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Famed Novelist Harry Crews Is Dead at 76

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You’re going to think I am crazy. The other day I was reading Bert Sugar’s obit in the New York Times and a thought flashed in my head. It was because Bert was all about boxing, and I always think of Harry Crews, the great Southern Gothic novelist when I think about boxing. And I actually thought: Harry Crews is next.I don’t know why I thought that, except that Harry–whom I had not talked to in years– was a severe alcoholic who lived a life very hard on himself. I knew he was 20 years or more older than when I’d edited him at Fame magazine, during our short but happy friendship. But I got a feeling, a vibe, something was wrong. And I dismissed it. So now I read that Harry died on Thursday at 76 down in Gainesville, where I left him in 1991. I’m so disappointed that I was right.

Harry–despite being very famous and revered– wrote two pieces for me at Fame. One of them was on Sean Penn. It was excellent. I can’t recall the other. I do know that I sent him to Louisiana in 1990 to interview Walker Percy. He kind of disappeared. It took a while to find him. One day when I called his house in Gainesville, he answered the phone. He said, “Grrr Mmmm uhhhhh.” I said, “Harry, I don’t know what are you saying. Did you see Walker Percy? How did it go? He mumbled something and put a friend on the phone. The friend said, “He went and it was very bad. They started drinking. Harry fell off the wagon. He’s back but he’s a mess.” There was no piece. Walker Percy’s person at the time yelled at me, as I recall, which was bad because I revered Percy and had looked forward to this coup. Oh well. Apparently they spent a spell just drinking til they were blind drunk and got nothing done.

(Addendum: I do remember meeting Harry in 1989 in Louisville for the Humana Festival. They commissioned him to write a play, which was staged. It was very good, but he was not comfortable with it. He walked out of the performance. You could see that he was suffering, watching the actors speak his lines.)

I’m so sorry he’s gone, and that not more people know about him. He was a tortured geius. His memoir, “A Childhood,” is just a must read. “The Knockout Artist,” “The Gospel Singer”– there are many novels, they are all worth reading. In my head I think of him with Barry Hannah, who is also gone. And Walker Percy. But Harry was grittier and closer to the bone. If it weren’t 12:25 am, I’d go look for a letter he wrote me in 1990 saying I was the greatest editor he’d ever had. I was flabbergasted, but he probably wrote to that to all his editors. He was an American original, really important, and from the time we worked together a magnificent friend who I was probably too young to appreciate properly. I just pray he’s being read in Southern Lit classes, and that his importance grows and grows.

Now he’s with so many writers I knew, hung out with and learned from, I hope they’re all together, cooking, fishing, dreaming, drinking: Laurie Colwin, Kurt Vonnegut, Pierre Franey, William Wharton, the magician Harry Blackstone, Jr., David Halberstam, Spalding Gray, Julia Phillips, Robert Parker, and the hilarious Peter Ustinov among them. They made such a difference in my young life.

 

Steven Tyler Says New Aerosmith Album Almost Ready, Announces Tour

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Only in jaded LA would a major rock band hold a press conference during the day at a mall while shoppers and soccer moms did their thing. That’s exactly what Aerosmith did today at The Grove Mall, talking about their 2012 Global Warming North American Tour and forthcoming album to the press and numerous adoring fans. The 18-city trek will begin in Minneapolis on June 16. Cheap Trick will be their opening act. Additional dates will be announced later. Jimmy Kimmel introduced the band (minus guitarist Brad Whitford). LEAH SYDNEY reports from the city where no one presses the gas pedal when the light turns green. (They’re eating, talking, throwing the I Ching, whatever.)

“Aerosmith are literally walking this way,” said Kimmel. Steven Tyler wore a sparkling half buttoned polka dot red shirt and sequined jeans. He said that the band’s 15th studio album, their first in eight years, is almost finished and should be released in roughly three months.  “We’ve been underground for four months,” said Tyler, “doing what we do best. We got two more songs to finish before mixing.”  Some of the new song titles are “Legendary Child’ “Beautiful” and “Out Go the Lights.” Tyler spoke about this year being the band’s 40th birthday and the band’s sometimes contentious history. “Everything you’ve ever read, plus a lot of inside family stuff. Our kids grew up together. We fight all the time.”

