Saturday, November 23, 2024
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HBO’s “The Gilded Age” Rebounds Nicely for Series Finale with Increase of 100,000 Viewers

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Good news for the season finale of HBO’s “The Gilded Age.”

The Julian Fellowes-produced and written soap opera rose by 100,000 viewers and finished with its top rating so far, 800K.  Not bad!

Also, the key demo rose to .07, bringing the show back from the dead among younger viewers. All those people who thought I was being ageist last week pay attention: I go by the numbers only. I’m well out of the key demo.

So “The Gilded Age” leaves in good shape for Season 2. They could have a break out season next time around, especially if they spice it up a bit. A good mystery would help, too. But seeing that the final episode was very cerebral, kudos to the writers.

Now, on to the Emmy Awards!

Broadway Gives Grosses 1st Time in 2 Years: “Music Man,” “Michael Jackson” Booming, “Company” Needs Some, “Tina” Rolling on a River

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Broadway is back, and so are the grosses.

For the first time in 2 years we have the actual numbers for the prior, just like old times.

No surprise: The Music Man with Hugh Jackman and Sutton Foster is a blockbuster. The weekly take was over $3,45 million. That’s stunning, Of course, the ticket price is astronomical.  But this was all expected.

Kind of a surprise: “MJ,” the Michael Jackson musical, is a hit. Last week’s take was $1.3 million. And they were only at 93% of capacity. There’s a little room for improvement. But the well reviewed show has an audience, they’re telling friends, and coming back for more. Nice.

Almost all the shows are taking in over a million bucks. Some, like “Hamilton,” “The Lion King,” and “Wicked, ” are doing much better. “Plaza Suite” is in previews but acting like a musical hit with Sarah Jessica Parker and Matthew Broderick basically sold out at nearly $1.7 million. They open on Monday, the day after the Oscars, so I won’t get in there for some time. But this is like printing money. The Neil Simon Estate should be thrilled.

On the down side, “Company” with Patti Lupone, is not making the $900K mark. It should be. Tony nominations are coming, with a win for Lupone, so I hope that will help. This production is a gem.

“Tina: The Tina Turner Musical” is also just below $900K. This show is so good, I’d like to see it soar. But ‘Tina” opened in November 2019, had to shut down in March 2020, and never got the momentum back. Adrianne Warren won her Tony Award, but she left. So now it’s up to the press to go in, review it again with the new cast, and give them a boost.

I fear there’s real trouble for “Come from Away.” The great Tony hit is coming in around $650,00 a week. It’s only playing to 84% capacity. “Come from Away” has aged, certainly, and may be ready for a rest.

Really suffering is “Chicago.” After 25-plus years, just about everyone in the world has seen it. Plus, the Weisslers are missing the big tourist trade which bolsters them. Right now they’re at 77% and just under $600,000. Their Hail Mary pass will be bringing in pin up Pamela Anderson for stunt casting. She’ll either turn things around or “Chicago” will also have take a snooze. But never ever count out Fran and Barry Weissler. They are Broadway’s ultimate survivors!

 

Oscars: Van Morrison Song Won’t Be Performed, But Beyonce, Billie, Reba, and “Encanto” Are All Set

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Here’s an update from the Academy on the musical performers this Sunday night.

Since Van Morrison won’t come and sing his song from “Belfast,” no one will sing it. So there. Frankly, the music branch should have nominated Jennifer Hudson’s song from “Respect.” She would have sung it like crazy and given the audience a really great night. Van Morrison is nuts. He’s unpleasant and unwilling to play with others.  He has a show in the UK tomorrow (the 23rd) and one in Spain (on the 29th). He could have flown back and forth if he wanted to. My guess is there are issues about him not being vaccinated, as well as no distemper shot.

On the good news front, we’ll hear from Beyonce, Billie Eilish, Reba McEntire, and Sebastian Yatra from “Encanto” in a medley that includes the not nominated “We Don’t Talk About Bruno.” They’re going to be smashes, all of them. And who knows what other surprises await us musically?

Sheila E. is the featured drummer in the Oscar band this year, playing with the show’s music director Adam Blackstone, blink-182 drummer Travis Barker, percussionist and singer, and genre-spanning pianist Robert Glasper. We will not be bored.

Not Just Like That, “Sex and the City: And Just Like That” Will Return to HBO Max for Season 2

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HBO finally made the announcement earlier today: “Sex and the City: And Just Like That” will return for a second season — whether we like it or not.

This announcement took a while. It wasn’t made during the Season 1 run or at its end which is usually what HBO does to goose interest in a show while it’s still on the air.

Season 1 had its issues, especially with the death of Mr. Big hovering over Carrie (Sarah Jessica Parker), the absence of Kim Cattrall, and the death in real life of Willie Garson.

No one knows what the readership was because it was on HBO Max. No numbers were divulged. So it may have been tricky getting it all back together for another run, but “AJLT” has a solid brand, viewers know the characters well, and the show always gets press one way or another. It’s not a surprise it will return.

