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RIP Michael Lang, the Man Who Brought Us Woodstock and Changed a Generation

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Is there any more powerful event in the popular culture than Woodstock?

The summer of ’69 gave us the first mass rock concert experience, way beyond Monterey Pop. It changed everything, gave us dozens of music acts, lasting music, created the rock festival. Everyone wanted to be there. Everyone said they were there even if they weren’t.

Michael Lang did all that. He has died at age 77 from cancer. I met him several times. He was a sweet guy who was ruthless when he put Woodstock on and never really recovered from it. Woodstock was his one incredible moment. It will never be forgotten.

Rest in peace.

 

Box Office: “Spider Man: No Way Home” Sinks “Titanic,” Moves Up to 6th Place, Eyes “Infinity War” Next

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So…

“Spider Man” is starting to drain, but not fast. Peter Parker and pals had a boffo $14 million Saturday night and will clear $668 million today.

This means that the webslinger has sunk “Titanic” and moved into number 6 on the all time box office list. Number 5 is not far off, as “Avengers: Infinity War” is only at $678 million. Then comes “Black Panther” at $700 million. We’ll be there by the end of the week if not sooner.

Where is Tom Holland? He must be in some kind of state of nirvana, same for director Jon Watts. How many Bentley convertibles can you drive at once? I’ll bet they’re finding out.

Meantime, “Licorice Pizza” is a dish best served cold. What a mess. United Artists Releasing has stalled out at $8 mil bucks. It’s time to scrape the plates and throw out the boxes. Also UAR’s “House of Gucci” is finished at $50 mil, which is all Lady Gaga. The movie cost $75 million. Add that to the “Respect” disaster. Doesn’t this suggest a problem at UAR?

“The 355” took in just $4.8 million. I’d say please put it on VOD now, Universal. Jessica Chastain’s gang is total fun, the women are great, Sebastian Stan is a solid surprise villain. Let the fans just enjoy it at home.

All the films from Searchlight and A24 are basically gone. “The French Dispatch” made $16 million in the US. Yeesh. And now Wes Anderson, shooting another movie or finishing up by now, is starting yet another one for them, The apple doesn’t fall far from the twee.

Tough season. Tough, tough season.

When “Dexter” Ends Tonight For Good, Star Michael C. Hall Will Be On Stage Singing David Bowie Songs

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“Dexter” is coming to an end tonight, apparently for good, on Showtime.

Resurrected after fans objected to the previous series finale, the show about a serial killer was brought back for one last season and a fitting ending. Dexter will not be coming back, unless he does as a ghost.

So where will star Michael C. Hall be tonight? Just when “Dexter” is getting his just comeuppance, his portrayer will be on stage. Hall has been part of a weekend David Bowie tribute at the Cutting Room on East 32nd St. all weekend. “The Sound and Vision of David Bowie” is a 75th birthday show for the late Ziggy Stardust, and it includes Michael Esper, who appeared with Hall in the Bowie musical, “Lazarus,” off Broadway in 2016.

So Hall will not be at home in front of the TV when Dexter takes his last, gruesome fall. How does he die? You’ll have to tune in and see, but it’s poetic justice.

Revlon’s Ron Perelman Was Quietly Canceled by Princeton University After Reneging on $65 Mil Pledge

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Ronald Perelman, chairman of Revlon, never made a single payment toward a $65 million pledge to Princeton University for a new residential college bearing his name. The result was the University dropped his name and canceled the donation. The building is set to open in the fall of 2022 without Perelman’s imprimatur.

This news did not make it into the New York Times when it was revealed last summer, and it doesn’t appear in Jacob Bernstein’s lengthy piece today in the Times Style section about Perelman’s declining wealth and health. At the time last summer that this fiasco occurred, only the Daily Beast covered it, as well as the Daily Princetonian. This major scandal escaped even the NY Post’s Page Six, largely because they’ve been in Perelman’s pocket for decades.

“The university has terminated the gift agreement with the Perelman Family Foundation Inc. to name a residential college because the Foundation has not made payments due under that agreement,” Princeton University spokesman Michael Hotchkiss said in a statement back on August 6th. “However, we remain grateful for the Perelman family’s long-standing support of the university, including its support of the Ronald O. Perelman Institute for Judaic Studies.”

That today’s Times piece has missed this is surprising but clearly a masterful move on Perelman’s PR agenda. The Times piece, titled “What Has Ron Perelman Learned?” also fails to examine the Revlon chairman’s personal charitable Perelman Family Foundation. The records are all public, and show that Perelman’s personal giving has been in steady decline for the last several years. The 2015 Form 990, for example, shows Perelman made donations of just over $11 million.

But in 2018 his giving was down to $5.9 million. And by 2019, the number was down to $3.1 million. Another $33 million is listed as promised in the future. Of that, $25 million is earmarked to Brown University. St. Ann’s School in Brooklyn is promised $4.5 million. The Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation, a relatively new Perelman donee, is set for $2.7 million. In 2019, nearly half that $3.1 million went to them as well.