Sony Music must be very happy.

When bandmate Joe Perry was asked about the benefits of Tyler being on “American Idol,” Perry quipped, “He gives us free sunglasses.”  Perry then went on to say, “It’s getting warm, it’s going to get hotter. We’re going to actually play some songs off our new record for our fans, along with the old good ones. So we can’t wait to bring this thing home.” Tyler then added, “We’ve been setting fires and putting them out whole career. We like to light fires under peoples’ asses. What better title than ‘Global Warming,’ right? Everyone’s been dancing around the tribal fires of rock and roll forever.” Then in true rock star fashion, Tyler said sincerely, “We will not let you down.”  With that he dramatically walked off the stage. And, luckily, did not fall.

Meantime in the LA Music scene, LEAH reports on our old pal Carole Bayer Sager, one of the great pop songwriters of the last 30 years.

On Tuesday night, Carole was honored at the Grammy Museum in their Clive Davis Theater.  Classy and fun Carole regaled the crowd, which included Carole’s hubby ex-Warner Brothers CEO Bob Daly, her son Christopher Bacharach (with ex husband Burt Bacharach with whom she remains friendly). Songwriter/Producer Bruce Roberts, Carol Chilts, Henry Winker with his wife Stacey and our buddy Alana Stewart.

Manhattan native Carole told the story of how she was just fifteen when she first started writing songs.  She later had a brief stint as a speech teacher, which she loved, while she was teaching she received a $35,000 check from a B-side of a Monkees record.  Carole knew then this was her calling and went back into song

writing full time, garnering numerous awards in her spectacular career.  She told the stories of her working with all the greats, from Burt Bacharach David Foster, Kenny “Babyface Edmonds,” Marvin Hamlisch, Peter Allen, Bruce Roberts and Melissa Manchester.

She playfully told a story of how annoyed she would get by Burt’s legendary obsessive perfectionism, acknowledging that, “Burt is one of kind.  A true genius.”  Burt himself was honored along with Hal David the night before at the Museum. Clive Davis and Dionne Warwick, each still mourning Whitney Houston’s death, attended.

PS Carole’s hits: include “Don’t Cry Out Loud,” “When I Need Love,” “That’s What Friends Are For,” “The Theme from “Arthur,” just a few dozen major hits.

 

News Corp. Promoted Piracy, According to Aussie Report

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According to a report in the Australian Financial News, News Corp–which owns Fox News and the New York Post here in America–had a secret division that promoted piracy. I don’t mean the kind from big ships, with eye patched ghouls yelling, “Yar!” The paper says: “A secret unit within Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation promoted a wave of high-tech piracy in Australia that damaged Austar, Optus and Foxtel at a time when News was moving to take control of the Australian pay TV industry. The piracy cost the Australian pay TV companies up to $50 million a year and helped cripple the finances of Austar, which Foxtel is now in the process of acquiring. A four-year investigation by The Australian Financial Review has revealed a global trail of corporate dirty tricks directed against competitors by a secretive group of former policemen and intelligence officers within News Corp known as Operational Security.’

There are 14,000 emails reprinted on the site as corroborating evidence.

What happened to News Corp’s “zero tolerance policy” for piracy?

Meantime, James Murdoch has resigned from everything to do with his father’s company in the UK. And 20th Century Fox has pulled all the marketing for a summer movie called “Neighborhood Watch,” as I’ve reported on Forbes.com

Read more: http://afr.com/p/business/marketing_media/pay_tv_piracy_hits_news_OV8K5fhBeGawgosSzi52MM

Bobby Brown DUI: Whitney Houston Legacy A Nightmare

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Whitney Houston’s legacy? It’s a nightmare. On Monday afternoon, ex husband Bobby Brown was arrested in Reseda, outside of L.A. for DUI and talking on his cell phone. TMZ says he was “drunk.” He’s the remaining responsible parent for a 19 year old young woman who’s just lost her mother to “chronic” cocaine abuse (causing a heart attack and drowning). The girl, Bobbi Kristina, is living in her mother’s Atlanta condo with a 22 year old man who apparently has his own problems. Nick Gordon and Bobbi Kristina, raised together for the last ten years, are seemingly having some kind of relationship now. Whitney’s sister in law is now her executor (hence brother Gary’s quote that he didn’t care if he was left of out of the will–Pat gets a nice fee anyway).

