Wednesday, December 10, 2025
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RIP Phil Smith, 89, Longtime Head of the Shubert Organization, a Broadway Star in His Own Right

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Phil Smith, the long time head of the Shubert Organization, and a Broadway star in his own right, has died at age 89. The cause was COVID.

I’m lucky to say I knew Phil a long time myself, he was incredibly friendly and gracious to me. He was a sounding board when I was writing about Broadway, or just gossiping about what was going on.

He was an elegant, worldly gentleman who loved theater, loved everything about the Great Way so much that the last ten years, as his health declined, he continued to come almost every opening night even in a wheelchair. I must say, I felt better when I knew he was in the theater before the curtain went up.

“How’s this one, Phil?” I’d ask him before the show started. Sometimes he’d say, “You’ll see,” with a wink. If the Shuberts were invested in it, he might say, “You’re really going to like this, Roger.”

There are only a few people left from this generation now that Phil, and Roger Berlind– the great producer who passed last month– are gone. Even though there is no Broadway now, it will return, and we will never forget these guys who made our lively entertainment so enjoyable.

Condolences to Phil’s family and friends, and admirers, who are numerous. Please read Phil’s NY Times obit here.

UPDATED Review: Leslie Odom Jr. Headlines a Well Meaning but Stagey “One Night in Miami” Directed by Regina King

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UPDATED Thoughts, January 15, 2020: Just caught up with a second viewing of “One Night in Miami.” It is a powerful, well made film. It’s still talky, but I was less bothered by that. All the actors are exceptional. I’m torn among which one I liked best. Regina King has made an exceptional ensemble piece. She is really the star here because she’s taken what was essentially a play performed in one room with four men, and opened it better than I remembered. Eli Goree is just sensational as Muhammad Ali, and Leslie Odom, Jr. — well, it’s not just the singing. His speech about Bobby Womack and the Rolling Stones will land him an Oscar nomination. I was already a huge Aldis Hodge fan, and Kingsley Ben-Adir has got me now, too. Plus, I like any movie Lance Reddick is in. So second time around, I’m an even bigger fan of “One Night in Miami.” It’s certainly a contender for Best Picture.

 

 

September 10, 2020: My first TIFF film is Regina King’s “One Night in Miami.” I wanted to love it. Certainly, we all love Regina King and know how important this material is to her. But this is a movie that will play well on Amazon. In theaters, it would have been problematic.

Kemp Powers wrote this play in 2013, imagining conversations among four towering historic heroes who were all in Miami on the same night in February 1964: Malcolm X, Sam Cooke, football player turned movie star Jim Brown, and Cassius Clay. The latter came to fight Sonny Liston in a memorable knockout. In Powers’ telling, Malcolm X is there to convert him to Islam. The others are there for the big fight.

So what if they all hung out afterwards? What would happen?

The problem with the movie is all they do is talk, endlessly. The talk is important, I’m not saying it isn’t, but it’s pages and pages of exposition with no action. The four men cover a lot of ground and history but it’s not depicted. It’s reviewed.

Leslie Odom Jr is so good as Sam Cooke they should just spin him right off in a biopic and let him sing Cooke’s songs. As it is, even though this movie is co-produced by Jody Klein, whose father Allen Klein had the Cooke catalog, there are few moments of Odom showing off. Maybe they’re waiting for the sequel.

The rest of the main cast are spot on: Kingsley Ben-Adir as Malcolm X, Eli Goree as Cassius Clay/Muhammad Ali, Aldis Hodge as Jim Brown. But they are all dressed up with no place to go. Goree has a nice way of capturing the rhymin’ Clay, Ben-Adir fleshes out a frustrated Malcolm X empathetically. Aldis Hodge, who should have been a movie star already, radiates charisma as Brown.

You can feel this was a stage production transferred to film. The one scene that has a gut punch is when Brown goes to visit a wealthy patron in the South played by Beau Bridges. The man is so excited to see him at his southern mansion and meets him on the porch, but won’t let Brown in his house because he’s back. It’s freakin’ 1964. Think about it: Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat to a white man on a Montgomery, Alabama bus in 1955. We’ve already had the march on Selma. It doesn’t matter.

If only there’d been more scenes dramatized like this, “One Night in Miami” wouldn’t have seemed like a year in any other place. But Regina King acquits herself with the material she has in her directorial debut, and I look forward to seeing more from her.

Emma Thompson Will Play Mrs. Trunchbull in Movie “Matilda,” Even Though Men Have Always Played the Role on Stage

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Harvey Fierstein, stand down.

