dave, had a massive hit called “Soul Man.” It became the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame legend’s moniker, and keynote song. If Aretha Franklin is the Queen of Soul, and James Brown is the Godfather of Soul, Sam Moore is the Soul Man. That’s it.

Now TVLand is launching a new comedy series called “The Soul Man” starring Cedric the Entertainer. When Moore and his manager wife Joyce caught wind of it, they immediately sent a cease and desist letter through their respected Washington lawyer, Bruce Fein. The Moores are already in litigation with The Weinstein Company over a 2009 movie called “Soul Men.”

The TV Land people assured Fein that “The Soul Man” would not be promoted until both sides at least negotiated some kind of license agreement. But last night “The Soul Man” was featured heavily during “The TVLand Awards.” The show is also being touted on the TVLand website. Fein says he was very surprised. He told me this morning. “I am very disappointed that in the middle of negotiating with TVLand for use of Soul Man as the title of their show–and with the promise of no public advertising until it was done–that they went ahead with a promotional blitz.”

There’s a strong argument here. Sam Moore is 76 years old and “Soul Man” has been his career identity for 40 years. The serious contention here is that  one or two seasons of the new show, with syndication, could make new generations think that Cedric the Entertainer is “the Soul Man.”  Over the years, others have been more respectful. Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi loved Sam & Dave, and based “The Blues Brothers” on the song. Moore was in the movies. Moore even sang a new version of “Soul Man” for the egregious mid ’80s movie starring C. Thomas Howell as a white kid who passed as black to a scholarship. He is commonly referred to by Bruce Springsteen in concert as “the greatest living soul man on the planet.”

Carole King’s Memoir Should Have Been Called “A Difficult Woman”

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The worst interview experience I ever had with a celebrity–and there have been thousands–was with one person I really wanted to like. But in the early 90s, to promote one of her post-success albums, Carole King brought her mother with her to the Paramount Hotel for our lunch. She said, “I figured if I brought my mother, you wouldn’t ask me anything personal.” It was a nightmare. King wouldn’t talk about her Brill Building years or even “Tapestry,” her seminal, watershed album of 1971. She mostly wanted to discuss conservation in Idaho, a subject New Yorkers–this was for the New York Daily News–didn’t much care about. She also indicated that she didn’t care much for Neil Sedaka, her childhood friend and teen songwriting buddy from the Brill era. When the story was published, she fired her publicist, a very sweet woman.

Later, Neil Sedaka told me a story. His adult son had run into Carole on the street and introduced himself. King responded: “Tell your father to stop talking about me in interviews.” Nice.

Now we have a new memoir from King, which I downloaded (publishers don’t send or promote books) for my iPad. After reading “A Natural Woman,” I felt like I needed a Xanax. It made me think about creativity and the people who have it, why geniuses are crazy, and completely self-absorbed. Basically, King marries her childhood sweetheart, Gerry Goffin, and they have tons of hits with music publisher Don Kirshner at the Brill Building. There’s almost no mention of Sedaka, but there’s one interesting section about how she wrote “The Loco Motion” for Little Eva. She has two daughters with Goffin very young–when she was 18 and 20. They move to L.A., he drops acid and loses his mind, she divorces him.

In 1970-71, she meets James Taylor and Lou Adler, records “Tapestry,” has five or six really top charting albums in a row. She marries her bass player, Charles Larkey, and has two more kids. This man must be a saint. Because King drop kicks him, and basically from 1976 through the early 80s relegates him to the parenting of what she calls her “Larkey children.” (The “Goffin daughters” evidently raise themselves.) She moves to Idaho with a homeless psychotic who

 

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abuses her, marries him, and he dies of a cocaine overdose. Then she takes the younger kids, moves further into Idaho, becomes a Mountain Woman, buys a big ranch, marries again, sues the town over an access road, and makes a lot of enemies.  She gets another divorce. (That’s four marriages.) Larkey, the saint, takes care of the kids in L.A. because they don’t want to live in their own private Idaho.

There’s no mention of Carly Simon and little of Joni Mitchell, each of whom were featured with King in a good book by Sheila Weller called “Girls Like Us.” I have no idea why, after 300 pages, or how, Carole King wrote “You’ve Got a Friend” or “Up on the Roof,” two of the best songs of the modern era.  The book should have been called “A Difficult Woman.” She comes across as the kind of person who willfully makes mistakes, and still defends them. There are a couple of anecdotes about Paul McCartney, John Lennon, and Bob Dylan, but they’re not very informative. It’s a shame.

For someone who supposedly writes personal music, there’s not a lot of introspection.  I mean, she became a grandmother at forty four. That’s pretty young. Goffin just disappears (when in fact he’s been very much around for years). What were the consequences of literal laissez faire child raising? (Well, she’s properly proud and surprised that the two younger kids finished college and one got a PhD.) I was very sorry to read that the coke-addicted homeless husband abused her, and for so long. He also stalked her and terrorized her band. That was a shock. But it only ended because the guy OD’d. Even King can’t say why she allowed it to continue.

