Monday, December 22, 2025
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Larry David’s “Curb Your Enthusiasm” Renewed for 11th Season After 20 Years and Big Breaks in Between

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“Believe me, I’m as upset about this as you are,” Larry David said today about the latest renewal of “Curb Your Enthusiasm’ by HBO.  “One day I can only hope that HBO will come to their senses and grant me the cancellation I so richly deserve.”

“Curb” will now add an 11th season, after starting in 2000. That’s twenty years, folks.

This past season, which will reap Emmy nominations for Best Comedy, Actor, Supporting Actor, Guest Actor and so on, was just as hilarious and well written as all the others. The first episode, in which Larry brandishes a MAGA hit to discourage new friends, was superb. But the whole “Larry’s Latte” story line was beautifully constructed. Hats off to everyone.

The show stars Susie Essman, Jeff Garlin, Cheryl Hines, Richard Lewis, J.B. Smoove, and Ted Danson. This season, Jon Hamm did serious damage and guaranteed himself a Guest Emmy nomination as a Larry David wannabe. Megan Ferguson deserves some acclaim for playing Larry’s put upon secretary, Alice.

What’s next? Can you imagine the Larry character and his friends wearing masks? Pandemic problems? Dealing with racism? (They’ve done it a lot, all of it very un-PC.) I can’t wait. In the meantime, I feel like opening my own spite store!

 

“Ozark,” the Best Drama on TV This Year, Will End with a 4th Super-Sized Two Part 14 Episode Season

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“Ozark,” which just had the best season on TV, I think, will come to an end.

Netflix has announced a fourth season for the despicable Byrde family that will have 14 episodes split into two seven episode cycles.

Jason Bateman, Laura Linney, Janet McTeer, Julia Garner and Tom Pelphrey made Season 3 so amazing they all deserve Emmys, in every category. I will be sad to see it all end.

“We’re so happy Netflix recognized the importance of giving “Ozark” more time to end the Byrdes’ saga right,” showrunner Chris Mundy said in a statement. “It’s been such a great adventure for all of us — both on screen and off — so we’re thrilled to get the chance to bring it home in the most fulfilling way possible.”

There’s no real reason given by Netflix for ending the show, which could have gone on for a few more seasons. But the cost of producing the show must have been gaining, and no one outside of Netflix knows what the ratings are. If you went by the people I talk to, the show is massive hit.

Seriously, with Emmy nomination voting starting Thursday, we should see all the actors I mentioned get spots. Even in the toughest competitive year, “Ozark Season 3” was simply outstanding.

 

UPDATED Carl Reiner, Brilliant Writer, Comic, Director, Creator of “The Dick van Dyke Show,” Dies at 98: Wrote a Farewell Tweet

UPDATE 2:27PM Dick Van Dyke writes on Twitter: “My idol, Carl Reiner, wrote about the human comedy. He had a deeper understanding of the human condition, than I think even he was aware of. Kind, gentle, compassionate, empathetic and wise. His scripts were never just funny, they always had something to say about us.”

EARLIER Three days ago, Carl Reiner– who’d become a prolific Tweeter– wrote a mystifying message that sounded like he’d come to the end. He wrote: “Nothing pleases me more than knowing that I have lived the best life possible by having met & marrying the gifted Estelle (Stella) Lebost—who partnered with me in bringing Rob, Annie & Lucas Reiner into to this needy & evolving world.”

It wasn’t his last message, there were a couple more about Noel Coward and about his loathing of Donald Trump. But that family Tweet was a sign. He knew he was done. The remarkable Carl Reiner had died at age 98. Condolences to his family, to son Rob Reiner, to his daughter, and grandchildren, and to Mel Brooks, his life long best friend.

Of course, Carl created “The Dick van Dyke Show” and even played talk show host Alan Brady in it. Before that he was a writer of Sid Caesar’s “Your Show of Shows.” After “Dick van Dyke,” he went on to direct movies and write books and have a late in life acting resurgence in the “Oceans 11” movies.

