Thursday, October 10, 2024
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Trailer: Bruce Willis-John Travolta “Paradise City” Looks as Bad You’d Expect, the Anti-“Heat”

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Movie fans love a great set up where two legacy stars take each other on. Think “Heat” with Al Pacino and Robert De Niro. Nothing could be better.

Now comes “Paradise City” pitting bald, waddling John Travolta against bewildered Bruce Willis, his lines edited together. It’s the anti-“Heat.” It’s very sad. These two were never on the level of that other pair, but they were in “Pulp Fiction” together, and technically “Look Who’s Talking.”

Travolta has made D film after D film, so that’s nothing new. Bruce is being exploited by his family. And this is the result.

“The Conners” Gets a New Lease on Life in Season 5 with Long Awaited Move Back to 8PM, Ratings Rise by 500K

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It doesn’t seem possible, but “The Conners” has a new lease on life.

The “Roseanne” spin off spent its last two seasons at 9pm on Wednesdays. “Roseanne” always aired at 8pm, and indeed the show was the perfect anti-family show for the family hour. “The Conners” played its first two seasons also a 8pm, where it was a hit.

But then in season 3 ABC changed their day and time. The show dropped by well over 500,000 viewers. It wasn’t just the change of day but the time. “The Conners” was far from cutting edge. It’s a family show, you know, about a family with kids. But ABC sacrificed it for the miserable “Goldbergs.”

Then a funny thing happened. Jeff Garlin was forced off “The Goldbergs.” The show spiraled because he was the only reason to watch it. “The Goldbergs” is a bore. Their ratings dropped. So ABC switched “The Conners” and “The Goldbergs” this year. “The Conners” ratings are back, averaging 3.5 million viewers. Maybe it’s me, but the show seems relieved. It has a new lease on life.

I hadn’t watched “The Conners” for quite a while, but when I didn’t have the Yankees to worry about last night, I tuned in. Jackie — the great Laurie Metcalf — had gotten unwatchable last year, Yet, now she has her own house set, a normal husband (Nat Faxon as Neville, the brother of Dan’s new wife, Louise). Metcalf has better writing, it seems, too. She’s no longer substituting twitches for dialogue. Maybe her Emmy winning turn on “Hacks” shook up the staff.

Darlene and Becky are the same, although they’re spatting less and acting like loving — but still acerbic — sisters. Last night’s show didn’t give much to John Goodman, but I’m sure he’ll be back in the center ring by next week.

And that 3.5 million — it suggests there’s life left in this crowd. Season 6?

Bruno Mars Won’t Leave the Door Open for Grammy Nominations — But Current Record Already Won Last Winter

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Nothing like making a big deal out of nothing.

Bruno Mars has told Rolling Stone that he and Anderson Paak are withdrawing their 2021 release, “An Evening with Silk Sonic,” from Grammy consideration this year.

That’s very brave of them since the single from that album, “Leave the Door Open,” already won Best Record last year. The single was released before the Grammy deadline on September 30, 2021 so it was eligible for last winter’s Grammys. The album came out in November, so it could be be up for awards this year.

But let’s face it. Silk Sonic getting nominated now would be a little weird. And Bruno and Paak probably aren’t interested in performing the old songs on an awards show. They’ve got their statue. Why not just sit out the competition and have a good time?

“We truly put our all on this record, but Silk Sonic would like to gracefully, humbly and most importantly, sexually, bow out of submitting our album this year,” Bruno said. “We hope we can celebrate with everyone on a great year of music and partake in the party. Thank you for letting Silk Sonic thrive.”

Grammys: Beyonce’s “Renaissance” May Not Be Adele’s Concern As Sales Were Far from 1 Million Copies (Bad Bunny Alert!)

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The Grammy race is underway with nominations coming next month. There’s a lot of speculation about the Album of the Year nominees. Some pundits are hoping to position another Beyonce vs. Adele deathmatch as both divas released records this past year.

