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Exclusive: “Goodfellas” Could Be Getting a Companion Movie with Robert DeNiro in the Mix

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Yes, it’s been 30 years since Martin Scorsese’s beloved “Goodfellas” became an instant classic. And now it’s been a few weeks since the death of Ray Liotta, who played Henry Hill so memorably in the film.

Now I’m hearing the exciting news that “Wiseguy,” the original book that formed the basis of the “Goodfellas” story is getting its own film. Sources say director Barry Levinson would reunite with his oft-collaborator Robert DeNiro possibly reprising his role as Jimmy Conway (or who knows? maybe someone else). The screenplay is from Nicholas Pileggi, who wrote the book.

“Wiseguy” was an even fuller account of the life of Henry Hill than just the Lufthansa robbery covered in “Goodfellas.” A young actor would have to be cast as Hill, with other roles to be cast including Tommy DeSimone aka “Two Gun Tommy,” described as “a young aspiring gangster with psychopathic tendencies” who was Hill’s partner in crime in his early days.

The prospective studio for all this would be Warner Bros. where it could be among the first projects from Mike DeLuca and Pam Abdy. Producer would be Winkler Films, which made “Raging Bull.”

The Kennedy Center’s Most Egregious Mistake: Not Inducting Superstar Composer Burt Bacharach, 94

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There’s a lot of head-scratching today about the new Kennedy Center Honors. It’s not like the chosen honorees don’t deserve their accolades. But the people who were overdue for the award are from a long list.

The most egregious miss? Superstar composer Burt Bacharach. Bacharach and Hal David are one of the most important teams in music history. David has passed away, sadly. But Burt is 94. How much longer is he supposed to wait?

Hits? The list is beyond measure. From all his songs with Dionne Warwick, to the Carpenters, and ultimately “That’s What Friends Are For” with former wife and hit songwriter Carole Bayer Sager.

But those other songs–the Academy Award winning “Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head,” not to mention songs like “I Say a Little Prayer,” “Walk on by,” “Always Something there to Remind Me,” “Close to You.” Bacharach has an incredible catalog and career including a landmark album with Elvis Costello and an appearance in an “Austin Powers” movie.

Rewarding Bacharach would have covered a lot of bases, too, because it’s not just pop music and movies but also Broadway. “Promises, Promises,” still beloved, came from Bacharach and David.

So what happened? Burt probably didn’t campaign, and no one involved with the Kennedy Center is smart enough to include him. What a shame. Instead we get Amy Grant.

Book Bust: Ken Auletta’s Harvey Weinstein Book Drops Below 3,000 on Amazon, Sells No Copies

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Color me surprised.

Ken Auletta’s book on Harvey Weinstein, some 20 years in the making, is a total bust.

Published a week ago Tuesday, “Hollywood Ending” has sold just 1,500 copies according to NPD Book Scan.

The book has fallen below number 3,000 on amazon.

No one wanted to read it.

It’s so strange because Auletta is a star journalist and a great writer. But he got nothing of interest on Weinstein. “Hollywood Ending” is just a revisit of facts already known from Weinstein’s trial and from accounts in the New York Times and the New Yorker. There were no scoops.

Media books are tough sells anyway, like inside baseball that the public doesn’t care about unless there’s a wider story being told. Reporters who wrote about Weinstein between 1990 and 2017, when the mogul’s world came crashing down, know hundreds of stories that haven’t been published, concerning the making of movies and the stars in them.

Auletta never got to those stories. He got bogged down in minutiae. I’ll bet Harvey is disappointed. But also relieved. Nothing in the book can do him any more damage or cause more trouble than he’s already in.

Kennedy Center Honors: Gladys Knight (Yes), George Clooney (Too Soon), Amy Grant (?), U2, But No to Denzel Washington, Alan Alda

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The weirdness of the Kennedy Center continues under David Rubenstein.

He wants the show to be the Grammys, and hes getting his way.

Gladys Knight deserves the honor, U2 probably does, too. But Amy Grant? And George Clooney?

No disrespect to George Clooney, but really? There are a dozen other actors who are older and more accomplished who deserve the honor, have longer and better resumes. I appreciate Clooney’s social activism and his handful of really good performances, but it’s a decade too early I think for this accolade.

Amy Grant? She hasn’t had a hit that I know of in 30 years. But her appeal is to the Christian country audience. Rubenstein knows how to pander. He thinks he’ll get TV ratings. And maybe Vince Gill can perform in his wife’s tribute. But really: she had one number 1 hit in 1991. Ridiculous.

Back to Gladys: it’s about time. So many hits, such a great life. She is adored.

