Wednesday, June 24, 2026
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Trump Terrified of Tomorrow’s Obama A-List Blowout, Saying Iranians Called Him “Stupid SOB,” Jealous of Show With Bruce, Stevie Wonder, Steven Spielberg

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Donald Trump is freaking out.

He’s so terrified of tomorrow’s opening of the Obama Presidential Library, he’s saying “the Iranians” called the beloved former president a “stupid son-of-a-bitch” at the G7 meeting of international leaders.

Trump, of course, failed to put together his Great American State Fair when even Milli Vanilli refused to perform at it.

Now he’s got to witness a raft of stars take the stage on a livestream Thursday at noon Eastern, to support Obama.

Added to the A list names is Steven Spielberg, who will get to see Bruce Springsteen, Stevie Wonder, Christina Aguilera, Bono and The Edge, John Legend, The Roots, Common, Jennifer Hudson, and Marc Anthony on stage.

IS CARLY SIMON GOING TO TAYLOR SWIFT’S WEDDING? CLICK HERE

The Obama concert and opening are a total diss on Trump, who has no one popular or contemporary to support him from the entertainment world.

The livestream will be on YouTube and also carried, to some degree, on CSPAN.

At the very bottom, which is where he belongs, see Trump saying the Iranians called Obama “A stupid son of a bitch.” This is Trump backed into a corner like a rat.



Review: Somehow, the Rolling Stones Have Made an Even Better Album than “Hackney Diamonds,” An Unexpected Career Highlight After 62 Years

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Two years ago, the Rolling Stones — in their 60th year — turned in an excellent album called “Hackney Diamonds.” It was maybe their best album of new music in over 30 years. Who’d a thunk it? Andrew Watt produced, Lady Gaga sang on one masterpiece, and it was all good.

Now comes “Foreign Tongues,” also produced by Watt, which somehow tops “Hackney.” It’s a career highlight, unexpected because let’s face it, the remaining Stones could just coast at this point. Their legacy is secure in rock history.

And yet, “Foreign Tongues” is so good you have to listen to it a couple of times to make sure you’re just not overreacting. It’s also kind of amazing because their contemporary, Paul McCartney, just gifted us with his sensational “The Boys of Dungeon Lane,” also produced by Watt.

Watt’s up with that? (Sorry.)

We already knew two singles, the blues number “Rough and Twisted,” and the very Stones-y “In the Stars.” On past Stones albums post 1980s, that pair would have been enough to satisfy everyone. Because think of it — a Stones live show, always electric, has to accommodate a monster list of hits, so they can only add in one or two new songs.

But “Foreign Tongues” has a robust 14 tracks, and not one of them is a sleeper. More than even with “Hackney,” the boys — so to speak — and Watt decided to make this album one after another. No coasting, far from it. The work that went into “Foreign Tongues” is evident. But there’s also a lot of magic.

When the album was first being talked about, they promised a track called “Mr. Charm” as the launch single. That didn’t happen, but now we have it and I can see why they will wait until the album drops on July 10th. “Mr. Charm” is a home run. Will radio play it? Probably not. Classic rock radio ignores all new material. But “Mr. Charm” sounds like a missing track from 1978’s “Some Girls.” It’s kind of dizzying to think 80 years could pull off a rock track this good.

Between now and the 10th we will probably get the mid tempo “Jealous Lover,” more in the realm of “Wild Horses” with Mick Jagger’s not so often heard anymore falsetto slicing through a blues-pop foundation made for radio and Spotify. This is one full of beats and claps, and repeated lyrics that should make it a big streamer.

I say all of this with a lot of cockeyed optimism. The McCartney album is just as good but is having trouble selling 100,000 copies. Is it because all the fans are dead? No younger people care to hear perfectly executed music made by musicians playing actual instruments? Do they have to feature Lady Gaga to get the attention of the current generation? What miserable conclusions.

I, however, will listen for the rest of the year to “Divine Interruption,” “Ringing Hollow,” and “Hit Me in the Head.” The former, with Mick yelling “Dance in the flames,” is rapid fire. “Some of Us,” a fresh take on a long available demo, brings together Jagger and Keith Richards in a rare duet — a little gem among these gaudy jewels. There’s also “Covered in You,” hidden at number 11, with delicious lyrics and hooks.

