Monday, October 7, 2024
Home Blog Page 1361

Ex “Twilight” Star Kristen Stewart Happy to Get a Real Acting Prize in New York: “I’ve received a lot of Popcorn Awards” from MTV

0

Michael Keaton and Saoirse Ronan won the top actor awards for “Spotlight” and “Brooklyn” respectfully at the New York Film Critics Circle Awards celebration last night at Tao Downtown. But the main attraction at the star-studded event was Kristen Stewart, who received the best supporting nod for Olivier Assayas’s little-seen showbiz drama, “Clouds of Sils Maria,” starring Juliet Binoche as a superstar and Stewart as her meticulous and subservient personal assistant, first screened at Cannes over a year ago.

Stewart was the last of the award winners to arrive on the red carpet and posed for photographers in a flurry and then was whisked away for the ceremony where she was guarded by security all night. The “Twilight” star stayed for the entire celebration and at the end of the evening mixed with celebrity guests Jim Jarmusch, David Hyde Pierce, Paul Haggis, Bennett Miller and Tony Kushner.

Julianne Moore presented Stewart with her supporting actress award and joked she was glad it was still early in the evening, because otherwise, “I was going to be drunk before I got up there.”

Moore went on to say that she has known Stewart since the actress was twelve years old and starred in the 2004 film, “Catch that Kid,” directed by her husband Bart Freundlich, who told her Stewart was going to be a big star.

Stewart gave a laid back and short speech but seemed genuinely moved by the nod from the New York Film Critics. “I’ve received a lot of Popcorns, MTV Popcorn awards,” she said, but this meant something more for a film she described as “thoughtful and quiet,” adding, “It came out a year ago, so this is nuts.”

If Stewart was the evening’s superstar, Irish actress Saoirse Ronan was the event’s charmer. Liam Neeson, who presented her with the award, compared her to the late Irish actress Maureen O’Hara, who also became a star as a teenager.  Nominations are nothing new for Ronan, who was nominated for an Oscar when she was thirteen, for “Atonement.”

Ronan, who will appear next month on Broadway in Arthur Miller’s “The Crucible,” mentioned that she was born in the Bronx and moved to Ireland when she was three.  “I am from the Bronx after all,” she said in her charming Irish brogue. “Saorise from the Block’ is what they call me,” she said, referring to the Jennifer Lopez song. She added, “It’s a lot like J-Lo, a little more attitude, though.”

Best actor winner Michael Keaton, who plays a Boston Globe editor in “Spotlight,” who headed the investigative team that uncovered sexual abuse of children by Catholic clergy, gave his typical freewheeling speech that was endearing during last year’s awards season and has now become his trademark. Keaton said as one of seven sibling his mother “drilled” into him that, “You should be grateful, so whining was not even remotely in our vocabulary.”

He continued, “I’m going to say simply to the people who decided I was pretty good in this movie, ‘Thank you, just thanks.’ That’s it!” He went on to say, “I’m so fortunate to do what I do.” He thanked the cast and director Tom McCarthy.  “This is tough material to pull off in the degree he pulled off… Look man, I’m a blessed dude! I’ve had a nice life,” Keaton said. “I work hard. I deserve it. I will tell you that.”

Keaton extended special thanks to the “real stars” of the movie, the journalists of the Boston Globe, and he thanked his cast and directors and crew. He also singled out the people involved. “God bless them! This is for the survivors of this horrific situation, and I really hope it’s going to change things in the world.”

Early in the evening on the red carpet, Keaton admitted he doesn’t pay much attention to what writers say about his films. “This is not a good thing,” he confessed, but he thinks about critics only as an after thought. “I often go, ‘Oh that’s right! Someone’s going to write about this.’ I pretty much just enjoy making the movie. I haven’t really seen any of my movies, for, I don’t know, a bunch of years. I saw this and I saw ‘Birdman.’”

Keaton said he saw “Spotlight” two or three times. “Birdman is his favorite. “I’ve seen ‘Birdman’ four times,” he said. “That’s just unique. There’s just nothing like it. I venture to say there never will be anything like it. Honestly it’s not me. It’s Alejandro [Iñárritu]. I’m part of cinematic history if you ask me. And I’m not talking about me. I’m talking about him and IT, so as a person who loves filmmaking, I can’t not watch that,” he said. “I tell people all the time I would catch myself thinking, ‘God I love this movie,’ and then I’d go, ‘Wait, I’m in this movie.’”

