Sunday, December 21, 2025
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Clive Davis’s Amazing 5 Hour All Star Night of Stars Zoom Party With Bruce Springsteen, Alicia Keys, John Legend, Jennifer Hudson, Gladys Knight, Beyonce

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Clive Davis couldn’t bring 2,000 stars and execs and celebrities to the Beverly Hilton tonight, so he put them on a Zoom call. All of them! Insane! It may have been the biggest Zoom call of all time!

Saturday night’s “call”/party, whatever– all the proceeds go to MusiCares and the Recording Academy. So Clive pulled out all the stops. His guests– I mean the people he interviewed through the five hour call included Bruce Springsteen, Beyonce, Alicia Keys, Carole King, Barry Gibb, Rod Stewart, who was hilarious, and the legend Gladys Knight. John Legend and Jennifer Hudson each sang live and wowed the crowd. Jamie Foxx was sensational.

And the crowd– yes, of the 2,000 people who watched the show, about 250 were in a “VIP” room and I was a fly on the wall. This group included LEGENDS, the heavy hitters of the music biz including all the label execs, plus — and this just in no order—Joni Mitchell, Dionne Warwick, Quincy Jones, Berry Gordy,  Roberta Flack, Herbie Hancock. Verdine White of Earth Wind and Fire, Carole Bayer Sager, Diane Warren, Jimmy Jam Harris. Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff, Nile Rodgers, Lou Adler, TONY ORLANDO, kids, David Foster and Katherine McPhee, Sam Moore and his wife Joyce Moore, Lisa Loeb, Cynthia Erivo, Rob Thomas, Rickey Minor– who gave a great interview about Whitney Houston, Peter Asher, Melissa Manchester, Alan Parsons, Clarence Avant, LORNA LUFT — hello!, the great Michele Lee, Charlie Puth, Ray Parker Jr, and I’m pretty sure Lindsey Buckingham was in there.

Who else? Lorraine Bracco, Katie Couric, Sherry Lansing, Richard Weitz and his daughter Demi, 90 year old Laugh In impresario George Schlatter, Broadway’s Andy Karl and wife Orfeh, Cameron Crowe, Ari Melber, Shep Gordon, Bryant Gumbel, Tyra Banks, Martha Stewart, agent of all time Arnold Stiefel, Robert Weir of the Grateful Dead, the great songwriter Lamont Dozier, and Atlantic Records’ Pete Ganbarg, Craig Kallman, and Julie Greenwald, and BYRON ALLEN.

I’ve missed some– and this thing is still going on at 11:26pm with Sean Combs giving an interview about he signed Bad Boy Records to Clive at BMG and launched a million hits.

Again, this was to benefit MusiCares, which needs funds to keep helping musicians through the pandemic. If you listen to music, you must send them money. Harvey Mason Jr. of the Academy explained how they created a COVID fund with Steve Boom of Amazon Music.

Bruce Springsteen told Clive tonight, “Fifty years ago you changed my life.” He wasn’t kidding. Alicia Keys and Carole King were charming. Rod Stewart was hilarious.

I think Clive might be turning 88 this spring. If you saw him interviewing stars for four and a half hours tonight, you’d give him a talk show. He literally surveyed the whole of pop, rock, and R&B tonight with the biggest acts. He’s going to do another one of these on March 13th, the actual night before the Grammys, and then he can turn the whole thing into documentary to benefit MusiCares.

What a night! And it was just Part one!

Sundance Record Broken as “CODA,” Film About Singing Teen from Deaf Family, Breaks Record with $25 Mil Sale

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Apple has gotten to the core of Sundance.

The computer/phone company with a burgeoning film firm broke the Sundance record today. They bought “CODA” for $25 million.

They broke last year’s record of $22.5 million for “Palm Springs” bought by Neon and Hulu.

I told you in my review that “CODA” was big. Directed by Sian Heder and based on a French film, “CODA” stands for Child of Deaf Adults. In this case, the child is 18 year old British actress and singer Emilia Jones, who plays a teen who can sing like a bird. Only problem is her parents and brother are deaf, and can’t hear her.

Heder set her version among fishermen in Glouchester, Mass., and this gives the film a lot richness and texture. Luckily, she shied away from having a lot Boston accents. But the warmth of the characters and the situation– of course, the girl joins the high school choir, is discovered to be a phenom, and tries out for Berklee School of Music– add up to a home run of a film that everyone will enjoy.