Over the next week we’ll get into the last four tracks, and all of the lyrics, including “Covered in You,” . But the main thing to know now, is that the Stones have delivered something we don’t deserve. Like “Dungeon Lane,” this is the real thing. These two will be on constant play in my car. Also, Watt has so lavished them in aural richness that you want to hear them through real speakers or great headphones, not just as background music for a subway ride.

More to come…

Obama Library Opening on Thursday to Include Performances by Stevie Wonder, Bruce Springsteen, Bono and the Edge, Common, Eddie Vedder, Jennifer Hudson, More

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Thursday’s opening of the Obama Library in Chicago sounds like it will be off the hook.

Performances are expected from Stevie Wonder, Bono and the Edge, Bruce Springsteen, Jennifer Hudson, Common, Eddie Vedder, John Legend, Marc Anthony, Christina Aguilera, and the Roots.

Unlike Trump’s failed Milli Vanilli show with D list performers. Yeah, they couldn’t get Milli or Vanilli.

The whole opening will be livestreamed on YouTube. We’ll pick it up here, too.

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Kim Kardashian and Kanye West Are Pimping Out Their 13 Year Old Rapper Daughter, North West, on a 13 Stop Tour in August

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Aren’t there any labor laws anymore for children?

Kim Kardashian and Kanye West apparently don’t believe in them.

The former husband and wife are sending their 13 year old daughter, North West, on a 13 stop rapping tour this August.

She will open for a 21 year old named Molly Santana, who I hope is no relation to Carlos.

This kid obviously is not going to school, or playing field hockey, or riding a bike.

In a press release, North West — wearing a bright blue wig and sporting a grill — is described as a “13-year-old producer and artist…She released her debut single “PIERCING ON MY HAND” in February and made a surprise live performance of the song during Ye’s sold-out Sofi show. Prior to her solo music, North has collaborated on releases from FKA Twigs, Lil Novi, and skaiwater. North is set to make her festival performance debut at Lyrical Lemonade’s Summer Smash in Chicago June 12th. Despite her young age, North West has also already gained a reputation as a fashion icon, with her unique and stylish outfits regularly making headlines and inspiring trends.”

It’s no surprise that Kim and Kanye have turned into negligent parents. You’d think someone around them would put a stop to this nonsense now. The couple has three more kids, and I’m sure they’re figuring out how to exploit them already.

Here’s the garbage being spewed by these self aggrandizing people:

Review: “Toy Story 5” Lives Up to the Pixar Series Legacy and More, with Joan Cusack’s Jessie Leading the Quest This Time (and Taylor Swift Singing)

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“Toy Story 5” brings the Pixar franchise, which started 30 plus years ago, to an emotional, profound full circle. Somehow that makes it relevant today and yet continues where they started.

“Toy Story 5” — written and directed by Andrew Stanton and McKenna Harris — picks up after the events of the fourth installment, which ended with Woody departing the group to help abandoned toys find new owners alongside Bo Peep. In his absence, Buzz and Jessie the Cowgirl stepped up as leaders of Bonnie’s playroom. Woody comes back into the fold when an iPad-like tablet named Lilypad disrupts the group’s dynamic, forcing the whole gang to reunite for a new adventure.

Tom Hanks, Tim Allen and Joan Cusack return to their iconic roles, joined by a clever Conan O’Brien as Smarty Pants. The filmmakers wisely give Jesse the story she deserves. She and Woody go on a similar journey of discovering what the life cycle of a toy really is. No matter what age you are, the audience will relate to finding meaning in your own self -worth; that you are valuable and not useless.

Cusack’s Jesse knows that she and the other toys agonize about being abandoned. Then she realizes that the same thing happens with devices because devices get better and shinier and the old ones get thrown away, too. The film appeals to all because of the nostalgia factor and the relatability of any age. What is indeed our purpose in life? How do we deal with change of being tossed aside?

