Saturday, December 20, 2025
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“Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale” Has Biggest Preview Night of the Three Post-Series Movies, Looks at $17 Mil Weekend

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“Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale” opened in royal style last night.

The last of the trio of films post-TV series had the best preview night of the three. “DAGF” brought in $2.6 million.

That’s more than double the prior installment, in 2022. And $500,000 more than the original “DA” film in 2019.

All signs point to a pretty swell weekend, with a possible $17 million take.

The new film is creator Julian Fellowes’ piece de resistance, and Focus Features knows it. They threw him and the cast an old fashioned premiere Monday night with a screening at Jazz at Lincoln Center followed by a lavish party at the NY Public Library.

You always know the studio means business if they take over the Library, by the way.

Fellowes was there, eating, meeting, and greeting. He’d never met Tony nominee Kristine Nielsen, who plays Mrs. Bauer on his HBO hit, “The Gilded Age,” and was thrilled when she came to say hello.

Other “Gilded Age” cast included Christine Baranski, aka Aunt Agnes, who came over from a fundraiser for the American Theater Wing.

There was plenty of “Downton Cast” on hand to celebrate including director Simon Curtis and his wife, Elizabeth McGovern, aka Lady Grantham, as well as Laura Carmichael (Edith), Hugh Bonneville (Lord Grantham), Michelle Dockery (Mary), Alessandro Nivola (he plays a sexy scoundrel), Paul Giammatti (Lady Grantham’s sad sack brother from America), Kevin Doyle (Mr. Moseley), and so on.

At the screening, Curtis and Fellowes gave a special shout out to Bob Balaban, who got all this started. In 1995 he went to famous director Robert Altman with the idea for what became “Gosford Park,” which he and Fellowes wrote and was a smash hit. “Downton” is really the TV version. So all kudos to Balaban, who was there with wife Lynn Grossman.

Fellowes has written every word of “Downton.” With “Gilded Age,” he gets ‘final pass’ on the scripts. He told me he’s completely stunned about how “Gilded Age” has taken off. No one was sure it would happen. In “Downton” Mr. Moseley — who’s now a screenwriter — makes several inside jokes about writers and actors, who’s most important, and so on. It was ironic, then, that Fellowes and Baranski disagree about the imperious Aunt Agnes — he thinks she does things for the right reasons. Her portrayer is a lot harder on her. Interesting.

After 16 years, I will really miss all these people. The “Downton” crowd was the nicest — except for “The Sopranos” — we ever dealt with. Every one of them was a pleasure to interview and review. But at least they’ve given us this one, last great send off.

PS When you see “The Grand Finale” this weekend, bring tissues. The ending deserves a whole box!

“SNL” Exit: Ego Nwodim Says She’s Out After 7 Years: “The hardest part of leaving a party is knowing when to say goodbye”

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“SNL” has lost another key player.

The great Ego Nwodim is out after seven years. Nwodim joins Heidi Gardner, Michael Longfellow, Emil Wakim, and Devon Walker who’ve either left or been let go by Lorne Michaels this month.

She wrote on Instagram: “The hardest part of leaving a party is knowing when to say goodbye”

She thanked Lorne Michaels, as well.

Nwodim’s seven year contract was up, and I guess renegotiation did not go well.

She’s a star, turning everything she did into magic. Her Dionne Warwick talk show was one of the great sketches of the last few years.

On the closing Weekend Update last May she went balls out in a performance that should have earned her an Emmy.

Nwodim’s exit is bad also because she’s a black woman, something “SNL” does not specialize in. She’s leaving several voids at once. But let’s hope we see her again soon in new triumphs.

Charlie Kirk Cash In Begins: Right Wing Singer Tom MacDonald Releases “Charlie” Hours After Activist’s Assassination

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Right wing singer and Canadian white rapper Tom MacDonald didn’t waste any time exploiting Charlie Kirk’s death.

MacDonald — who issues MAGA recordings every few months unknown to the mainstream — has released a digital single called “Charlie” that blames “woke people” for the podcaster’s death. (I’m actually surprised he didn’t call the record “Captain Kirk.” Missed opp!)

MacDonald has no idea who killed Kirk but he was willing to write any lyrics if he could make a buck off what’s happened.

On the video McDonald writes: “All proceeds to be donated,” but he doesn’t say to whom. Kirk’s lawyers should get on that one fast.

