Thursday, October 10, 2024
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Watch New Trailer for “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” Featuring Angela Bassett as Queen Ramonda in New Adventure

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Interesting: Angela Bassett gets the focus in this trailer for “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever,” coming November 11th. It’s not Letitia Wright or any male replacement for Chadwick Boseman. This gives us a little insight into what this story may entail.

Queen Ramonda looks sensational!

Bad Andrew Lloyd Webber: Composer/Producer Bringing Reinvented Cancelled West End Show to Broadway

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It was only a few months ago there were protests in the West End of London against Andrew Lloyd Webber.

The composer/producer/theater owner shut down his production of “Cinderella” without warning and called the show “a costly mistake.” The cast and crew were furious. But COVID has interrupted “Cinderella” and it never took off.

Now ALW has reinvented “Cinderella” as “Bad Cinderella” and is bringing it Broadway with a whole new cast and angle: hit the Latinx market. ALW has chucked Carrie Hope Fletcher, the star of the West End production, and hired a newcomer, Linedy Genao. She’s the total opposite of the London star, a Dominican American who previously appeared in “On Your Feet” and as an understudy in “Dear Evan Hansen.” Congrats to her.

In keeping with this new theme, ALW has retitled the show, and released a single from it called “Bad Cinderella” in both English and Spanish.

Emerald Fennell wrote the book, David Zippel wrote the lyrics, JoAnn M. Hunter did the choreography and the director is Laurence Connor. Christine Schwartzman‘s No Guarantees group is producing. Opening night is March 23rd.

If it’s a hit I guess “Bad Cinderella” will head back to the West End, where all the people who worked on it in the first place will march in front of the theater with placards. But that won’t be for some time.

Lesson: never bet against Andrew Lloyd Webber. He’s an evil genius!

“Young and the Restless” Star Mishael Morgan First Black Actress to Win Emmy Award, Then Leaves Show

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Mishael Morgan is outta here.

The crazy-talented actress from “The Young and the Restless” has left the show on a full time basis according to an announcement she’s made on Instagram.

Morgan won the Daytime Emmy this year for Best Actress, the first time a Black actress has ever won that award. She started out playing a semi-evil character named Hilary. Then when she couldn’t get a new contract, she was killed off on screen. But — aha! — a new regime brought her back as Hilary’s nicer sister. Now it seems Morgan still can’t get a decent contract from Y&R. So she’s out again.

She says in her post that she’ll “recur,” which means she could come in and do a day here and there. But she’s off to find greener pastures, and who can blame her? Frankly, CBS should be scooping her up for prime time as they did with another “Y&R” star Shemar Moore. It doesn’t make sense that they haven’t.

Morgan is native of Trinidad. And even though Eartha Kitt was not from there, Morgan would be a perfect fit for a bio film. Someone at HBO, Netflix, make that call!

Here’s the link to the Instagram post.

Sunday Night Live: Lorne Michaels Brings An A+Plus Audience to Broadway Opening of Sensational “Leopoldstadt” Including Mick Jagger, Steven Spielberg

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You don;t often see Mick Jagger at a Broadway opening night, but he was there Sunday night for the premiere of Tom Stoppard’s Olivier award winning masterwork, “Leopoldstadt.”

The play is mesmerizing. It will win the Tony Award next June and likely the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Stoppard is no stranger to awards and great plays but this one is exceptional in every way.

Jagger came as the guest of one of the show’s three main producers, Lorne Michaels. He wasn’t alone in making a buzz in this audience. Steven Spielberg and Kate Capshaw, Tim Robbins, Edie Falco, Steve Martin, Tina Fey, Barry Diller, Tovah Feldshuh (who came over after the “Funny Girl” matinee), Ethan Hawke with Josh Hamilton and Jonathan Marc Sherman all came pouring out of the two hour ten minute play that has no intermission and, last night, started fifteen minutes early without notice.

I thought about Spielberg a lot during the course of the play. He should make a movie out of it, he knows how to do it. Stoppard, author of so many important and classic plays, now tells the story of his Viennese Jewish family beginning in 1899, jumping to 1924, and then to 1938 as they grapple with assimilating into Christian and Catholic culture, resisting it to save their identities, and then hiding — mostly unsuccessfully– from the Nazis.

