Saturday, December 20, 2025
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Susan Boyle: Les Miz Writer OK That She Took Out a Verse of His Song

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One person missing from the festivities at Sunday’s 25th anniversary performances of “Les Miserables” in London: Susan Boyle.

The singer, who was launched on the show “Britain’s Got Talent,” is nevertheless incredibly popular with the people who made “Les Miserables.” Her recording of “I Dreamed a Dream,” they say, has revived the show with a new generation.

Show and song lyricist Herbert Kretzmer told me last night at the after party at Indigo: “I love her. I wish there were a hundred more like her!” Kretzmer is awaiting his first royalty statement since Boyle made “I Dreamed a Dream” an international hit last year. He told me that the song only worked because of Boyle’s personal life story, and how she became identified with dreaming the dream.

One thing Boyle fans may or may not know: she eliminated a verse from the song for her record. Kretzmer said: “The verse that goes, He slept a summer by my side’ didn’t seem appropriate for a woman of her, uh, age,” he noted.

Boyle is equally loved by show producer Cameron Mackintosh and composer Alain Boublil. “She completely revived interest in the show,” Mackintosh observed.

Boyle’s fine; but for my money, Lea Salonga’s version of the song, which she sang in the blockbuster show last night at the O2, is far superior, richer, and sung with texture and grace. Check it out on the DVD and see what I mean.

And note to Lou Reed: see how happy they all are? Once the money comes rolling in from Boyle’s cover of your “Perfect Day,” you’ll be a new man. Kretzmer, apparently, has “several” homes. Dream that dream!

Nick Jonas, Unlikely “Les Miz” Star at 25th Anniversary

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Nick Jonas, teen pop sensation, was the unlikely draw at producer Cameron Mackintosh’s 25th anniversary “Les Miserables” extravaganza Sunday night in London.

Mackintosh put on two shows Sunday–one in the afternoon and the big one in the evening. He filled the O2 Arena twice in one day with “Les Miz” fans and gave them a superstar concert version of the show followed by a finale featuring knock out performances from the original 1985 cast.

Lea Salonga and Alfie Boe — opera star turned overnight musical theater sensation–headlined the spectacular event. Indeed, Boe was such a hit Sunday night that he received a standing ovation in the middle of the show as he finished the song “Bring Him Home.” Later even Mackintosh said that in that 25 years no one had received a standing ovation during the show. It was a first.

But the big draw seemed to be 18 year old Nick Jonas as Marius, the star crossed lover of the show’s heroine, Cosette. One third of the pop trio the Jonas Brothers, Nick has to be given kudos for doing a run in the West End as Marius and then jumping in with last night’s all star cast. His voice is not yet on a par with the musical and opera stars around him, but he gave it his all.

After the show, Nick said that even his brothers had been surprised when they saw him do the show. And the demands of this kind of singing, he said, had improved his pop singing. He’ll find out soon when the brothers go on a tour of South America.

PS Original director of “Les Miz,” Trevor Nunn, was a no-show on Sunday night. They say that he and McKintosh are feuding–undoubtedly over money. Sources say Nunn declined his invite. He was the only missing member of the original team.

Ian McKellen Waiting for “Hobbit” Papers

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Sir Ian McKellen was one of the many celebs at the “Les Miz” 25th anniversary show on Sunday night at London’s O2 Arena.

Just finished with a stage production of “Waiting for Godot,” Sir Ian is now Waiting for Peter Jackson. He’s supposed to appear in Jackson’s “Hobbit” movie, and is hopeful that the lawyers involved will have papers for him to sign soon so he can reprise the pivotal role of Gandalf.

“It’s still a matter of MGM and Warner Bros. sorting things out, but I’m told they’re close.”

Sir Ian also told me that he’s never heard a word from anyone about the upcoming reboot of “X Men.” McKellen has played Magneto in the first three films.

“The last I heard, nothing was happening. Then I read about the new production.” Likewise, he hasn’t heard about the new “Wolverine” or anything new from the Marvel-Fox productions.

