Tuesday, November 19, 2024
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Fleeting Fame: Adele Replaced at Number 1 on iTunes by New One Name 17 Year Old Singer Gayle

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Fame is fleeting and 2021 is a lot different than 2015.

Adele is learning this the hard way. Just a few weeks after her single, “Easy On Me,” stormed the charts and took hold at number 1, the party is over. “Easy on Me” has been replaced by a song from another one name singer. And a total unknown.

Now number 1 has gone to a record by a singer named Gayle. The single is called “abcdefu” and just from the title sounds like a song Adele should have sung. But she chose to make a whole album with the same songwriters she used six years ago.

So far Gayle is number 1 on iTunes, which is in real time. On Billboard, Adele is still number 1 but having a tough time on the Billboard Hot 100. While “Easy on Me” remains at the top of Billboard’s chart, all the other tracks from Adele’s new “30” album are collapsing. “Oh My God” is the highest, at 37, with an arrow pointing down. It’s the same for two others. This means there’s no follow up single for “Easy On Me” as it’s replaced by Gayle and whoever comes next.

“abcdefu” was co-written by Gayle, for whom there is little info currently, with Sara Davis and David Pittenger, and produced by Pete Nappi. (Thanks Wikipedia.) PS UPDATE: She’s 17, from Nashville, and a discovery of the great Pete Ganbarg of Atlantic Records and Kara DioGuardi. Congrats!

Adele isn’t suffering from the chart loss. Tickets to her Las Vegas sit down go on sale today and will be gutted in short order. Then the secondary market will take over and we’ll be hearing stories of $1000 tickets. Hello!

Pedro Almodovar’s “Parallel Mothers” Has a 100% on Rotten Tomatoes But Spain Didn’t Enter It for the Oscars

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Here’s a quandary as today the members of the Critics Choice Association– a group I belong to — receives ballots for nominations.

On Rotten Tomatoes, Pedro Almodovar’s sensational “Parallel Mothers” has a 100% rating. That’s 45 out of 45 reviewers. Penelope Cruz won the Venice Film Festival award for Best Actress. And yet, the film was not entered by the Spanish Film Commission as their choice for the Oscars in Foreign Language Film.

To further the irony, the Spanish film people chose a film starring Cruz’s husband, Javier Bardem. Go figure.

So now there’s a problem. Critics groups and the Academy have to find Penelope and “Parallel Mothers” on their own or it will flounder in its US release. This would be a shame.

For me, Cruz gives one of the 5 best performances by an actress this year without a doubt, maybe the best. In a competitive year, her turn as Janis, a single woman who wants to become a mother is incredibly captivating and moving. It’s full of Almodovar’s drama and humor. And Cruz brings to Janis the sexiness of Sophia Loren updated with modern practicality. I don’t want to give it away, but when Janis is delivered lemons she makes lemonade. Or in Almodovarian terms, when she’s pelted with tomatoes she whips up a tasty gazpacho.

Without the entry from Spain, “Parallel Mothers” is only eligible for Best Picture, a category that rarely accepts films in a foreign language. “Parasite” was a very rare exception. But Best Actress is a place where Penelope Cruz could find success. She already has an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress in Woody Allen’s “Vicki Cristina Barcelona.” She’s been nominated two other times, for Best Supporting Actress in “Nine,” and for Best Actress in Almodovar’s “Volver.”

“Volver” remains one of Almodovar’s top movies. I often think it’s his best. It’s the best precursor to “Parallel Mothers” in that it sees Cruz playing an intelligent, forthright woman who must find her way out of a dilemma. While “Volver” revolves around death, “PM” springs with life. A baby is at the center of the story, and what sacrifices a woman will make to secure a family. You can’t imagine a woman as beautiful as Cruz getting into so much trouble in the process. But Penelope, playing the movie as a drama without a hint of hammy-ness, brings out pathos and wry laughs as she must solve her own problem.

So I hope my fellow Critics Choice voters will enter Penelope’s name as one of the possible nominees for Best Actress this week. And I also hope that all the other voters in different groups seek out this movie and this performance. There’s a reason that it’s at 100% on Rotten Tomatoes. It’s that good.