There are many levels working simultaneously in this story, and Stoppard handles it all masterfully, there’s other way to explain it. He’s got intergenerational characters matched against the rise of fascism. In the final segment, 1955, a character says — with the war over and Hitler defeated — “that can’t happen again.” The audience gasped because it is happening in Europe right now again and we all know it. Donald Trump is pushing it in the US and this is lost on no one.

It’s a huge cast with all outstanding performances. But Brandon Uranowitz, Faye Castelow, David Krumholtz, and Jenny Augen are among the standouts.

“Leopoldstadt” begins, as I said, at the turn of the century in Vienna where Eastern European Jews have arrived, started business, been influential in culture, but are discriminated against in subtle and not so subtle ways. One member of the large, successful family of main characters has a very successful business and has converted to Catholicism so he can assimilate more ease into the hierarchy of society. But Stoppard doesn’t let Hermann get away with that within his own family. The underlying reminder is that when the time comes, the gentiles will identify you as Jewish no matter what you’ve done to alter your identity.

And in the third segment, 1938, we see what’s happened. The family is in hiding, some of have already been taken away by the Nazis. After prospering for 30 or more years, reality has descended as Hitler has risen. The family home has been whittled to nothing. Hermann is forced to give his business to the Nazis without compensation. It’s a quarter century or more since the people of Anatevka were forced from their homes in “Fiddler on the Roof,” but yes, it is happening again. And again.

Every person interested in theater or history, every Jew certainly, must see this play. As soon as possible, for Stoppard, the cast, director Patrick Marber, for ourselves.

“SNL” Returns Without Cecily Strong in the Credits, Without Promoting Last Year’s Star James Austin Johnson

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“Saturday Night Live” returned last night with a lot of withouts:

Cecily Strong wasn’t in the opening credits. The reason, the show says, is that she wasn’t in New York to shoot her new opening photo because she’s performing the Lily Tomlin show in Los Angeles. Huh? Plenty of cast members have been missing in previous seasons from the opening shows and still managed to be in the credits. Also, she’s a contract player. But maybe her contract was shortened and doesn’t include these episodes until she returns? It seems odd.

The show did not promote James Austin Johnson to regular player from featured. Last year, JAJ was MVP of the show, playing both Biden and Trump, nailing scene after scene. He was right there last night in the cold opening as Trump. It really seems wrong that he wasn’t elevated to the regular cast, considering all the changes that have occurred.

Last night’s episode had its moments, mostly in :Weekend Update. Mikey Day was a little off trying imitate Adam Levine without any tattoos. The cold open referred to all the changes, and the lack of Kate McKinnon who used to play at least three different characters. Newcomer Mike Longfellow seems like a nice guy, but very tentative. He looks younger than 28, but everyone looks young to me at this point.

Kendrick Lamar is always interesting, but I don’t know how a record company considers what he does commercial. As for Miles Teller, he was smart in everything he did, and it was fun to see Jon Hamm. There was a rumor Tom Cruise was going to pop in, but it’s probably not possible considering he has zero sense of humor and a decided lack of spontaneity.

And so we’re off on a new season, for better and for worse. Next Saturday’s musical guest is Willow Smith, a definite must-skip.

“SNL” also introduced a new design for its logo, which looks a lot like an update of the one they had in the 70s.

Box Office: “Bros” Fails to Hit $5 Mil, Horror Film of the Month “Smile” Brightens $22 Mil

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The box office is a horror.

Paramount’s “Smile,” a movie we will never see, managed to grab $22 million this weekend. I’m sure no one in the audience smiles during or after this one. But it’s the horror film of the month. Is there no point at which these blood fests don’t become repetitive or redundant to their audience? I don’t get it. But they keep the studios involved afloat with low budgets and low expectations. It’s good for Sosie Bacon, talented actress daughter of Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick.

The real horror is “Bros,” the gay comedy that was so heavily promoted and marketed. “Bros” turned out to be a very niche film. The total is $4.8 mil, a crushing disaster for a movie that wasn’t met with Universal appeal.