Sir Ian was busting with pride about “Les Miz” and the fantastic 25th anniversary show put on Sunday night by Cameron Mackintosh. “And it’s British!” he declared. “Americans aren’t the only ones who can do musicals.”

Sting Caps 59th Birthday with Landmark London Show

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Multi colored party balloons rained down on rock star Sting Saturday night in London’s famed Royal Albert Hall as he celebrated his 59th birthday. It was the second of two sold out shows in two days at the famed music hall.

At first he didn’t look too happy—after all, 59 is a number, and the forever leader of the Police could easily pass for a decade younger. But he took it in stride, with guests in the jam packed audience including wife Trudie Styler, his two sisters, director Terry Gilliam, and British actor/author Stephen Fry all rocking out.

Later, the consummate musician said of being enshrouded in the surprise: “I was trying to sing, after all. I had a song to do!” He protested too much, I think. He didn’t know what was coming, but said his faithful road manager, Billy Francis, “had had a look on his face all day. I knew he was up to something.”

By the end of the song he was playing, “She’s Too Good to Me,” Sting gave in to the mischief as the balloons piled up around him.

I’d caught up with Sting’s classically orchestrated show on Thursday in Paris, where the audience – again, sold out to the rafters in the Bercy theater—stamped their feet like thunder to show their unanimous approval of the two hour set that takes a couple dozen of Sting’s well known songs and reimagines them in pop-classic settings.

In front of a French audience, Sting—who can often seem school teacher serious on stage—connected, and the crowd loved him. He belly danced to “Desert Rose” and two stepped with his band through the just-added “Cowboy Song.” During emotional numbers like “When We Dance” and “Why Should I Cry for You” his passion resonated with the audience.

In London, where performing at the Royal Albert is always a milestone, two sold out nights is quite a feat. Saturday night’s show was extra special. At the start, Sting told the crowd: “It’s my 59th birthday, I’m starting my 60th year.” Many in the audience were young enough to be his children’s ages. Sting is either at the low end age wise of the classic rock star generation, or an elder statesman to the New Wave crowd. It just depends on how you look at it. For a lot of his audience, it’s seeing a rock “artist” at work for the first time after daily exposure to pre-packaged commercialism.

The way Sting looks at it, he’s a kid. “I love this show,” he told me a couple of times over the Paris to London period. “I could do it forever.” And you can see why. This huge catalog of songs is so well constructed that its transformation to the symphonic seems natural. Unlike other rockers who’ve tried to “mellow out” their music as they’ve aged, Sting’s transit in this direction comes off as ebullient and cool.

He not only looks good, but he sounds like a million bucks, too. At the Royal Albert, I had a seat with an unusual angle toward the stage, just above and to the side of the singer’s microphone. Sting is by himself on that spot, sort of home plate, where there’s no cheat sheet for lyrics, no augmentation for his vocals other than his beautiful, soulfully voiced back up singer, Jo Lawry. He’s out there on his own, which is sort of quaint in the era of Auto Tune and computerized gimmicks.

After Saturday’s show, a few friends and family made it through a drenching rain across London to the narrow basement club Bungalow 8. Sting’s two sisters, Angela and Anita, and Trudie’s sister, Heather, were among the guests sprinkled through a room of well wishers. Fry—a large presence in the small room– commandeered the bar area and helped reach drinks over the heads of models and other Bungalow types. A promised “stripper” turned out to be an athletic pole dancer, which was maybe a sign of the times.

Another sign: while Sting may be 59, his 20 year old daughter with Styler, Coco Sumner, has taken London by storm. Following in the footsteps of dad and older brother Joe (whose group Fiction Plane played Paris a couple of nights before Sting), Coco has her first big hit in the charts here with “In Spirit Golden.” On the train from Paris to London, a proud papa played it for me from his IPad, and said: “That’s the best thing I’ve heard in two years.”

James Franco Goes into Business with Dave Eggers

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Here’s today’s James Franco business update.

Yesterday it was anounced that he’s optioned a book called “The Adderall Diaries,” which he may produce and star in.

Today’s news, exclusive here: Franco has sold all his short films to writer Dave Eggers’s DVD series for McSweeneys called Wholphin.