Alicia Keys Readies New Album for Friday But Digital Only Despite Heavier CD Sales in Past

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Alicia Keys– it’s hard to think of her as emeritus now. But her hitmaking years are over, along with top 40 radio play. She had her hits 20 years ago– “Fallin’,” “You Don’t Know My Name,” “Empire State of Mind.” and “If I Ain’t Got You” were the big ones.

But decades pass, audiences grew up and out of the record buying mode. Still, even though Keys’s last few albums were low sellers, they at least sold on CD. Her last album, “Alicia,” had first week sales of just 62,000. And 51,000 of those were on discs.

Her new album, “Keys,” is coming on Friday. But there will be no CDs. It’s just digital. If you’re looking for it on Amazon, you won’t find it. Presumably you’ll be able to download it on iTunes. And stream it on Spotify or Apple Music. But no CDs, no LPs– even though they’re hot right now.

This is unusual. But it’s been many years since Keys, who became an international brand in 2000 thanks to Clive Davis, has sold much of anything. Her last actual hit album, “Girl on Fire,” was released in November 2012 and sold 755,000 copies in the US, about 1.3 million worldwide. Before that, starting in 2000, Keys had had 4 multi-platinum albums.

But Keys’s 2016 album, “Here,” with excellent tracks, had no single. There was no ear-wig for the radio. And it’s been like that for the last few years. In 2020, she had a potential hit in “Underdog,” which was used for commercials and so on, but it never really took off. Recent releases, even a new single called “Best of Me,” has failed to get attention.

Maybe it was just decided to it was too expensive to make CDs or LPs this time around. But not having any physical product for someone who should be a legacy artist seems a shame.

The Country Gets a Break: Devin Nunes Leaving Congress to Work for the Former Guy at His “Media” Company

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The nation has dodged a bullet.

Devin Nunes, the imbecilic Congressman from California, is leaving to work for the Former Guy at his “media” company.

Nunes is a 10 term congressman who had a lot of power. He worked his way to become the head of the House Intelligence Company, a contradiction in terms since he lacked any intelligence. Then the Republicans lost the House and he was out anyway.

He will run Trump’s company, which is already being investigated. Good night, and good luck.

According to Politico, Nunes said in a statement: “I wasn’t being paid much, there weren’t many opportunities to line my pockets more, so I’ll take my chances with Trump, who famous pays no one.”

No, that’s not what he said. But it would have been apt. No, he said: “Recently, I was presented with a new opportunity to fight for the most important issues I believe in,” Nunes said in the email. “I’m writing to let you know I’ve decided to pursue this opportunity, and therefore I will be leaving the House of Representatives at the end of 2021.”

Isn’t that great? Maybe his district can find someone decent, smart, intelligent, literate, and humane. Who knows? Politico says that under California law, congress people don’t have to live in their own districts. How crazy is that? Oh, California. It’s a free-for-all.

Certified Nut Job: Drake Withdraws His Two Grammy Nominations And No One Really Cares

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Big scoop this afternoon from Variety:

Drake has withdrawn his two Grammy nominations. He doesn’t want them. They were for Rap Album of the Year and Rap Song of the Year.

The album is called “Certified Lover Boy.” I think now Drake is kind of a certified nut job.

The withdrawal is not a big deal. I don’t think many care whether he keeps the nominations or gives them back. He wasn’t going to come to the Grammys anyway.

Drake is probably pissed that “Certified Lover Boy” was nominated for Album of the Year in the General category. Hey– at least he was nominated. Kacey Musgraves won the Album of the Year in 2019 was totally snubbed this year in the General category, and in country!

I think Drake is taking all of this too seriously. He needs a sense of humor. It’s not like he doesn’t have millions of fans, millions of dollars, and millions of homes.

Another Grammy twist this week: the Recording Academy removed the names of Taylor Swift, Jack Antonoff and St. Vincent from a song called “deja vu” on the album, “Sour” by Olivia Rodrigo. Rodrigo sampled their songs in her song, so when her album was nominated for Album of the Year, the actual writers were included. But the Academy decided that since those three didn’t write for “Sour” directly, they shouldn’t get a Grammy nod.

