Wednesday, October 2, 2024
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Barbra Streisand Remembers How She Recorded “The Way We Were”: “The ending needed work”

In Barbra Streisand’s memoir, “My Name is Barbra,” the famed singer recalls the making of her arguably biggest hit record, “The Way We Were”:

…”the song that you know today is not quite the song I heard when Marvin [Hamlisch] first played it for me. That’s always an important moment for both the composer and the singer . . . and a bit nerve-racking. You want to like it. You want it to be good. All I knew at that point was that it was going to be called “The Way We Were.” Marvin sat down at the piano in my living room and began to play a gentle, repeating chord, and then the melody came in. My ears perked up. I loved it. That first line of the melody was sensational. But then it went downhill, literally. The notes under the second line (“misty watercolor memories”) were going down the scale, which felt too somber to me. And then I heard the bridge, which was beautiful, but the ending needed work.

Streisand recalls how she and composer Marvin Hamlisch set about to work on the song, even changing a few words from lyricists Allan and Marilyn Bergman. (Some of this, she says, is in the DVD commentary about the movie.)

She adds:

“there was one last bit of improvisation . . . I found myself humming over the introductory bars. I do that often when I’m recording, to clear my voice and warm up. It usually gets cut from the track. But Sydney loved the hum and thought it was perfect for the title sequence, because he felt it eased the audience into the song . . . and the flashback . . . in a gentler, more organic way.”

Call Her Barbra: Streisand’s 992 Memoir Reveals Jon Peters’ “Temper Scared Me,” Don Johnson Was Insecure About Singing with Her

Barbra Streisand’s 992 memoir, “Call Me Barbra,” has just hit Kindle. We had to wait for it since her publisher was so uncooperative. Anyway, Barbra’s six decade career is one for the books. She has one child, a son, from her marriage to actor Elliot Gould. She’s been married to James Brolin for 25 years. She’s had hit records in each of the six decades. She’s also directed a bunch of movies, as well as starred in them. She’s done it her way, that’s for sure!

Here are some reveals from the book:

She had a real “A Star is Born” moment with boyfriend actor Don Johnson when they recorded a song together. She writes:

The session in the studio seemed to go well. We were improvising at the end . . . having fun in the moment, and laughing. I had asked Phil Ramone to produce it, and we both liked the way it turned out. Then somehow it all went wrong. Not the duet itself. It was Don’s attitude afterward . . . singing with me apparently made him feel very insecure. And instead of talking about it honestly, he just became very cold, and mistrustful, and angry. I tried to be sympathetic. I certainly had no intention of ruining his career, but it turned out he was concerned about exactly that. It seemed like an overreaction to me, but clearly he was upset, and therefore so was I.

On boyfriend Jon Peters, who went from hairdresser to movie producer:

he’d been telling people for years that he cut my hair. He took credit, in other words, for a cut that was done by Fred Glaser in Chicago. But that’s Jon . . . he had a lot of chutzpah. And clearly he also had a rather tenuous relationship with the truth . . . but I didn’t pay enough attention to that at the time.

Eventually they fell into a relationship:

Jon could also be thoughtless, and sometimes quite mean. We would be driving in the car and I’d say, “Could you please close the window? I’m getting cold.” He’d say, “Get a blanket.” What kind of love is that? (My husband Jim would never say that. Instead he’d quickly close the window and turn on the heat.) I was shocked sometimes by what came out of Jon’s mouth. He said we had hundreds of acres when it was only twenty-four, which was plenty. And he told one reporter that he planted fifty thousand trees and moved forty million tons of rock, but that’s typical of him . . . he always exaggerates. The truth was never enough for him. And he could be so volatile. His temper scared me.

Barbra reveals the fake name she travels under:

Angelina Scarangella. I picked it out of the phone book. I thought it sounded so beautiful, and I used it for years, whenever I wanted to be incognito. At Mount Sinai Hospital, where I gave birth to my son, Jason, I was listed as Angelina Scarangella. And to this day, whenever I do a concert tour, the name on my dressing-room door is Angelina Scarangella. (Now that I’ve told you, I guess I’ll have to come up with something else.)