What’s more, Perelman’s Claudia Cohen Cancer Foundation, formed in 2010 as a memorial to late ex wife, stopped giving donations to cancer professionals in 2018. Prior to that, the foundation had given $50,000 grants annually to researchers. But the 2018 Form 990, the most recent filing available, shows that despite total assets of $328,784, the Foundation claimed just administrative expenses. Indeed, for 2018, Perelman’s contribution to the Claudia Cohen Cancer Foundation was just $8,607. This foundation has been inconsistent in its pattern, giving two awards in gynecological research in 2017, and none in 2016 or 2015 according to it Form 990 filings.

The Times article also mentions in passing Perelman staging fundraising concerts for the Apollo Theater at his Hamptons spread, called The Creeks. When those events first started, Perelman would jump in and play drums with the likes of Jon Bon Jovi. But the events were stopped a few years ago, and before that Perelman himself had ceased being part of the activities. The Times made it seem like they were still ongoing up until the pandemic put a kibosh on everything.

In the Times article, the pull quote is “I am not sick, and I am not broke.” Each of those statements is questionable in light of the Princeton revelation. What Bernstein does do well is dissect the immediate debts of Perelman and Revlon, detailing the sale of his art collection, a $115 million home in Manhattan, and the rumored potential sale of the Creeks.

Also, the fact that Bernstein got Perelman to appear in person and speak on the record is a huge achievement. A billionaire who glowed in the spotlight, Perelman has been absent from the public stage for several years ago. He’s sometimes spotted at the upper East Side restaurant he owns, Le Bilboquet, but — as Bernstein notes– there have been accounts of him walking with a cane. Sometimes it’s said he’s in a wheelchair. A lot of what’s going, as with Princeton, remains a shrouded mystery.

 

Three Hour Japanese “Drive My Car” Wins National Society of Film Critics, Group Seeks to Make Awards Even More Irrelevant

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I wish I knew what the point was of all this: the National Film Society of Critics voted Best Picture to “Drive My Car,” an almost three hour Japanese film that most people know nothing about. It’s a very good film, and a long one, but it was already named Best Picture by the New York and Los Angeles film critics groups. So what’s the point?

Best director went to the film’s director, Ryusuke Hamaguchi. Best actor went to the star of the film, Hidetoshi Nishijima. “Drive My Car” also won Best Screenplay.

Best Actress went to Penelope Cruz of the Spanish film, “Parallel Mothers,” which I support totally. Best supporting actor went to Anders Danielsen Lie, of the Norwegian film, “The Worst Person in the World.” Only Ruth Negga, who won supporting actress for “Passing,” counts English as a first language (she’s Irish, born in Ethiopia).

Because the NSFC gave “Drive My Car” Best Picture, they didn’t choose a Foreign Language Film from a wide field of deserving pictures.

Frankly, this was a big “f-you” to American and British filmmakers and films made in English. It was the same to the larger film going audience. The NSFC could have shaped the conversation about a group of films headed to the Oscars and struggling at the box office. But the message is “We’re so cool we don’t have to like anything you’re being offered.” So why should anyone bother going to theaters if the critics say forget it?

I’m not talking about giving awards to blockbusters like “Spider Man” or “No Time to Die.” With good movies from Spielberg, Branagh, Campion, PTA, Joel Coen, Villeneuve, Miranda, Sorkin, not mention “CODA,” and so on, it’s kind of insulting to thumb your nose at your own business. (I’m not supposed to say this, but the film critics still don’t get if they don’t support the movie business, they will be out of jobs.)

Anyway, Cruz and Negga could proceed from here to the Oscars since they’ve been nominated before and have some standing. But the two winning actors I doubt will get that far. And “Drive My Car,” a very good film, should be in Best Foreign Language Film. As well, this means that other really good foreign films, like “A Hero” and “Parallel Mothers,” were denied some good publicity from being selected in that now excised category.

I know there’s a Film Twitter feeling that “Drive My Car” will be “Parasite,” win Best Picture and really up-end the film business. If that’s how the Oscars seem like they’re going, no one will watch the broadcast on March 27th. This is what’s happened to the Emmy Awards: the statues go to shows with small audiences, minuscule, no one watches the Emmys as a result. If the point is to make all this irrelevant, we’re headed in that direction very fast.

Great News: Penelope Cruz’s Oscar Chances Leap After Winning Best Actress from National Society of Film Critics (Updating)

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This is great news. The National Society of Film Critics has voted for Penelope Cruz for Best Actress in “Parallel Mothers.”

I said from the beginning she should win the Oscar. This ups her chances into the top 5, which now I think consists of Nicole Kidman, Jennifer Hudson, Jessica Chastain, and Lady Gaga. (Sorry, Kristen Stewart fans.)

Pedro Almodovar, of course, wrote and directed “Parallel Mothers,” which wasn’t chosen by Spain as their official Oscar entry. But it should be a Best Picture nominee. Sony Pictures Classics must get this movie into voters’ hands and step up the press.

UPDATING winners from this group, Keep refreshing!

