Thursday, December 18, 2025
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West Side Story: Leonard Bernstein’s Fans and Friends Orchestrate Private Screening of New Doc Set For 2022 Release

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An elite group, many of whom knew Leonard Bernstein, gathered this week at Soho House in the Meatpacking District (technically the West Side) for a special screening of a documentary set for release in 2022. “Bernstein’s Wall,” a spectacular film about the great composer- conductor- pianist- music educator- humanitarian- antiwar activist, a fixture of 20th century American cultural history, previewed earlier this spring at the Telluride and Hamptons film festivals to raves.

Well-timed in a wave of Bernstein projects, the riveting film comes as Bradley Cooper finalizes his production of a fictional “Maestro,” and “West Side Story”   — Steven Spielberg’s movie of perhaps the most famous and oft-produced Broadway musical, composed by Bernstein in collaboration with Stephen Sondheim and Arthur Laurents — is set to sweep this year’s Oscars.

Tuesday’s screening and dinner hit every high note. Mercedes Bass,  the dynamic Vice Chair of Carnegie Hall — where Bernstein’s illustrious career was launched at age 25 — hosted the evening. It was at Carnegie Hall that Bernstein, who began as an understudy conductor, garnered his first ecstatic reviews. He later conducted at Philharmonic (now David Geffen) Hall to great acclaim. Both venues should be thrilled about Bernstein’s imminent Renaissance.

“Bernstein’s Wall” is not quite a biopic, as filmmaker Douglas Tirola makes clear—a proper one might be hours long. This film, comprising only Bernstein’s own voice from tapes and readings from personal letters, recounts the development of his process, and how music informed his life. It still manages to touch all bases: his political activism—starting with the dismantled Berlin Wall—a rousing moment in 1989 when he led an international orchestra in Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony  near the Brandenburg Gate celebrating freedom and German reunification –and coming to the “kotel” in Jerusalem.

Over tuna tartare and tenderloin, music mogul Clive Davis, who produced Bernstein’s music for ten years at Columbia Records, sat opposite famed bandleader Peter Duchin. Duchin attended Bernstein’s legendary parties, and remembered the infamous fundraiser that spawned Tom Wolfe’s coinage, “radical chic,” in New York Magazine. Duchin told me it was Bernstein’s wife Felicia’s idea to bring the Black Panthers to Park Avenue: “Let’s just hear what they have to say,” she advised. The not-so-glamorous event nevertheless made headlines. “It was serious, not frivolous,” Duchin recalled, “[J Edgar] Hoover thought we were all Communists.”

Duchin, by the way, will publish a memoir next month that will include the story of his successful battle with COVID in the spring of 2020. Doubleday is the publisher.

Nearby –at the long table, where multi-hyphenate entrepreneur and celebrity Martha Stewart chatted with composer Karen LeFrak of the New York Philharmonic, and writer/ historian Amanda Foreman. Though she did not know Bernstein, her father, noted Hollywood screenwriter Carl Foreman (High Noon), was black-listed by the infamous House UnAmerican Committee, another touchstone of the era’s politics limned in the movie.

“Bernstein’s Wall” is a winner, and a sure hit for 2022. The composer-conductor’s pulse was attuned to the movements of the day. Mensch that he was, he did not turn away. He fixed neither his nose nor his name. And even though Bernstein clearly states that at age 10 he wished his strict Ukrainian-immigrant father dead—the hard-working beauty supply company owner refused to pay for his son’s piano lessons—he came to understand and to love him.

Other guests included John Sloss, of Cinetic Films, who is negotiating the sale of “Bernstein’s Wall” to a distributor for release next year, as well as famed architect Daniel Libeskind, plus Jackie Williams, grandniece of the Duke of Marlborough, and Richard Gelfond, head of IMAX, with wife Peggy. (What a thrill it would be see to Bernstein conducting on an IMAX screen!)

 

 

Adele Lost Weight But Her New Songs Gained: Six of the “30” Tracks Are Five or Six Minutes Long

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Remember the days when a hit record could be no more than 3 minutes, 30 seconds?

Then we hit the “Bohemian Rhapsody”/”Stairway to Heaven” era when everything was a rock opera at 45rpm. Six minutes? Seven minutes? The longer the better.

Punk and new wave music came along to dispel all that, returning pop and rock to two or three minutes of punchy, catchy power playing. It was a welcome relief to hear Elvis Costello, the Clash, or the Pretenders tell their stories succinctly.

Well, bloat is back in the form of Adele. The singer herself has a lot of of weight but her new songs sounds like they’re going to be nappers. Five songs on the “30” album clock in at over six minutes! One o them is five minutes! Hello! It’s not like Adele is showing off her guitar solos. She isn’t Ray Manzarek playing keyboards on “Light My Fire”!

The last two songs on the album, “To Be Loved” (not the Jackie Wilson classic, by the way) and “Love is a Game” come in at 6:43. What is this? “Hey Jude”? “American Pie”? “Inagaddadavida, Baby”?

In the old days, record labels would force acts to accept radio edited singles so even if the album track was long, the single was a tidy fit. I can’t imagine Z100 or KIIS FM playing six minute tracks. Maybe Sony can send out their own versions so drivers don’t doze off and have accidents. “Your honor, I plead the Adele defense.”