Some other news: “Avatar” re-release has picked up another $4 million, bringing its total to over $18 million. This is great news for Disney/Fox/whatever for the new “Avatar” coming soon. The audience is still into this Blue Man Group!

“The Woman King” chugs away to $46 million after three weeks. Not a smash hit, but still hanging in there. Sony’s other fall release, “Bullet Train,” finally arrived at the station with $101 million. Yes, it took nine weeks. They made a lot of stops along the way.

“Don’t Worry Darling” fell 62% from last week, no PR good or bad could help it. They’re at $32 million, just $3 million shy of the budget and another $35 million short of breaking even including theater rentals. As Harry Styles once sang, it’s a sign of the times.

Review: “White Noise” Gets Star Studded Premiere at NY Film Fest, Ambitious Film Shoots and Scores

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“White Noise” opened the NY Film Festival last night with a star studded premiere and a beautiful outdoor late night party at Tavern on the Green. Noah Baumbach’s careful adaptation of Don DeLillo’s cleverly acidic literary novel was the perfect choice for New York audiences.

It may not have been the perfect choice to open the Venice Film Festival, where “White Noise” was met with less enthusiasm. But this is a very American movie, and Venice is never the place for that kind of social satire, no matter who the stars are.

In this case, the stars are Adam Driver and Greta Gerwig, who play Jack and Babette, a married Ohio couple each on their fourth marriage. They have a bunch of kids in their blended family. The three older teens are played by Sam and May Nivola, the real life children of actors Alessandro Nivola and Emily Mortimer, and Raffey Cassidy. They are all ready for big careers.

Jack is a professor at the appropriately blandly named College-on-the-Hill. He’s self important and self satisfied having invented a curriculum called Hitler Studies. His rival at the school is Murray Siskind (the excellent Don Cheadle) whose own specialty is teaching the importance of Elvis Presley. This is DeLillo’s “white noise” — that all subjects have the same gravity no matter how mundane or silly, that these professors have convinced themselves that they’re all onto something. On top of that, there’s the absurdity of Jack’s take on Hitler and the Nazis. It’s somehow all about him.

And the shit literally hits the fan. A train collides with a gas truck on the outskirts of town and creates a deadly toxic mass in the sky. The town has to be evacuated. Baumbach riffs a little on Spielberg’s “War of the Worlds” here, one of many movie references throughout the film as the family is now under siege. Adding to the misery is that Babette has been taking a mysterious pill that no pharmacy or doctor can identify, which means she has a secret life that may be worse than the toxic cloud when discovered.

But none of this “can happen here.” Jack is like Mary Hartman (a reference for the older crowd). You almost expect him to say “Let’s go to the IHOP and everything will be ok.” For Jack everything can be rationalized— until it can’t be. Babette, however, is suffering from white noise. Despite being beautiful and having a happy family, she fears her own death. Not her children’s, her own. She seeks answers in a newspaper ad from a charlatan offering home remedies — and the results are, to put it mildly, disastrous.

So there’s a lot going on here as Baumbach covers the entire, sprawling novel including presenting the physical aspect of family in a glowing supermarket that turns out to be the theatrical stage of their lives, and the college where Jack is one of the few who wears what looks like an almost shredded black cloak or a shroud (more death). The attention to art detail is remarkable, from the parade of station wagons bearing students coming around the college’s circular driveway to the rows and rows of gleaming produce around which the customers move in syncopation at the supermarket. Ann Roth’s costumes (including Driver’s fake belly) are characters on their own.

Because it’s a novel, “White Noise” revolves around several central moments, but one that may propel Driver and Cheadle to big things is known unofficially as the Dueling Professors. The two men circle each other with students around them, Driver spouting his Hitler theories, Cheadle recalling the high points of Elvis’s life. The movie kind of levitates here, and also when Gerwig finally explains to Driver what drug she’s been taking and how her life has unraveled secretly in plain sight.

You could call “White Noise” a big meal, a three courser, and then it does come to a natural end. But wait! There’s dessert. After two hours or more of Danny Elfman’s gorgeous score wafting in and out, the credits begin and so does a scene over them, of poetry and ebullience back at the story’s central meeting place, the supermarket, to a new song from James Murphy and LCD Soundsystem. This is the payoff for traveling this journey, and it’s incredibly tasty.