There’s no word from Cissy Houston, who was conspicuously absent from the Oprah interview, for which Winfrey’s OWN network paid — at least licensing photos and video, as it now known. Someone sold a picture of Whitney, dead, in her coffin, to the National Enquirer. Pat Houston doesn’t care who it is. Is this because she knows who it is? I’ve said in this space on Forbes.com I believe it’s Raffles van Exel, who sticks to Pat Houston with Velcro. Whitney’s estate is a mess, with only a chance of improving now that she’s dead and her albums are selling like crazy every week. No word from cousin Dionne Warwick, who’s in L.A., grieving, but one her own. She lost a sister, the lovely and talented Dee Dee Warwick, to drugs and alcohol. What mess. Such talented people. Such a horror.

It’s not over. Someone sold those pictures to TMZ and the Enquirer. There’s a lot of cover up here. And Bobby Brown could have stepped up to the plate and acted like a father. But that ship sailed today.

Boy, I think of Whitney a year ago January, coming to rehearsal for Clive Davis’s party, stoned out of her gourd. And then the show, the next night, performing with Dionne, so wrecked that she started talking on stage to Clive in the middle of the performance. Or the year before she recorded her final album, when she pulled up a chair at Alicia Keys’s table, and literally begged her for a song (they were not friends, and barely knew each other before Alicia gave her “Million Dollar Bill”). Or the time we waited for Whitney at Lincoln Center to tape an outdoor performanceu for Diane Sawyer and ABC–and waited and waited in the freezing cold for hours.

This is what I wrote, December 9, 2002:

WHITNEY’S WACKY OUTDOOR SHOW: HI, HIGH, AIYY!
Whitney Houston’s outdoor performance yesterday afternoon in the plaza at Lincoln Center was as wacky as anything the troubled singer has come up with yet.

She arrived nearly one hour late, and the show—which Good Morning America taped for broadcast tomorrow—started much later than scheduled.

About 1500 people (this an amateur estimate) filled the plaza, hoping to get a look at Whitney after her calamitous interview with Diane Sawyer on ABC last week. Houston did not disappoint.

The show was supposed to refute the stories that Houston is a complete drug addict, and help promote her new album, “Just Whitney,” which will be released tomorrow in this country. In England, where it came out on November 25, the album finished at a terrifyingly low number 76 in its first week.

I don’t know how “Good Morning America” will edit the performance, but this is what we saw. Houston sang three numbers—“One of those Days” and “Tell Me No,” from her new album, and the Christmas song “Do You Hear What I Hear?” Her voice was impeccable for having to sing in a bitter cold wind. You had to give her credit for trying. She even said, “You know I never sing in cold air.”

On the other hand, when she emerged at last on stage, wearing sunglasses in cloudy skies, a tan suede jacket that was open to reveal a white wool turtleneck and jeans, it was clear that Whitney was high as a kite. She has managed to turn herself into the Jeff Spicoli of soul singers. A woman standing next to me in the VIP section who had fervently defended Houston up to that point, said twice, “She’s high. She’s stoned.”

The amazing thing is, she still sings. In fact, maybe it helps. She was very loose on stage, perhaps too loose. Right before she started “One of those Days,” she said, “I’m shitting my knickahs.” I’m sure ABC will edit that out. Before “Tell Me No,” she made several pleas to the audience to buy the new album. But it was the last song that was strangest, and best.

Houston did not know the words to “Do You Hear What I Hear?” so she read them off a piece of paper that was taped to the stage beneath her feet. Unfortunately, this meant that her head was pointed down quite a lot. A minute or so in, backed by a high school choir, she got lost in the song, and started yelling, “Stop! Stop!” to the choir and the band. She started to slip and almost fell off the stage. “”What if I fell?” she asked rhetorically. “That would be more money for you,” she said to someone in the wings. When “Do You Hear?” started again, Houston nailed it, however.

An announced fourth song, which was supposed to be an older hit, did not materialize. Instead, Sawyer came on stage, and the two of them discussed last Wednesday’s interview. Whitney called Sawyer “my new friend,” seemingly clueless about the damage that was done to her in the interview. Proclaiming at that point that Jesus loved her, Houston launched into an impromptu gospel song that was extremely heartfelt and moving. She said, “Let’s do it the way they do it in the dirty south!” She stopped as suddenly as she started it, though, thanked the audience and got off the stage. That was it.