McSweeneys is a cult literary magazine and website run by Eggers, who’s also a cult writer and author of a couple of bestsellers. (“Hearbreaking Work of Staggering Genius.”) Think of the McSweeneys world as the anti-New Yorker for people who think Brooklyn is cool. It’s also for people who use the word ‘dude’ a lot.

Eggers is a cool dude who runs several programs out of McSweeneys including a series to help schoolkids learn to read. So Franco is doing a documentary about that program, which McSweeneys will then release along with all of Franco’s short films and documentaries–except of the course his “Saturday Night Live” documentary, which was sold to Oscilloscope.

Meanwhile. Franco’s book of short stories, called “Palo Alto,” and published by Scribners this month, is getting very positive reviews from the book trade. And while the snarky blogs are probably gunning for it, “Palo Alto” is indeed a serious and well wrought group of short stories that cannot be glibly dismissed as the work of a dilettante movie star.

“Palo Alto” contains a bunch of loosely linked stories about adolescents–ages 13 to 17–trapped in a adult-less world of violence, sex, and alcohol. One story in particular is sure to get some attention as it focuses on a gang rape of a young girl by several boys and sodomy with vegetables.

Indeed there is a lot of teenage sex here, and plenty of violence and drug taking to go with it. But this is no “Less than Zero.” Franco is not celebrating these things as Brett Easton Ellis did. Under a sheen of apathy, there’s a lot of pain. Franco creates a kind of suburban underworld that is absolutely riveting. “Palo Alto” is unforgettable. And you certainly won’t associate it with Silicon Valley billionaires after reading these stories.

Tony Curtis, 85, Had the Sweet Smell of Success

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Reports this morning that Tony Curtis, the great actor and father of Jamie Lee, has died at age 85.

It seems funny that Tony’s died in the same week pretty much as Eddie Fisher. They were the hottest stars circa 1960. None was bigger. The partying, the girlfriends and wives, all of it. What a time they had.

When Tony Curtis married Janet Leigh, it was like when Madonna married Sean Penn. Chaos. My friend, the late John Springer, was their publicist. He used to tell us how he created diversions that day for the press so they wouldn’t catch on, and John managed to get the couple hitched in the suburbs.

The couple was married from 1951 to 1962, during which Leigh made “Psycho” and became a superstar. Curtis made his best films during that time–“Some Like it Hot,” “Sweet Smell of Success,” and “The Defiant Ones.” He also, he admitted, cheated on Leigh a lot. He wrote recently that he had a fling with Marilyn Monroe. But from the Curtis-Leigh marriage came actress Jamie Lee and her sister Kelly.

In recent years, Curtis had been a regular at Spago for lunch, where he sat in the table next to Sidney Poitier, his “Defiant Ones” co-star. They were real Hollywood.

Curtis made lots of other films over the years, but my favorite–and so many people’s–is “Sweet Smell.” As Sidney Falco, he was indelible. There are few performances this good on film. May he rest in peace.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXULG-UKVq8

Warren and Annette: The Kids Are All Right

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I keep hearing and reading about Warren Beatty and Annette Bening. According to “friends” and “sources,” the couple is on the verge of breaking up after two decades and four kids. The ostensible reason: the gender problems of eldest child Kathlyn who, these friends say, is going to have a sex change operation any minute.

This week two people who don’t know each other swore to me this was all about to explode. So I asked an actual friend of the couple. This is what he had to say.

“I don’t believe it for a minute. They are a happy couple. They have four children, not just one. I can’t see them ever parting.”

Now, no one really knows what goes on in a marriage. Anything is possible. But I tend to agree with this assessment.

True, Annette has shied away from doing a lot of press this year even with two movies, “The Kids Are All Right,” and “Mother and Child” putting her in the awards race. But just because you don’t want to be asked questions doesn’t mean the thesis behind them is true. Maybe Annette just doesn’t want to deal with it.

My source, who knows the couple well, also says it seems unlikely that Kathlyn is really considering a sex change operation. Even if she’s asking people to call her “Stephen Ira”–as has been reported–that doesn’t mean she’s going under the knife.