Raised Catholic, Keaton said “Spotlight” was special to him. “I was an altar boy, and it means a lot to be part of something like this, to be honest with you.”

A reporter asked what his favorite part was about working with the “Birdman” director? ”He’ll drill down, he’ll drill down, he’ll drill down to the specifics to get to the truth of the scene, to get the reality of the scene, and I like that,” said Keaton. “It’s not just being pushed. It’s how you’re pushed and why you’re pushed. You know, I can go all day. They can never wear me out.”

As for whether he was shocked by the subject of “Spotlight,” Keaton said he read about it for a long time, but “It’s always shocking. You think you get it and you know, when you’re making this movie you think, ‘Well, I read the script and I’m in it, so I get it.’ And then there would be days where you’d be in the middle of the scene, and you run through it maybe in the fifth, sixth scene and you go, ‘Wow!’ It hits you on a whole other level. It’s kind of hard, you know, to fight through it and get back to work frankly.”

When asked if he enjoyed being back on the awards circuit, he said, “How bad can it be? There’s a whole lot worse things to do beside somebody saying, ‘Hey we think you’re pretty cool!”

I asked him what it meant being recognized by the New York Critics group? “These guys, they really write well and they can be really tough, so if they think you did all right that’s pretty gratifying.”

Although the New York Film Critics Circle is comprised primarily of male critics, the big winner was the estrogen-cocooned film, “Carol,” about lesbian lovers in 1950’s New York, which stars Rooney Mara and Cate Blanchett. “Carol” received the top prize for best film. The Weinstein Company film also picked up awards for screenwriter Phyllis Nagy, cinematographer Edward Lachman and director Todd Haynes, who are all getting a lot of practice making speeches leading up to the Oscars.

Photo c2016 Showbiz411 by Paula Schwartz

Oscar Favorite Sylvester Stallone Says “Creed II” Could Bring Back Rocky’s Son

0

EXCLUSIVE Ryan Coogler’s “Creed” is on the outside track, making a quick secret run toward an Oscar nomination for Best Picture. Sylvester Stallone, already tipped for a Golden Globe this Sunday, is looking at his own Oscar nomination and very probable win. Who wouldn’t want to hear that acceptance speech on Oscar night, after Stallone’s played Rocky Balboa for 40 years?

So last night, Stallone, Coogler and “Creed” (as well as actress Tessa Thompson) were feted at Patsy’s on West 56th St– the real Patsy’s, former home of Frank Sinatra and his buddy Jilly Rizzo, where the bolognese sauce melts in your mouth.

Producer Irwin Winkler– who’s been with Stallone the whole 40 years– was also toasted by the likes of Gayle King, Bob Balaban, Patricia Duff and journalist Richard Cohen, New York Daily News publisher Mort Zuckerman, legendary former NBC News correspondent Richard Valeriani, director Malcolm Lee, actors Joey “Pants” Pantoliano and Rosie Perez, Rutanya Alda, “Wall Street” producer Ed Pressman, Oscar winning screenwriter Geoffrey Fletcher (“Precious”) and so on.

Missing only were “Creed” stars Michael B. Jordan and Phylicia Rashad, each working on the west coast.

Stallone was beaming. Dressed nattily in a blazer and tie, and looking fit, he held the room in the palm of his hand when he spoke about how Coogler convinced him to “raise Rocky from the dead.” You can see that Stallone is very enamored of his new director.

Now that “Creed” has crossed the $100 million line, it’s time to think about the sequel. Stallone thought after “Rocky Balboa” (2006), the franchise was dead. But now it’s back. He told me he could see a sequel that brings back Rocky’s son (played by Milo Ventimiglia in “Rocky Balboa”) as Coogler develops Adonis Creed’s next story.

Rocky’s cancer, of course, would be in remission.

“We just gotta sit down and map it out,” Stallone told me.

So what was the difference playing this Rocky than the last six? “As we live we acquire all kinds of experiences, some good, some bad. It builds up a reservoir of emotions. As we got older the opportunities diminish and we don’t get a chance to express ourselves. Well, he [Coogler] gave me a format where I could let out a lot of stuff that had been building up inside. It was very cathartic. Perhaps when I was younger, it was a different kind of exuberance. I think as you get older you get a resignation about how life works, and maybe a world weary intelligence.”

Did you know Sly Stallone was so articulate, so thoughtful? As Ryan Coogler said after first meeting him and expecting Rocky, “You know he has to be a good actor. He’s completely different from the character.”

Yup. “Creed,” Rocky, Stallone. It’s time, kids.