The movies: Okay, “Where’s Poppa?” is a lost classic, starring George Segal and Ruth Gordon, and if you haven’t seen George Segal getting mugged over and over by the same mugger in Central Park, you must. “All of Me” with Steve Martin and Lily Tomlin transcends genius. There are three other Steve Martin collaborations: “Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid,” “The Man with Two Brains,” and the real classic, “The Jerk.” Let’s not forget how Carl resurrected George Burns for “Oh, God!” with John Denver. I watched it recently on cable and it’s marvelous, sweet, and so funny.

With Mel Brooks, there are many collaborations but the best and longest lasting is “The 2000 Year Old Man,” which they resurrected many times after its great success. It’s a sketch that lives on to today. And so does Carl Reiner.


Anyone who followed Carl on Twitter knew how much he hated Donald Trump. He was planning to vote for him and would have been urging everyone to do the same from now through Election Day. We have to do it for him now.

And that Twitter account: if he was doing the posting, he was sending messages. “Does anyone know Olivia deHavilland’s birthdate?” (She’s over 100.) The last week was full of memories, tributes. Looking at it now in retrospect, it’s so classy.

What a life, what a legend.

Review: Oscar Contender “Hamilton” On Film for DisneyPlus Puts Us Right in the Room Where it Happened

I always say, and you may, too: Donald Trump doesn’t realize who will write his story. Lin Manuel Miranda got that when he read Ron Chernow’s biography of Alexander Hamilton, and the result was a raft of prizes, the highest praise, commercial success and an understanding of history.

“Hamilton” was filmed on Broadway in 2016 for posterity by its award winning director Thomas Kail, using many cameras and some tricks not seen before in performing such an enterprise. The reward is “Hamilton: The Film,” which I think may explode the internet and DisneyPlus on Friday when it’s made available for streaming. I just finished it. This is the third time I’ve seen Hamilton– after its original two opening nights– and I am gobsmacked by it. You will be, too.

Prepare for a two hour, forty minute ride. You can’t look at your phone, or take long breaks or even wait and “see the rest of it tomorrow.” For one thing, it’s impossible. Your are drawn in from the first minute and there is no backing out. Make sure the dog is fed and walked, the babies are asleep, the ovens are all off. You do not want to be interrupted.

Frankly, if “Hamilton: The Film” had opened in movie theaters it would have been a massive hit. As it is, I don’t see how it can’t be nominated under this year’s temporary rules for Best Picture. And maybe win. It’s just an extraordinary achievement, not just theatrically but cinematically. You won’t think for a minute “I’m watching a play.” Nope. It’s a movie, and it’s as convincing and utterly involving as if Kail and Miranda had built sets and all that stuff we rely on.

Maybe the music is the sets. The music is so overwhelmingly melodic and witty that it becomes a character unto itself. So many people know the score from the bestselling album that it’s not a problem. I remember at the Public Theater opening, no one knew anything in advance. We kept hearing, ‘there’s a lot of rap music.’ There is some, but it’s so good, so urbane, so clever. And overall the music is what you might call symphonic R&B. Or just great Broadway.

All the songs, like the people who sing them, are hits, one after another. After you watch this movie, you’ll only want to hear Phillipa Soo and Renee Elise Goldsberry’s voices. I don’t know how Leslie Odom Jr went to bed every night after singing his songs, especially “The Room Where it Happened.” Same for the dizzying talents of Lin-Manuel, Daveed Diggs, Chris Jackson, Anthony Ramos, Jasmine Cephas-Jones (yes, her father plays Sterling K. Brown’s dad on “This is Us”– some family!), and the quite hilarious Jonathan Groff. Their heads must have been swimming with excitement and melody.

It’s not that Lin Manuel Miranda had that brainstorm that comes once in a million for even the greatest genius. He saw something else here back in 2014-15 that now is pressing on us. Alexander Hamilton, the immigrant, making his way in the white world of George Washington, becoming essential and indispensable, infiltrating the Schuyler sisters’ society world and rising to the top. And then, to cast almost all multicultural actors to play people we’d been taught in school for generations were white and untouchable. That first night at the Public, the whole concept was like a brain explosion.