On winning the Oscar for Best Actress for “Funny Girl” — tying with Katharine Hepburn — but losing Best Picture to “Oliver!”:

I was really disappointed that Funny Girl didn’t win more awards. But the worst was yet to come. When I put on that black net pantsuit back inmy dressing room on the lot, it had looked chic and fun, and everyone had approved. None of us realized that it would turn transparent under the lights. When I saw the footage on TV, I was horrified. It looked as if I had nothing on underneath. (It was actually lined in nude georgette.) I was so embarrassed. And I’m still horrified, thinking about it now. The outfit was more talked about than the fact that I had won the Academy Award. When I called my mother the next day to ask what she thought of my Oscar, all she could say was, “What kind of dress was that to wear in public?” For once, she was right! Katharine Hepburn was kinder. I still have the telegram I received from her:

Dear Barbra, I think that you are really first rate and full of whatever it is and I am proud to share that perch with you for the next year. Incidentally I just hope that osmosis transfers a little of what you have to me.

I returned the gesture by sending her flowers, along with a note: Dear Kate (I feel I should still call you Miss Hepburn), How very nice of you to send me such a lovely wire. I, too, am most honored to share this with you. But there’s one question I have to ask— It’s tough enough being in the same business with you—but do you have to start singing as well!!!! [Hepburn was about to star in the musical Coco on Broadway.] With much admiration, Barbra

More to come…

Mariah Carey May Have Christmas, But Michael Jackson is the King of Halloween: “Thriller” Soared Last Week

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Mariah Carey may have cornered the market on Christmas. But Michael Jackson is the King Ghoul.

According to Luminate, Jackson’s song, “Thriller” outsold Bobby Boris Pickett’s “Monster Mash” on October 31st.

The totals including streaming were 49,000 vs. 45,000.

Altogether, “Thriller” sold over 106,000 copies last week in streams and downloads. The “Thriller” album — the best selling album of all time — sold 20,474 copies as well.

Jackson fans are waiting to see where the Billboard charts put the song tomorrow. Whatever chart position is arrived at, clearly “Thriller” won Halloween week by a landslide.

Next year, the fans — who really made this happen as a grassroots affair — can team up with Jackson’s label, Epic, to go even higher!

Awards Season in Peril as SAG Says Actors Strike Continues with “Several Essential Elements” Still Not Resolved

SAG AFTRA has just issued a statement that is not terribly optimistic about the actors’ strike.

The union says there are “Several essential elements” still not resolved. The conflict seems to be about AI, which SAG will stand fast until the studios cave.

The picket lines, meantime, are busier than ever.

If the strike is not resolved, and both sides decide to wait until after Christmas, awards season will be decimated. Right now there’s a heavy schedule the first two weeks of January. If actors are not allowed to attend the Critics Choice, Emmys, or Golden Globes, not to mention the Academy’s Governors Awards, there’s going to be a very tough time in Hollywood.

Maybe a truce can be called this week. Let’s hope!

Yes, Chef! “The Bear” Will Return for 3rd Season, in 2024, Cooking Up New Stories in the Kitchen

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I kind of thought that was it for “The Bear.”

But there will be a season 3 despite all the plotlines having been tied up neatly at the end of Season 2.

“The Bear” is a huge hit on Hulu with Jeremy Allen White, Ayo Edebiri, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, and Oliver Platt. In season 2, we got to meet Carmie’s family including his rampaging mother played by Jamie Lee Curtis.

If we ever have the Emmy Awards, “The Bear” Season 1 is up for several. But that season was long ago at this point. Season 2 has already run and will be eligible for the following Emmys, likely next September. Confused? Don’t get me started!

Maybe we’ll see more of Carmie’s sister, played by Abby Elliott (ex-SNL). She’s the real life daughter of Chris Elliott (Letterman, Schitt’s Creek, etc) and the granddaughter of legend radio man Bob Elliott, half of the comedy duo from the 50s and 60s, Bob and Ray.