This should be interesting…

John Legend Leaves Sony Music After 17 Years and He’s Not Alone: BTS and Maxwell Have Exited As Well

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John Legend’s first album was his biggest hit. “Get Lifted,” released in 2004 was the beginning of his career.

Now, 17 years later, Legend– whose real name is John Stephens — has left the label and signed a deal at Universal’s Republic Records. Republic is the hottest label in the music business.

Legend’s last Sony-Columbia release was a dud, selling just over 200,000 copies. It was called “Bigger Love” and it didn’t have any singles or radio friendly songs. Did anyone at Sony “A&R” it, as they say, i.e. supervise it or executive produce it? My guess is, no.

John told Variety in 2020: “The way you monetize your work is through so many other things, beyond streams and physical sales. For me, recording is about building my legacy and my brand, and using it as a calling card to do other things, like perform live. We can do it on our own; the question is, do we want to? Columbia has been cool. I’ve been there since the beginning of my career, and we’ve had a lot of success together. Obviously, personnel changes matter — [chairman/CEO] Ron Perry is fairly new there, and we’re getting to know each other — but we’ve had a great run there. Ask me in a year.”

Sony has also lost a very big act, BTS, which moved to Universal Music, and R&B legend Maxwell, in the last few months. BTS’s move is tied up with the company that owns the Korean boy group and their deal with manager Scooter Braun, who is tied to Universal. Maxwell hasn’t released a new record since 2016. Indeed, he’s only had five albums in 25 years. Now he’s left for vanity label BMG, where his music will sink like a stone into obscurity.

Sony has had some hits this year, with BTS, but also with Lil Nas X and with The Kid Laroi. They may have a Beyonce album coming. (No one ever knows.) When they release Adele’s “30” album next Friday, Sony will be on top of the world again. So John Legend and Maxwell may seem old hat to them. And BTS? Well, that’s the way the cookie crumbles.

 

Not an “SNL” Sketch: Justin Bieber is Endorsing Flavored Donut Holes at Canadian Coffee Shop Chain

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You can’t make this up. Justin Bieber is endorsing flavored donut holes at Canadian coffee shop chain, Tim Horton’s.

Think Dunkin’ Donuts. And Dunkin’ Munchkins. Same idea. Except they’re called Timbits. Or Timbiebs.

Justin, no Mensa candidate, is seen in the video below enthusiastically picking the flavors that best represent him.

What comes to mind is that there’s been no touring income for two years. And Justin’s albums haven’t sold especially well. His biggest hit this year was “Peaches,” which featured other singers, so his cut of the profits wasn’t so high. Another hit was with Kid Laroi. So Bieber may need money.

And this is what it’s come to. I’d love to see the books on his account over at Scooter Braun’s. Things must be pretty bad if they’ve stooped this low.

This is sad.

Who Knew? Famed Actor William Hurt is a 9-11 “Truther,” Narrates Film About How the World Trade Center Was “Really” Destroyed

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Actor William Hurt has been “out there” for a long time. A respected acting talent, he’s never been part of the mainstream of Hollywood or Broadway. He was always a little “off.”

And now comes the proof. Hurt has thrown in with the 9-11 “truthers” who believe the US government blew up the World Trade Center buildings. He’s narrating a film about it and has written a piece on the site of wacko conspiracy theorists Architects and Engineers.

Hurt says in the piece, called  “It took me a long time to face what I knew to be true about 9/11,” that ten days after the 9-11 attacks he was on a movie set when he lost consciousness or something. The medics thought it might be a TIA or mini stroke But Hurt says no, it was when he had an epiphany.

He writes:

It was a busy scene involving over a hundred people. As I returned to what they call “start marks” for another “master shot” (of the whole scene before tighter “coverage” setups begin), I stopped. And I suddenly couldn’t remember where I was. What city was I in?

Then my body just “went” to New York. It was “there,” floating high up inside one of the imploding towers. I was trying to catch the falling bodies in my arms. Trying to pick them from out of everything and grab them to my chest to save them, but everything was passing through me — the immense pieces of concrete and superstructure mingled with the bodies of my fellows. I couldn’t catch them. They went through my arms. Everything did. I was what they call “losing it.”

A crew member came up and said, “Mr. Hurt, we’re ready.” I had no idea what he meant. The man asked, “Are you okay?” I heard his voice and said, “I don’t think so.”

Hurt says it wasn’t a physical issue. He was having some kind of out of body experience.

It took a while but, finally, I found pieces of evidence online. Mixed in among all the nonsense, there was sane and reasoned evidence. One of the sources, the strongest one by far, a source supported by thousands of responsible, honest, honorable, grounded, normal, respectful people — professional architects and engineers all around the world — was Architects & Engineers for 9/11 Truth. An amazing act of courage and compassion meets us there when we can bring ourselves to seek the answers.

Um, these people are completely CRAZY. I am very worried about American society. Too many people think this stuff, and also think they’re being tracked by the vaccine. Mental illness is thriving around us. And here is William Hurt, who won an Oscar in 1985, is now in his 70s and hasn’t been in anything of importance for at least 15 years or more. He’s lost his mind. If anything, he’s become his character in the mind bender, “Altered States,” from 1980.