I asked some of the high school choir kids later why Houston had stopped the Christmas song. “I don’t know,” was the answer, “we were doing fine.”

The thing that’s amazing about Whitney is that she’s a quick study. If you lay out a basic idea and melody, she can turn even a small bit into a whole song. She’s good at what I call show biz faking—she can take one word, repeat it over and over into a crescendo, using her church background as a foundation. That alone is worth the price of admission.

But she seems to have no idea otherwise about what people are saying or thinking about her. Being an hour late, performing stoned, none of that occurs to her might be a problem. On stage, Sawyer asked her what she’s doing next. “Taking a vacation,” Houston said. You had to laugh. Or cry.

Mad Men: Young & Rubicam Racism Was Even More Recent

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“Mad Men” is back, and I’m elated. A two hour opening episode set on June 1, 1966 brought back everyone except Betty Draper–actress January Jones was on maternity leave. Its central kicker involved race. A bunch of young associates at Young & Rubicam dropped water “balloons” on black civil rights protesters on the sidewalk below them. There’s no ready anecdote of such a thing happening–maybe someone from Y&R will remember such a thing.

But in Peter Georgescu’s memoir, “The Source of Success,” he recalls firing a bunch of young associates for racism not in 1966 but more recently–for forwarding around a racist email. Georgescu, the long time head of Y&R, dismissed them reluctantly. “Mad Men” creator Matt Weiner no doubt got inspiration for his scene opener from this story. And it’s a comment about how little things have changed on Madison Avenue from 1966 to the early 2000s. It also provided a subplot with a last minute kicker that worked like a charm.

Otherwise, “Mad Men” is back to business. Megan danced to Sophia Loren’s kitschy hit, “Zoo Bisou Bisou,” which was perfect. (It’s from the 1960 movie “The Millionairess”–the track was produced by a -pre-Beatles George Martin.) I loved Pete’s sadness at having to move to the suburbs. And what the heck is going on with Lane? Jared Harris is getting a meaty story–where is he spending all his money? A couple of things that don’t quite make sense: Roger sees Joan’s baby, but has little reaction to it. He knows he’s the father, doesn’t he? And the uncomfortable moment for Pete and Peggy with the baby in the room–it just seems odd that their history is never addressed.

Nevertheless, “Mad Men” is very welcome in its return. Having his secrets known doesn’t seem to make Don any more agreeable. And how long before Megan’s tensions at the office boil over into something more–like her exit? What verities we did get out of this episode: that a white carpet is hard to keep clean, a metaphor perhaps.

Anyway, “A Little Kiss” was a good way to bring everyone back after a long absence. There will be enough rough road ahead, I’m sure.

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qZ4odDli9O4&feature=player_embedded

Our Scoop: Aretha and Clive Davis Back Together Again

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This was our scoop from Forbes, which found its way uncredited everywhere today:

The Queen of Soul and the Most Famous Music Man in the biz are reuniting. Aretha Franklin confirmed for me last night that she’s made a deal with Clive Davis for a new album. So far it’s all hush hush, but Davis sat right next to Franklin at her swanky 70th birthday party dinner at the Helmsley Park Lane hotel– and they didn’t stop talking all night. Aretha will allegedly make a new album for Davis on RCA, which carries her Arista catalog of hits from the 80s, 90s, and 00s, all made with Davis. An official announcement should come soon. Franklin has never been in better voice.

Among the guests for the four course meal and musical treats were Diane Sawyer, Rev. Al Sharpton, singer Nona Hendryx, Harlem musical theater great Vy Higginsen, BET’s Debra Lee, local newsman Maurice DuBois, and opera great Kathleen Battle. The party was such a hit that Franklin had to cancel tickets for “Porgy and Bess” on Broadway. She’ll see it the next time she’s back in New York. In the meantime, entertainment was provided by choreographer George Faison, who directed two small ballet pieces for the guests with his performers. Then Thelonious Monk competition winner Kris Bowers and his jazz band, with singer Jose James just wowed the crowd–they are phenomenal–and Davis was impressed; he was bopping his head to the music. Franklin was in good form, wearing a silver and black art-Deco short dress, greeting guests, taking pictures, and posing with a modest three tiered cake. She joked: “I wanted to know what 50 felt like.” She re-nicknamed herself  “RiiRii Buttons” after “Benjamin Button,” the character who ages backwards. Franklin has a busy year ahead of her, including being honored at the Essence Jazz Festival on July 8th in New Orleans.