Forget Taylor Swift: BTS Member Jung Kook Has 15 of the Top 20 iTunes Singles (Beatles Are #1)

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Forget Taylor Swift taking over the charts.

Now BTS K-Pop member Jung Kook is dominating the iTunes top 20.

Jung has 15 of the top 20 singles, almost all different versions of his song, “Standing Next to You.”

The records are all from Hybe Entertainment, which Scooter Braun — the man Taylor Swift fans hate — is raking it in. Braun let Hybe buy out his Ithaca Holdings this year. Now he runs the US company and no longer manages Justin Bieber, Ariana Grande, and other American pop stars.

The BTS K-Pop fans are famous for gaming iTunes. With each new release they just keep hitting the buy button. The result is that their popularity always seem more than the reality.

But for now, it’s all Jung Kook.

Jason Momoa Must Know the SAG Strike is Ending, He’s Hosting “SNL” on November 18th, Following Timothee Chalamet

What do Jason Momoa and Timothee Chalamet know about the SAG strike?

They’ve each booked dates to host “Saturday Night Live” soon — Chalamet this Saturday and Momoa on November 18th.

Do they, or “SNL,” have inside info on the strike ending? They are not contracted to the show and not part of the net code contract. (Net code actors must adhere to their contracts — like soap opera actors and talk show hosts.) They are also promoting movies from a big company — Warner Bros. Chalamet stars in “Wonka” and Momoa is in “Aquaman 2.”

Could the strike be over this week? So far SAG says it’s reviewing the studios “last, best, and final offer.” Generally work on the show starts on Tuesday, which is tomorrow. If SAG didn’t want members dressing up as movie characters for Halloween, it’s hard to imagine they approved of this.

Tom Cruise is Still Celebrity Top Gun at Scientology Gala in England, Along with Jenna Elfman, But No John Travolta

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You’d think this wouldn’t be going anymore, but Tom Cruise is still Top Gun at Scientology, the religious cult.

This is despite three broken marriages, and a teenage child he refuses to see because she’s not in the cult.

But Tom showed up this weekend in the UK at the annual Scientology gala– in black tie, no less. The intrepid Tony Ortega has the whole story on his Substack blog.

“Dharma and Greg” actress Jenna Elfman was there with her husband, Bodhi. Bodhi is the nephew of composer Danny Elfman, currently accused in a lawsuit of sexual assault by one woman and accused by another.

Not seen at the Scientology fest was John Travolta, who’s lost two important women in his life, wife Kelly Preston and bff Kirstie Alley. They were each members of the cult and each succumbed to cancer. Travolta also lost his son, Jett, 16, in bizarre circumstances after the boy — who Travolta and Preston for years denied was autistic — fell and hit his head during a seizure.

Cruise — who won’t have a new movie until 2025 — is all in on Scientology despite books, documentaries, and exposes detailing the cruelty, greed, and mistreatment. Recently, Scientology member Danny Masterson was convicted of rape and sentenced to 30 years in jail after the group allegedly tried to cover up his crimes. Cruise doesn’t care, and neither do the other people who paid a lot of money no doubt for this party.

Cult leader David Miscavige was there, although protected enough, we assume, so as not to be served legal papers by former member Leah Remini. Not a guest: Shelly Miscavige, David’s wife, unseen for years and considered “missing” by Remini and many others.

Director Ava DuVernay (“Selma”) Speaks About “Origin,” Her Latest Ambitious Project, Based on the Bestseller “Caste”

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The charismatic director Ava DuVernay exuded optimism at the Whitby Hotel last week for a screening of her new film, “Origin,” inspired by Isabel Wilkerson’s NY Times bestseller “Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents.”

In her intro she told the packed theater that this was the first New York screening. She was looking forward to the audience response. But, she joked, “You never know with a New York audience.”