Yes, there is the reality that because of devices, kids will abandon their toys. Toys will always triumph because this film touchingly shows that as long as children use their imagination they will always have play time with their magical toys. Taylor Swift’s song, “I Knew It, I Knew You,” which she played at the premiere, fits beautifully in the film. (At the premiere, Taylor also joined Randy Newman for a duet for his famed hit, “You Got A Friend In Me.”)

Is there going to be a ‘Toy Story 6’? An insider told me that, “Yeah, we can go from kid to kid. and have new adventures.” For now, ‘Toy Story 5’ is a poignant, genuinely moving film which will appeal to all ages and is destined to become another Pixar classic.

Taylor Swift Seen Spending Overnight at Famed NY Recording Studio, Probably Rehearsing for MSG Wedding Show with Pals Alaina Haim, Benny Blanco

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Reports are coming in from everywhere.

Taylor Swift spent the overnight hours last night at Electric Lady Studios, the famed home of Jimi Hendrix on West 8th St.

There’s video her coming and going.

The word is that pals Alana Haim and Benny Blanco were there, too.

Are they rehearsing for her big wedding show at MSG? Probably. Are they making a record? Knowing Taylor, they could be making two! Or three!

TMZ says that a big stage is being built at Madison Square Garden for the post-wedding ceremony concert. I told you a few days ago, I’ve confirmed that the whole staff at MSG is talking only about the wedding and show. It should be a blast. As I wrote, both Jack Antonoff and the Bleachers, and the National, have no shows that night on July 3rd. They would be among the performers.

But don’t sleep on Travis Kelce and his brother going up the microphone. By the end of the night, even Patrick Mahomes will be quarterbacking a number!

Grammys Awards Add New Categories For this Year Including Amount Of New Material on New Albums and Times A Best New Artist Can Be Submitted

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Lots of changes for the Grammy Awards this morning.

For Album of the Year, the amount of original material is reduced to just 66%.

Best New Artists can be submitted four times until something clicks. This works out the problem of indie artists going to labels, and unrecognized label artists catching on with their third or fourth release.

There’s a special category for K Pop and Asian records.

Some of the R&B categories have changed to reflect featured and guest stars on records.

Gotta change with the times!

PS In Best Traditional Pop Performance this year, it’s going to be all about Paul McCartney, and also the Rolling Stones. Watch for Andrew Watt to receive Best Producer, Non-Classical.

NEW CATEGORIES
Best Asian Pop Music Performance
This Category recognizes artistic excellence in Asian pop music performances originating from or widely recognized within Asian markets, including but not limited to K-pop, J-pop and C-pop, with meaningful use of one or more Asian languages. Awards are presented to the performing artist(s).

Best R&B Collaboration or Duo/Group Performance*
This Category recognizes excellence in contemporary R&B performances for works by established duos or groups, as well as collaborative works between solo artists, duos and groups. Awards are presented to the performing artist(s).

Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance
This Category recognizes excellence in singles and tracks that consist of a type and style of song and/or performance that cannot properly be intermingled with present forms of pop music. Awards are presented to the performing artist(s).

Best Traditional Folk Album**
This Category recognizes excellence in albums of traditional folk recordings. Awards are presented to artist(s), producer(s), engineer(s)/mixer(s), and songwriter(s) of new songs, if other than artist(s), of greater than 50% playing time on the album.

Best Latin Song
This Category recognizes the achievement of songwriters for newly written Latin songs predominantly in the Spanish language (at least 51% of the lyrics). Awards are presented to the songwriter(s) of new material.

*With the addition of this new category, the Best R&B Performance Category has been revised and renamed Best R&B Solo Performance.
**With the addition of this new category, the Best Folk Album Category has been revised and renamed Best Contemporary Folk Album.

DEFINITION, ELIGIBILITY & CRITERIA UPDATES
Best New Artist
Category description language and guidelines have been refined and a maximum number of times an artist may be submitted increased from three to four. These updates provide greater clarity around an artist’s impact during the eligibility period and more flexibility in the number of times an artist can submit, reflecting the evolving nature of artist development.

Album Eligibility
The threshold of new recordings required on an eligible album is lowered from 75% to 66% to reduce the exclusion of entries that are widely recognized throughout the music industry as new albums.