U2: Also lots of hits, plus Bono has worked tirelessly for world causes, and made a difference. Plus, for some reason, the Rolling Stones don’t want this award. And the Kennedy Center is running out of rock groups they can get away with inducting.

Tania Leon: the Cuban born composer covers classical music and POC representation. Plus a performance of her music would be thrilling if done right.

Who got snubbed, so to speak? Francis Ford Coppola, it’s the 50th anniversary of “The Godfather.” Hello? Liza Minnelli? Judy Collins? Jane Fonda? What about Alan Alda?

And then there’s whole issue of Denzel Washington, who should have been in a long time ago. He only has two Oscars and two Tony Awards.

Oh yes, speaking of Tony Awards: Broadway isn’t represented here at all. No Tommy Tune or Bernadette Peters. That’s pretty rude of CBS which hosts the Tony Awards.

And so we paddle on in the post- George Stevens Jr. era.

Broadway’s Tough Summer: Only 3 Shows Played at 100% Last Week, “Strange Loop” Wasn’t One of Them, “Mockingbird” Still MIA

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Broadway is having a tough, tough summer.

Shows are closing left and right, or announcing their finales are coming. The mask mandate has been lifted, so everyone can come in and cough up a storm. Theaters are no longer checking vaccination cards.

If all that wasn’t bad, New York in the news looks like 1975 again. There are random shootings and stabbings. Times Square between 44th and 47th Streets, in the godawful pedestrian mall, is a sewer. No one in their right mind would hang out there, so everyone not in their right mind is making it their headquarters.

Plus, it’s really hot.

So last week, of 29 shows, only three played to 100% capacity crowds. None of them was “Strange Loop,” which just won the Tony for Best Musical and played at 91% last week. And they’re in a decline.

The three hit shows were “The Music Man,” “MJ,” and “Hamilton.” Even standard bearers like “The Lion King” and “Wicked” weren’t sold out. The only good news is that the Tony winning revival of “Company” is packing in crowds before it closes at the end of the month.

“Funny Girl” is a disaster waiting for fresh troops to arrive and save the day. Currently at 73%, “Funny Girl” is bringing in less than $800,000 a week. Star Beanie Feldstein, who’s leaving early on July 31st, comes and goes. August will be a write off with understudies — really good ones — in the main roles. Then right after Labor Day comes Lea Michele and Tovah Feldshuh. The show will be re-re-reviewed. If all goes well, ticket sales will pick up. If not, the parade will be rained on.

Broadway soldiers on. Lots of potential hits are in the wings. A short-run “Into the Woods” revival is sold out. Maybe one day, “To Kill a Mockingbird” will return, not likely with Greg Kinnear, but with some big name actor if producers can lure one. “Mockingbird” was supposed to have returned already, on June 1st, but that obviously hasn’t happened. Richard Thomas is starring in the national tour, and I’ll bet he’s good.

What I would do with “Mockingbird” is hire Matthew Modine right now. He’s had a huge comeback with “Stranger Things.” He’s played Atticus Finch at Hartford Stage and done a beautiful job, rave reviews. Get Millie Bobby Brown to play Scout. Maybe get Finn Wolfhard to play Scout’s brother, Jem. And that would sell some tickets!

Adele Myth Busted: “30” Album Is the 16th Best Selling Record of 2022 So Far, A Million Less Than “Encanto”

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Reality bites.

Hitsdailydouble.com just posted the top 25 albums in sales so far for 2022.

Number 1 is the soundtrack to “Encanto” with 1.5 million copies. Of those, 203K are actual albums– CDs, downloads, LPs. The bulk of sales came from streaming.

Ironically, Adele’s “30” album sold just as many actual albums, 203K. But it lacked in streaming, bringing the total to just 567,000. “30” finished at number 16 of the top 25.

This time around, despite lots of hype, Adele didn’t have a massive hit. But we knew that. The album never produced more than one actual radio hit, “Easy on Me.” It paled in comparison to Adele’s previous outings. (I keep asking where producer/writer Paul Epworth has gone. If anyone knows, send me an email at showbiz411@gmail.com).

Adele may have also cut sales by cancelling her 13 Weekends with Adele in Las Vegas. Fans were screwed. The shows have never been rescheduled. Adele, meantime, is sailing around Sardinia this week.

Only four albums have sold more than 1 million copies in the last six months. They are from Bad Bunny, Harry Styles, Morgan Wallen, and Encanto. All the other “names” we hear on the hype machine– Taylor Swift, Ed Sheeran, etc– are well below that bar. You wonder how all the record companies can stay in business this way. The numbers are daunting.

Not on the list at all: Justin Bieber. Number 25 is Kid Lario with 468,000.