What happens when the killer doesn’t fit McDonald’s description? Well, never mind!

PS Get a load of this guy. He is #MAGA from tip to toe. Even from Canada. They have loonies, too. Yeesh.

Charlie Kirk Death A Boon For Donald Trump Jr’s Vanity Book Company: Three of Them Are On Amazon’s Top 10 Including One That Sells for $49

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EXCLUSIVE Charlie Kirk’s tragic killing turns out to be an unexpected windfall for Donald Trump Jr.

Junior and Trump Sr. lackey Sergio Gor own a right wing book company called Winning Team Publishing. They own the rights to Kirk’s books.

Now three of those books have shot to the amazon top 10 in the aftermath of Wednesday’s horror.

“The College Scam: How America’s Universities Are Bankrupting and Brainwashing Away the Future of America’s Youth ” is number 3 in overall bestsellers, in a paperback edition. It sells for $16.64. Easy peazy. If you want your kid to be totally illiterate and removed from reality, this is the book for you.

At number 5 comes “Right Wing Revolution,” which was published by Winning Team in 2022.


“Right Wing Revolution,” subtitled “How to Beat the Woke and Save the West,” is only available on amazon in collectible editions, whatever that means, starting at a formidable $49.95. Prices run up to a stunning $350 per book. (Buy food and gas first, people, and toothpaste.) Advice: on the Winning Team website, you can get it for 19.99.

At number 7 comes a Kirk book not set for publication until December 9th. That’s “Stop, in the Name of God: Why Honoring the Sabbath Will Transform Your Life.” List price is $29.99, which is a little high but in keeping with books these days.

With Kirk’s death pumping interest in his writings, Trump Jr. turns out to be a clever investor. Winning Team — created when Trump Jr couldn’t find a publisher for his own books — also publishes books by his father, with signed versions coming to a shocking $999.99. It’s unclear if anyone reads any of this stuff or these are just considered MAGA souvenirs.

Winning Team also offers literary refreshments from Judge Jeanine Pirro, Kari Lake, and wordsmith Marjorie Taylor Greene. I am serious.

Are there more writings that Trump Jr can profit from? You know there must be potential collections of speeches, and when she’s ready, an inevitable book by his grieving wife.

Superstars Earth Wind & Fire Getting a Live Two Hour Special on the 21st Day of September, of Course, on CBS, Plus Cyndi Lauper Show Coming

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Do you remember the 21st day of September?

You will now.

CBS and the Recording Academy are putting on a live two hour special celebrating Earth Wind & Fire on September 21st.

Of course, that lines up with EWF’s probably most famous song, “September.”

Stevie Wonder, Jonas Brothers, Jon Batiste, and Janelle Monáe are among the artists set to make special appearances on the stage at the Hollywood Bowl.

They should really get Mariah Carey, who appropriated several of their songs for own records.

EW&F was originally composed of brothers Maurice White — the genius songwriter — and his brother, Verdine, a celebrated bass player who runs the show since Maurice’s death. The other main members are star vocalist Philip Bailey and the legendary Ralph Johnson.

The group released albums first on Warner Bros and then Columbia Records, where Clive David championed them. After a series of R&B hits, they broke out in 1975 with “That’s the Way of the World,” which featured the title track and “Shining Star,” which was number 1 for weeks.gon

After that EWF racked up hit after hit including “Let’s Groove,” and “After the Love Has Gone,” “Boogie Wonderland,” and “Fantasy,” which Mariah helped herself to as if — to paraphrase what Maurice once said to me — she was not just sampling but taking the whole buffet.

What a show this will be! No one deserves it more.

CBS and the Recording Academy are also giving Cyndi Lauper a long overdue special on October 5th. Taped recently at the Hollywood Bowl, special guests include Joni Mitchell, Cher, Angélique Kidjo, John Legend, SZA, Mickey Guyton, Trombone Shorty, and Jake Wesley Rogers, with a video tribute from Brandi Carlile.

Ben Winston, Patrick Menton and Harvey Mason jr. are executive producers of EW&F.For the second special Ken Ehrlich, Cyndi Lauper, Harvey Mason Jr., Brian Burke, and Lisa Barbaris — Cyndi’s fantastic manager — are executive producers. Ken Ehrlich Productions and GRAMMY Studios are producing.