So far there’s no word on the cast, but the universally unpopular character Che Diaz (Sara Ramirez) is not one anyone wants to see again. Cynthia Nixon’s Miranda was a bitter pill to swallow in these episodes. Contrast that with her work on “The Gilded Age,” where is absolutely delightful and award winning. It would be nice to get some of that back no matter what Miranda’s sexual preference is.

So on to Season 2. Maybe John Corbett will finally be asked back. And Kim Cattrall? Don’t hold your breath.

Pre-Oscar Parties In Small Spaces Looking Less Attractive Every Day as New COVID Variant Rears Its Ugly Head

Going to the Oscars Sunday?

Think twice about attending small pre-parties in tiny restaurants.

Right now, Oscar nominated “Belfast” director Kenneth Branagh has had to opt out of Thursday night’s Oscar Wilde Awards. Branagh tested positive for COVID after attending last week’s BAFTA Awards in London.

He wasn’t alone. His nominated Supporting Actor, Ciaran Hinds, also got it. So did a movie exec at Focus Features who was with them.

There are other stories about BAFTA guests, most of whom were vaxxed but none who wore masks, coming down with the virus.

Now that there’s a new variant spreading fast in New York and Los Angeles, crowded events in Hollywood look verboten. One would be the W Magazine party that will stuff a couple hundred A listers mixed with stars into Gigi restaurant in downtown Hollywood. That one looks like a super spreader without a doubt.

The other one is Vanity Fair’s party with advertiser Lancome at another small Hollywood eatery called Mother Wolf. (Vanity Fair’s parties now are all advertiser driven.) Mother Wolf’s menu looks yummy if you’re sitting at a table properly distanced from the next group. But 350 people standing cheek by jowl for cocktails? No, thanks.

All the Oscar nominees will be smart to stay home or be in the open air if they want to make the scene Sunday. Find a good Zip Loc bag and don’t leave it until you have to!

 

Smart ’80s Dance Throwback: Soft Cell and the Pet Stop Boys Get Out of the “Purple Zone”

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Soft Cell (“Tainted Love”) and the Pet Stop Boys (“West End Girls”) were everything in the dance crazed 80s. They made smart,classic music that is played everywhere forty years later.

Now they’ve combined for this effortlessly catchy single, “The Purple Zone.” If Z100 played this, they’d have cars bopping up and down freeways. Great single!

The song will be included on Soft Cell’s much anticipated fifth studio album Happiness Not Included which is now scheduled to be released on May 6th. They haven’t released a new album in 20 years. How crazy is that?

Kid Rock Trapped Between a “Bad Reputation” And Ripping off His Clueless Redneck Following

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Don’t believe a word of Kid Rock‘s lyrics.

Bad reputation? He grew up in a mansion, lives in another one, and is all vaxxed and masked.

But his new album, “Bad Reputation,” is designed to capture the redneck, beer-swilling, anti-Biden, Lets-go-Brandon world of illiterate fools.

It’s all a game. He’s a phony. On the album, he kicks off with “Don’t Tell He How to Live.” Right, he’s a rebel. But by the second track, “My Kind of Country,” Bob Ritchie is already back-tracking. His kind of country has Trump and JFK, the NRA and the NAACP. He wants it both ways. Like Trump, he thinks there are good people on all sides.

Really, Bob? He’s just nervous because he’s going on tour with Foreigner this summer. I can’t believe Mick Jones even wants to be in the same room with Ritchie, least of all share a stage. Kid Rock’s new album is digital only right now but when the CD drops it will be from his own website, not Atlantic Records. Ritchie, despite his upbringing, has put himself in the Ted Nugent category of gun-toting right wingers. You have to make your money somehow, so why not follow Trump’s lead and rip off your base?

 

“The Gilded Age” Ends Its First Season with A Social Chess Game and a Lot of Potential for the Future

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Julian Fellowes‘ long delayed “The Gilded Age” ended its first season tonight with a lot of potential. But it took a long time to get there.

When the first episodes were unveiled, the series — set in 1882 Manhattan — felt like a pale reminder of “Downton Abbey.” Many of the characters, especially those working “down below,” were reminiscent of Mrs. Patmore and Carson and Mrs. Hughes, etc.

On top of that, some of the acting was very awkward and the cast was uneven. Christine Baranski and Cynthia Nixon hit their stride right away. But Carrie Coon, who plays the manipulative and social climbing Mrs. Russell, felt out of her depth. Her cadences were harsh and she seemed uncertain of who Mrs. Russell was or what she was up to.

Luckily, by tonight’s full episode, Mrs. Russell pulled it together. I’m still not cheering over Coon’s speech pattern, but she definitely feels more settled in the role. She had to tonight. All of Mrs. Russell’s machinations– using her daffy daughter to negotiate a place in society — came together. At the same time, her husband’s JR Ewing like jockeying paid off for her. Morgan Spector is really grinning like a Cheshire cat with the character of Mr. Russell.