Best Album Notes and Best Historical Album
Internet-only releases are eligible in Best Album Notes and Best Historical Album if the additional materials and album notes are part of the commercial download, ensuring albums released solely in digital form remain eligible for consideration.

Songwriters and Composers Recognition Expansion
Songwriters and Composers of new material on the winning albums in most genre album Categories will now receive Grammy statuettes and Achievement Certificates in parity with the recognition currently afforded to Producers and Engineers in those categories.

Broadway Course Correction Continues: “Celebrity Autobiography,” Playing to Empty Theaters, Will End Early And Skip the Summer

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Broadway is in the middle of a clearing out.

Soon, around a dozen plays and musicals will be gone. Some exits were planned up front. Some are sad surprises.

The latest news is that “Celebrity Autobiography” is done on June 21. They were supposed to stay through August.

This show should NEVER have been on Broadway. Its whole charm was being off and off off Broadway. It was a cool secret that demanded small houses. Whoever thought to put in the Shubert Theater was smoking something good.

Hopefully creators Eugene Pask and Dayle Reyfel can return to their origins.

“CA” has a rotating cast of dozens — way too many — and dozens of investors. But last week it played to empty houses — 27% capacity. There was no way they’d have made it through the summer.

Other shows closing or closed now are “Beaches,” “Chess,” “Death Becomes Her,” “Dog Day Afternoon,” “Fallen Angels,” “Moulin Rouge,” “The Fear of 13,” not to mention the great limited run comedies “The Balusters” and “Becky Shaw.”

“Ragtime,” sadly will also wrap up in August after many extensions. New shows will come, and somehow “Chicago” will hang on, but this is definitely a course correction.

Ticket prices are way too high. Going to theater, in your car, paying tolls and a congestion fee plus parking, with a babysitter at home, having a modest meal — can cost $1,000. That has got to change. And fast! And, no, Mayor Mamdani, no one is biking to the theater with sandwiches made from home. Get real.

Brooklyn Beckham Tries to Insult Father, Respected Soccer Star David Beckham, Brags About Doing Door Dash Commercial Tied to World Cup

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It turns out that Brooklyn Beckham is quite the little snot nose.

He’s posted a commercial he’s done for Door Dash in which he asks Why is he watching the World Cup from FIFA at home.

“It’s a long story,” he says with a smirk. More to come.

Brooklyn Beckham is a spoiled kid who married a very rich man’s daughter and abandoned his own family. He’s 27 and makes Instagram videos in which he cooks a grilled cheese or a hamburger and calls it “cuisine.” You can’t believe they’re not intentional parodies, they’re so clueless. He also sells a condiment.

He has no other job, or education, or career.

His parents, David and Victoria Beckham, are tabloid fodder all the time. But you know what? They made it all on their own. This Brooklyn wouldn’t even get a job tied to the World Cup if his name…Peltz (the family name of his wife, and her father, billionaire Nelson Peltz).

If it weren’t for the Beckham name and connection, he’d just be Barron Trump. Or Wilson, the soccer ball from “Castaway.”

Emmy Voters: Alessandro Nivola Is More Calvin Klein Than the Designer Himself in the JFK Jr-Carolyn Bessette Miniseries, “Love Story”

Editor’s note: Since I wrote this profile of Alessandro Nivola and Emily Mortimer in 2016, the couple has soared professionally and personally. Mortimer co-wrote the excellent Noah Baumbach movie, “Jay Kelly” and has appeared in countless movies such as “Mary Poppins.” She’s currrently in “Ladies First” with Sacha Baron Cohen on Netflix.

Nivola won the 2017 Tribeca Film Festival Best Actor Award and has gone on to hit after hit on TV and in the movies. He’s an Emmy contender for his portrayal of Calvin Klein in FX’s “Love Story,” about JFK Jr and Carolyn Bessette. He really studied the designer, and is more Klein than Klein! If Ryan Murphy is smart, he’ll spin Nivola off into a whole series about Calvin, Donna Karan, et al. An Emmy nom should be in his future. He stars next in Netflix’s “The 99ers.” (PS And yes, their son Sam is now a star, too, from “The White Lotus.” Daughter May is next.)