I’m not linking to the film or the website of these kooks.

This is what it’s come to, kids.

 

RIP Beloved Actor Jerry Douglas, 89, Played John Abbott on “The Young and the Restless” for 30 Years

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Beloved actor Jerry Douglas has died at age 89.

Douglas played the patriarch of the Abbott family, John Abbott, on “The Young and the Restless” for 30 years. He was so popular that even after a bad team of writers thought he was too old and killed him off, Douglas was brought back over and over as a ghost, or a dream character.

Douglas started working in Hollywood on TV in 1961, and soon amassed a huge resume in the two decades leading up to his role on “Y&R.” He appeared on dozens of series, often multiple times, from “Mannix” to “Mission Impossible” to “Barnaby Jones” and so on.

But was in 1981 when “Y&R” creator Bill Bell remade the nearly ten year old soap, that Douglas found his niche. As the head of the Abbott family, he was the only character on the show with principles, a conscience, and tried to remain above the fray as everyone around him was involved in subterfuge, adultery, and other soap related chicanery. He was the moral center of the very immoral Genoa City. His run finally came to an end in 2016.

Condolences to his family and friends.

(Listen) U2 Joins Oscar Race for Best Song Along with Diane Warren & Reba McEntire, Beyonce, Van Morrison, More

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The race for Best Song at the Academy Awards is on. U2 has joined it with “Your Song Saved My Life” from “Sing 2.” Already in the hunt are Diane Warren and Reba McEntire, Beyonce, Van Morrison, and host of pop stars whose songs are featured in films this year.

Bono, the lead singer of U2, has a featured role in “Sing 2,” and so does the group’s classic hit, “I Still Don’t Know What I’m Looking For.”

Is there a new U2 album in the offing? I hope so, I miss them! But in the meantime, we’ve got this song. U2 has one Oscar already for Best Song, “The Hands that Built America,” from Martin Scorsese’s “Gangs of New York,” 2003.

Babaloo: Nicole Kidman, Javier Bardem Are Striking Lucy and Ricky in “Being the Ricardo’s” Trailer

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I like everything about this trailer for Amazon’s “Being the Ricardo’s” starring Nicole Kidman and Javier Bardem. The Oscar winners look and sound like Lucy and Ricky. There’s an orchestrated version of the TV show’s theme music. Aaron Sorkin explores Lucy’s dustup with the Black list. Cross fingers, this could be a winner.

Mariah Carey, Who Wouldn’t Eat Fast Food If You Paid Her, Will Now Because McDonald’s Is Paying Her

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Mariah Carey has made a deal with McDonald’s. They’re offering some kind of Mariah Carey Happy Meal for Christmas tied to her annual “All I Want for Christmas is You.”

Mariah would not eat fast food, let alone McDonald’s, if you paid her. But I guess she will now since McDonald’s is paying her.

Years ago there was big all star concert in Hyde Park, London called Live 8. July 2005. I wrote:

Here’s the thing about Mariah: She is a diva, and she doesn’t even know it. While I sat with her, she sent back her spaghetti-and-meat-sauce dinner three times — because it had cheese on it.

It’s not like she’s allergic to cheese, either. It’s that she could smell that the grated parmesan came from a jar and wasn’t fresh. (“It’s a thing I’ve had since fourth grade,” she said.) It was kind of hilarious.

What I remember is a production assistant walking into this little mobile structure where Mariah was holding court. Snoop Dogg had walked in with a gold chain around his neck ornamented by a small pistol. The P.A. was a woman with a headset. She carried in a round aluminum take out container, covered in foil, and said, “Hi, this is your dinner. It’s spaghetti and meatballs.”

Mariah said, “Is that cheese I smell?”

PA: “Yes.”

“Is it from a can? I won’t eat it. I only eat fresh grated parmesan.”

The PA was gobsmacked, as she was delivering food to a lot of celebrities. Everyone else in the tents, including Paul McCartney, Bill Gates, and Sting, was eating the food they were getting. But Mariah refused, and yes, they went back and forth three times on this cheesy subject.

So Mariah eating a Happy  Meal from McDonald’s? Uh, no. Not possible. (And PS I don’t blame her, it’s disgusting.)

All she wants for Christmas is a private chef, kids.

 

Pop Chart Prediction: ABBA First Album in 39 Years Won’t Sell More than 80K Copies, Finish at Number 2 This Week

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Not many people took a chance on them.

ABBA’s first album since 1982, “Voyage,” is more or less a bust.

Hitsdailydouble.com predicts “Voyage” will sell no more than 80,000 copies. It will finish its debut week at number 2, second to Summer Walker’s album, “Still Over It.”

Walker, a jazz and R&B sensation, will sell 100,000 copies more than ABBA. She’s shooting for 185,000 streaming equivalent copies.

ABBA’s comeback so far hasn’t been a great success. The album is terrible, and the singles from it have not been hits. Their London hologram show isn’t a big ticket seller either.

Stay tuned for Friday sales finals.