But Beyonce’s “Renaissance” was not much after all. Total sales failed to reach the 1 million mark. The magic number so far is only 816,000. “Renaissance” was just not as popular as Beyonce or her record company would have liked.

So Adele may not have to worry about Beyonce at all. Indeed, Adele’s real competition is coming from within her own company. Harry Styles’ “Harry’s House” is really the success story of the year. Sony has sold 1.8 million copies. Plus the lead single, “As It Was,” has been a monster hit. And the second single, “Late Night Talking,” is doing very well. If I were Adele, I’d be more worried about having to lease space in “Harry’s House.”

As for Adele, her “30” album had a big start and a quiet finish. She got one big hit out of it– “Easy On Me” — and sold about 2.7 million copies in the last year. After a disastrous PR deal on those Weekends with Adele– all cancelled — she’s got a fresh slate starting soon. She actually plays a show on Saturday, February 4th, the night before the Grammys. After that show Adele will be placed in a Ziploc bag and carried on a cashmere pillow by dragons from Westeros to the Staples Center Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles where she’ll feed on Sony Music interns raised only on Johnny Mathis records until showtime.

Will there be a spoiler in the group like this past year’s win by Jon Batiste? Yes. That would be Bad Bunny, whose “Un Verano Sin Ti” has outsold everyone with 3 million copies. He’s massive international hit, and could very well steal the whole deal. He’d be the first Puerto Rican act to do so. Remember, you heard that here first.

Broadway: Lea Michele “Funny Girl” Scores Highest Week Yet, Enters Rare 100% Club

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Lea Michele has proven to be everything producers hoped for with her arrival at “Funny Girl.”

Last week, the musical revival had its biggest week since its opening in April, and definitely all summer. The turnaround is miraculous.

Even better is that last week “Funny Girl” entered the 100% club — it played at 100% of its capacity or possible sales. Only four shows did that last week including “MJ The Musical,” “Moulin Rouge,” and “Phantom of the Opera.” The latter is closing at the end of the year, which is spurring ticket sales.

But not even Hugh Jackman in “The Music Man” hit the magic 100 last week. Neither did “Wicked” or “The Lion King,” two perennials. They all hit 99 percent.

So congrats to the producers of “Funny Girl,” who I hope didn’t sell their souls to the Devil or anything that extreme. They suffered through a horrible opening and summer and have survived!

Happy 87th Birthday to Soul Man Sam Moore, First Ever Credited Artist Featured on a Bruce Springsteen Album

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Next month, Sam Moore is listed as the credited guest artist on at least two tracks on Bruce Springsteen’s new album. In five decades, Bruce has never had a track that read “featuring so-and-so.” So it’s a big, big deal.

And a nice birthday gift for Sam, who turns 87 today. A legend from Sam & Dave, member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Grammy winner, singer for presidents, Sam has seen it all. And sung it all. His vibrant voice is heard somewhere every day around the world on his hits like “Soul Man,” “Hold On I’m Coming,” and “I Thank You.” If you’re in the supermarket and listening to the radio above, Sam’s magnificent voice cuts through the air as its own instrument.

It hasn’t changed. “I’m making my gospel album right now,” Sam told me from his home today via telephone. “It’s something I have to do.”

I met Sam in 1999 when he agreed to let us follow him around for a documentary called “Only the Strong Survive.” Now he’s on Bruce’s album of the same name (a tribute to another R&B giant, Jerry Butler). Sam is the only shouted out name still alive from the Arthur Conley classic, “Sweet Soul Music.” Everyone is gone — Wilson Pickett, James Brown, all the greats. Some of Sam’s Motown buddies are still around, like Stevie, Smokey, and even Berry Gordy– but Sam Cooke, Jackie Wilson, all left us early. We are so lucky to still have Sam (with a lot of thanks to his super wife, Joyce).

Happy Birthday, Sam! Can’t wait to hear you on Bruce’s new record!