Here’s the story from 2016:

One day a long time ago, the famed artist Jackson Pollock gave a painting to his friend, the famed artist Costantino Nivola, in Springs, just north of East Hampton. This was a time in the early Fifties when the Hamptons were an enclave for artists and writers, before the country roads were lined with limos and paved with gold.

Nivola hung the painting in his modest living room, and sat on a couch facing it with his family. A photograph was taken of them studying the Pollock the way people stare at flat screen TVs nowadays.

“They used to give each other art all the time,” Costantino’s actor grandson Alessandro Nivola, recalled for me recently. “Pollock was experimenting with the splatter paintings, and he gave my grandfather one. Apparently it stayed on the wall for about a week, at the end of which he called Pollock and said he had to take it back.”

Sandro imitates his late grandfather’s Italian accent. “He said, “Jackson, I cannot keep your painting. It makes me nervous.”

The grandson, known to family and friends as Sandro, gets a good laugh from this. “He gave the painting back. Years later I was at MoMA for the big Pollock retrospective and saw the painting. When I went home I looked it up and sure enough, it had been purchased from a Sotheby’s auction for something like $25 million!”

That was the world Alessandro Nivola came from in 1999 when he met actress Emily Mortimer on the set of Kenneth Branagh’s musical version of Love’s Labours Lost. She was the fetching, sexy and intelligent daughter of staggeringly famous British writer John Mortimer. “I was going to London,” Nivola says, “and Leonard Cohen’s son Adam said I want to give you the number of the most beautiful girl in London. You have to call her.” It turned out, when Nivola arrived, that the girl whose name was scribbled on a crumpled piece of paper was already cast in the movie, too. Sandro says, “On the first day of rehearsal, I said ‘I already have your number!’”

Almost seventeen years later, the Nivola-Mortimers are one of New York’s hip, wildly talented premier acting couples. Along with Maggie Gyllenhaal and Peter Sarsgaard, and Matthew Broderick and Sarah Jessica Parker, they’re to our generation what Eli Wallach and Ann Jackson or Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy were to a golden era. She made her mark with Woody Allen’s Match Point and more recently Aaron Sorkin’s The Newsroom. He hit his stride in Mansfield Park and Janie Jones, and is now on a tear with films like American Hustle and Selma.

You wouldn’t know it — unless you asked– that boyishly handsome Sandro is a Yale graduate and accomplished soccer player, the son of artist Virginia and a senior fellow from the Brookings Institute. Pietro Nivola is himself the product of an extraordinary couple: a world famous Italian born sculptor and his wife, a Jewish emigre from Germany who met in Milan art school before World War II.

And then there’s Mortimer, the product of her father’s second marriage late in life. Sir John was a legendary barrister, novelist and screenwriter beloved and celebrated in the UK as the defender of the Sex Pistols in their 1977 obscenity trial was well as creator of The Rumpole of the Bailey, the very popular BBC TV series, and wrote the equally beloved series of Brideshead Revisited (with Charles Sturridge).

Bringing together two families with staggering pedigrees, merging the Nivolas with the Mortimers wasn’t simple. They didn’t have that much in common, as it turns out.

The Nivolas, Mortimer says, “are much more refined than mine. Mine were vulgarians in comparison. The Nivolas are all very aesthetic, ascetic, spare and refined and beautiful and elegant. My lot are a bit more chaotic. I remember we are all renting a house on Long Island one Christmas –because there wasn’t enough room in the Nivola house for everyone– and we realized there wasn’t any alcohol in the house. And Ruth—[Sandro’s late German Jewish grandmother] said ‘That’s okay, that’s all right.’ And my mom said, ‘Speak for yourself! We’re all alcoholics!’”

“My dad,” Emily recalls, “liked the idea of Italian blood coursing through our blood,” Emily says.
There’s a story about the Nivola house, which is now occupied by Sandro’s father, a Brookings Institute fellow. Several years ago it had to be moved as the water table rose in Springs. This wasn’t so easy because the house is not only filled with historic art, but it’s made of it, too.
After Pollock’s painting left, the French artist and architect Le Corbusier – the great artist Charles-Édouard Jeanneret-Gris—arrived with a mission.

