Thursday, October 17, 2024
Home Blog Page 400

Broadway Exclusive: “Funny Girl” Insiders Are Saying Lea Michele Will Finally Be Fanny Brice

0

EXCLUSIVE: We know that Beanie Feldstein will exit her role as Fanny Brice in “Funny Girl” in September. Jane Lynch, who plays Fanny’s mother, is going with her.

Now I’m told by insiders that the producers have found the obvious new Fanny: Lea Michele.

The “Glee” star has always wanted the role. When she was in “Glee” there was a lot of talk about her taking the part. But a lot of things went sideways, and it never happened.

This past Sunday, Lea Michele was a hit on the Tony Awards during the “Spring Awakening” reunion. She was really given the spotlight, and hit a home run.

The Tonys appearance was either because her deal was already done, or because producers were waiting to see how Michele would be received. It was all ‘thumbs up.’

Remember– Lea Michele sang “Don’t Rain on My Parade” at the 64th Tony Awards 11 years ago. She is ready to go!

Lynch still has to be replaced. I have a funny idea for Funny Girl: offer the role to Michele Lee, the great Broadway star of “Seesaw” and TV’s “Knots Landing.” She can sing like crazy, she would seem like Lea Michele’s mother. And think of the marquee– Lea Michele and Michele Lee. David Merrick would do it in a second! (Michele Lee was last on Broadway in “Wicked,” by the way, and I’m told she recently bought a new place in New York.”

So hold on for the announcement. I know a lot of people will be disappointed that understudy Julie Benko won’t get promoted. But if “Funny Girl” is to survive and pay back its investors, they need a ‘name.’I hope Benko hangs in there until she gets her own show. She deserves it.

Ex-Monk $259 Million Powerball Lottery Winner Makes Martha Clarke’s Stunning “God’s Fool” Come Alive at Famed La Mama Theater

TV: Why Has “Billions” Never Gotten An Emmy Nomination? Now is The Time for Paul Giamatti, Corey Stoll, David Costabile, Asia Kate Dillon

0

It’s hard to believe Emmy voters haven’t watched “Billions” on Showtime.

Today, as ballots go out for nominations, all voters have to look seriously at “Billions” for Best Drama, Best Actor in a Drama Paul Giamatti, and Supporting Actors Jeffrey DeMunn, David Costabile and Corey Stoll.

More importantly almost, it’s the writing from Brian Koppelman and David Levien that sings with erudition, movie references, business jargon, and language all its own. If “Succession” is considered a great show, “Billions” is every bit its equal.

During its run — now coming into its 7th season — “Billions” has received nothing from the Emmys. Not a single nomination. The only possible reason for this is that Showtime does nothing for this show. They renew it, and then leave it to for itself. There have been so many missed opportunities, particularly with departed star Damian Lewis and guest star Nina Arianda, who should have received awards during their runs.

Besides Koppelman and Levien, the most egregious Emmys omission has been Paul Giamatti. A past Oscar nominee, Giamatti is also an Emmy winner. He has three other nominations. But nothing for “Billions.” As Chuck Rhoades, Jr, the on again off again New York District Attorney, Chuck is a force of nature. Formerly involved in BDSM, Chuck is a glorious construct of Ivy League upbringing and down low Tammany Hall politics.

Giamatti steals every scene he’s in, which isn’t easy because Giamatti is always working with top level people like Maggie Siff and Condola Rashad. No one on “Billions” is a slouch. They’re speaking golden dialogue composed of inside jokes, Greek philosophy and Springsteen lyrics. But they’re also echoing the greed of Wall Street, the venality of politics in the 21st century, in satire worthy of Upton Sinclair.

My advice: watch the last two episodes of Season 6. They will make you want to watch more and more, until you’re hooked and must see the whole series. Showtime’s lackadaisical approach be damned.

Mike Lindell Says Wal Mart Is Pulling His My Pillow Products in Light of January 6th Hearings

Wal Mart has finally done the right thing. They’ve dumped Mike Lindell and his MyPillow products. Lindell made the announcement himself. So far Wal Mart has said nothing.

Lindell was absolutely a proponent of the January 6th Capitol rights in 2021. All other major retailers have dropped his products. It was about time Wal Mart took action. Frankly, Lindell should be brought before the January 6th committee.

Lindell went on Facebook today complaining about his poor treatment from Wal Mart. He claims that the Wal Mart COO lied to him. You know? Good.