She added, “Most of all, this is an audience of strangers, and one of my favorite things to sit in the dark with strangers… I hope that you have an experience about what you’ve seen.”
The experience I gleaned from the audience reception was profound. “Origin” is uncannily timely, a movie that couldn’t speak more to these discordant, tragic times. Written and directed by DuVernay, it moves back and forth in time and place, connecting American’s history of racism, Nazi Germany’s genocide of Jews, and India’s rigid caste system.

The excellent cast features award-worthy Aujanue Ellis-Tayor as Isabel, Jon Bernthal as her husband Brett, the fabulous Audra McDonald, who has a powerful monologue, and a stand-out Niecy Nash-Betts as Isabel’s sister Marion.

There’s a lot packed in slightly over two hours, and on the surface it sounds impossible to cohesively put together. But DuVernay is a magician. “Origin” has a wide historical sweep, but it’s also an intimate emotional deep dive of a journey. I was wrecked. But the movie offers hope as well. DuVernay is defiant in refusing to leave audiences in a dark place. 

DuVernay was joined in the post-screening Q&A with Kris Bowers, the composer, Matt Lloyd, the cinematographer and producer Paul Garnes


Here are just a few of the highlights from the director following the screening:

From the book: “Maybe about 60% of what’s in the film is not in the book…Her (Wilkerson’s) personal life is not in the book, the historical piece that you see, maybe about half of it is in the book. I really follow my instincts in terms of things that she sees in the book that I wanted to know more about…  So (I’ve called the film) inspired by, it was really a jumping-off point, she (Wilkerson) was gracious enough to share stories about her family life with me. And so that’s why I don’t call it Caste because I don’t want to misrepresent it. It’s inspired by the book, ‘Caste.’”

 The author’s participation:  “Isabel participated in the film. So we talked for, I don’t know, maybe about over a period of two years…. And I’ll just say, because I don’t want to speak for her, she’s incredibly generous and incredibly courageous. I’ve lost people in my life and I don’t know if I could sit down and tell a stranger about it, but she trusted that my way into the story about Caste was to go through her experience. Because in my mind, the trauma that you face with personal loss is not much different from the trauma that we face in society through so much of the loss that we experience living together and treating people the way that we do. So I was really interested in that collective grief and personal grief, and trying to put those side by side to tell the story.”

The greatest challenge making the film:

“Beyond my own questions about confidence, as to whether or how I could do it, once I pushed past that, the real challenge was money and how we would tell this story inside of the studios’ system. Because when you go to studios and you pitch, ‘Hey. I want to make a movie about Caste, based on a book called Caste. And I want the lead to be someone that, she’s never opened a movie. She doesn’t actually lead in the movie, but I know she can do it…  ‘And what are some of your scenes?’ …Might have to stop by some very sad times in history, but few people pass away, but it’s going to be hopeful to me.’ It’s not a good pitch. So we went another route.”

Going the Independent Studio route:

“So a big challenge was just going back and remembering how to do it yourself, not having all the help and infrastructure of the studios, which is the good side of it. But we also wanted to be free of all the opinions about what could or couldn’t work, and that was super important to us… We had very limited window of time that we could film, this is before the strike, so actors were super busy. Even getting actors booked was really difficult for an independent film. And so we really had to build a complicated schedule where we were able to get actors in and out of town.”

Casting Niecy Nash as Marion:

“I fell in love with Marion just from her (Wilkerson’s) stories. And as I was listening to her telling me stories about Marion, I was thinking of one of my great, great best dear friends, Niecy Nash. And I called Niecy and I said, ‘You have to be Marion.’ And she said, ‘Girl, who’s Marion?’ And she was on a TV show, ABC TV show, she was booked. She worked Monday through Friday on the TV show and she went to her show and said, ‘My friend needs me. I need to have Fridays off.’ So she shot all of her work on Fridays. She would leave the set, the ABC set, on Thursday night and she would fly to Savannah, Georgia. She would fly overnight, she would work Friday all day and then go home and go back to her show, because she is a good friend of mine and she fell in love with Marion too.”