Originally, this “Hamilton” film was supposed to be released in October 2021. When this new date of July 3rd was announced, George Floyd hadn’t been murdered yet. That was two weeks away. We were just dealing with the pandemic. Even the immigrant struggle had been a bit backburnered. But look how the news has made “Hamilton” so important to see right now. By a series of turns in the universe, “Hamilton” is exactly the history lesson we must study ASAP. It’s almost like it’s here to save us.

Really, kudos to Thomas Kail. He puts us right in the room where it happened. The actors, every one of them, deserve prizes. The music, I told you, I will be singing it in my sleep tonight. The cast, wherever they are, will have trouble going out for food on Saturday. No one will socially distance themselves. There will just be a lot of hugging and applause. (I clapped many times and you will, too.)

Damn COVID-19. We were gypped out of a real red carpet premiere for this movie. Now I’m really depressed!

So, I’m sorry, you guys have to wait til Friday. But the “Hamilton” cast was so over the top great on Jimmy Fallon last week, that I’m giving you that video here. In the show Phillipa Soo and Renee Elise Goldsberry sing “Helpless” as their characters each fall for Hamilton. In this Zoom video, the whole cast is featured, even the ones not in the song on stage. Just brilliant.

 

 

Flashback Review: “Hamilton” Opens at the Public Theater February 17, 2015 And Shakes the Whole World

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I was lucky enough to attend the opening of “Hamilton” at the Public Theater on February 17, 2015. To say everyone in the audience was wowed was an understatement. When I filed the column below, I hadn’t even processed it. Earlier that day I’d called Oskar Eustus and asked him about a new show he had that night. He laughed and said, “You can come, because you’ll never be able to get in again.”

The after party was in the lobby of the Public Theater. The audience and cast were equally stunned. I do remember Jimmy Fallon being there and being bowled over. We were all actually saying to each other, quietly, “Is this the best thing you’ve ever seen?” No one could believe it.

Did I ever see it again? Yes. At the Broadway premiere five months later. It was every bit as good, if not better.

This Friday, “Hamilton” — filmed in 2016 on its stage with the original cast– debuts on Disney Plus. I’ll be watching it shortly. In the meantime, here’s that original column.

Lin-Manuel Miranda? You may know his name from “In the Heights.” But starting this morning you will know him as the genius behind a brilliant epic musical (dare I say an opera) that opened last night at the Public Theater. “Hamilton” is the story of Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr set against the Revolutionary War.

Most of the actors playing your favorite historical figures are black (Washington, Jefferson, and so on, as well as Hamilton and Burr). The show is an epic, an opera, a soaring musical, a deeply researched history lesson that is going to blow audiences away when it hits Broadway.

And that, according to my sources, will be this spring to make the Tony Awards cut off. At the opening last night producers circled like sharks. But the Nederlanders will bring it in, I’m told, to either the Nederlander (where “Rent” once ruled the roost) or the Richard Rodgers. There will be lines around the block.

First of all, Oskar Eustis must know that Joe Papp, the legendary founder of the Public, be smiling in heaven. Eustis — with shows like this and “Here Lies Love” and the introduction of Sting’s “Last Ship” and many others– continues to be the leader in theater. He’s batting a thousand, as they say.

But back to Miranda, and his amazing “Hamilton.” They say it took him five years to write and mount this show. Watching it, you can’t imagine how he wove in so many story lines of characters both great small, famous and minor. Working off the little known point that Hamilton, a founding father and the creator of the New York Post, was of unspecified African and Caribbean background, Miranda turns history on its head. And that doesn’t mean that he’s inaccurate. (He’s not, and there will no “Selma” type whisper campaign here.) Indeed, Miranda’s decision to have a multi cultural story erases almost all idea of race. So Miranda himself plays Hamilton, Leslie Odom Jr is Burr, Daveed Diggs is Thomas Jefferson, Okieriete Onaodowan (James Madison) and so on. After this show, they will always be remembered this way.