As of 1:24pm, My Pillow is still available on the Wal Mart website. They may just be letting their inventory drain. Or they haven’t pulled it all off the site.

If you have time to watch this nut job rant and rave, here’s the clip. You can FF through it.

“Hacks” Returning to HBO Max for 3rd Season Even Though They Wrapped All Their Stories

0

“Hacks” is not over.

The Emmy winning series will return to HBO Max for a third season. This is surprising since the end of Season 2 seemed like a series finale. All the stories were wrapped up with a bow.

So what now for Deborah and Ava and the whole crowd? Deborah’s career has been revived, Ava has gone on to fame and fortune in Hollywood as a TV writer. All the supporting characters also got happy endings.

Maybe Ava will write a sitcom for Deborah and we’ll see how that plays out. That seems like the only option. The sitcom could be an instant flop which has to be recovered pending cancellation. Or it gets cancelled and we start all over again. But that sounds a little like the excellent “Episodes.”

Ah, well. It will be great to see everyone again. Meantime, “Hacks” is in the running for Best Comedy as Emmy voting begins today. I hope Emmy voters won’t forget Harriet Harris as Guest Actor in a Comedy. She was terrific.

Beyonce’s New Album Coming July 29th, Setting Up Grammy Battle with Adele for Best Album

0

Get ready. Next January at the Grammys it’s going to be Beyonce vs. Adele, Round II. Or III.

Overnight, Beyonce announced her new album, called “Renaissance,” will drop on July 29th. It’s got 16 tracks and lots of merch: four different collectible box sets with t shirts included.

“Renaissance” is also labelled Volume 1, so there may be a Volume 2 down the road.

But this sets up a competition next winter for Album of the Year at the Grammys with Adele. Adele released her “33” album at the end of last year, so it will be eligible at the same time.

Who will win? This time. Beyonce. Hands down. For one thing, “33” just wasn’t that good. Aside from “Easy On Me,” there were no other hits. And Adele stiffed thousands of people on Las Vegas tickets by cancelling her 13 week “Weekends with Adele” at Caesar’s Palace and never rescheduling.

You know Beyonce will pull out all the stops including tracks with husband Jay Z and daughter Blue Ivy. Maybe even sister Solange or a Destiny’s Child reunion track.

What’s interesting here is that this not a surprise drop, as has been Beyonce’s wont for the last decade. “Renaissance” is being thoroughly marketed way ahead of time.

Cancelled: Hotel Reluctantly Kills Brooklyn Concert by Reagan’s Attempted Assassin John Hinckley Jr

0

John Hinckley Jr will not be warbling love songs at the Market Hotel in Brooklyn on July 8th.

The hotel has cancelled the Hinckley show. I was among the first to report the booking back in April.

Market Hotel posted a long explanation. They didn’t want to cancel but felt pressured to from customers. Come on, are you kidding? This man ruined James Brady’s life, altered his family’s. and tried to assassinate the President of the United States.

The Hotel says it thought this might be an “interesting” booking. That’s one word for it.

Maybe they can bring in Squeaky Fromme to sing Beatles songs instead.

Broadway: No Tony Awards Love Sends Beanie Feldstein Packing from “Funny Girl,” Jane Lynch Too

0

Beanie Feldstein is outta here.

The star of Broadway’s “Funny Girl” is exiting the show in September. That will be six months from opening to her farewell.

Jane Lynch is leaving too. She played Fanny Brice’s mother as if she were Sophie Lennon from “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.” My guess is each of them had “Outs’ and they are taking them.

Usually the cast of a new hit show stays at least 9 months to a year. But Lynch has a busy career, and Beanie’s faced a lot of criticism as Fanny. The show received just 1 Tony nomination, for tap dancer Jared Grimes. Otherwise, it was snubbed (which I think was very wrong of the Tony voters).

The hope is Beanie’s understudy, Julie Benko, who’s filled in a lot for her, will get the permanent job. Everyone who sees her raves about her work. For Mrs. Brice the producers can get someone who looks like Benko. Feldstein and Lynch were an odd mother and daughter in appearance, they looked nothing like each other.

“Funny Girl” is still making over 1 million dollars a week, but it’s in a slow decline. If the producers want to keep it going, they’ll cut costs and rethink the marketing. It can be done.