CBS is seeing the end of these specials as they’ve lost the rights to the Recording Academy’s Grammy Awards and other shows to ABC beginning after January’s Grammy Awards. CBS really blew it, but at least they still have the American Music Awards and MTV specials. Yikes.

Media Madness: Report Says Graydon Carter is Selling His Air Mail to Newsletter Puck, Bid is In and Agreement Made

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Leave it to intrepid Lachlan Cartrwright and his Breaker newsletter.

He’s scooped that the famed former Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter is selling his Air Mail web magazine to the Puck newsletter.

Apparently, they share many of the same investors.

The irony here is that Puck was started by Carter’s former Vanity Fair assistant, Jon Kelly. Now it’s grown into a scoop making machine, especially about Hollywood thanks to Matthew Belloni and other contributors.

Carter has been trying to sell Air Mail — which I write for occasionally — for some time. Now in his 70s, he could be living in the south of France instead of dealing with the daily grind.

Yet Air Mail has been a very classy effort and probably has a high demographic subscription base. Merged with Puck, the whole enterprise is very appealing.

The contracting of the media business continues. But a Puck/Airmail combo might also make for profitability, which is always preferable to other alternative.

“Spinal Tap” Sequel, Hidden by Studio, Opens with Few Reviews at Okay 74% And Has Almost No Advance Sales

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The “Spinal Tap” sequel opens tonight in previews, mostly against heavily promoted and raved about “Downton Abbey” finale.

They don’t share much of an audience so maybe counter programming will help them both.

The difference is while “Downtown Abbey” had splashy premieres and lots of studio support, “Spinal Tap II: The End Continues” is kind of escaping into release. A quiet premiere in LA, and so little press availability that today there are only 42 reviews on Rotten Tomatoes, most of them from bloggers.

The score so far is 74. Not great, but could be worse, and a lot of fans of the 1984 original seemed to like it.

There is literally no advance sale for tonight’s previews in most New York theaters, with one or two scattered tickets checked off. Did Bleecker Street just run out of money? (Sony Pictures has international rights but so far this year all of their releases have been stiffs.)

I’ve done everything but send bagpipers into the Bleecker Street Film offices to provoke them, but there’s no response. I have a feeling “Spinal Tap II” will have a short theatrical run and then head to streaming. I’ll see it in December, maybe, which is too bad because I’m sure it’s funny.

What happened to the movie? Why has there been so little advertising? The biggest publicity was all the members of the band appearing on Jimmy Kimmel a few nights ago, and performing one of their “hits.” But that didn’t register much. Neither did having Paul McCartney and Elton John in cameos.

The original “This is Spinal Tap” remains one of the great comedy classics, directed also by Rob Reiner. That will never go away.

Famed Author of Songs Like “Piece of My Heart” and “Twist and Shout” Gets Deserved Award in Bizarre, Off Calendar Stealth Ceremony

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Um, the Songwriters Hall of Fame ceremony takes place every June, at the Marriott Marquis Hotel.

But last night, an off calendar unadvertised event happened at 54 Below, the cabaret club below the fabled Studio 54, now Roundabout Theater.

The late Bert Berns was inducted posthumously, which is fine. Berns wrote a lot of hits including The Isley Brothers’ “Twist and Shout” and Janis Joplin’s (and Erma Franklin’s) “Piece of My Heart.” Berns was a key part of Atlantic Records in the 1960s before starting his own label, Bang Records. He died much too young, at age 37 in 1968.

Berns has major fans who never knew but support his work to this day including E Street Band leader Stevie van Zandt, who helped produce an off Broadway musical about him called “Piece of My Heart.”

van Zandt was on hand last night, along with Paul Shaffer, who hosted the event, rocker Steve Miller, and a smattering of local rock music luminaries. There were some live performances, too, by Broadway performers who’d appeared in the musical. There were also some folks from the SHOF board, but president Linda Moran was a no-show (she hasn’t missed an event since 1932), as was titular group chief Nile Rodgers, who was probably on tour somewhere exotic.

Why wasn’t Berns inducted back in June? Or even nominated? Why didn’t they wait until next June? Did they think Ahmet Ertegun would find out? It’s all very cloak and dagger. A press release insists that the SHOF regularly inducts members posthumously, but that has not been the case in the past.

