Monday, December 22, 2025
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Spider Man On Broadway Swings As Top Money Maker

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“Spider Man: Turn off the Dark” turns on the money. Last week, “Spider Man”–still in previews–was the number 1 grossing show on Broadway.

The $65 million “Spider Man” –the most expensive Broadway show ever, by far–topped both “Wicked” and “The Lion King” with $1.588 million. It beat “Wicked” by just $58. Both “Spider Man” and “The Lion King” were conceived by Julie Taymor.

You could put an asterisk in and say that Spider Man’s theater is bigger than the one in which “Wicked” plays. But why rob Spidey of this much deserved moment? It’s also playing at 100% capacity.

“Spider Man” opens on February 7th after two delays. Yesterday I heard a whisper of another postponement, but I’m sure it’s not true.

The show has three weeks to make changes–add a much needed ending, and beef up the fun in the relationship between Peter Parker. Spider Man’s alter ego, and Mary Jane.

The ending is the biggest problem–the audience still doesn’t realize the show has concluded. The flourish of a flying Spider Man will instigate a standing ovation.

But what a rebuke to the New York Post’s campaign to kill this show. Box office has just gotten bigger and better. Nicely done. And this week. the New Yorker sends the show up with a clever cartoon cover. That should only add to the publicity.

King’s Speech Gets Royal Lunch; DGA Picks Its Top 5, Snubs “Grit” and “127”

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“The King’s Speech” got a royal lunch yesterday at a fancy shmancy private club on Fifth Avenue yesterday. We were asked not to say which one, for fear the members will be bombarded by outsiders with questions. Suffice to say, it was the real thing. A clue: its name reveals a position you might sit in.

Anyhoo: Director Tom Hooper –who’d moments before heard about his Directors Guild nomination–and stars Colin Firth and Jennifer Ehle were hosted by Harold Evans and Amanda Foreman. CNN’s new chat show host Piers Morgan was joined by Liz Smith, Trudie Styler, Neil Simon and Elaine Joyce, Kim Cattrall, F. Murray Abraham, Al Maysles, Freddie Hancock, Israel Horovitz, Hannah Pakula, etc.

Harry Evans, who’s 83, told the crowd: “I remember the King’s Speech. I mean, I remember the King’s speech.”

So did the several Brits who showed up who are associated with actual royalty. One of the guests, Edwina Sandys, a granddaughter of Winston Churchill and an artist, gave the movie and the discussion–with Foreman moderating Hooper and Firth–a thumb’s up…

The Directors Guild of America issued its five nominations on Monday. Basically, they’ve chosen what will likely be the five Best Films of the year. Their choices: Tom Hooper for “The King’s Speech,” David Fincher for “The Social Network,” Chris Nolan for “Inception,” David O. Russell for “The Fighter,” and Darren Aronofsky for “Black Swan.”

No “Toy Story 3” or “True Grit” or “The Kids Are All Right” or “127 Hours” or “Blue Valentine.” Those are likely the next five, in the Oscars’ top 10.

But DGA nominees normally predict Oscar nominees. And unlike the Golden Globes (haha) there was no mention of “The Tourist” or “Burlesque.”

Nolan might be considered the weakest choice in the DGA group, possibly vulnerable to one of the others replacing him. But frankly, between bending the city over on itself, and those guys floating through the hotel, I think he’s solid. His real Oscar nemesis might turn out to be Ben Affleck.

NY Film Critics Dinner: “Social Network” Writer Has Seen “King’s Speech” Three Times

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And things were going so nicely at the annual New York Film Critics dinner. There were toasts and acceptance speeches. Everyone was so happy. “The Social Network” won Best Picture.

Then “Black Swan” director Darren Aronofsky took the stage to present his cinematographer, Matthew Libatique, with an award. Without flinching he took a shot –verbally– at Armond White, current chairman of the Critics Circle. He was on stage, standing right behind Aronofsky. White didn’t like “Black Swan.” Aronofsky wasn’t going to let it pass. He opened fire.