Review: Baz Luhrmann’s “Elvis” is a Unique Combination of Moving and Repelling, With Oscar Level Performances

0

So much has been written already about Baz Luhrmann’s “Elvis,” I went in with a lot of expectations and none. The result though is a movie that is uniquely moving and repelling at the same time. It’s fact free, and too long. But it’s also incredibly entertaining.

Every Baz Luhrmann movie is a triumph of style over substance, and “Elvis” is no exception. The first 20 minutes are so dizzying that you say to yourself, OK, if he can keep this up, I’ll buy it. But of course, he can’t sustain his own initial excitement because reality always sets in: what is this movie about, anyway? It can’t just be amazing photography and costumes.

The question becomes, who is this movie about? Elvis Presley or his manager, Colonel Tom Parker? After two and a half hours, I’m not sure I know the answer. I will say that Austin Butler’s performance as Presley is worth the price of admission. And Tom Hanks makes Col. Parker, who’s always been a subject of fascination in the music world, is as compelling as anything the two time Oscar winner has done.

If there’s a central problem it’s the screenplay. There are three credits: Luhrmann, Sam Bromell., and Craig Pearce. What they needed was a dramatist, someone to lay this massive amount of information out and shape it. Not once in all the screen time do we really learn who Elvis was, or anything new about the mysterious Parker except that he was a mystery wrapped in an enigma. Would it have been so hard to do a little sleuthing?

But Luhrmann isn’t interested in all that. He has such a strong visual concept, his mind can’t be cluttered by facts. We get some, but we also get a lot of fiction, some made up situations that “could have been true,” that kind of stuff. But you know, if you want the real story, there are biographies, and the old Kurt Russell TV film, among other sources. Luhrmann will send us there if questioned.

The set pieces are spectacular. The script concentrates heavily on the later years of Elvis’s life, the taping of his 1968 Christmas special, and his Las Vegas shows at the International Hotel. The early part of the film, his childhood, the 1950s, is glossed over quickly. Elvis goes to the Army, marries Priscilla, and the years between 1962 and 1968 are skipped over. We never get how Elvis managed in that time, what the Beatles and the British Invasion did to him.

Pretty much the only characters developed in any way as Elvis and the Colonel. Olivia DeJonge’s Priscilla simply isn’t written with any dimension. She’s a cypher. Watching the film you have no idea about Vernon, Elvis’s father and Richard Roxborough doesn’t help. Elvis’s assistant, Jerry Schilling, suddenly appears but you never know what he’s supposed to be doing.

“Elvis” comes down to Butler and Hanks. They are on a seesaw for two and a half hours. Parker is a snake, but Hanks gives him layers. (I didn’t mind the odd Dutch-esque accent. I think it worked.) If only Hanks had been given some history to play rather than imply. You see his eyes dancing with their own questions. He’s such a great actor, and gives the Colonel all that he’s got.

Butler is a revelation. His performances, the singing, the dancing, the gyrating, Elvis’s accent, all soar. If you liked Rami Malek as Freddie Mercury or Jennifer Hudson as Aretha, you will not to want to miss Butler’s work. He sings most of Elvis’s songs, and carries them off with aplomb. Sometimes he doesn’t look like he’s aged as much as Elvis did during the late 60s, but more often that not the makeup people do a fine job. Catherine Martin’s costumes — really.Elvis’s outrageous Vegas trappings — deserve their own movie.

Go see “Elvis” when it opens June 24th by all means. If you know nothing, you’ll glean the basic story. It’s not that hard. If you know a lot, you’ll be mesmerized by the many glittering pieces. Remember: Elvis’s music stands one way or another, and his “real” story is available with the stroke of a computer key. The rest is cinematic magic.

Ex-Monk $259 Million Powerball Lottery Winner Makes Martha Clarke’s Stunning “God’s Fool” Come Alive at Famed La Mama Theater

0

Martha Clarke‘s stunning theater piece, “God’s Fool,” opens at the famed La Mama theater in the East Village this week. But the play with music wouldn’t have happened without special financing. From a monk.

Ironically, “God’s Fool” is a unique take on St. Francis of Assisi, who was, as it happened, a monk himself. But he didn’t win Powerball lottery. That’s what happened in 2014 to Roy Cockrum. He won $259 million and knew just what to do with it.