I haven’t cited the women, who are on a par with the men. Renee Elise Goldsberry and Phillippa Soo play the Schuyler sisters. Hamilton married one and pined for the other. The segment and song about the wedding of Hamilton to Soo’s Eliza is breathtaking. Kudos all the way through to director Thomas Kail. Each of these women are stars, and convincing sisters. (Soo played Natasha in the theater “experience” piece “Natasha and the Comet.” Goldsberry is a Broadway phenom from “The Color Purple” and “Good People” who has a loyal following from “One Life to Live.”)

Some reviewers will say the songs are rap. Some are; most aren’t. They’re R&B, pop, hip hop, a little Beatle-y, hugely melodic and hummable. It’s a gorgeous, continuous score that never stops surprising us. Last night Atlantic Records’ Craig Kallman was in the audience. It’s my guess he’ll snap up (or has snapped up) this soundtrack.

Also in the audience last night: Audra McDonald, Ethan Hawke, Stephen Pasquale, among others, all entranced.

But get to the Public because for the next two weeks, the real show stopper is Brian D’Arcy James as King George III. He leaves soon to go star on Broadway in “Something Rotten.” I’m sure his successor will be just fine. But James, already a bona fide star, is having too much fun. (No one asked me, but I’d get Fred Applegate to try the part next. In fact, it’s possible King George will become a “Stunt cast” once the show opens. I overheard one of the producers say he’d like Paul McCartney or Sting to give it a shot. I could see Elton John doing it, frankly.)

“Hamilton” is one of those memorable moments in New York theater. You’re going to be hearing about it a lot.

What??? MTV’s Video Music Awards Will Be Broadcast Live from the Barclays Center in Brooklyn August 30th

Huh? Did I miss something?

MTV’s Video Music Awards will be broadcast from the Barclay’s Center in Brooklyn live on August 30th. Gov. Andrew Cuomo knows about and is thrilled.

Is the pandemic over? I am really confused.

I wouldn’t go to this event without the pandemic, frankly. It’s usually like a three train crash spectacle. But I guess the kids love it. And why not crowd into the Barclays Center? By August 30th, heck, the whole thing will be a distant memory.

Read the small print: “The health and safety of artists, fans, industry, staff, and partners is of the utmost importance. Show producers alongside Barclays Center management have been working closely with state and local officials to implement best practices for everyone involved. Among the measures all parties involved have aligned to include extensive social distancing procedures, meaningful capacity limitations, the virtualization of components where possible, and limited capacity or no audience. Details and potential options to come at a later date based on the science and data in New York. Barclays Center and ViacomCBS are unequivocally committed to ensuring that the show does not compromise the health and safety of anyone involved in the event.”

Official sponsors of the 2020 “MTV Video Music Awards” include Burger King®, Coors Light, and EXTRA® Gum– all of whom will offer branded thermometers, masks, gloves, and hand sanitizer to the guests.

TV: BET Awards on CBS Fizzle, Lose Two-Thirds of “60 Minutes” Audience But Jennifer Hudson Stole the Show

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The BET Awards were more about quality than quantity went it came to ratings last night.

The show averaged 2 million viewers from 8 to 11pm, which means a fewer number of people watched than see CBS’s soap operas.

“60 Minutes” scored 7.4 million viewers from 7 to 8pm. Two thirds of those people bailed when the BET Awards began. The awards show had 2.4 million people for the 1st hour, 1.7 million and then 1.6 million.

The game shows on ABC and reruns of “America’s Got Talent” on NBC did a lot better.

I found the BET Awards so interesting and well produced, I’m sorry it didn’t have more of an audience. Kudos to CBS for having it on in the first place.

The show introduced a new clip from the Aretha Franklin movie starring Jennifer Hudson. JHud is on her way to another Oscar nomination and possible win. One interesting tidbit from the new clip is that screenwriter Callie Khouri has been restored to the writing credits as “Story by.” She was the original screenwriter, than director Liesl Tommy replaced her with her own writing partner, Tracey Scott Wilson. But I guess there was some kind of negotiation that put Khouri back into the credits.