PS Stallone pointed out that Coogler, 29, wasn’t born the year after Sly made “Rocky IV” in 1985!

Pop Charts: Adele Sells Another 300K Copies of “25,” Beatles and Sinatra Hit the Top 20

0

Adele, Adele, Adele. Hitsdailydouble says she sold 293,000 copies of “25” between Christmas and New Years. Billboard says it was 307K. Let’s split the diff and say 300K. Adele has sold over 7 million copies through December 31st. She’s on her way to 8 mil.

On amazon, Adele occupies most of the top 5 with her “25” CD, “21” CD, and vinyl edition of “25.” That’s right– her LP. Hah!

Also in the top 20 Christmas week, the Beatles “1” CD remastered version from this year, and a Frank Sinatra greatest hits collection. Capitol Records’ catalog department is really on the ball with reissues. Plus, they have the two greatest acts in pop history.

Will anything ever topple Adele’s run at number 1? Nothing that’s known. If some artist has a surprise release– maybe Beyonce– that might do it. But there aren’t any other superstar acts right now with Adele’s depth artistically and demographically. A new Justin Timberlake? Maybe. But basically, we’re stuck with Miss Adele for some time to come. A new single comes this week, too.

Watch Natalie Cole and Whitney Houston Sing Two Duets Together from 1990

0

Natalie Cole hosted a syndicated show called Big Break in 1990. Whitney Houston was her guest one week. Watch these duets– heartbreaking because these are the best voices of their generations. (Natalie was about 15 years old than Whitney.) Who would have said in 1990 that 25 years later these young women would be gone? Tragic.

I Say A Little Prayer

Bridge Over Troubled Water

“Spotlight” Named Best Picture by Film Critics, Leo, “Revenant” Ignored, “Creed” Star Best Actor

0

The National Society of Film Critics comprises a lot really great writers who’ve matriculated out of the New York and L.A. Film Critics groups. They’ve named “Spotlight” best picture, and Michael B. Jordan Best Actor from “Creed.” Todd Haynes is Best Director for “Carol.” Charlotte Rampling is Best Actress for “45 Years.” Their choices are very good, I think. The pick of Jordan is a nice touch. The group completely ignored “The Revenant” and Leonardo DiCaprio, including cinematography. Lubezki didn’t even get runner up. None of this means a thing Oscars-wise, but it’s an interesting episode.

They dedicated the meeting to the late Richard Corliss, who I can’t believe isn’t with us anymore. Unlike the idiots at the National Board of Review, the National Society has no lavish dinner dance and rat-fuck so the critics can meet the stars. There’s no $600 ticket. That’s what makes it real.

Awards for 2015 films

BEST ACTOR:

*1. Michael B. Jordan (Creed) 29 points

Geza Rohrig (Son of Saul) 18
Tom Courtenay (45 Years) 15

BEST ACTRESS:

*1. Charlotte Rampling (45 Years) 57

Saoirse Ronan (Brooklyn) 30
Nina Hoss (Phoenix) 22

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR:

*1. Mark Rylance (Bridge of Spies) 56

Michael Shannon (99 Homes) 16
Sylvester Stallone (Creed) 14

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS:

*1. Kristen Stewart (Clouds of Sils Maria) 53

Alicia Vikander (Ex Machina) 23
Kate Winslet (Steve Jobs) 17
Elizabeth Banks (Love & Mercy) 17

BEST SCREENPLAY:

*1. Spotlight (Josh Singer and Tom McCarthy) 21

Anomalisa (Charlie Kaufman) 15
The Big Short (Charles Randolph and Adam McKay) 15

CINEMATOGRAPHY:

*1. Carol (Ed Lachman) 25

The Assassin (Mark Lee Ping-bin) 22
Mad Max: Fury Road (John Seale) 12

PICTURE:

*1. Spotlight (Tom McCarthy) 23

Carol (Todd Haynes) 17
Mad Max: Fury Road (George Miller) 13

DIRECTOR:

*1.Todd Haynes (Carol) 21

Tom McCarthy (Spotlight) 21 (because he was on fewer ballots; a winner must be on a majority of ballots)
George Miller (Mad Max: Fury Road) 20

FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM:

*1. Timbuktu (Abderrahmane Sissako) 22

Phoenix (Christian Petzold) 20
The Assassin (Hou Hsiao-hsien) 16

BEST NON-FICTION FILM:

*1. Amy (Asif Kapadia) 23

In Jackson Heights (Frederick Wiseman) 18
Seymour: An Introduction (Ethan Hawke) 15

FILM HERITAGE AWARDS:

Film Society of Lincoln Center and the programmers Jake Perlin and Michelle Materre, for the series Tell It Like It Is: Black Independents in New York, 1968-1986

The Criterion Collection and L’Immagine Ritrovata for the restoration and packaging of the reconstructed version of The Apu Trilogy by Satyajit Ray

Association Chaplin for supervising the digital restoration of Charlie Chaplin’s Essanay Films

SPECIAL CITATION for a film awaiting American distribution: One Floor Below, a Romanian film directed by Radu Muntean.