By the way, contrary to reports, Franklin has been in close touch with Whitney Houston‘s mother, Cissy. They are friends for almost fifty years. Says Aretha: “She had good days and bad days. It’s hard.”

Today–Sunday March 25th–is the Queen of Soul’s actual birthday. Put on one of her albums and dance! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kaUyjtbRnRo

photo c2012 Ann Lawlor

See Madonna Actually Sing A Cappella (Video) in Jimmy Fallon Interview

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Madonna can sing. Who knew? After all the years of processed recordings and pre-recorded concerts, Madonna can carry a tune. At least a little bit of one. In the Facebook interview, Madonna is prodded by Jimmy Fallon. At around 11:00 in the interview–which you can in our video player at the bottom of this home page– she sings a few notes from “Borderline,” her 1985 hit. It’s quite amazing. The Facebook interview is short — just 24 minutes and 13 seconds– even thought Madonna keeps asking to make it longer. I thought she was charming and honest. Fallon brought out the best in her, that’s for sure. She said her new show would be “violent.” She also said her favorite new song from her “MDNA” album was “Gang Bang.” Fashionwise, she explained that she’d cut the feet off Adidas socks to make arm warmers. She looked great, and seemed relaxed. She wasn’t nasty, didn’t curse, said nothing bad about Guy Ritchie, didn’t discuss her debacle in Africa or Kabbalah. What more could you want? Madonna said if she had three wishes, they’d be: to give all the money spent of defense for education; to make sure gay marriage was legal; and that none of her videos would be banned. Jimmy Fallon continues to hit home runs. One day soon he’ll have the “Tonight Show.” It’s as if he’s channeling Jack Paar, Steve Allen and a little Johnny Carson. Bravo!

Happy 70th Birthday Aretha Franklin– RESPECT!

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The Queen of Soul, Miss Aretha Franklin, turns 70 years young tomorrow, Sunday, March 25th. Tonight she’s celebrating with an all star party in New York, followed by taking a few friends to a Broadway musical. I’ll tell you all about it tomorrow after the festivities are over. But 70 years–what an amazing life the gifted singer, performer, and writer has had. From her early days at Columbia Records to her halcyon recordings with the Atlantic crew–Jerry Wexler, Tom Dowd, Arif Mardin and Ahmet Ertegun. Her four CD box set, “Queen of Soul,'” tells that story. Then she went on to another successful chapter with Clive Davis Arista Records, with hits like “Freeway of Love” and “Jump to It.” Aretha marched with Dr. Martin Luther King, has sung for all the presidents, topping off with her performance at Barack Obama’s inauguration. In her hometown of Detroit she’s known for her generosity, giving annual gospel shows at her father’s church. This past year she released a  new record, “A Woman Falling Out of Love,” and recorded a duet with Tony Bennett. She’s also giving the best shows she’s done in years. A great mother, friend, and icon. Happy Birthday, Aretha. The best is yet to come!

Laura Nyro’s Son Not Invited to Rock Hall Induction

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Exclusive: Laura Nyro was one of our great singer songwriters–a legend. “Stoned Soul Picnic,” “Eli’s Coming,” and “And When I Die” were just three of her many hits. She’s finally been voted into the Rock and Roll Fame. But the foundation, which operates in New York, has refused to invite her only son (actually, only child)  period to the Cleveland induction ceremony. Gil Bianchini lives in New York, and is a singer-rapper-musician. He is Nyro’s sole heir. But Nyro’s estate fell into the hands of a non relative,a woman named Patti DiLauria, years ago. Even though DiLauria had a tenuous connection to Nyro, she is the executor. So the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is flying her out and putting her up. She will receive Nyro’s award. Bianchini, after many protests from his lawyers, was allowed this morning to purchase two tickets for $100 apiece to the Cleveland ceremony. They’re in the nosebleed section, with the public, far from the other stars and inductees.