Emma Thompson has been cast as evil Mrs. Trunchbull, the deliciously malicious central antagonist in the movie version of Broadway’s “Matilda.”

This decision is despite men having played the part on stage traditionally. Bertie Carvel was nominated for a Tony Award in the original 2013 production. His replacements during the four year run included Bryce Ryness, Christopher Sieber, and Craig Bierko, and Chris Hoch. No ladies, only guys.

But Working Title, Netflix, and Matthew Warchus probably thought this was a safer way to go. They didn’t even consider John Travolta, who went full on drag for the “Hairspray” movie.

You know that Billy Porter and Eddie Izzard would have given anything to take this part.

Eleven year old Alisha Weir has been cast as the title character.

“Hard Kill,” the Latest Bruce Willis Movie with a Zero Critics Rating, Will Get a Sequel, Natch

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You’ve never heard of “Hard Kill.”

It’s the latest Bruce Willis movie that was made for straight to video and streaming. Rotten Tomatoes gave it a Zero from 21 negative reviews. Even the audience rating on Rotten Tomatoes was low, 64%, when it was “released” last September.

“Hard Kill” will nevertheless get a sequel, because, why not? Willis’s co-star, Jesse Metcalfe, announced it this morning on Fox5 NY’s “Good Day New York.” “We just got word,” said Metcalfe.

The director, Matt Eskandari, has made two other Bruce Willis D Movies in the last two years including “Survive the Night” and “Trauma Center.” You never heard of them either. Don’t worry.

These Bruce Willis movies are a far cry from the actor’s halcyon days in movies like “Die Hard” and “The Sixth Sense.” They’re so bad and low budget that even the Razzie Awards ignore them. Willis himself may be unaware of how awful they are. He usually plays a small part of the production, appearing in two or three scenes, taking second billing, and deferring to a younger actor as the lead.

“Hard Kill” was not a big hit in theaters. According to boxofficemojo.com, it made $111,523. Most of that came from the United Arab Emirates, some of it from Vietnam. Other income might have been realized from streaming services or DVD sales in other foreign territories. It’s ranked at #40,647 on amazon.com among Blu-Ray DVD’s and can be purchased for six dollars and eleven cents.

 

Candice Bergen’s Amusing Guest Stint on “The Conners” Raises Show’s Ratings 8.6%, More Stunt Casting Needed

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Turns out injecting some stunt casting into “The Conners” didn’t hurt the ailing ratings, it actually helped them.

Multiple Emmy Award winner Candice Bergen guested last night on the comedy and the numbers rose 8.6% to 3.89 million. The previous episode, on December 2nd, was at 3.58 million.

Bergen– who should be in the running for the Oscars Best Supporting Actress in “Let Them All Talk”– was very amusing, sarcastic, and biting as always. She was also a necessary addition to “The Conners,” which has been fading on a different night and time this season.

Bergen played Ben’s mom, and stole the show. Her interaction with Jackie (Laurie Metcalf) was worth everything. Let’s hope we see her again!

 

 

Chris Evans Laughs Off Rumors He’ll Return to Marvel Studios as Captain America: “News to me”

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At the end of “Avengers: Endgame,” Chris Evans retires as Captain America and hands his famed shield to Anthony Mackie. Evans goes on to a much loved performance as the playboy son and maybe murderer in “Knives Out,” and makes cable knit sweaters popular again.

Today a wild rumor went through the entertainment press that Evans was returning to Marvel Studios as Captain America in some form. The story flew from site to site, with wild speculation and no facts.

Finally, around 5pm Eastern, Evans responded on Twitter: “News to me.” A minute later, he wrote: “Some of the gif responses are priceless good work, everyone”

Earlier in the day I asked my insider expert on these matters. They responded: “Probably a flashback thing or some kind of appearance. Doesn’t affect Mackie.”

And that is probably right. As much as everyone loves a Marvel “leak,” these people are trained to deflect, obfuscate, and actually lie when secrets seem to have been divulged. It’s all orchestrated, and designed to create renewed interest in the films.

In all likelihood, Evans turns up for a cameo in the upcoming six part miniseries, “The Falcon and the Winter Soldier,” starring Mackie and Sebastian Stan as Sam Wilson and Bucky Barnes, which will show Wilson/Falcon’s transition to Captain America. The miniseries airs on Disney Plus sometime this year.

Honorary Oscars Will Go to Tyler Perry for Humanitarian, Charitable Efforts, and Motion Picture Television Fund, Questionably

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The Motion Picture Academy usually gives out Lifetime Achievement awards. Among them, in most years is the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian award. They were re-branded as the Governor’s Awards and got their own ceremony starting just a few years ago.