This meeting was dedicated to the late Richard Corliss, longtime critic at TIME magazine, not just a writer of extraordinary intelligence, wit, and energy, but also a generous friend and colleague.

Fifth Beatle George Martin, Producer of the Group’s Records, Turned 90 Today

0

Sorry to get to this so late. George Martin, the Fifth Beatle and the group’s producer of all their amazing records, turned 90 today. Since it’s 1am in London he is no doubt asleep. But we owe Sir George a huge debt of gratitude for making those records, producing and arranging them, suggesting things to Lennon and McCartney and helping them realize their ambitions.

All_You_Need_Is_Ears_The_Inside_Personal_Story_of_the_Genius_who_Created_..._-_George_Martin,_Jeremy_Hornsby_-_Google_Books_-_2016-01-03_19.03.29I think his last real act was apprenticing his son Giles, who helped him create the soundtrack for the Cirque du Soleil “Love” show. That was an incredible project in which Sir George pulled apart the whole Beatles catalog and re-assembled it like a cubist painting.

In Martin’s memoir, “All You Need Is Ears,” available at amazon (and should be an ebook– Giles, please call Jane Friedman at Open Road Books) he tells a funny story about the making of Paul McCartney’s “Live and Let Die.” You see, George continued into the 70s producing McCartney records. (He also produced a lot of hits for America, including “Sister Golden Hair” and “Tin Man.”)

Turns out the Bond producers– Cubby Broccoli and Harry Saltzmann– wanted George to score the film. They liked Paul’s “Live and Let Die” track. But they wanted a female singer, like Thelma Houston! George writes, they considered Paul’s version a demo track! Cooler minds prevailed, and the rest is history.

Sir George is retired now. But boy oh boy– what an immense talent. There would never been Revolver, Sgt. Pepper, The White Album, Let it Be, Abbey Road, any “later day” Beatles without him. Happy Birthday, Sir George Martin.

Joy Mangano Returns to HSN, Sells Over 250,000 Miracle Mops in 24 Hour Marathon

0

UPDATE 11:30pm 250,000. Times $40. You do the math. Joy Mangano should do the marketing for the Oscars.

EARLIER With 12 hours to go, Joy Mangano has already sold over 100,000 new Miracle Mops on HSN during a 24 hour marathon.

Mangano went live on HSN last night at midnight and sold 40,000 mops in the first hour, at $19.95 apiece. That doesn’t count the matching bucket ($14.95) or the super absorbent mop head ($9.95) or the 2 piece mesh bag ($4.95). So it’s really $40 plus $4.95 shipping that we’re talking about.

But still… it’s the Miracle Mop, and it’s the story of “Joy,” now booming at the box office thanks to David O. Russell’s interpretation of Mangano’s life, starring Jennifer Lawrence, Robert DeNiro and Bradley Cooper, et al.

Last night on HSN, Mangano appeared herself, with the mop, looking glamorous but accessible. She kept talking about introducing the Miracle Mop “twenty five years ago.” Going by her looks, this would make her 40 years old now. She will be 60, however, this May.

Is this life imitating art? Or life imitating art which already imitated life? Mangano joins the elite bunch that includes people like Erin Brockovich and the real Philomena, and the real Wolf of Wall Street– Jordan Belfort–and so on–real unfamous people who were catapulted into the spotlight by movies based on their lives. Of course, Mangano was already known to a segment of the population pre-movie thanks to home shopping.

Stars Wars, Adele, self wringing mops. Good morning.

“Star Wars” Crosses $700 Mil Line US, Now Number 2 All Time, Will Eclipse “Avatar” Tomorrow

0

“Star Wars: The Force Awakens” has now crossed the $700 million line in US box receipts, hovering around $740 million. On Tuesday J.J. Abrams’ film will eclipse “Avatar”– which made $760 million– and become the number 1 U.S. film of all time. Today “Star Wars” is number 2, having passed “Titanic” and “Jurassic World” on Friday.

