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Last Night’s Golden Globes: Did They Predict the Oscars or Send the Academy in a Different Direction?

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Last night’s Golden Globes were…a mess. The awards were Tweeted out, and badly, from the Beverly Hilton ballroom. There was no video. Or stars. Except for Jamie Lee Curtis, who has a lot of explaining to do. (She’ll be getting a Globe next year for that performance.)

The winners were “The Power of the Dog” in drama, and “West Side Story” in musical/comedy. Will the Academy rubber stamp those choices? I doubt it. I really think there’s a case now for “Belfast” to sweep into the Oscars as Best Picture. “Power of the Dog” had a big Netflix push, and director Jane Campion could still pull off Best Director. But the movie? That dog won’t hunt.

“West Side Story” was my choice for Best Picture early on. It’s big and bold, comes from a big studio. has all the elements that make it the opposite of last year’s winner. “Nomadland.” But Disney has not sent out screeners. The movie has been a box office disappointment.  Disney seems to have no consciousness about how to market it or make it seem like something entertaining and important.

Best actor in a drama at the Globes went to Will Smith for “King Richard.” That may have been Will’s peak. Andrew Garfield has the momentum from “Tick Tick Boom” plus he’s finally embraced his “Spider Man” history. If the Oscars can get him to do a film bit playing the piano like Jonathan Larson in his “Spider Man”  suit, he’s in.

Best actress in a drama went to Nicole Kidman for “Being the Ricardos.” The movie is solid, Kidman is beloved and did a great job. She has the momentum for the Oscars. Rachel Zegler won Best Actress in a Musical/Comedy. Her  lovely debut in “West Side Story” is hampered, I  think, by the movie’s current standing.

What about Lady Gaga? “House of Gucci,” like all the other MGM/UAR movies, is a marketing, PR fiasco. The whole thing rests on Gaga, and she’s exhausted all avenues. She carries the movie, but this is no “Star is Born” scenario. Penelope Cruz, if she had a campaign, has momentum from the National Society of Film Critics. Kristen Stewart, I’m afraid, may be done. Jessica Chastain hangs in there on good will.

Director? The Globes went for Jane Campion. Unless there’s some major turnaround, she’ll win the Oscar. This is her year. That’s the one major accomplishment from Netflix. The only upset could be a big wave of enthusiasm for Kenneth Branagh, and “Belfast” making a quick break to the finish line. It was my favorite movie of the year. Jamie Dornan and Ciaran Hinds seem to cancel each other out for Best Supporting Actor, although one of them should win. Unless someone stands up and wants it, Best Supporting Actress will go to Ariana Debose. She’s excellent in the film, and she wants it.

So that’s where we are on January 10th. Of course, the Critics Choice Awards will have some bearing but not much if they occur after Academy voting is over.

 

Exclusive: Bob Saget Was Secretly Married to Wife Kelly a Few Weeks Before Beach Wedding

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Everyone is mourning the untimely loss of actor and comedian Bob Saget today. It’s really wonderful how consistent all the tributes are to him, from his “Full House” castmates and pals to dozens of friends and innumerable fans. Despite his hilarious raunchy side, Saget was a great, sweet guy— which is why when he told “The Aristocrats” joke no could believe it.

Flashback to the fall of 2018, I ran into Bob at an Emmy party. This was the weekend of September 18th. From photos I think it might have been the Netflix party, but I’m not sure. We knew each other a long time and greeted each other enthusiastically. He had a beautiful blonde with him.

“I heard you were getting married,” I said.

“I am married!” he replied. I was confused. “I got married last weekend,” he blurted out with a big smile, then added, “Wait. No one knows that.” Whoops! He instantly knew he shouldn’t have said it.

I was floored. I asked him what was going on?

Bob said, “We actually just got married, but no one knows it. We’re keeping it a surprise until our actual wedding ceremony next month. Please don’t write it, and don’t tell anyone.”

And I didn’t. He was so sweet about it, and so pleading, but it was unnecessary. “We haven’t told my family, her family, my kids, anyone!” So I agreed on the spot, naturally, to keep his secret. We shook hands, and that’s the last I thought about it.

A few weeks later, I read about Bob and Kelly Rizzo’s wedding at the beautiful Shutters on the Beach in Santa Monica. Bob wrote on Instagram: “Okay, so we went and did it. And damn are we happy.” I’m assuming they told everyone what happened with the secret wedding, but I never got the chance to find out.  From all accounts, and his recent Instagram post recapping the last year, it seems Bob and Kelly had a terrific three years together. It’s cruel that there wasn’t more time.

Bob was a mensch, everyone can see that. Here is the memorial he posted for Betty White just ten days ago:

 

James Mtume, R&B Legend, Played with Miles Davis, Wrote Hits for Roberta Flack & Donny Hathaway, Stephanie Mills

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So many people died today, and I had to write a lot of obits. Not fun.

But I couldn’t let James Mtume’s death today at 76 go unremarked upon. He played with Miles Davis during the early 70s He had his own hits like “Juicy Fruit.”  He wrote “The Closer I Get to You” for Roberta Flack and Donny Hathaway, and the amazing “Never Knew Love This Before” for Stephanie Mills with Reggie Lucas. (Lucas repurposed it a couple of years for “Borderline” by Madonna. Mtume’s song was first.)