This year, for the first time, there will be two Jean Hersholt Awards. One will go to Tyler Perry, actor, director, producer and philanthropist. He really deserves it, too.

The other will go to the Motion Picture Fund, which runs the big retirement home/assisted living facility for showbiz people in Woodland Hills. Known as the MPTF, the Fund is a thing not a person. They have $90 million in assets according to their 2018 tax filing. The Fund is run by supremely overpaid people ($36 mil in salaries in 2018 including $800,ooo for the CEO) who’ve done a lot of bad things over the years. It was not that long ago that there were protests against the MPTF during awards weekends about the management of the home. But producer Jeffrey Katzenberg made it his admirable mission to raise millions for them. And now they’re getting an Oscar, which is totally ridiculous. They should just give it to Katzenberg. (Oh wait, he did get it, in 2012.)

In order to pull off this little coup, the Academy had to vote to change the wording of the Hersholt prize. “For this year only, the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award may be given not just to an individual, but also to a group of individuals or an organization in the motion picture arts and sciences whose humanitarian efforts have brought credit to the industry.  The Board may bestow up to two Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Awards.”

Oy vey.

The Academy can also give out the Irving Thalberg Award, and just a Lifetime Achievement Award. There’s been no announcement of those yet, but expect a total of two more along this line. The awards will be given out at the Oscars ceremony on April 25th, which will most certainly be virtual.

Fleetwood Bank: Now Mick Fleetwood Joins Stevie Nicks, Lindsey Buckingham Selling Rights to His Songs, Recorded Catalog

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Well, why not?

Now Mick Fleetwood has sold the rights to his recorded catalog to BMG. He follows bandmates Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Byckingham, who’ve sold the rights to their catalogs.

With touring paused for possibly two years, the members and former members of the Mac need money to maintain their lifestyles. They’re all in their 70s.

Mick Fleetwood is a drummer, and never wrote the band’s biggest hits. But he has a stake in them, certainly, as the namesake of the band. He’s the most senior member of the band, followed by former married couple Christine and John McVie. The latter wrote a lot of the hits. We should be getting an announcement about them pretty soon.

The press release reads below. Who knows what this means for dead Mac-ers Bob Welch, Peter Green and Danny Kirwan, who wrote the band’s original hits?

from the release:

The deal gives BMG Fleetwood’s royalty interest in over 300 recordings including all of Fleetwood Mac’s biggest hits including ‘Dreams’, ‘The Chain’, ‘Go Your Own Way’, and ‘Landslide’ from albums including Fleetwood Mac (1975), Rumours (1977) and Tango In The Night (1987). It includes Fleetwood’s interest in all of their recorded work apart from their first two albums.

It means BMG will participate in the proceeds of the global viral success of ‘Dreams’ on TikTok which became a worldwide sensation generating over 3.2 billion streams globally (during an eight-week period September 24 to November 19, 2020). The song generated 182 million streams, 126k downloads, 2.8 billion TikTok views, and sold upwards of 86k albums in the US in 2020. The moment captured a new generation of fans, while its contagious vibes spread across the globe engraining it as a defining moment of 2020 and propelled Rumours into the charts worldwide, reaching number six on Billboard’s Streaming Songs chart 43 years after its release.

The acquisition also strengthens an ongoing relationship which includes the theatrical, record and mediabook release of Mick Fleetwood & Friends, 2020’s tribute event to legendary guitarist Peter Green and the early years of Fleetwood Mac, including performances by stars such as Steven Tyler, Christine McVie, Neil Finn, Noel Gallagher and Pete Townshend.

BMG CEO Hartwig Masuch said, “Mick Fleetwood is the bedrock of one of the greatest bands in rock, he has a unique talent to bring together musicians of all genres and of course he is one of rock’s greatest drummers. BMG is proud to represent his greatest work and excited about the forthcoming launch of Mick Fleetwood & Friends.”

Mick Fleetwood said, “This is a wonderfully inspiring marriage between two creative partners that understand all aspects of the business. Foremost, BMG understands the artistry and puts the artist first. If this partnership is any indication of my past, and now future, working relationship with BMG, it’s that they truly ‘get it’.”

Exclusive: Harold Bornstein, Eccentric Doctor Who Said Trump Was in Excellent Shape, Dead at Age 73

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read all today’s Showbiz411 headlines click here

Harold Bornstein, the doctor who said Donald Trump was in excellent shape and was mocked for it, died last Friday at age 73.