 JHud also performed on the show, one of Aretha’s old songs that she covered from Nina Simone– “Young, Gifted, and Black.” It was a show stopper, of course. The movie “Respect” will be out for Christmas, we hope.

Sundance Festival, Which Some Think Was Early US Entry Point for COVID, Starts Planning 2021 Festival

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The last Sundance Film Festival, in January 2020, some feel may have been an early US entry point for the COVID virus. A lot of people got sick there, reportedly, and didn’t know what it was.

Now the 2021 Festival is being planned, and organizers are taking precautions. The new director, Tabitha Jackson, says in a letter: “The 2021 Sundance Film Festival will be a grand partnership of communities. It will take place live in Utah and in at least 20 independent and community cinemas across the U.S. and beyond.”

Also Jennifers Hudson and Holliday are singing a special version of “And I’m Telling You I’m Not Going” at the opening ceremony.

We love Sundance, but travel to Park City, Utah in the dead of winter with the coronavirus hanging over us doesn’t sound prudent.

But Sundance can be done virtually, and I think it will work.

Here’s the letter:

Dear Friends,

As we plan for our 2021 Festival — my first in the Director’s chair — and with submissions now open, I wanted to give you an early insight into how we are thinking. This is not an announcement, but rather an invitation into the process of building something together this year. There are very few certainties in these uncertain times, but we are lucky to have as our North Star a well-defined and decades-long mission of championing the independent voice.

That mission — driven by our values of inclusion, equity, and accessibility — becomes more urgent with every passing day. We also have a world of artists making bold powerful work that creatively expresses a lived experience, reveals its complexities, delights in its absurdities, and challenges its injustices. And we have you — this community — which over the years has empowered us to do something extraordinary every January in Utah. With these elements magic can surely happen.

Although it is fair to say that I had not factored a global pandemic and an international reckoning around racial justice into my job application, I did know that as we write the next chapter in the incredible history of the Sundance Film Festival I would want to pose a slightly counterintuitive question: “Where do we begin?”

I began with our founder, Robert Redford, who imagined a different landscape for independent artists, one where the work they wished to make could be developed and supported outside of the studio system. He created a new space for imaginative possibility and creative community. We call that space Sundance.

We spoke about our animating purpose, about the importance he places on gathering together in person, and about the role of art itself. But it was this provocation that I found as profound in its generosity as it was liberating in its effect: “I invite you to think not just outside the box, but as if the box never existed.”

So with that we began to imagine a kind of Sundance Film Festival unbound:

An edition respectful of the public health situation, responsive to the moment, and reimagined in and for extraordinary times;

An edition doubling down on our values of access, equity, inclusivity, and independence;

An expanded Festival in which we preserve the possibility of in-person gathering while providing access to those unable or unwilling to travel;

A unique celebration of independent cinema and community;

A single festival expressed locally, globally, in-person, and online.

Although this planning had started as a response to an economic downturn and global health crisis, it became an opportunity for creative and expansive thinking.

 

In the Atacama Desert in Chile, there is an array of 66 telescopes turned toward the stars. Alone each one is not powerful enough to capture the extent of the universe astronomers are seeking to know. But combined, this multiplicity of perspectives has the power to reveal the structures of the system we inhabit, which had been hidden from us by distance and time.

This is my image for the Festival: a powerful array of perspectives, of talent and artistry — combining with audiences in homes and cities and across countries to reveal new truths. An accessible, inclusive Sundance Film Festival whose form this year enables us, together, to see differently.

<p “=””>So enough of the conceptual stuff — what might this look like on the ground? Seven months out, we are actively planning for the following public health scenario: We are allowed to gather, but there is no widely available COVID-19 vaccine. With the knowledge that as of now socially distanced gatherings are permitted in Utah and other states, but travel is greatly reduced — and large events, shuttle buses, and crowded waitlist tents cannot be supported, which may limit the number of theaters we use during the Festival in Utah.