Writing the script: “The way I did it is I freed myself by A, saying that we have to walk away from the studio environment so that we can be free to find it. That was the first thing. And the second thing is I freed myself from the idea, literally —any screenwriters in the house?— I broke every narrative rule… I’m a documentarian as well, don’t shy away from it. What are the places where you want to blur those lines? Really trying to push myself in terms of not trying to create new form, but embrace a form that allowed me to tell this story, because this is an untraditional story I’m bringing. I’m crossing cultures, continents, communities, and I did not want to feel restricted to the rules that I usually abide by.”

Directing “Origin”:

“Everything that I did that I’ve done led me do this. And when I said I had to get over the lack of confidence, it was a voice telling me, ‘You can’t shoot in Germany. You can’t go to Germany, you can’t shoot Indian people. You have to shoot Black folks.’ This is what you do, and you do that real well… I get emotional in thinking about the ways in which I’ve let the industry, the world tell me what I can and can’t do, and also what I’ve gotten comfortable doing and how can I push myself out of that. And so once I got past that, I thought, ‘Oh, I know how to do this.”

Review: The Biggest, Most Comprehensive Bob Dylan Book Ever, Approved by Him with Lots of Unseen Archival Stuff

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Everyone remembers their first Dylan concert. Mine was historic: When Dylan switched guitars, from acoustic to electric, when crowds stormed the stage in protest. No, this was not the more famous concert in Newport. This was a few days later, in Forest Hills. A friend and I, two immigrant teens took the subway from Brooklyn to Queens to find America. Up until that day, Dylan was to me an anti-war poet/ a scratchy singer in the manner of Phil Ochs. But that day the Dylan fans were waging their own war against HIM, booing, unseating, moving forward as a mob.

It was clear: Dylan mattered. But the question was, did the rage matter to him? If it did, he took the advice of The Beatles, who advised, ‘Don’t worry about the fans, they will come back.’ And, of course, the rest is, as they say, history.

Cut to Tulsa, May 2022. The opening of The Bob Dylan Center. Why Tulsa, everyone asked? Because his archive could be housed right next door to his hero’s Woody Guthrie. Parties, music, academic meetings marked the occasion. Visiting, I could see a photograph from the concert of my youth amidst the incredible collection of guitars, vinyl, notebooks, artwork—memorabilia of a creative life.

And now readers of “Bob Dylan: Mixing Up the Medicine,” edited by Mark Davidson and Parker Fishel, can revel in their own nostalgia and more in this elegant, meaty tome—a chronology of the archival Tulsa haul, a backstory for a great biography. This is no small tome: 608 pages, 4.4 pounds, bursting with minutiae, color photos and graphics, essays by experts, unseen treasure troves, designed within an inch of itself to be the ultimate holiday gift for the Dylan freak in your realm.

To the photos with EVERYONE: Joan Baez, Patti Smith, Bruce Springsteen, Robbie Robertson, Allen Ginsberg, Barack Obama, still shots from D. A. Pennebaker’s famous card thrown down, torn ticket stubs, song lists, lyrics, stuff, add smart essays by Greil Marcus, Lucy Sante, Raymond Foye, Richard Hell limning Dylan’s writing process from foundational tapes to recordings and artifacts. A facsimile of Dylan’s essay on Jimi Hendrix. Peter Carey’s grim look at Tulsa’s racial divide, how the famed riots serve up classic Dylan material. Douglas Brinkley’s Epilogue sums up his last decade in person from his own interviews and personal connection with Dylan, noting: “his piercing blue eyes that could burn through disingenuous people like a blowtorch.”

Word in Tulsa was Dylan has never laid those eyes on the Archive, not even when he came to town to play. This book, a tribute to his art, should matter to him. But even if he turns away in the manner of his Nobel Prize for Literature, it’s a rich read and the deepest dive into his work to date. It’s so rich, in fact, that Sony Music has issued an accompanying CD– a greatest hits update — of the same name.

“Mixing Up the Medicine” is produced by Nicholas Callaway, of Callaway Editions, which means it’s delivered to us like the stones on the Temple Mount.