Hey– and here’s a nudge to Atlantic Records– Sam has no star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Can you imagine who’d show up for that installation?

PS I love that picture of Sam with Eddie Murphy. Eddie asked Sam to perform at his Kennedy Center Mark Twain Awards ceremony a few years ago!

https://youtube.com/watch?v=L2degI8EF_E

Hollywood: LA’s Carousel Ball Draws the Stars Thanks to Legendary Philanthropist Barbara Davis

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Barbara Davis, the classiest most indefatigable lady in Hollywood, turned 92 this weekend and she co-hosted her beloved Carousel of Hope Ball the day before her birthday.  It’s her 36th year of hosting the event, she started the Barbara Davis Center or Diabetes in Denver more than 40 years ago along with her husband, the powerhouse Marvin Davis.

The reason was personal for both, their daughter Dana Davis, who was the co-host along with her mom, was diagnosed with diabetes at the age of seven.  Barbara recounted the story that when she told her husband Marvin Davis that their daughter was afflicted, he didn’t miss a beat and said, “well fix it then.” That’s exactly what she’s been doing along with Hollywood’s A-listers over the years. This recent one was no exception. 

Diane Keaton was honored with the “Brass Ring Awards,” and the crowd enjoyed performances by John Legend, who was solo at the piano and just sensational, his rendition of Bruce Springsteen’s “Dancing in The Dark” was sensational.  Andy Grammer and Deborah Cox were equally as terrific.  Howie Mandel hosted the event.  Diane talked about the need for the center and then focused her gaze on Barbara.  “Barbara, I adore you, I love you.  You are such a spectacular woman.  You are the inspiration and I’m so fortunate to call you my friend.” 

Numerous Barbara friends came out including Clive Davis, Powerhouse WME Co-Chairman Richard Weitz, Ed Begley Jr and his lovely daughter Hayden, the icon Berry Gordy, Jimmy Jam and his wife Lisa Padilla Harris, Linda Thompson, Loretta Devine, AnnaLynne McCord, Kathy and Rick Hilton, Barbara’s daughter Nancy Davis, her husband Kenneth Rickel and their daughters Isabella and Mariella, Barbara’s son Gregg Davis and many more.  Barbara thanked her dearest friend Clive Davis, who was also on the production team and called him “the most brilliant man I’ve ever met.” 

We agree!  George Schlatter and his lovely wife Jolene were also a part of the team as was Quincy Jones.  The evening celebrated Barbara Davis and all she has accomplished.  Brava to her! 

Broadway: Tony Winner “A Strange Loop,” by the Other Michael Jackson, Closing After Less than a Year

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There were two Michael Jackson musicals in the last Broadway season. One was a hit, and the other is closing after less than a year of performances.

“A Strange Loop,” from Michael R. Jackson, a very gay musical about a Broadway usher named Usher who dreams about putting on his own show, will shut its doors on January 15, 2023. Never a box office draw, with songs and materials that couldn’t be widely discussed, and a totally unknown star, “Strange Loop” was never going to be a mainstream hit. As one producer said to me when it opened, a true national tour wasn’t going to happen, and schools couldn’t perform it.

Nevertheless, “Strange Loop” won the Tony for Best Musical. It didn’t even win for Best Score– that was “Six.” But the idea persisted that it was the Best Musical. And now it’s leaving the stage.

This is not the norm for other Best Musical winners, which usually make it through a full season. But “A Strange Loop” averages $600,000 a week, which is about $400,000 less than a hit. Will it pay back investors? Unlikely. And it didn’t help Broadway to get that Tony Award. “A Strange Loop” is silo’d, so to speak. You can say to someone who didn’t get a ticket to the other Michael Jackson musical, “MJ,” they should go see “A Strange Loop.” It’s a very different experience.

A valiant try, for sure.