“The Gilded Age” has a well off Black family living in Brooklyn, who I love even though I’m not sure how much verisimilitude is there. But Denée Benton and six time Tony winner Audra McDonald are so perfect in their roles as daughter and mother, let their stories continue and grow, please. There’s also a gay story that seems a little far fetched for its time and modeled on “Downton Abbey,” but alright, it’s going to get interesting.

In the end, though, “The Gilded Age” is about class, not race or sex. It’s about “new money” forcing itself into the old world. Fellowes stops just short of revealing the Russells are Jewish, although Mr. Russell makes reference to a Jewish banking firm. Baranski’s Agnes van Rijhn is very snobby, impatient with all newcomers, but has a tenderness for Black people. (We don’t know what she’ll say if she discovers her son is gay.)

I can’t help think of one of Baranski’s golden moments in movies: she plays Claus von Bulow’s girlfriend, Andrea Reynolds, in “Reversal of Fortune.” von Bulow summons lawyer Alan Dershowitz (Ron Silver) to defend him. Baranski enters the room as Jeremy Irons (von Bulow)  interviews Dershowitz. Waggng a finger, Reynolds pipes up, “I made him hire you. Get the Jew, I said.” No kidding, this is all over Aunt Agnes’s face now whenever the Russells are mentioned. It’s too funny. Baranski and Nixon, playing her sweet sister, must get Emmy Awards.

The great pleasures of “The Gilded Age,” by the way,” are all the Broadway actors. Donna Murphy as Mrs, Astor, Michael Cerveris as a mysterious butler, etc. But my favorite, to my surprise, is Kelli O’Hara as the cousin who is guiding young Marian (Louisa Jacobson). O’Hara is a Broadway superstar who’s never had a good TV or movie role. It turns out she’s killing it. I can’t wait to see more of her story.

The show hinges on  ingenue Marian, niece of the wealthy society sisters played by Baranski and Nixon. Yes, Jacobson is Meryl Streep‘s daughter in real life, but Jacobson has found her rhythm. She is clearly the central character, the one who we’re rooting for among all these bustles and footmen. Her Marian managed to dodge a bad marriage tonight, but what fun Fellowes will have devising her next chapter. So we wait for Season 2. but just one thing: someone turn down the sharpness of the lighting!

 

Exclusive: Oscar Isaac Passes on “Godfather” Director Francis Ford Coppola’s$120 Mil “Megalopolis,” Director Wants to Shoot This Fall

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DOUBLE EXCLUSIVE: LAST NIGHT I learned that Oscar Isaac, long rumored to star in Francis Ford Coppola’s Megalopolis, has passed on making the film. So the search is on to find a new star of Coppola’s $120 million epic which the famed director wants to shoot this fall.

Isaac is currently starring in Marvel’s “Moon Knight” on Disney Plus, just came off a big year with “Scenes from a Marriage” on HBO, and “Dune.” He is always working. Perhaps he couldn’t fit “Megalopolis” into his busy schedule.

Earlier I wrote: Coppola is celebrating the 50th anniversary of “The Godfather” this week. He got his star on the Walk of Fame today, and on Sunday he and the cast and producer Al Ruddy will be honored at the Academy Awards.

Let’s face it, “The Godfather” and “The Godfather II” are the best movies since “Citizen Kane.”

Now I’m told Coppola will start shooting his next blockbuster in September. The shoot will go from September through January, largely in New York, on sound stages, and maybe in Europe.

The stars of “Megalopolis” are said to be Oscar Isaac — playing architect who wants to reimagine New York, as well as Zendaya, Cate Blanchett, and Michelle Pfeiffer among others.

The cost is $120 million, and Coppola told GQ recently he’ll fund it himself if he can’t find financing. Coppola has made a fortune from a lot of thing besides movies, including his famed winery. He’s visionary, that’s for sure. Everyone wants this to be a tremendous hit.

with additional reporting by Leah Sydney

Pre-Oscar Parties In Small Spaces Looking Less Attractive Every Day as New COVID Variant Rears Its Ugly Head

Oscar Music Lining Up for Show: No Van Morrison, Beyonce At the Courts, Reba for the Country Crowd

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The Oscars are lining up their music acts for Sunday.

We still don’t have confirmed word about Billie Eilish or the cast of “Encanto,” but they seem like sure bets.

I can tell you my Van Morrison sources confirm that he will not be performing “Down to Joy” from “Belfast.” Since the Academy would let him without a mask or even a vaccination, that is not the issue. Or maybe he doesn’t want to take a COVID test. Van marches to his own, strange drummer.

Who will sing that song? Still up in the air. (They should get Bono. That would be a “get.”)

I have heard that Reba McEntire will sing the Diane Warren written “Somehow You Do.” It’s Warren’s 13th nomination. It would be swell if she won already.

Variety is reporting that Beyonce is possibly performing “Be Alive” from the tennis courts in Compton where Richard Williams started with daughters Serena and Venus. This seems strange, wouldn’t it be better to have her live in the Dolby Theater? Oh well. Beyonce does what she wants, too.

But there will be plenty of music and buzz on Sunday night one way or another.

I’m looking forward to these Oscars. I hope everyone else is, too!