Co-stars in the film include Oscar winner Marlee Matlin, and 21 year old Ferdia Walsh-Peelo, of “Sing Street” fame. “CODA” will be a major player in 2022 awards season, if we ever finish the 2021 awards season. I do hope Apple puts this film in theaters and doesn’t just relegate it to TV screens and computers. It deserves a big setting.

I can’t wait to see who picks up the soundtrack, and who signs these kids to record contracts.

PS You have to realize how Apple, Amazon, and Netflix have so changed the way deals are done now at places like Sundance. Those companies have unlimited cash. Plunking down $25 million is pocket change for them. It’s very different than when Miramax, or Fine Line, etc– the O.G. indie film companies– battled to get product. They were sweating it. Very new world we have here.

Lockdown Blues: As Van Morrison Backs Lawsuit Against Irish Government, Eric Clapton Erases “Stand and Deliver” from Social Media

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It’s only seven weeks since Eric Clapton foolishly released his recording of a Van Morrison song called “Stand and Deliver.”

It was not an anthem for Uber Eats. The song decries the lockdown in the UK and Ireland, urging everyone to go back to clubs to hear live music.

Morrison, who has unwisely gotten involved in questioning the validity of COVID regulations, has heart in the right place but his head up his you know what. His song compares the lockdown to slavery. Really.

Morrison remains committed to the cause. He’s backed a lawsuit against the government of Northern Ireland over their “blanket ban” on live performances. On Twitter, Morrison says: “There were some very misleading stories in the press in recent days. For clarity, the legal action refers to allowing musicians to legally return to work once lockdowns are lifted and once it is safe to do so.”

But that makes no sense. When the lockdowns are over, everyone will return to work.

Interestingly, Clapton has remained mum about the legal action. He’s also cleaned his social media of all reference to it, also, after enduring proper criticism. His Instagram and Facebook pages are absent any sign of “Stand and Deliver,” and his website makes zero mention of it. It’s as if the whole thing never happened.

Of course, “Stand and Deliver” remains on YouTube and on streaming services. But no one really cares. The two YouTube videos have  a combined roughly 500,000 views, which ain’t much in terms of pop music. Actual sales are nil — less than 4,000 including streaming since December 4, 2020. There’s still time for Clapton to repurpose the song for Uber Eats!

Broadway Hit Musical “Dear Evan Hansen” Coming to Movies in September But Will It Come Back to Broadway?

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“Dear Evan Hansen” is already a movie.

While we were buying toilet paper, Universal spent the last few months shooting the Tony winning Broadway musical as a film this September.

Ben Platt returns as Evan, the boy who lied, with an all-star cast subbing in for the Broadway performers. Amy Adams, Julianne Moore, Kaitlyn Dever, Amandla Stenberg, Colton Ryan, Nik Dodani, DeMarius Copes and Danny Pino are in the cast.

Stephen Chbosky directed the pic from a script by Steven Levenson, who wrote the book for the stage musical, with music and lyrics by “La La Land” Oscar winners Benj Pasek and Justin Paul. Marc Platt and Adam Siegel will produce for their Universal-based Marc Platt Productions. Michael Bederman, Levenson, Pasek and Paul and the executive producers. If they get Oscar nominations, Marc Platt and Ben Platt will be the first father-son duo at the awards maybe ever.

“Dear Evan Hansen” opened on December 4, 2016 on Broadway and played through mid March 2020. That’s a short time before a movie is usually made from a hit show. But who knows if the theatrical version will return next summer or fall? And wouldn’t the movie siphon off the legit audience?

Anyway, that’s the plan, although nothing is written in concrete, as we know.

 

Retiring at 84: Kris Kristofferson, Famed Songwriter of “Me & Bobby McGee,” Acclaimed Actor, Renaissance Man

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Kris Kristofferson is calling it a day.

The famed singer-songwriter and actor is retiring now at age 84. He deserves some downtime after a stellar career- make that two or three!

Kris is the accomplished and successful singer songwriter of “Me & Bobby McGee” and “Help Me Make it Through the Night.” among other hits.