Internationally, “Star Wars” is over $1.5 billion and also on track for number 1 in the world.

And remember, it’s still number 1 in real time, with no end in sight. The global $2 billion total is not far off. Neither is the domestic $1 billion total.

The secret here is was really “Give the people what they want.” But I object to the bashing of George Lucas over the prequels. Forget Jar Jar Binks. In order to make prequels, Lucas had to invent a whole new world. That’s a lot harder than delivering sequels in which beloved characters can appear and our own fantasies of What if? could be explored. I think in the long run, the prequels will find new love in 10 or 20 years as their own creations.

Keep refreshing for new numbers…

“Downton Abbey” The End Begins Tonight: The Cast Talks About Fame, A Movie, and 1925 Foreplay

0

“Downton Abbey” is coming to an end. Soon the Crawleys will ring the servants’ bells for the last time. The sixth and final season begins tonight and fans all over the world are sighing and weeping. But first there are story lines to resolve.

It is 1925 at Downton Abbey. Will Edith and Mary find love? Will Mr. Carson and Mrs. Hughes find marital bliss? And will Mrs. Patmore steel herself for that sex talk with Carson that Mrs. Hughes has put her up to? (You’ll have to watch it to believe how hilarious it is.) Will the Bateses become pregnant? Will Lady Edith make a success of running a publishing company? Tom Branson has gone off to Boston, so he’s gone, or is he? In a stand off between Isobel and tart-tongued Dowager Countess (Maggie Smith) and kind-hearted Violet (Penelope Wilton) who will prevail? Will Lady Mary be given leeway to run the Crawley estate? And will Molesley find happiness, in anything?

All these questions and more came up when Downton Abbey cast members Hugh Bonneville (Robert Crawley), Phyllis Logan (Mrs. Hughes), Michelle Dockery (Lady Mary), Allen Leech (Tom Branson), Jim Carter (Carson), Kevin Doyle (Molesley), Elizabeth McGovern (Cora Crawley) and executive producer Gareth Neame, who turned up at the Hudson Theater Tuesday night to participate in a moderated conversation following a screening of the first episode.

The Downtown Abbey actors were all over Manhattan the first week of December hyping the show with some entertaining and spirited patter. Following are some tidbits from their Q&A at the Hudson Theater on West 44th Street:

Asked about his initial reaction to the script for the Downton Abbey pilot, Carter said their was one line that caught his attention: “Carson sits there in his magnificence.’ And I thought, ‘I can do that.’ You want an actor to sit in magnificence? I’m your boy!”

Hugh Bonneville on whether there was a test to see if there was chemistry between him and Elizabeth McGovern: “We had two tryouts actually. The third time we played husband and wife. So the third time’s lucky.”

Irish actor Allen Leech said of his audition, “The show was already well into filming when I auditioned for it. What was then John Branson was a Yorkshire chauffeur. I walked in all prepared, having worked for weeks on a Yorkshire accent. And they sat there and went, ‘What if you played Irish?”

Hugh Bonneville on how he realized Downton was not only a hit show but also a cultural phenomenon. “It was about four weeks in, I was in the playground picking up my son from school and a guy of his age group, age 10, came over and said, ‘I don’t mind that Thomas.’ A, I thought, what are you doing up at 9 o’clock on a Sunday evening? And B, Wow! We never expected that demographic.”

Neame said that at the 2011 Emmy Awards the show did well, picking up eight trophies. “Nobody in the theater–there was about 3000 people apparently–and nobody had a clue what the show was.”

Asked about celebrity and the show’s impact on their lives, Jim Carter said, “I can’t sit in a restaurant without somebody saying, ‘Oh it’s funny to see you sitting down.’”

The actors were asked if there was segregation of the actors? Did the aristocratic actors only hang out with each other? “We sit together don’t we Mommy?” asked Michelle Dockery, turning to Elizabeth McGovern.

Told that the romance between Mrs. Hughes and Carson was one of the delightful moments of the show, Jim Carter said, “We felt it was approaching sort of at the speed of a glacier.”

“Snail pace,” replied Phyllis Logan. Said Carter, “We didn’t rush it did we?’

Alan Leech cracked, “But in 1925 that’s foreplay.”

There were tragedies and deaths, including the death of Michelle Dockery’s husband, played by Dan Stevens, in the 2012 finale. “It really changed the show,” said Dockery. “As much as I missed Dan when he went, I then went on to have such a fabulous storyline!”