“Sorry, it was my only chance,” Aronofsky told an audience that included Warren Beatty and Annette Bening, James Toback, Colin Firth, Tom Hooper, Kerry Washington, Mark Rufffalo, David O. Russell, Stanley Tucci, Aaron Sorkin, Lesley Manville, Edward Norton, Lisa Cholodenko, Paul Schrader, and so on.

White retaliated when he regained the mic. “Darren reads me. That’s all I need,” he said. Later, at the end of the evening, White then lashed out at his fellow critics. “At least “Greenberg” didn’t win anything,” he said, referring to Noah Baumbach’s Ben Stiller movie. A resounding “ouch” went through the audience.

Well, at least the NYFCC wasn’t boring. It was a little brutal, always fun, and very intimate. Organized by veteran press rep Jeff Hill–who was surprised when he was presented with a special award –the NYFCC was the kind of evening tonight’s National Board of Review won’t be–authentic.

The best speeches were personal. Michelle Williams, introducing Best Supporting Actor Mark Ruffalo, noted the she and the Ruffalo’s live in the same town upstate. It was at a carpool that Williams spied Ruffalo cleaning a kid’s vomit out of the backseat of his SUV. (Really times have changed. No such speeches were ever made about Henry Fonda or Al Pacino!)

Ruffalo conceded that it was true, and then got emotional thanking his wife for allowing him to be an actor.

During the evening, “Social Network” screenwriter Aaron Sorkin told Firth and Hooper that he’d seen “The King’s Speech” three times. “There are a lot of similarities,” Firth said of the two movies. “They’re both about loneliness,”

Of course King George VI only needed one friend–Lionel Logue. Mark Zuckerberg needs 500 million on Facebook.

Melissa Leo, so good in “The Fighter,” met Annette Bening. Ruffalo got to meet Beatty, who told me his plans for another movie are still forming. “I always took a lot of time,” he told me. We talked politics, and Beatty told me about viewiing the many Oscar contenders on his new big screen home theater.

Bening said she’s done two plays in Los Angeles this year. But she can’t come back to Broadway right now. “My kids are still too young,” she said. “They’re still at the ages where you have to be there for them.” She’s taken Susan Sarandon’s theme–only work in town during the school year.

I sat at a table right at the front with “Animal Kingdom” director David Michod and supporting actress candidate Jacki Weaver. They are fresh from Australia. A year ago at Sundance I told them they’d be at the Oscars. Now Michod won Best First Feature last night. Weaver is up for a bunch of awards. They are shocked, to say the least.

More people told me surprisingly candid things, then added: “Don’t print that.” Or “this isn’t an interview.”

Will Warren be at Friday’s Critics Choice Awards in Los Angeles? Yes. “I do what I’m told.”

Warren Beatty Is In the House and “All Right”

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Warren Beatty is here, he is–as they say–in the house.

Warren is in New York to help wife Annette Bening in her quest for an Academy Award. This is called pulling out the big guns, because Natalie Portman, let’s face it, is pregnant and engaged, and Nicole Kidman has Keith Urban.

Last night, media shy Focus Features threw a dinner for Annette. No press attended because “Extreme Makeover: Home Edition” was on.

The buffet dinner in the parlor room of the Soho House–that’s right, “Kids Are All Right” has only made $20 million at the box office- didn’t pull Heather Graham, who didn’t show up.

But the cast–Annette, Julianne Moore, Mark Ruffalo–plus writer/director Lisa Cholodenko–got to pass the salt to Warren’s best pal James Toback, Oliver Platt, Kyra Sedgwick, Nora Ephron and Nick Pileggi, “Precious” filmmakers Lee Daniels and Geoffrey Fletcher, James Lipton, Peter Riegert, Bob Dishy, documentarian Alex Gibney, Parker Posey, Bob Balaban and Lynn Grossman, Israel Horovitz, Fred Zollo, and “Amadeus” director Milos Forman.

I have no idea what was discussed, so no bon mots. I can only guess that everyone was very witty. What they probably talked about: the shooting in Arizona, the snow, lesbian couples, fracking in New York state, what Lee Daniels is doing since “Precious,” and if Warren is working on a new project. I doubt anyone mentioned Snooki.