“They’re not even on the floor,” Bianchini tells me. He has no idea how he’ll get to Cleveland yet or where he’ll stay, Or how he’ll be treated. He says he hasn’t seen DiLauria for years.

According to his lawyers and to Bianchini, DiLauria refuses to turn over Nyro’s personal effects to him. Instead, she’s offered to donate some of them to the Hall of Fame museum in Cleveland. Nyro died in 1997 at age 49, leaving a then teenage Gil in the care of her lover, Maria Desiderio. But Desiderio died the next year, also of cancer, and left the estate in control of her friend, Patti DiLauria. DiLauria, according to Gil and his lawyers, has mostly ignored his existence. “She’s tried to disinherit me,” Gil says. He’d like to get back some of his mother’s notebooks and other personal things to give to his children. He has three– a little boy, and newish twin daughters, one of whom he named Laura.

The RRHOF has an uncanny ability to do the wrong whenever possible.
Laura Nyro, c. 1968

Laura Nyro, c. 1968 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

In the past, they’ve charged inductees for tickets to their ceremonies. They’ve rarely honored the wishes of family members. Joel Peresman, who runs the foundation and earns almost a half million dollars a year, told me it was “a complicated” situation with Laura Nyro and that he’d discuss it with his committee.

DiLauria tells me that it wasn’t up to her to invite Bianchini, and that the estate has been closed for some time. She said: “I didn’t know he [Gil] wanted his mother’s possessions.” She told she’s been considering giving the stuff to the RRHOF. Is the foundation flying her out and buying her tickets? “They’re a gift from a friend,” is all she would say.

The RRHOF is mostly run by Rolling Stone publisher Jann Wenner, who staffs the nominating committee with friends and former employees. Last year he tried to change the eligibility period from 25 to 20 years to speed up the induction of more c0ntemporary groups. A few years ago he tossed out a ballot on which the Dave Clark Five had been voted in by the membership, replacing them with Grandmaster Flash. I wrote about it, and subsequently the DF5 was inducted the next year. But by then the group’s leader, Mike Smith, was dead.

At the Cleveland ceremony, Bette Midler will perform a medley of Nyro’s songs that could also include “Wedding Bell Blues,” “Stoney End,” “Sweet Blindness,” “Blowin’ Away,” and “Up on the Roof.” The latter song was written by Carole King and Gerry Goffin, but it was Nyro’s biggest hit and possibly the all time best version of it.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RVYqR0bnoqQ

Spike Lee Producing Movie by Hedge Fund Manager Ray Dalio’s Son

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Remember Ray Dalio? The man who runs the $80 billion Bridgewater Hedge Fund was recently profiled in Forbes. And I told you that Dalio is also a fan of Jennifer Lopez–he funds her charity–and a heavy contributor to director David Lynch’s Transcendental Meditation charity. (And you thought his mantra was just ‘money, money money’.)

Now Dalio’s son, Paul, a TV producer at the David Lynch Foundation, is now getting ready to make his debut as a  feature director with a film called “Mania Days.” And the producer of the film is, of all people, Spike Lee. ‘Producer’ is not executive producer–Spike isn’t coming up with the money. But according to a production sheet that went out on Friday, Spike is going to be overseeing Dalio’s film on a hands-on basis, which he rarely does for films other than his own. Dalio, like Lee, is a graduate of the NYU Film School.

Dalio wrote and directed the film about a manic depressive rapper who gets involved with a manic depressive poet in a passionate affair that results in a pregnancy. There’s no word on who’s financing “Mania Days,” but all things considered, it shouldn’t be hard to find the money. His mom is loaded, too–she’s a direct descendant of the Vanderbilt-Whitney families, making Paul a cousin, by the way, of Anderson Cooper, son of Gloria Vanderbilt.

Paul Dalio’s previous credits include  a short film called “The Order” about  “Sam, a major driver behind economic policy, devises a plan to get the country out of a depression by harnessing the power behind people’s desires for conflict.” He also co-wrote a feature called “Faith, Love and Whiskey,” that was shot in Bulgaria and shown in January at the alternative Slamdance Film Festival. In February, Dalio married the director-star of the film, Kristina Nikolova.