“White Noise” comes to theaters at the end of November, and then moves to Netflix a month later. I hope everyone sees it on a big, big screen. It’s Netflix’s best shot at an Oscar since “The Irishman,” and must be appreciated for its lofty ambitions, most of which are achieved. Baumbach has always worked from his own scripts and personal ideas. This is the first time he’s adapted other material. I have my personal favorites from his long CV including “The Meyerowitz Stories,” “Greenberg,” and a little gem called “Mr. Jealousy.” But “White Noise” is a massive leap forward and suggests huge things to come along the way.

Just one PS: at the after party I ran into Gerry Howard, a DeLillo editor and friend, one of the living legends of book publishing. He knows “White Noise” probably better than anyone aside from the author. (The great Elisabeth Sifton was the original editor of the book.) I hope he doesn’t mind me saying this, but Howard told me he really enjoyed the movie. For a book editor of such high esteem to say that means a lot.

Paul Simon’s Sudden Exit from Jimmy Kimmel Gives Break to Rapper, Sampler Action Bronson (Watch)

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Action Bronson got a big break last night on national TV.

The rapper who is similar to DJ Khaled got to perform on “Jimmy Kimmel, Live from Brooklyn” at the last minute because legendary singer songwriter Paul Simon cancelled at the last minute. Simon was supposed to perform and be interviewed. His appearance was heavily promoted. But for unclear reasons he ditched the show. No mention was made of the change. If Simon is ill (presumably) let’s hope he get better fast.

Bronson performed his hit called “Jaguar.” You’ll notice an amazing background vocal by a Black woman. Bronson samples the late great Loleatta Holloway from her record, “I Can’t Help Myself,” released in 1975. Holloway died in 2011 at age 64. Who knows if she — her estate — got paid for this sample?

There’s an odd note about “I Can’t Help Myself.” It’s a total rip off of Barbara Acklin’s “Am I the Same Girl,” which was written by the Chi Lites’ Eugene Record. It’s the same song, just a few years later. I don’t know why Gene Record let this happen, or if he was just ripped off himself! It doesn’t change the quality of Holloway’s magnificent voice, but it just shows how artists are pillaged all the time.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=1Z0Ui9cocCg

Box Office: “Bros” May Score Just $5 Million Weekend After Disastrous Opening Night

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“Bros,” billed as an all gay comedy, is a box office disaster.

Total receipts for Thursday and Friday came to just $1.84 million. With another $2.5 million coming on Saturday and Sunday, “Bros” stands to make less than $5 million for its entire opening weekend.

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“Bros” doesn’t have a huge budget — $25 million at most. But the movie has had a tremendous amount of publicity and marketing, a blanketing that most films would give their popcorn up for. This just means that the public at large had no interest in seeing not only a gay rom com, but one with graphic sex scenes.

“Bros” comes from Universal, which will also release a second film in this genre through its Focus Features soon called “Spoiler Alert.” Once that’s over, this genre may be severely curtailed. What a disappointment for Billy Eichner and Judd Apatow, but this is an example of Hollywood being insulated from reality even when it has the best of intentions.

Thursday Ratings: Chris Meloni’s “Organized Crime” Is Weak Link in “Law & Order” Chain, 1 Million Behind SVU

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Thursday night ratings: Dick Wolf’s “Law & Order” night is back to normal after the big three way opening last week. But Chris Meloni’s “Organized Crime” remains an issue. At 10pm, the spin off show dropped 1 million viewers from the 9pm “SVU” with just 3.51 million fans.

“SVU” took in 4.51 million and built on the 8pm “L&O” Classic with a strong 4.33 million. “OC” is simply not pulling its weight. The show’s structural problems are continuing even with a new showrunner and a changed direction. Some ingredient is missing there.

Over on CBS, “Young Sheldon” continues to kill with 6.6 million viewers. “Ghosts” was right behind it at 8:30 with 6.1 million. You know, as someone pointed out to me, Sheldon is no longer young. Iain Armitage is 14 by now and growing. This is the sixth season. He’ll be turning into Jim Parsons soon. They may get just one more season out of this blockbuster. Maybe the next series can be “Old Sheldon.”