This Week: Critics Choice Awards, New York Film Critics, Golden Globes, NBR

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Here comes the big awards week. This is the week when a lot of different groups vie for attention as they hand out movie awards.

None of them are the Academy Awards. Those aren’t handed out until February 27th. The nominations won’t even be read until January 25th.

And this is the reason the Oscars should stay at the end of February. It’s good to let all these other groups get their moments in the sun.

Of course, two of this week’s groups come from credentialed critics; the other two are less, shall we say, serious.

Tonight, the New York Film Critics Circle has a modest ceremony. They bestow Best Picture on “The Social Network,” and gives it also Best Director (David Fincher). The NYFCC really liked “The Kids Are All Right,” so they awarded it Best Actress (Annette Bening), Supporting Actor (Mark Ruffalo), and Screenplay (Lisa Cholodenko, the director also). I loved this movie. It won’t win the Oscar. But this is a nice way of rewarding it.

NYFCC gave Colin Firth the Best Actor prize for his standout performance in “The King’s Speech.” Melissa Leo got Best Supporting Actress for “The Fighter.”

The other critics group with an award show this week is the Critics Choice Award. It’s shown on Friday night on VH-1. Each year this show gets better and better. Last year, Meryl Streep and Sandra Bullock locked lips-for fun- on the stage. The critics, drawn selectively from all over the country, send in their final votes today. No one will know until Friday who won what. I wish Les Moonves would promote this show from VH-1 to CBS. This could be the Tiffany network’s awards jewel in the crown. You can follow them at http://www.vh1.com/shows/events/critics_choice/_2011/tweettracker/

The two other shows this week range from ridiculous to who knows. On Tuesday night, the absolutely ridiculous National Board of Review, a group of fans who pay $600 a year to belong, hold a swanky dinner in Manhattan. The dinner is also around $600 a ticket, the NBR gives some kind of award to every movie so that the studios have to buy seats. This year they went heavily for “The Social Network.” They totally snubbed “True Grit” because it arrived late and they’d already made up their minds. Last year they snubbed “Precious.” They’re basically a joke.

Then, next Sunday, come the Golden Globes on NBC. The 80 member Hollywood Foreign Press Association is a complicated story. I’ll address it in the next day or so. They have an undeniably bad reputation. This year their own publicist mocked them. So did host Ricky Gervais on last year’s show. They gave nominations to two awful movies, “Burlesque” and “The Tourist.” hoping to get Christina Aguilera, Cher, Johnny Depp and Angelina Jolie on their red carpet. We’ll see on Sunday how that plan paid off.

Congresswoman Gifford’s Hollywood Connection to Paltrows

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While everyone is praying for Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords‘ speedy recovery, I can tell you that, yes, she does have a Hollywood connection.

Gabrielle Giffords‘ grandmother and Gwyneth Paltrow‘s late grandfather were brother and sister. That makes Gabrielle’s father, Spencer Giffords, and Gwyneth’s late director-producer father, Bruce Paltrow, first cousins.

Technically, Gabrielle and Gwyneth would be first cousins once removed. Or maybe second cousins.

In any case, it’s quite a family of achievers– a Congresswoman and an Oscar winner — nothing to sneeze at, as they say.

Giffords, like Gwyneth, is half Jewish on her father’s side. She’s also the first Jewish congresswoman from Arizona.

Kennedy Mini-Series Cancelled, Had Already Been Termed “Malicious, Vindictive”

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by Roger Friedman

It shouldn’t come as much of a shock that the History Channel has decided to yank its mini series on the Kennedys. The question is, why did they make it in the first place?

Almost two years ago, when the project was announced by right wing filmmaker Joel Surnow, Kennedy defenders and historians made a pretty clear case against the mini series. They’d seen the script and termed the project a disaster. The whole saga can be found at www.stopkennedysmears.com

Robert Greenwald, a left wing filmmaker, and the man behind the clever anti-Fox News documentary “Outfoxed,” put up an 11 minute video on You Tube with dozens of withering attacks on the Kennedy project.