Coming to the rescue, maybe, next Friday: Beyonce. Let’s see if her “Renaissance” is one for the whole business.

Review: Jigsaw Puzzle Pieces Don’t Always Fit in Jordan Peele’s Ambitious “Nope” Starring Keke Palmer, Daniel Kaluuya

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I know that the Film Twitter is desperate for Jordan Peele’s “Nope” to be dope. They loved “Get Out” and even “Us,” his sophomore effort that didn’t compare to the debut.

My favorite reaction from last night’s press screening may say it all. One young guy was over heard saying to another, enthusiastically: “I’ve never seen anything like that before!” Indeed.

“Nope” — an ambitious riff on summer blockbusters — stars Oscar winner Daniel Kaluuya — who had his breakout with “Get Out” — and Keke Palmer, who’s this year’s “It” girl. Plus there’s an extended appearance from Steven Yeun of “Minari” and a short cameo from the great Donna Mills of “Knots Landing” fame.

There are also a lot of animals, UFOs, aliens, and a necessary amount of fake blood. Peele aims high and sometimes hits his target. But other times “Nope” feels a little like a Quentin Tarantino movie that was never made until now.

The set up is that Kaluuya and Palmer are brother and sister OJ and Emerald who run a horse training business for Hollywood studios and live on a ranch in a remote area outside of Los Angeles. (Is there such a thing?) They sense UFOs are lurking in the clouds, and set out to film them. (As an after thought. they might also save the world.) Into this project they bring a sort of Geek Squad expert from the local Fry’s Electronics store (are they still in business? good product placement), and a Sam Peckinpah-like filmmaker who might be the Sean Penn character from “Licorice Pizza.”

Meantime, locally there’s an Old West carnival in town run by Yeun’s Jupe that might be from “Nightmare Alley.” And he has a connection to the movie’s opening scene– a TV show taping years before in Hollywood destroyed by Gordy, a showbiz chimp who loses his mind and kills everyone except young Jupe. (No one comes running to their rescue– this may be a reference to Blake Edward’s excellent Hollywood satire, “SOB.”)

Do the UFO’s have something to do with Gordy going crazy? Do they have some connection to the wild horses on the siblings’ ranch? Is there a reason Kaluuya’s character is named “OJ,” other than to hear Palmer shout out, “Run OJ, run!”? I have no idea.

For a while, Peele seems like he’s got something interesting going. A Black brother and sister starring in a western with a UFO theme feels Tarantino-esque, with a touch of “Blazing Saddles” meets “Close Encounters.” But Peele has enough of his own imprint with the horror elements: the sound, cinematography, and production are impeccable and distinct.

What about the cast? The clever, hip Palmer does the heavy lifting here. She’s in every scene, and her presence is key to the action. Emerald is a gem, a unique, snarky, and smart heroine for a horror film. If anyone’s going to survive an alien attack, it’s her.

Kaluuya is more of an enigma in “Nope.” He plays OJ as if he’s in a trance. OJ is the most inactive hero a movie could have. He does ride a horse like a cowboy. And I loved his scenes with the too-little used Keith David, who plays the siblings’ father. Peele seems more interested, frankly, in Michael Wincott’s caricature as the rowdy cinematographer trying to capture the aliens, and Brandon Perea as Angel, the Fry’s guy who knows how to set up electronics equipment. (The director likens OJ, Emerald, and Angel to Harry Belafonte, Sidney Poitier and Ruby Dee from “Buck and the Preacher.” The poster for the Black western is prominent in the background– very Tarantino.)

Where Peele goes wrong, and “Nope” goes out of control, is when the lurking space ship, which turns out to be something other, becomes a wild alien determined to swoop down and suck up everyone on the ground. What could have been a witty, psychological exercise then jumps the shark, so to speak, and becomes a parody of 50s D movies. In “Nope,” that’s the frustration. A director who’s a social observer has become a ghostbuster, for better or worse.

“Bridgerton” Starts Shooting Season 3 with a Replacement Character for Rege-Jean Page

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“Bridgerton” starts shooting season 3, and the producers are not stupid.

Into the cast they’ve brought actor Daniel Francis playing a new character who is obviously a replacement for Rege-Jean Page.

Francis will play Marcus Anderson, described as “a charismatic presence who lights up any room he enters, attracting the notice of certain matriarchs in the ton — and the ire of others.”

Page was the sensation of season 1 as Simon Bassett, the sizzling sex symbol who turned the show into a hit overnight. But his character wasn’t part of the subsequent “Bridgerton” books that were to be filmed for the Netflix films– and he wasn’t going to be written into them.