Review: “The Whale” Spouts a Lot of Cheap Sentiment Despite Brendan Fraser’s Lovely Turn as a Victim

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“The Whale” was a short-lived off Broadway play, set in one room, with a six hundred pound elephant at its center.

Now “The Whale” is a movie, set in one room, with six hundred pound elephant and such low lighting I started to think my cataracts had returned.

In the hype leading up to its release, “The Whale” has been heralded as Fraser’s second coming as if he were Daniel Day Lewis returning from retirement. He is not that, although his performance is lovely and moving. That can’t be denied.

But it is also one note in the sense that the character he plays is doomed from the start. He is very ill, and soon will die one way or another. We get that.

Fraser’s Charlie has a daughter (Sadie Sink) from a failed marriage (Samantha Morton plays his ex). Apparently, Charlie is also gay. His longtime lover, Alan, for whom he left the wife, has been dead for a while, and his death has forced Charlie to eat himself into a coma, so to speak. Now Charlie teaches an online course in English composition. On Zoom, he closes his camera off so his students can’t see that he’s a mountain of flesh. His only lifeline is a visiting nurse (Hong Chau) who acquiesces to his demand not to go to the hospital. There’s also a young Mormon guy (Ty Simpkins) who shows up out of nowhere.

So why the whale of the title? Charlie, who is constantly almost dying from choking to death on his food or from actual congestive heart failure, keeps re-reading a book report about “Moby Dick” by who we think is a former student.

Soon, we learn how the nurse is connected to Charlie, and who wrote the book review, and we are in “This is Us” territory of cheap sentiment that is being offered in place of real drama. This is the world of cloying TV, where the audience will burst into tears later when they realize all the cheap connections. Back in 2012 it didn’t work off Broadway, where “The Whale” played for a month until it was harpooned. And it doesn’t work now even as Sadie Sink tries to break through this mawkishness. But there’s not much she can do with the stereotypical estranged juvenile delinquent teen who comes looking for a father she hates.

Darren Aronofsky has made some great movies like “Black Swan” and “Requiem for a Dream.” He’s made some mistakes, too, like “Mother!” and “Noah.” This one falls in between. He does his best with the material but doesn’t open up the story, or expand it, or show us Charlie in flashbacks, even to a better time. “The Whale” is claustrophobic, maybe intentionally, but even the movie “Room” left the room sometimes.

I admire the affection some bloggers and reviewers have for Fraser, who was a young star in the 90s in teen films and then in “The Mummy” series. As I recall, when he was in “The Quiet American” in 2001 and “Crash” in 2004, there was a moment when it looked like he’d made the transition into adult stuff. So his return now is filled with nostalgic hopefulness. But there’s only so much he can do here beside drag around a 300 pound fat suit. He does that with grace, which is saying a lot.

RIP Angela Lansbury, Beloved, Legendary Actress from “Manchurian Candidate” to “Sweeney Todd” to “Murder She Wrote”

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Angela Lansbury was maybe the most popular actress in American history and one of the most gifted. She’s passed away today at age 96. But she will never be forgotten. Her role as Jessica Fletcher in “Murder She Wrote” immortalized her. The entertaining reruns will go forever.

She was our Judi Dench , excelling in TV, theater, and movies often at the same time. And in theater, she commanded drama, comedy and musicals. There as nothing she couldn’t do. So devious and cunning in “The Manchurian Candidate,” sweet and endearing Mrs. Lovett in “Sweeney Todd,” and then brilliantly charming as Jessica Fletcher. And those three roles were just a few highlights of a remarkable career.

Think of “Beauty and the Beast,” and her singing the famous title song. Or winning a Tony Award in 2009 for “Blithe Spirit” on Broadway. And that was just two years after a nomination in 2007 for Terence McNally’s “Deuce.” Certainly it’s time for a theater on Broadway to be named for her. (She did receive a Lifetime Tony Award this past season.)

What a life! Amazing lady! Condolences to her family and legions of fans around the world.