“He said,” Sandro recalls, “this house needs murals.” Le Corbusier created two gigantic murals on different walls—one was the wall where the Pollock had hung. The Nivolas have lived with them for half a century. When the move was contemplated, advisers had to come in from MoMA and elsewhere to give opinions. Museums are still vying for them, but they’re part of the family.
Now Sandro and Em, as they are called, are parents to twelve year old Sam and six year old May Rose, racking up acting credits working with the likes of Woody Allen, Martin Scorsese, Sally Potter, Aaron Sorkin, David O. Russell, Darren Aronofsky etc. They are ‘in demand’ and working, I say to Mortimer, it seems, all the time.

She laughs. “It just seems that way because that’s when you see us,” she says. “In reality, it’s like waiting for a bus. None comes, and then four come in a row. There’s a lot of down time.”
The company started with a mini-series for HBO called Doll & Em, written by Mortimer and her best pal Dolly wells. It was such a hit a second season was ordered and shown. A third is now a possibility. In the meantime, Mortimer and Wells have a new series they’re negotiating for streaming in which the couple may act, both Mortimer and Nivola are literally shooting movies back to back to back. Emily is shooting Darren Aronofsky’s untitled and secret film with Jennifer Lawrence this month. Sandro has films in the can including Barry Levinson’s Madoff for HBO in which he plays Bernie’s tragic son Mark (who committed suicide) opposite Robert DeNiro.

I ask Sandro to name his favorite Emily Mortimer performance (she’s probably best known for HBO’s The Newsroom, but we’re talking movies). Bright Young Things, he says of the Evelyn Waugh adaption by Stephen Fry . “She was born to be in an Evelyn Waugh novel. She has the perfect combination of romantic longing and acidic intelligence.”

Mortimer tells me she’s in awe of her husband’s ability to do stage plays—something she hasn’t attempted yet. Sandro was nominated for a Tony in 2015 opposite Bradley Cooper and Patricia Clarkson in The Elephant Man. “It’s so amazing to me the guts it takes to stand up on a Broadway stage and fill the theater with your voice and not just vomit and run off!”

Nivola’s Broadway turn was just the latest in a series of successes—his last several films, all hits, have been made by some of the directors in the business including David O. Russell, Ava Duvernay, and JC Chandor. “ It took me a while to realize movies were all about directors. I never cared about the director before, just the role.”

He says he’s very choosy now. “It’s not like a director has to have made a million brilliant movies. I just have to have an instinct they’re unique and potential to be great.” He names Paul Thomas Anderson among those he’s aiming to work with.
Would he like to direct? There’s a hesitation. “The more I work with better directors I see it’s an overwhelming job.”

This month during a rare break, the couple will help Sandro’s brother, Adrian Nivola, the sculptor, launch a new show at the Drawing Room gallery in East Hampton on Newtown Lane. A similar show two years ago caused a sensation and sold out immediately. It was followed by a charming, cozy dinner for friends at the same house in Springs where Jackson Pollock’s painting made Costantino nervous. Adrian, who thought he’d be a painter, has bloomed with a series of highly imaginative and winning wood and wire constructions that can’t be made fast enough.

“He’s really the real deal,” Mortimer says of her brother-in-law, who counted his grandfather and family friend Saul Steinberg among his influences. “He’s been reticent about coming forward because he’s an incredible perfectionist. It’s taken him until now to show the world his stuff which I think is a really good sign.”

But then it’s back to work. In August the couple heads to Spain with their family to shoot Isabelle Coixet’s adaptation of the Penelope Fitzgerald novel The Bookshop with pal Patricia Clarkson and Bill Nighy. But before they head to Europe, there’s a big art opening to preside over. (They hosted the Parrish Museum’s annual summer gala earlier in July.)

They will take the kids, of course. The Mortimer-Nivolas – wrought from great families–are the paradigm of the modern show biz clan. Times have changed since actors parked their little ones with staff. “My dad always told this story about John Gielgud when I was a baby,” Mortimer says. “My parents brought me to a party. And Gielgud said, ‘Why did you bring your baby to the party? Why didn’t you leave her at home? Are you frightened of burglars?’”