A few years ago, Peter Asher resurrected King with his friend and client James Taylor. Asher recreated for six performances Taylor and King’s 1971 shows at the Troubador in West Hollywood. There was supposed to be a DVD issued after that, but it took at least two years because King stalled, hemmed and hawed. Then King parlayed that into a tour, documentary and best selling album with Taylor. There’s no mention of Asher having done this. The book just ends quickly, rushed, as if it were all meant to be. So weird. We hold our teen idols up on such a high pedestal. Carole King is immensely talented singer and songwriter. But “Natural Woman” is better left avoided in order to continue enjoying the music.

And on that music note–this is the real dichotomy of Carole King–she’s also released an album of her rare demos. It includes her version of the Monkees’ “Pleasant Valley Sunday” and a bunch of other gems. I’d buy the album and skip the book. That’s the Carole King I want to know.

Tony Award Deadline Arrives, Broadway Season Ends With a Muddle of Shows

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It’s over. The big race from March 1st — when the spring season begins– to April 26th, cut off date for eligibility for the Tony Awards. It ended tonight with a thud. I saw “Leap of Faith”–it’s as bad as the 1992 movie, maybe worse. I skipped “Don’t Dress for Dinner” and “Ghost: The Musical.” The other reviews were bad enough. I really liked “Nice Work If You Can Get It,” and thought the New York Times was unusually harsh and wrong. It’s delightful, and Matthew Broderick is very good in it. As for “Leap of Faith”: they brought in the talented Warren Leight (“Sideman”) to fix a broken script. He did everything he could. He used the paddles, yelled “Clear!” and tried to revive a dead body.

But the show is inert. The songs are mostly torture. The concept is still a very pale rip off of “The Music Man.” Boy, if you saw the most recent production of that show, with Craig Bierko, or watched the classic film with Robert Preston, you’d wonder why anyone would try to make this musical. Taylor Hackford left as director seemingly years ago. He could smell the turkey while it was basting. And while the performers are all fine, it doesn’t matter. “Leap of Faith” will close very, very quickly.

So that’s the bad news. The good news is that there plenty of selections in all categories for awards. The Outer Critics Circle got most of if right. On Friday morning will come the Drama Desk nominations, which are always weird. (They’re the theater equivalent of the National Board of Review.) There are some others, and then the Tony nominations the first week of May.

Now, some of this depends on what’s eligible for each group. Shows like “Venus in Fur,” “Peter and the Starcatcher,” and “Other Desert Cities” had off Broadway runs and were honored in some corners last year. “Once” has a score from a movie, so the score can’t get awards but the show can. “Newsies” has a mixed score of old and new. “Spider Man,” you know about it. I’d like to see Julie Taymor rewarded with a Best Director of an Original Musical nomination for daring to do what she did. And the show turned out to be a hit.

“Death of a Salesman” is the best play revival, and Philip Seymour Hoffman, Andrew Garfield and Mike Nichols are all on their way to awards. I’m crazy about everyone from “Once.” If Stockard Channing (“Desert”) and Nina Arianda (“Venus”) are allowed to be nominated, they should tie. The OCC remembered Tyne Daly from “Master Class,” in which she was superb. In musicals, Audra McDonald is stunning in “Porgy and Bess.” Among actors in musicals, there will be fierce competition among Norm Lewis, Steve Kazee, Jeremy Jordan, and Matthew Broderick. I hope Josh Young is cited for “Jesus Christ Superstar.”

“Leap of Faith” was not the worst show of the year. That honor goes to “Lysistrata Jones” perhaps tied with “On a Clear Day You Can See Forever.” They were each quite painful.

As the season ends, my hat is off to the intrepid Harry Haun of Playbill, who dutifully interviews all these people as if everything, life, depended on it. He is totally objective, just does it, whether the show or the performer is good or bad. He wants everything to succeed, unlike some other people, whose name doesn’t deserve to be reprinted.

Then there’s the other end of the Broadway world: the show crashers. These are weird, highly eccentric, sometimes dangerous looking types who hang around under the marquees on opening nights, begging for tickets. They can’t be photographed because they are like endangered species. When they see a camera, they run. There’s a small, elderly, well dressed woman with gray hair. There’s a very tall,  lanky older guy with a huge head of wavy gray hair. He always wears the same blackish suitish outfit. One of the crashers looks like the son of Professor Irwin Corey, with a big bald spot rimmed by wild, lunatic uncombed locks; he wears glasses. A chubby, middle aged woman, very friendly, always sports a cane. There’s another guy who always wears a knit cap with a cheap suit. There are others; they would make a great documentary. More often than not they get into whatever show or party they want. Interesting: I didn’t see any of them at “Leap of Faith.” Even they knew.