Mtume was an R&B superstar, and he will be sorely missed. Condolences to his family and friends and fans, who are many.

Read more at https://www.bet.com/article/zr8rg8/james-mtume-dead-at-age-75

UPDATING Golden Globes Winners: “Power of the Dog,” “West Side Story,” Nicole Kidman, Andrew Garfield, Will Smith, Ariana DeBose, “Encanto,” “Drive My Car,” “Succession,” Billie Eilish

UPDATING the Golden Globes. They’re announcing their winners from Hollywood to a small, private crowd. We’re not sure how this is going to work, but check in and we’ll see how long this takes. Something happens beginning at 9pm Eastern…

Some of these make sense, some really don’t and what else is new?

BEST PICTURE DRAMA, “Power of the Dog”
BEST DIRECTOR: Jane Campion, “The Power of the Dog”
BEST ACTRESS, DRAMA: Nicole Kidman, Being the Ricardos
BEST MOVIE, MUSICAL/COMEDY: “wEST sIDE sTORY”
BEST ACTOR, DRAMA: Will Smith, “King Richard”
BEST ACTOR, COMEDY: Andrew Garfield, Tick Tick Boom!
BEST ACTRESS, COMEDY/MUSICAL: Rachel Zegler, “West Side Story”
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN ANY MOVIE: Ariana DeBose, “West Side Story”
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR IN ANY MOVIE: Kodi Smit-Mcphee, “The Power of the Dog”

BEST SCREENPLAY: Kenneth Branagh, “Belfast”

BEST ANIMATED FILM: “Encanto”
BEST SONG: “No Time to Die”
BEST SCORE, “Dune,” Hans Zimmer

BEST NON ENGLISH FOREIGN FILM: “Drive My Car”

BEST TV DRAMA: “Succession,” HBO
BEST TV COMEDY: “Hacks:
Best Limited Series, Anthology Series or Television Motion Picture: “The Underground Railroad”

BEST ACTOR IN A DRAMA: Jeremy Strong, “Succession”
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A DRAMA: Sarah Snook, “Succession”
BEST ACTOR IN A COMEDY: Jason Sudeikis, “Ted Lasso”
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR IN TV SHOW: O Yeong-su, “Squid Game”
BEST TV ACTOR MINI SERIES: Michael Keaton, “Dopesick”
BEST TV ACTRESS MINI SERIES: Kate Winslet, “Mare of Easttown”
BEST ACTRESS TV COMEDY: Jean Smart, “Hacks”
BEST ACTRESS, DRAMA: Michaela Jaé Rodriguez, “Pose”

Shock: “Full House” Star and Comedian Bob Saget, 65, Found Dead in Orlando Hotel Room

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One of the nicest and funniest guys I’ve ever known, Bob Saget, has been reported dead in his hotel room in Orlando Saget was 65, and this is really tragic.

Everyone knows him from “Full House” and the Netflix series, “Fuller House.” But was a prolific and gifted comedian who worked gigs all over the country.

He was also involved in the one of the funniest documentaries ever, “The Aristocrats.”

I am so sorry, and this is third obit I’ve written today. (I could have written a fourth,for jazz musician Mtume.)

It seems like it was a heart attack. Just awful.

Keep refreshing…

this was his Tweet this morning after playing a show last night

 

Dwayne Hickman, Wry Star of Early 60s Hit TV Show “Many Love of Dobie Gillis.” Dies at 87

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Dwayne Hickman has died at age 87 from Parkinson’s Disease. I know if you’re under a certain age you’re saying, Who?

But Dwayne was the Richie Cunningham of his day. He was the teen and young 20s star of “The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis,” the hit TV series of the early 1960s. As he was a proto-Richie, Bob Denver– later to become Gilligan of “Gilligan’s Island” — was the show’s Fonzie, Maynard G. Krebs. The show was created by and written by Max Shulman, the humorist who wrote the short stories on which the series was based.

The series launched the careers as well of Warren Beatty and Tuesday Weld.

When “Dobie Gillis” ended Hickmman starred in some beach blanket movies like How to Stuff a Wild Bikini with Annette Funicello, and Ski Party with Frankie Avalon.He also starred in the Academy Award-winning comedy western classic Cat Ballou with Jane Fonda and Lee Marvin. Along with guest appearances on episodic television, Hickman toured in national companies of hit plays.

But there’s a twist. In the 70s, armed with a B.A., Hickman became an executive at CBS, and oversaw a host of new hit shows including Maude, M*A*S*H and Designing Women.

It was Dobie, though, for whom he will always be remembered. First of all, Dobie’s icon was Rodin’s sculpture, The Thinker, whom he stood before when he broke the “fourth wall” during each episode. Dobie narrated the action for the audience without the device of a documentary crew following him, a la The Office. He had a breezy, snarky delivery that was also endearing, much like the much older George Burns, in his matter of fact notice taking of the characters who surrounded him. Shulman was a genius, and Hickman was able to convey his unusual rhythms. For 1960, “Dobie Gillis” was ahead of its time.

So raise a glass to Dobie, Maynard G. Krebs, Max Shulman and an era when being smart was very cool.

 

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.