Asked about Maggie Smith stories, Dockery said the legendary actress tosses off one-liners like she does in the show. The actress explained they have microphones that are placed on their legs under their skirts by assistants. “Our sound guy was putting the microphone on her leg, and she went, ‘Control yourself. And he just went bright red.”

McGovern said Maggie Smith hated the costumes. “They were always uncomfortable, and I remember one particular costume, which had a high, what we call a French collar. Maggie kept pulling on her collar, complaining of the heat and said, ‘Now I know why they invented the guillotine.”

Asked about wrap parties, said Dockery, “Chris Croucher, one of our wonderful producers at one point did a speech at a wrap party. It was a very emotional speech and right at the end he said, ‘Now get your dancing shoes on and party like it’s 1926.’ I think my feet have just recovered from that party.”

On what she would miss, McGovern said, “I’m going to miss regularly reiterating the plot with Hugh Bonneville in bed every night.” (The audience hooted.)

As for their favorite period of time, McGovern said, “Personally I had no fun until I ripped off the corset.”

As for Moseley, Kevin Doyle’s character, “For me between 1912 and 1926 nothing got better. Slowly, slowly worse.” Allen Leech turned and hugged him.

Gareth Neame was asked if there is a chance Downton Abbey could come back in some other way in the future? (Hint hint– a movie has been suggested…)

“It really is over,” Neame said. “Of course I realize that might often not be true of television because half the things that are on TV now are remakes of shows from 30 years ago and it suddenly occurred me when I was asked this question, this show is finished, but somebody will always own ‘Downtown Abbey,’ and long after we will retire they might pull this idea out and start it all over again.”

And for the possibility of “Downton Abbey” the movie? “Well….,” is all the producer replied.

The last question from the audience praised the show for highlighting and discussing the struggles of women and how far women have come in such a short amount of time.

“I’m actually really happy to hear you say that,” said McGovern, “because I feel that doing the show made me so grateful for the things that we do tend to take for granted today as women. At the beginning of the series Cora was in no control of any aspect of her destiny whatsoever, and playing the part for six years at times made me feel as though I was living in a straight jacket and I think it’s easy to forget and to not be grateful for the strides that women have fought for and need to continue to fight for because you know it’s not over yet. It really isn’t.”

(Watch) Aretha Franklin’s Stunning Tribute to Natalie Cole: “We will always remember this classy and sophisticated lady”

0

Aretha Franklin sold out Mohegan Sun’s Arena on New Year’s Day night to the point where the 7,000 seat venue had to add about 300 seats. They couldn’t accommodate the sudden interest in the Queen of Soul following her Kennedy Center TV appearance this week. The audience roared when she began Carole King’s “Natural Woman,” which Franklin usually puts fourth or fifth in her set. (“And it’s 50 years old!” Aretha said to me after the show.)

The concert itself was so powerful and intense that it surprised even Franklin, who came out of the gate exactly on time at 8pm and launched into “I Knew You Were Waiting for Me,” her George Michael hit from the 80s. She hadn’t included it in a show in some time. That was followed by a sensational rending of another hit, Stevie Wonder’s “Until You Come Back to Me.” The audience was buzzing loudly.

But nothing prepared any of us for Aretha sitting down at the piano and giving tribute to Natalie Cole with a beautiful rendition of “Inseparable.”

“We will always remember this very classy and sophisticated lady,” Aretha said, making reference to Cole’s hit 1976 record, “Sophisticated Lady,” for which she won a Grammy Award.

Aretha’s Mohegan Sun show was one of those nights people will be talking about for a long time. She also delivered “Chain of Fools,” “Freeway of Love,” her trademark gospel piano take on “Bridge over Troubled Water,” the iridescent “My Cup Runneth Over,” plus “Don’t Play That Song for Me.” She ended with “Respect,” which always brings the house down, but then surprised one and all with “Auld Lang Syne,” from the piano bench, replete with confetti.

The legendary H.B. Barnum (80 years old and going strong– an understatement) led the orchestra as usual, with Richard Gibbs on piano, and backup vocals from Fonzie Thornton, Vaneese Thomas, and Brenda White-King, and a complement of ace musicians and horn players that sent chills up the spine.

There is no other 73 year old grandmother who can scat, sashay and testify like Aretha Franklin and appear more relevant than any 20 something on the road today. She’s in a class of her own.

PS Her version last night of “Natural Woman” –sung live– should be mixed and put on iTunes ASAP, I think. After the Kennedy Center show, the 1968 hit really is a “overnight sensation.”