We hope for better news about the pandemic by January 2021, but we also must plan for the greatest challenges. We have discovered that the planning is in fact an invitation to think differently about the form of the Festival.

The 2021 Sundance Film Festival will be a grand partnership of communities. It will take place live in Utah and in at least 20 independent and community cinemas across the U.S. and beyond. Utah has been the home of the Festival for close to 40 years and always will be, but the 2021 Festival will extend beyond Utah and will be co-created by and for different communities in different locations, preserving what is magical about experiencing films on the big screen with others — even if at a smaller and socially distanced scale.

While the full program plays out in Utah, each of our partners will host a bespoke slate from the official selection alongside complementary programming of their own. Their communities acting as vibrant hubs of creativity, maker culture, and adventurous audiences. This plan acknowledges the vital role of the independent cinema network in our ecosystem. We are in exploratory discussions with cinemas from LA to Louisville, from New York to Nashville, from Austin to Atlanta, from Detroit to Denver, from Minneapolis to Mexico City — with many more to come.

At the center of all our planning, the 2021 Sundance Film Festival will have an online home, making the festival accessible in a way it never has been before. Audiences will have the opportunity to view the curated program and take part in discussions and special live events online via a brand-new platform. This will be the nucleus of the Festival, a showcase for a world of new work, and home to a global community of festivalgoers who will encounter the art, the artists, and each other. A one-stop point of access, designed to create a participatory experience which brings all the elements and locations of the Festival together. It will center our values of engagement, inclusion, and entertainment, and connect artists with the first audiences as their work meets the world. All this in a way that captures the energy and excitement that has long defined the Sundance Film Festival.

As every day currently feels like a week, and every month like a year, we cannot know what the world will look like in January 2021. But as we plan this scenario, we are building in flexibility, including considering a different start date (January 28) to provide some room between the U.S. presidential inauguration and the start of the Festival.

The success of this idea, indeed its very heartbeat, depends upon collaboration — between us and key players in this delicate ecology of independent cinema. Rest assured that even amid the excitement of experimentation, if our approach doesn’t work for the artist, it doesn’t work for us. Our model intentionally allows us to dial up or dial down the live gatherings (especially in our Utah home) and Festival length as conditions dictate. The structure as we are currently conceiving it will remain intact — a Festival that for this year is live and digital and is co-created with partners. A Festival that will serve our communities where they want to be, given conditions of pandemic and economy. A Festival that is more than the sum of its parts, but whose parts are all driven by values and the opportunity to think a different thought.

We will be cheering on and learning from our colleagues putting on festivals in the fall and once again recognizing how fortunate we were to be able to have our 2020 edition, and now have some time to think about 2021. We look forward to exchanging ideas and improving on the specifics over the coming months. Together we can thoughtfully build this special edition of the Sundance Film Festival, perhaps breaking some “rules” as we go.

We are reminded daily of the power of what is made newly visible to us, the importance of what we look at. My hope for this edition of the Sundance Film Festival is that through a multiplicity of perspectives held by artists and audiences in their various communities we will also come to feel the power of where we look from.

Yours,
Tabitha

Broadway League Says Theaters Will Remain Shut At Least Until January 3, 2021 Because of Virus Fears

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Broadway will remain shut down at least until January 3rd, 2021 says the Broadway League.

It’s because, as we know, social distancing in a Broadway house, not to mention in the putting on of a play or musical, is fairly impossible.

We knew there was going to be a long wait. But two shows– “The Minutes” and “American Buffalo”– announced March and April opening dates.  The Michael Jackson musical, “MJ,” is determined to open in April. And “The Music Man” will open on May 20th, skipping the usual eligibility deadline for the Tony Awards.

Most shows should return, or resume their opening plans next spring. But “Frozen” closed for good. “Hangmen,” the Martin McDonagh play that’s so good but can’t catch a break opening on Broadway, has thrown in the towel. And a Scott Rudin produced revival of “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” that was unnecessary in the first play, shuttered before it started.