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Ruth Negga, “Passing” — another great choice

BEST ACTOR, Hidetoshi Nishijima for “Drive My Car” — inspired choice

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Anders Danielsen Lie, THE WORST PERSON IN THE WORLD

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY  Andrew Droz Palermo, THE GREEN KNIGHT — an offbeat choice

(Listen) Marilyn Bergman and Husband Alan Also Wrote 3 Classic TV Theme Songs Including “Maude” and “Good Times”

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Marilyn Bergman and her husband, Alan Bergman, wrote the lyrics to Oscar winners, hit songs, everything you can imagine from “The Way We Were” to “The Windmills of Your Mind.”

But they also wrote the lyrics to three famous TV themes: “Good Times,” “Maude,” and “Alice.” If you wanted an evocative lyric in the Golden Days of songs, you went to the Bergmans. They were the gold standard along with Hal David (who wrote with Burt Bacharach) and Comden and Green from Broadway. Alan, born in 1925, is hanging in there. But a great chapter is coming to an end.

Two of the shows were produced by Norman Lear, of course, “Good Times” and “Maude.” The 99 year old producer wrote on Twitter:  “There was only one Marilyn Bergman. No one knew that more than her husband and partner in music, Alan. To those of us who loved the Bergman’s lyrics, Marilyn takes a bit of our hearts and souls with her today.”

RIP The Great Song Lyricist Marilyn Bergman, 93, Wrote “The Way We Were” And Many Other Hits

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The great lady and lyricist Marilyn Bergman has died at age 93 in Los Angeles. She and her husband, Alan, wrote the words to dozens of memorable hit songs starting with “The Way We Were.” (Alan is still alive.) The couple was like family to Barbra Streisand, who recorded albums of their songs. They were also philanthropists and popular personalities in the music biz and Hollywood. Marilyn was one of the greats. What a week!

The Bergmans won Oscars for the songs “The Windmills of Your Mind,” “The Way We Were” and for the score for “Yentl.”  The couple was nominated 16 times- for such songs as “It Might Be You” from “Tootsie,” “How Do You Keep The Music Playing?” from Best Friends, “Papa Can You Hear Me?” and “The Way He Makes Me Feel” from Yentl,” and “What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?” from “The Happy Ending.” My favorite– and a lot people will say this– is “The Windmills of Your Mind” from “The Thomas Crown Affair.”

Here’s another hit take of “The Way We Were” music by the late Marvin Hamlisch

I was lucky enough to witness this recording of a Bergman song:

 

Sidney Poitier’s Family Official Statement: “our guiding light who lit up our lives with infinite love and wonder”

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Here’s the official statement from the family of Sidney Poitier who died today at age 94. PS I really hope Poitier’s publisher, Knopf, will reissue his autobiography from 1981, “This Life.” It’s way out of print and should be back in circulation.

Statement from the Poitier family:

There are no words to convey the deep sense of loss and sadness we are feeling right now. We are so grateful he was able to spend his last day surrounded by his family and friends. To us Sidney Poitier was not only a brilliant actor, activist, and a man of incredible grace and moral fortitude, he was also a devoted and loving husband, a supportive and adoring father, and a man who always put family first. He is our guiding light who lit up our lives with infinite love and wonder. His smile was healing, his hugs the warmest refuge, and his laughter was infectious. We could always turn to him for wisdom and solace and his absence feels like a giant hole in our family and our hearts. Although he is no longer here with us in this realm, his beautiful soul will continue to guide and inspire us. He will live on in us, his grandchildren and great-grandchildren—in every belly laugh, every curious inquiry, every act of compassion and kindness. His legacy will live on in the world, continuing to inspire not only with his incredible body of work, but even more so with his humanity.

We would like to extend our deepest appreciation to every single one of you for the outpouring of love from around the world. So many have been touched by our dad’s extraordinary life, his unwavering sense of decency and respect for his fellow man. His faith in humanity never faltered, so know that for all the love you’ve shown him, he loved you back.

“30” (End): Lin Manuel Miranda Ends Adele’s Six Week Run at Number 1 with Disney “Encanto” Soundtrack

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Adele’s six week run at number 1 on the album charts is over.

The singer’s “30” finished in second place this week with 56,283 copies sold according to hitsdailydouble.com.

In journalism, “30” means “the end,” a marking at the end of stories. For “30,” this week is a “30.” And the Adele album won’t be returning anytime soon. Next week’s number 1 album was released today, The Weeknd’s “Dawn FM.”

Who deposed Adele? Why, “Hamilton” creator Lin-Manuel Miranda. His soundtrack to Disney’s “Encanto” sold 69,948 copies and took the number 1 spot. The soundtrack’s success is driven by a track called “We Don’t Talk About Bruno,” which is being eyed for an Oscar nomination for Best Song soon.

Lin-Manuel has had quite a year. In addition to “Hamilton” being filmed for Disney Plus, his “In the Heights” was released last June. Adding to “Encanto” right now is Miranda’s film directorial debut with “Tick Tick Boom” on Netflix. That film may be a Best Picture nominee, and Andrew Garfield is in the running for Best Actor.

Adele will try to reclaim some heat for “30” with a video for “Oh My God,” coming January 12th. But that track has already been somewhat exhausted. We’ll see what happens…