He’s also a movie star, with credits like “A Star is Born” with Barbra Streisand, and “Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore.” One of his great roles was starring in James Ivory’s “A Soldier’s Daughter Never Cries.” Kris was featured in the infamous “Heaven’s Gate,” starred opposite Jane Fonda in “Rollover,” and co-starred in “Semi Tough” with Burt Reynolds and Jill Clayburgh.

Kris is a Renaissance man. He’s also a multi-tasker. He is one of the few in Hollywood who has done everything well.

Unfortunately he doesn’t remember a lot of it. I wrote in 2014 that Kris suffered from a form of dementia called “Puglistica.” He has severe memory loss from years of head injuries from boxing and football when he was younger. This is no joke. He remembers his songs and is able to play them pretty well. He knows his family. But memories of his career are almost all gone.

But between his diagnosis and the pandemic last year, he was still touring and recording, and acting. His wife of more than 35 years, Lisa, has run the show and let Kris do what he does best. But now they’ve hired an estate manager, and they’re coming off the road for good. He will still have 85th birthday celebrations in June.

Remember the Tony Awards? Now They’re Going to Vote in March for Nominations from Last October

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This is turning into pretty good theater.

The 2019-2020 Broadway season never really happened, remember? It stopped on March 13th because of the pandemic. A few shows had opened, mostly mediocre. The really good ones were either in previews or just about to start them. They never launched.

Broadway shut down before “Company,” “Girl from the North Country,” “Sing Street,” and so on went into limbo.

Six months later, the Tony Awards decided to announce nominees drawn from the 16 mostly mediocre shows, like “Moulin Rouge” and “Tina: The Musical.” Good performances, not great shows.

There was only nominee for Best Actor in a Musical. Aaron Tveit, of “Moulin Rouge,” come on down!

On New Year’s Eve, I wrote that we closed the year without winners or a ceremony.

Now, it seems, there will be voting for those nominations between March 1st and March 15th. And then? Who knows?

I do feel sorry for the producers, and everyone else who has lost livelihoods, and for Adrienne Warren, who deserved an award for playing Tina Turner. But the Tony Awards appear to be adrift. There’s no clear idea of what to do, and no one’s doing it. Will they announce winners from this vote? Will anyone care?

So far, this is a musical closing out of town.

Sundance Review: Questlove’s “Summer of Soul” is Like a Box of Fine Chocolates, with Unseen Performances by Stevie Wonder, Gladys Knight, Other Stars

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There was a Harlem Cultural Festival in New York in the summer of 1969. Stevie Wonder, Gladys Knight, Sly Stone, the 5th Dimension, and Nina Simone were among the performers. It was filmed, and then the footage was put away for 50 years.

Now Amir Questlove Thompson of the Roots and the Tonight Show has found the film and made a two hour documentary called “Summer of Soul: When the Revolution Couldn’t Be Televised.” It’s literally like a box of designer chocolates, just one tasty bite after another. I felt like it was made for me personally.

The performers are beyond outstanding. The only problem is there are too many of them, and after a while the message of the film is lost. Questlove and his team of editors (who did an amazing job) are trying to fit everything into that box. This movie needs to be cut by a half hour. I learned this the hard way when I made “Only the Strong Survive” with Chris Hegedus and DA Pennebaker in 2002. The trick is to stick to your story even when there are so many riches available. Some of this could be on the DVD.

But that doesn’t take away from Thompson’s mission. He’s got all this incredible footage of Stevie, Gladys, the 5th Dimension– who are so underappreciated, Nina Simone, David Ruffin solo, and many instrumentalists, not to mention Sly and the Family Stone at their peak, and so much more. This is the Black Woodstock. Thompson intersperses the musicians’ backstories with historical perspective of the time and culture. There’s a lot of information, not to mention reminisces of concertgoers a half century later. All of it is gold, although some of it has more carats than others.

Just a note on Stevie: this footage is of historical importance because he’s on the verge here of becoming the adult star who turned out a half dozen Grammy winning classic albums starting two years later. You see him performing every instrument already, it’s pure genius. It’s like a sketchbook for what’s come with “Superstition” and “Higher Ground,” etc.

Stevie says in a narration, “I never wanted to let fear put my dreams to sleep.” That right there should be the jumping off point for his own documentary.