Meantime, producers Joey Parnes and Tim Forbes are asking actors to send in audition tapes for a “K Pop” musical. Talented performers of Asian descent in their 20s are encouraged to visit kpopbroadway.com/casting in order to submit audition. materials.

Is there an audience for a Korean pop musical on Broadway? According to the press release: “An earlier version of the show, produced by Ars Nova in association with Ma-Yi Theater and Woodshed Collective, played to sold-out crowds Off-Broadway in the Fall of 2017, and was the recipient of the 2018 Richard Rodgers Award, three Lucille Lortel Awards, including Best Musical, the Off Broadway Alliance Award, and seven Drama Desk Award nominations.” 

 

Marvel Creator Stan Lee’s Daughter Sanctioned $1 Mil by US District Court, Plus Accused “Elder Abuser” Has All Misdemeanor Count Dismissed

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JC Lee, the daughter of late Marvel Comics genius Stan Lee, has been sanctioned to the tune of $1 million by US District Court of Central California for filing unnecessary lawsuits in her father’s name. She was upbraided by the judge in the case for not respecting her father’s legacy.

US District Court Judge Otis D. Wright II dismissed as “frivolous” a lawsuit brought JC Lee, as her father’s heir, against POW Entertainment, the company that Stan formed once he sold Marvel to Disney in 1998. He ordered sanctions against her of $1 million, which must be paid to the court, including $250,000 from her lawyers, who the judge held liable as well.

Judge Wright wrote: “Stan Lee, a super hero in his own right. served to inspire the everyday hero. The Court urges parties to to treat his legacy with respect and cease engaging in meritless litigation.”

At the same time, in a different LA court, JC’s rival (and some might say enemy) Keya Morgan– who’d been Stan Lee’s friend, manager, partner– had the last of 4 misdemeanor counts against him dismissed for allegedly making fake 911 calls from Stan’s home. Morgan is now suing JC Lee and a number of people for defamation and fraud.

Stan Lee died November 12, 2018 at the age of 95. His wife predeceased him, leaving him vulnerable, sources say, to daughter JC (Joan Celia), who resented his friendships and other relationships.

Judge Wright noted that the POW agreement had already been the subject of previous legal actions, all of which went in their favor. The judge wrote: “JC Lee is a negligent, if not willful, participant, in the frivolous and improper filings.”  JC should be thankful that the judge didn’t agree to POW’s original sanction request of $5 million to put an end to this madness. As it is, she will have to pay POW’s legal fees in addition to the $1 million.

Meanwhile, what Morgan has gone through is the most absurd part of this story. By coincidence, he had told me, in passing, in early 2018, that he’d been trying to help Stan Lee since his wife had died, and that people were preying on the Marvel founder.

Morgan’s friendship with Lee is one of those cases of no good deed goes unpunished. He was arrested on June 11, 2018 by LAPD, Commercial Crimes Division detectives for allegedly generating false 911 calls on May 30th and May 31st, 2018. The LAPD statement said: “In both instances, Morgan was using this tactic to further deceive Lee into believing he was in danger and needed to be moved from his home to a more secured condominium where Morgan had more control over Lee.”

But on Friday Morgan cleared a big hurdle with the dismissal of the purported fake 911 calls. He always said he was innocent, had the proof, and he did.

Next month, Morgan will confront JC Lee again in court over her accusations about false imprisonment and stealing money. Morgan, I’m told, has all the receipts. To wit: In May 2019, six months after Stan’s death, Morgan was also charged with one felony count of false imprisonment of an elder or dependent adult, three felony counts of grant theft of more than $100,000 from an elder or dependent adult and one misdemeanor count of abuse of an elder or dependent adult. He was jailed in Arizona and bail was set at $300,000. His arrest was made into a big show. But again, he’s confident of his innocence.

One big question that remains: who stoked the local press out west about Morgan, making him seem like a criminal on the run? Someone or something has been Keya Morgan’s Thanos all through this. We may never get that answer.