Surnow, the “Kennedys” producer, is a former Fox News producer and a close friend of the very biased: Roger Ailes and Rush Limbaugh. He also donates money frequently to Republican candidates and causes. It makes you wonder what the History Channel was thinking.

According to those who read the script two years ago, “The Kennedys” was not about the Cuban Missile Crisis, but rather a tabloid screed about John Kennedy‘s sex life. One reader called it “pornographic” in the Greenwald film. In the Greenwald film–which urged viewers to sign a petition to stop the Surnow movie–respected historian Thurston Clarke warns that if the Surnow film is made “it will be heartbreaking.”

It turns out the heartbreak is for the History Channel, and for the actors like Greg Kinnear (who I thought was smarter than this) and Katie Holmes. According to those who read the script, much of it details John Kennedy cheating on First Lady Jackie. The script included a scene of Kennedy and Judith Campbell Exner having sex in a swimming pool.

According to the imdb, other characters in this Kennedy “history” include mobster Sam Giancana and Exner ex lover Frank Sinatra. So this “Kennedys” hails from the Kitty Kelly branch of biography, and not Doris Kearns Goodwin.

The History Channel is part of AETN, a group that includes A&E and Lifetime. It’s termed a joint venture of ABC-Disney, NBC Universal and Hearst– all companies that no doubt had their ears open to complaints from the Kennedy family throughout this process. Reports say that Showtime is now interested in picking up the miniseries. Showtime is part of Viacom and a close cousin to Paramount. It may not be that easy.

Michael Jackson: Estate Files to Evict Squatters, Dr. Murray’s Story Gets Worse

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by Roger Friedman

Here’s a recap of what’s happening with Michael Jackson.

The Jackson estate has finally wised up and filed papers against Randy and Jermaine Jackson’s ex wife, Alejandra.

Alejandra, along with her grown children,  have been living rent free with Katherine Jackson at her Hayvenhurst home in Encino, California for years. But now that Hayvenhurst is part of Michael’s estate, the executors want her family out.

Alejandra, first married to Randy and then to Jermaine, has children with both Jackson brothers. According to many insiders, she feels entitled to live with Mrs. Jackson forever. Michael’s executors feel otherwise. The only people who are supposed to be living in Hayvenhurst are Mrs. Jackson and Michael’s three children.

A court date has been set for March 15th, and that’s when Alejandra can explain to a judge why she won’t leave. Meantime, Alejandra is threatening to “write” (someone will write it for her) a tell-all expose about her life as a double Jackson wife, mother of siblings who are also cousins to each other. She thinks there’s an audience for her story, and a publisher willing to pay millions. My guess is, she’s wrong.

At the same, the preliminary hearing against Dr. Conrad Murray continues. It’s all about numbers: how many phone calls Dr. Murray made after he administered Propofol to Michael, how many vials of potentially dangerous drugs were gound in the house after Michael died. Dr. Murray, prosecutor say, made eleven– 11– phone calls after Michael received what would be his fatal dose of Propofol.

Eleven calls–Dr. Murray, the prosecution has said, abandoned his patient. They are quite right. He abandoned him after giving him a drug no other person in the world receives at home because of its dangers.

Dr. Murray is more likely than not going to stand trial for Michael’s death. And a defense case that Jackson wound up killing himself is going to be laughed right out of court.

Mad Men’s 11 Year Old Sally Draper: “I’m Not Allowed to Watch the Show”

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Yes, “Mad Men” has been renewed for a fifth season–this is not a surprise, folks–and negotiations continue between the show’s creator, Matt Weiner, and AMC.

But the best “Mad Men” news came today at the Hallmark TCA panel. Our Randee Dawn reports from Pasadena that the 11 year old actress who plays Sally Draper, Kiernan Shipka was the funniest one on stage. Shipka is in a Hallmark Channel movie. During questioning, she revealed she’s not allowed to watch  “Mad Men”: “I just focus on the Sally parts. I
know the general storyline, but I’m not allowed to watch the show.”  She also revealed that while she likes Justin Bieber, “I don’t know if I have Bieber fever or anything.”