“Knowing Kathryn, this could just be her, being provocative. She’s very bright and very articulate.”

Again, life in a fishbowl. But Warren Beatty, this person points out, has wisely never addressed any rumors about his personal life in over 50 years in Hollywood. He’s not going to start now. Annette has surely learned from him.

As for Ms. Bening: I expect she will be nominated for Best Actres in “The Kids Are All Right,” with co-star Julianne Moore in Supporting Actress, and the movie in Best Picture. It’s a great movie and deserved to make more than $20 million at the box office.

Other potential Best Actresses: Helen Mirren, Helena Bonham Carter, Patricia Clarkson, Nicole Kidman, Michelle Williams, Freida Pinto.

And that’s just for starters. (I’m sure to get emails from a dozen publicists tomorrow with their ideas.)

My other prediction: Warren and Annette will stay classy, and keep mum.

Mariah’s Last Stand: On Flats

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A little more on Mariah Carey’s humorous fall on stage in Singapore.

Apparently she twisted her ankle in those high fashion boots. A friend told her she should have packed more sensible shoes. Mariah’s response: “I don’t have any!”

Now Mariah’s publicist, Cindi Berger, is sending her flats via Federal Express.

But still no one is saying anything about Mariah’s much rumored pregnancy. There’s always a chance that she is not pregnant, that her larger size is due to the process of trying to get pregnant–steroids, etc. What way to live, in a fishbowl. You wonder sometimes how people can take being observed and commented on constantly.

One thing about Mariah: she has a sense of humor. And to one commenter who wrote in about her voice: on the You Tube clips, to me, Mariah sounds just fine.

I know there are Madonna v. Mariah fanatics who want to start something but really: no one ever accused Madonna of being a great singer. Madonna has always had the abilities of a great showman and producer. She’s the Flo Ziegfeld of our time.

Sally Menke, Quentin Tarantino’s Film Editor, Dies in Accident

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Sally Menke died overnight in Los Angeles at age 56. She apparently went hiking in Griffith Park with her dog in the crushing heat, and was found hours later.

Sally edited all of Quentin Tarantino‘s films, which quite an achievement. If you’d seen “Inglourious Basterds” at Cannes, you’d know I mean it. At the AmFAR dinner that year, Sally sat next to me and told me all about what was left on the cutting room floor and what she still wanted to do to make the film better. In the next two months, before “Basterds” was released, she turned it into a crowd pleaser. This was no small task.

Her death is a tragedy and a real shame. I just think of Pam Grier coming into that hallway in “Jackie Brown” as Bloodstone’s “Natural High” starts to play. It gives me goose bumps. So cool. Thanks Sally.

Rock Hall Nominations: Neil Diamond, Maybe; No to Elton’s Pleas for Leon Russell

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The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame nominations are in.

Sir Elton John was totally snubbed in his quest to get Leon Russell into the Rock Hall. After they win some Grammys in February, Elton and Leon should schedule a show in New York the same day as the Rock Hall show. It will sell out in minutes.

A handful of names haven’t been on the list before: Neil Diamond, Bon Jovi, Donovan, Alice Cooper, and Dr. John are all new.

From ballots gone by: Tom Waits, Beastie Boys, Chic, J. Geils Band, Darlene Love, Lauro Nyro, Donna Summer, LL Cool J, Joe Tex and Chuck Willis.

Who really deserves it from these choices: Neil Diamond, Chuck Willis, Darlene Love, Laura Nyro, Joe Tex, Donovan, Alice Cooper. Bon Jovi would make it a great night and a contemporary touch. They’re a great bar band, and survivors.

Not rock, and it’s getting ridiculous already: Donna Summer. LL Cool J, Beastie Boys.

‘Still missing: KISS, Chicago. the Moody Blues, Mary Wells, Billy Preston, etc.

PS As we know, Joel Peresman is paid just under $400,000 a year to organize this list for the Rock Hall Foundation. Also on the group’s 2009 federal tax filing: $25,000 spent on music scholarship, nothing listed for indigent or needy musicians, and between $10 mil-$13 mil in assets. Good job!