Well, whatever, as they kids say. Congrats to Bert’s family. He certainly should have been in the SHOF a long time ago. His other hits include either writing or co-writing “Hang On, Sloopy,” “Everybody Needs Somebody to Love,” “Tell Him,” “I Want Candy,” “Cry to Me,” “I’ll Be a Liar,” “Cry Baby,” and “Heart Be Still.” 

Anyway, Erma Franklin was one of Aretha Franklin’s two very talented sisters. She recorded “Piece of My Heart” and had an R&B hit with it before Janis and Big Brother and the Holding Company.

Jane Fonda, Marisa Tomei, Rosanna Arquette, Sanaa Lathan, Mark Ruffalo Lead All Star Reading Next Month in NY of New Work by Eve Ensler

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Eve Ensler, a remarkable playwright who invented The Vagina Monologues, calls herself “V” now.

But for the purposes of publicity, most fans know her as Eve Ensler.

V has written a new work called “THIS IS CRAZY!,” a bold, funny, and moving new play to benefit The National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI).  The play will get a one night reading at New York’s Symphony Space in memory of someone who many of us knew and really liked, Chris Huvane.

“This is Crazy” features an extraordinary cast including Jane Fonda, Marisa Tomei, Mark Ruffalo, Sanaa Lathan, Rosanna Arquette, Lois Smith, Rachel Hilson, Olivia Oguma, Colette McDermott, Derrick Delgado, Luke Ferrari, Doireann Mac Mahon, Clarence Maclin, and Mohammad Saleem. The production, directed by V, brings together the acclaimed artists for a series of monologues, each offering a raw, personal perspective on mental illness and the emotional and social complexity of the human experience. 

“THIS IS CRAZY!” is produced by Ruth-Ann Huvane, mental health advocate and NAMI National Board Member. Chris was her brother-in-law, a respected Hollywood manager and partner at Management 360, renowned for his warmth and dedication to his clients. He managed a high-profile roster including Chadwick Boseman, Margot Robbie, Julianne Moore, Zoey Deutch, Zach Braff, and Henry Winkler. He is sorely missed.

Tickets are now on sale for the benefit performance here. To learn more about NAMI, THIS IS CRAZY!, or ways to support, visit Nami.org/ThePlay

Legendary Judy Collins Shakes Up Cafe Carlyle with Intimate Show of Songs, and Inside Stories About Dylan, Leonard Cohen

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Judy Collins is at New York’s famed Cafe Carlyle for the next three nights, and then all next week.

She is a legend you don’t want to miss, whether she’s singing the original version of “Both Sides Now” or telling stories about Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen.

Before she sings Cohen’s “Suzanne,” she reminisces about how she literally grabbed and recorded the song the minute after he played it for her in 1965.

Dylan she remembers as Robert Zimmerman, a skinny kid in the mid west who sang Woody Guthrie songs and wasn’t very good. Years later in Greenwich Village, he asked Collins why she wasn’t writing her own songs after having hits with everyone else’s. That changed everything.

By the way, there is no retirement in sight. She’s trying out a song called “Dreaming About Democracy,” which she just co-wrote. She received a Grammy nomination for Best Folk Album in 2023 for her album “Spellbound,” which was her first to feature all-original material.

Collins says she’s 86 but doesn’t look it or sound it. She appears with her guitar and a pianist on the Cafe Carlyle stage and transfixes the audience. She is also a well trained classical pianist who is mesmerizing when she sits down to play a couple of her own compositions including the extraordinary, “The Blizzard,” about love and loss in her home state of Colorado.

It’s the voice, though. It’s a clarion bell, that rings rich with colors and subtext. She has high notes that still thrill. She told me before the show that after she performed at the Temple of Dendur in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, a woman said: “We’ve never heard anyone sing like that in the Temple.”

You bet they hadn’t. Collins loves trying her legendary voice out at the Cathedral of St John the Divine, too, where it soars like an eagle through the cavernous church.

Collins has never gone away, but she’s having a Renaissance right now. She tours and does gigs for at least two thirds of every year. Her show at the Carlyle is a mix of humorous and sometimes disarming stories mixed with the songs, like “Send in the Clowns” and “Amazing Grace.”

Collins has her own amazing grace, connecting with the audience — which by the way had a lot of young people. Taylor Swift, all the other songbirds that now crowd the charts and stadiums? Judy Collins is the blueprint, and don’t forget it.