His paid obit is running in the Legacy section of the New York Times. (I posted this at 1am. The Times didn’t even know Harold died. Their obit ran this morning at 9:30am.)

I am gobsmacked. Harold was my doctor in the 80s and early 90s. His father, the late Dr. Jacob Bornstein, was the cousin of a friend of mine. Harold, who loved dispensing medication over the phone, never mentioned that Trump was his patient. But when Trump became president– and his health was questioned– Harold, looking more eccentric than ever, chimed in.

He wrote a letter stating: “If elected, Mr. Trump, I can state unequivocally, will be the healthiest individual ever elected to the presidency.” (The letter is below.)

He later told CNN: “He dictated that whole letter. I didn’t write that letter. I just made it up as I went along.”

Around that time, in 2017, Harold claimed his office had been raided by Trump via a bodyguard. Trump lawyer, and long time associate. It was prompted by an article in the New York Times in which Bornstein said the president takes a prostate-related drug to treat baldness, known as Propecia, as well as other “antibiotics to control rosacea, a common skin problem, and a statin for elevated blood cholesterol and lipids.”

Trump was obviously furious, and that was the end of his relationship with Harold. His obit doesn’t say what he died from, but like everything else touched by Trump, Harold was marked for doom. What a shame. Harold told NBC: “I feel raped — that’s how I feel. Raped, frightened, and sad. I couldn’t believe anybody was making a big deal out of a drug to grow his hair that seemed to be so important. And it certainly is not a breach of medical trust to tell somebody they take Propecia to grow their hair. What’s the matter with that?”

The Harold Bornstein I knew had a great sense of humor. Maybe he wasn’t the best doctor, but he was competent and helpful. He was eccentric, certainly, the opposite of his father, who was a straight shooter. It’s a shame that he got scooped up in the Trump tsunami of lies. The public will only think of him as Trump’s crazy doctor, but I have mostly fond memories of him. RIP Harold. Condolences to family, friends, and patients.

Round Up: RIP CBS’s Ray Brady, Armie Hammer Loses a Job, “Sopranos” Prequel Moves, SAG Awards Stagger to April 4th

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All movies of any value are leaving the first half of 2021. While we wait for James Bond “No Time to Die” to set itself up, here’s the latest:

David Chase’s “The Many Saints of Newark,” prequel to “The Sopranos,” is not opening in March. Warner Bros. has moved it to September 24th. March? Fuhgeddaboutit!

Alessando Nivola and Vera Farmiga lead this cast in a very anticipated film. September 12th would suggest Toronto or Telluride Film Festivals will be involved– if they happen at all. This date is flexible if this freakin’ pandemic isn’t in hand by then.

More immediately: the SAG Awards will play NBC on April 4th. They lost March 14th to the  Grammy Awards, who bigfooted them by taking the date without warning after canceling January 31st.

Armie Hammer is out of the Jennifer Lopez movie, “Shotgun Wedding.” He was going to play her fiancee. They should have called it “Cougar Wedding.” Armie is in trouble because of social media posts, and his response to them hasn’t been handled well. Now he seems to be planting nutty stuff in the Daily Mail on purpose. He said in a statement: “I’m not responding to these bullshit claims but in light of the vicious and spurious online attacks against me, I cannot in good conscience now leave my children for 4 months to shoot a film in the Dominican Republic. Lionsgate is supporting me in this and I’m grateful to them for that.”

He should be getting PR help. But you know, Armie is independently wealthy, so he doesn’t care. I wish he would take this more seriously and get it all straightened out. He is not a cannibal, or a drug addict.

Armie is still signed to play producer Al Ruddy in the miniseries about the making of “The Godfather” for Paramount Television. It’s called “The Offer” because no one could refuse it, not even Armie Hammer, even if he is a cannibal!

RIP Ray Brady, 94, long time CBS News business correspondent. He was a pro, his reporting was top notch and his delivery was excellent. I counted on Ray Brady to tell it like it was. Brady spent 28 years with CBS News, starting in 1972 when he joined CBS Radio. He retired in 2000 after 23 years as a correspondent for “CBS Evening News.”

Paula Salvatore has run Capitol Recording Studios forever. She’s been there about 30 years but looks 30 some how (no surgery either). Anyway, she’s the best. Everyone comes to her in LA to make their records, starting with Paul McCartney. Tommy Lipuma loved her. Every year she handles the pre-records for the Oscars, among her many resume highlights. Now word is Capitol is closing down her department. Paula will be in huge demand as word gets out. And rightly so.