Anyway, a little second draft-ing, tightening, and contemplating will make “Summer of Soul” even better and a must see I hope in theaters, not just cable and platforms. Great work.

Reality Bites: Armie Hammer Reportedly Out of “Godfather” Mini-Series Playing Movie’s Producer Al Ruddy

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Not since Tiger Woods’ meltdown a decade ago has a career melted down this quickly, and badly.

Actor Armie Hammer, who was on top of the world, is out of the “Godfather” mini series for Paramount TV. He was going to play the movie’s producer, Al Ruddy, who was producing this miniseries. Variety reported the news first.

Hammer, 34, has literally burned down his life and career since announced his divorce last July 10, 2020. He left his wife and two little kids in the Cayman Islands, went to Los Angeles, and started– well, started,  as far as we know then — dating.

But according to the women he’s known, he had some odd predilections for not just chewing the scenery, but also his dates. In the last few weeks, text messages were revealed, and then testimony from the women, that Armie has aspirations to be a “cannibal.”

As the women come out of the woodwork, and messages are revealed, Hammer is finding it’s not Hammer time, but time to release him from various projects. “The Offer” — as in “I’ll make you an offer you can’t refuse” — is just the latest one from which he’s been dismissed. He was also bounced from a Jennifer Lopez movie (that he shouldn’t have been in anyway), and one more as well.

To make things even weirder, Armie’s former collaborators from “Call Me By Your Name,” actor Timothee Chalamet and director Luca Guadagnino, are planning a movie about a modern cannibal. This may have to take the place of a “Call Me” sequel now that Hammer is becoming persona non digesta.

A new actor will be found to play Ruddy for “The Offer.” Ben Affleck might be perfect.

 

Cicely Tyson Wrote in Her Memoir About Husband Miles Davis: “He emitted a distinctly powerful scent, like the smell of burnt iron”

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Hard to believe that Cicely Tyson finally published a memoir, this past Tuesday, and died two days later. There is so much to read in “Just As I Am” about her amazing life, but of course I’m most interested in her romance and marriage to jazz legend Miles Davis, a heroin addict whom she could not control. They were married from 1981 to 1987, but a long relationship preceded that.

The book is out of stock on amazon but you can download it from Kindle. I will be up all night reading it, with an introduction by Viola Davis.

Miss Tyson wrote:

“And then there were the drugs. He did not use in front of me. In fact, in all my years with Miles, never once did he shoot up, snort cocaine, or even smoke a reefer in my presence. I’m sure Miles must’ve shot up or snorted in his bathroom, but he left no sign of it, clearing away any paraphernalia. He knew how much I despised drugs. Also, my religious upbringing ensured I had nothing to do with them. I still don’t.

“One night after Miles had played at a club in Midtown, he and I, along with some of his band members, drove uptown toward his place. One of the guys lifted a small bag, presumably filled with drugs, and offered it to me. Miles pushed away his hand. “Man, are you kidding me?” he said, laughing. “I can’t even get Cicely to smoke a cigarette.”

…Whatever he smoked or shot up, he usually reeked of it. I knew the scent of marijuana, but other than that, I couldn’t tell the difference between coke or heroin or any other drug. On many occasions, he emitted a distinctly powerful scent, like the smell of burnt iron. It permeated his pores. He’d try to cover it with cologne (he loved his collection), but I could still smell it. And when I did, I stayed as far away from him as I could, because I knew I wouldn’t have been talking to Miles anymore.”

…Miles played fast and loose with his life far too frequently to have known his value. And even while grappling with my own anguish, I could not stand by and watch this man waste the rare gift he came here to share. His behavior at times disturbed me greatly, even humiliated me. And yet more than anger, I felt compassion, and pity for his sad state.”

Cicely Tyson Published Her Memoir On Tuesday, Now It’s Number 1: See Her Interview with Gayle King

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Well, this is something:

Cicely Tyson published her memoir on Tuesday, three days ago, and was interviewed by Gayle King for CBS This Morning.

Two days after publication, she died. The book, “Just as I Am,” has zoomed to number 1 on amazon and is totally sold out! What the heck?

Miss Tyson has left the stage with a bang, not a whimper. Wow. She finished the book, did the publicity, and went to heaven. What a way to go!

Here’s the interview with Gayle King, who has had more scoops in the last year than a Baskin Robbins server!