 

After taking a lump sum of $153 million ($115 million after taxes), the Knoxville, Tennessee monk left his order and decided to start funding regional theater around the country. Cockrum had tried being an actor in New York when he was young. But after many frustrations he thew in the towel and put on the cowl, so to speak.

A random visit to a supermarket changed his life. And changed the lives of countless theater groups including ones like Berkeley Rep in California and the Goodman Theater in Chicago. He’s already given away millions of dollars.

 

Martha Clarke is already a legend in New York for her avant garde stagings. I actually saw an early piece, based on Kafka’s “Metamorphosis,” in 1982. It starred Linda Hunt, who went on to win an Oscar for “The Year of Living Dangerously” and is now known to zillions as Heddy on “NCIS Los Angeles.” I can still see it in my mind, it was so memorable. Now forty years later, “God’s Fool” — following four decades of successes — resonates the same way.

But in this tricky pandemic time, Clarke needed a backer for “God’s Fool.” And that’s where Roy Cockrum’s Foundation came in.

Francis wasn’t exactly a monk from birth. He was quite the ladies’ man. But he eventually turned into one of the important religious figures in history. You could say he started the first Friars’ Club, but the punchline now is that Clarke — who counts among her accolades a MacArthur fellowship, a Drama Desk Award, and two Obie Awards — has gorgeously captured a snapshot of him as Francis gathers his followers.

She’s done it with an A team of collaborators: a phenomenal scenic design and show stopping, endearingly comic masks that would put Julie Taymor to shame by famed artist Robert Israel; costumes from “Mrs. Maisel” genius Donna Zakowska, soaring chorale music direction and arrangements from Arthur Solari, and a singing text from Fanny Howe, among others.

Clarke’s other collaborators are the very talented cast of stars including Patrick Andrews, Evan Copeland, Luca Fontaine, Ingrid Kapteyn, John Kelly, Rico LeBron, George de la Peña (you know him from “Star Trek” and the “Nijinksy” movie, and James A. Pierce III, whose gospel blues voice has graced Broadway in “The Lion King” and “Anastasia.”. You’ve got to see this ensemble and hear them because for 80 minutes they create a gem of a theater piece that can’t be missed.

As for Brother Roy, he told the Financial Times that when he won the Lottery,  “I literally fell to my knees — a tsunami of cash like that is quite overwhelming.” But he knew just what do with it. Now he’s pumping much needed funds into regional theater all over the country. But New York is also regional, and La Mama — started by the legend Ellen Stewart decades ago — is the perfect recipient.

 

God’s Fool at La Mama, through July 2nd.
God’s Fool at La Mama through July 2nd.

God’s Fool | Trailer from La MaMa on Vimeo.

KPop Boy Band BTS Breaking Up, Causing Massive Stock Price Drop for Korean Company Recently Merged with Bieber Manager

0

But They Shouldn’t.

KPop giants BTS have announced they are taking a hiatus — meaning, it’s over — to do solo projects.

This announcement caused a seismic wave of news in South Korea last night. BTS there is like the Beatles used to be in the West. The band’s company, Hybe, is publicly traded in South Korea. The stock immediately plummeted by 28% when the news broke last night according to Bloomberg, wiping out as much as $1.7 billion dollars.

This is an issue that reverberates here in America. Hybe bought Scooter Braun’s management company last year, the one that houses Justin Bieber, Ariana Grande, and Demi Lovato.

Last week, BTS released a compilation album with three new tracks. Hitsdailydouble.com says the opening week numbers, which will be counted on Friday, should come to 259,000. That’s a lot less than usual, a signal that the group’s audience is aging out. This happened to NSync, Backstreet Boys, and One Direction. News of the breakup, however, could cause a spike in sales today and tomorrow as fans will want physical copies as souvenirs.

In a video, BTS member RM said: “I felt like I needed time to spend on my own.” Another, Suga, said “It’s not like we’re disbanding.”

Which BTS member will become Justin Timberlake or Harry Styles? Back when those groups were in their prime, everyone knew those singers’ names while they were still in their ensembles. Right now, no one from BTS has that name recognition in the US. That may be an issue. Geffen Records/Universal Music will be among those labels trying to determine which solo member to sign up. Remember, when One Direction split, Styles was not yet a superstar. Other members like Zayn Malik and Niall Horan got contracts and released music right away. Neither of the latter two did much, with Malik completely imploding.

So stay tuned.