Since then. the sex factor on “Bridgerton” has been demoted to Hallmark movie levels– rated G with a wink. Season 2 star Jonathan Bailey didn’t get busy. And season 3 star Luke Newton looks lire more chamomile tea. So Francis may be the key to lighting up “Bridgerton” skirts this time around.

Awards Season News: Critics Choice Takes January 15th in Presumptive Strike

Awards season is on, baby!

The Critics Choice Awards will go on January 15th on the CW Network. The announcement is a presumptive strike against the possible Golden Globes, which would have to shoehorn themselves in a week before if NBC decides to bring them back.

Here’s the whole list of Critics Choice Awards shows coming this season. Congrats to Madelyn Hammond, who will produce the whole schedule. Madelyn is Hollywood’s hidden power, and she does it with a big smile.

The 28th annual Critics Choice Awards will return to the Fairmont Century Plaza Hotel in Los Angeles on Sunday, January 15, 2023, airing live on The CW from 7:00 – 10:00 pm ET (delayed PT – check local listings). The show will continue its combined film and television awards format honoring the best in cinematic, televised, and streaming achievement. Historically, the Critics Choice Awards are the most accurate predictor of Academy Award nominations. Bob Bain will serve as the Executive Producer.

The 7th annual Critics Choice Documentary Awards are set for November 13, 2022 at a new and larger venue this year, the Edison Ballroom in Manhattan. The deadline for submissions is September 16, 2022; nominations will be announced on October 17, 2022. Last year’s winners included Summer of Soul (…Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised), The Rescue, Val, The Crime of the Century, Becoming Cousteau, The Alpinist, and The Queen of Basketball. Bob Bain will serve as the Executive Producer.

The 5th annual Celebration of Black Cinema & Television will be held December 5, 2022 at the Fairmont Century Plaza Hotel. Last year’s honorees included Halle Berry, Anthony Anderson, Jennifer Hudson, Barry Jenkins, Ava DuVernay, Idris Elba, Regina King, Jonathan Majors, Danielle Brooks, Robin Thede and Kenan Thompson. Critics Choice Association Board Member Shawn Edwards serves as the Executive Producer/Co-Writer of the Celebration of Black Cinema & Television.

The 2nd annual Celebration of Latino Cinema & Television will hold its first in-person ceremony at the Fairmont Century Plaza Hotel on October 7, 2022, following the success of last year’s virtual event. The 2021 inaugural celebration honored Rita Moreno, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Demián Bichir, Gloria Estefan, Reinaldo Marcus Green, Clifton Collins Jr., Eugenio Derbez and Olga Merediz. This year’s event has expanded to include television honorees, in addition to film awardees. Critics Choice Association Board Member Clayton Davis will serve as the Co-Programmer/Co-Writer for the Celebration of Latino Cinema & Television.

The inaugural Celebration of Asian Pacific Cinema & Television will debut on November 4, 2022 at the Fairmont Century Plaza Hotel. With noteworthy performances in projects such as Everything Everywhere All at Once, Turning Red, Squid Game, Pachinko, Never Have I Ever, Station Eleven, and many more, there has never been a better time to launch the inaugural Celebration of Asian Pacific Cinema & Television. Critics Choice Association member Kylie Mar will serve as the Co-Programmer/Co-Writer for the event.

Each of the three Celebrations will be produced by Madelyn Hammond and Javier Infante of Madelyn Hammond & Associates.

Prayers for “Laugh In” Star Ruth Buzzi, 86, After Series of Strokes Causes Alarm

The husband of “Laugh In” star Ruth Buzzi is asking for prayers for his beloved wife. LA entertainment reporter George Pennacchio says Kent Perkins reports Buzzi has had a series of strokes.

Buzzi’s Twitter account is usually brimming with funny one liners. But yesterday there was an ominous post that read: “Thank you for your love and friendship for all these years.”

Buzzi, 86, is probably unknown to readers under a certain age. But in the late 60s she was a superstar on NBC’s irreverent sketch comedy show, “Rowan and Martin’s Laugh In,” the blueprint for “Saturday Night Live.” She was part of a cast that included other newcomers like Goldie Hawn, Lily Tomlin, Judy Carne, JoAnn Worley, and so on.

Ruth and Henry Gibson appeared in dozens of sketches as a lascivious old man and an outraged spinster named Gladys Ormphby. He’d say something dirty and she’d hit him with her large pocketbook. I’ve got some videos below. She was nominated for 3 Prime Time Emmy Awards, two Daytime Emmys, and won a Golden Globe for not only playing Gladys but a wide variety of characters.

Buzzi always worked after “Laugh In” went off the air, but she will always be remembered for hilarious work on that landmark series. Sending prayers and good thoughts to her family.