Here’s Randee Dawn‘s report from the AMC and Hallmark presentation, and other notes:

Hallmark hauled out two forthcoming movies: “Goodnight for Justice” (best understood as Jason Priestley directing Luke Perry in a
fairly standard Western) and “Smooch” (best understood as giving “Mad Men’s” Kiernan Shipka something to do other than pout and rebel).

As for Perry and Priestley, refugees from “Beverly Hills 90210.” they’re happy to be working together, but it does seem to have a doomed quality:
“We’re stuck with each other until death,” said Perry. “We’ve known that for a long time.”

AMC alerted the assembled that “The Walking Dead” will be returning with 13 episodes, more than double the initial order of 6 for the
first “season,” that “Mad Men” will “definitely” be coming back for Season 5 (meanwhile, negotiations continue with Matt Weiner), and
“Breaking Bad” is about to start shooting Season 4.

The network is getting back into Westerns with the series launch of “Hell on Wheels,”
a “post-Civil War revenge story,” while new series “The Killing”
(which follows one single murder investigation for at least 13
episodes – and which may not even be solved by then) looks promising….
Matt Olmstead (“Prison Break”) keeps on topic for A&E with his new
series “Breakout Kings,” in which convicts are enlisted to help track
down fugitives. One nice thing about consistent topics is that
Olmstead is able to bring characters from his “Prison” show onto the
new series: Favorite “Prison” villain T-Bag, played by Robert Knepper,
was announced as a planned guest on the new show.

But, noted EP Nick Santora, “We don’t want it to be a reunion show,” so don’t expect too many more of the criminal element…. Lifetime has announced five pilots
are going to order and will double its slate in 2011 to include four drama series, with 15 original films planned for later this year.

One new series is Heidi Klum’s “Seriously Funny Kids,” which should go
gangbusters unless you’re of the popular belief that Germans are not
terribly humorous. Klum will interview kids for humorous effect and
help prank them lightly; she noted “I don’t think anything like this
has been done before,” clearly unaware of either Art Linkletter or
Bill Cosby,
both of whom made a stab at this same subject matter….

Watch live streaming video from academyawards at livestream.com

Oscar Race: 2 Serious Voters Discuss Their Choices Thus Far

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I happened to sit down with two Academy voters last night–two actors (I’m not giving gender) who are names. They are not A list movie stars, but they are typical of a veteran Oscar voter. Each one has name brand brand acting to their credit. One of them plays character parts in film mostly. The other had a long, wildly successful TV run and is also a member of the DGA. They are people past the age of 65 who look terrific and still work, are still vibrant.

Here is our non scientific discussion.

Each of them loved “The King’s Speech” and “The Social Network.” They cited all the actors from each film. “Basically it’s a toss of the coin,” they agreed. One said: “I loved Jesse Eisenberg.” The other was wild for Colin Firth. “King’s Speech” had the ever so slightest edge in their thinking. “Jeff Bridges for True Grit, maybe.” said one. And Hailee Steinfeld? “Maybe.”

There was disappointment about Ben Affleck and “The Town” not getting more attention. They loved Natalie Portman, but “Black Swan” not so much. Ditto James Franco but not “127 Hours.” They loved — LOVED– “The Fighter.” Each voter cited all the actors from “The Fighter.” Only one had seen “Rabbit Hole” and really liked Nicole Kidman.

Some more thoughts: Annette Bening got a very positive response–simultaneous “yes”es– but “Kids Are All Right” had a lukewarm response. Neither of them had seen “Inception.” They had lots of good things to say about–surprisingly–“Justin Timberlake. He was great being bad.” One of my voters shouted out the name “Gosling!” during our discussion of the Best Actors. They agreed to Ryan Gosling and Michelle Williams were terrific and would be nominated. The film, not so much.

These are two former New Yorkers, by the way, who are here often but live in Los Angeles. They take the voting seriously and don’t pass it off to kids, assistants, maids, or pets.