Hey– I think that if you sample other peoples’ work, you shouldn’t be nominated at all. It’s not your work.  But I’m an old coot who watched Paul McCartney write “Get Back” on video last week, himself, without sampling anyone and the song has lasted 50 years. These sampled constructions do not stand the test of time. PS Two songs called “Deja Vu” — one by Dionne Warwick, the other by Crosby Stills & Nash-– are infinitely better.

The Recording Academy said: “During the submission process, the Academy received credits from the label for the track ‘deja vu.’ Last week, we received the correct credits from the label, which recognize Annie Clark (St. Vincent), Jack Antonoff and Taylor Swift as songwriters of an interpolation on the track. In keeping with current Grammy guidelines, as songwriters of an interpolated track, Clark, Antonoff and Swift are not nominees in the Album of the Tear category for SOUR. Antonoff and Swift are nominated in the category for Swift’s album evermore.”

It doesn’t matter anyway. The Tony Bennett-Lady Gaga album, “Love for Sale,” is going to win Album of the Year. So move around the chairs on that Titanic.

As for Drake, lighten up, my friend.  To paraphrase Seinfeld, “Everyone loves the Drake!”

NYC Saturday: Stars Celebrate Adrian Nivola Art Show, Elaine’s Regulars Toast Famed Restaurateur 11 Years On

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Saturday night in New York City, it was like old times, pre-pandemic style.

A bunch of famous people crowded into the Victoria Munroe art gallery at 67 East 80th St for the opening night show Adrian Nivola. Last name sound familiar? Adrian is the brother of actor Alessandro Nivola, currently starring in “The Many Saints of Newark.”

Adrian is the real deal, a very fine artist whose work is in high demand. The talent is in his blood: their grandfather, Constantino Nivola, has work in museums around the world and is constantly in retrospectives. Adrian’s work is on exhibit every summer at the Drawing Room in East Hampton.

This exhibit of small exquisite oil and pastels is almost sold out. Adding excitement to the work itself was a phalanx of well known faces including brother Alessandro, his wife Emily Mortimer, Joel Coen and Frances McDormand, Ethan Hawke, playwright Jonathan Marc Sherman, musician Hamilton Leithauser, and so on. Little red dots went up under the individual pieces very quickly. Later, over at restaurant Orsay, “Tammy Faye” and “Big Sick” director Michael Showalter told us about the film he’s shooting now downtown called “Spoiler Alert,” and we got to meet actress Jennie Dundas, who owns the very hot Blue Marble ice cream store on the Upper West Side.

Also at Orsay: famed actress Brenda Vaccaro happened to be dining with a friend, so we introduced her to this crowd and they were thrilled. Brenda’s featured in the new “Sex and the City” series debuting this weekend on HBO Max.

And yes: I can confirm that Alessandro Nivola will be starring in the Peggy Lee biopic with Michelle Williams. He tells that it doesn’t start until he films the “Boston Strangler” miniseries in Boston this winter. Just FYI.

THAT CROWD would have been enough, but a couple hours later we relocated to Neary’s Pub on East 57th St. and First Ave for the postponed-from-last year 10th anniversary tribute to famed and beloved restaurateur Elaine Kaufman. Elaine, who we miss terribly, passed away 11 years ago on December 3rd.

The New York Times’s indefatigable Peter Khoury put the reunion together and couldn’t have done a better job. Top of the guest list was legendary writer Gay Talese turned out in a three piece bespoke suit, 86 years young and tireless himself. God bless.

Dozens of Elaine’s regulars paid their respects and made toasts, and we were happy to see writer Carol Higgins Clark, and former NYC fire marshall Louie Garcia, and ex-Elaine’s head Chef Barry Wildman. Many of Elaine’s former waiters turned up, as well, and no one had a good word for the person who inherited Elaine’s when she died and destroyed it. (We don’t say her name, it’s like Beetlejuice.) Present and accounted for were two of New York’s most famous radio personalities, Carol Miller  and Jim Kerr of Q104.3 FM and Sirius Radio.

Was Elaine there? She was! She was and always will be in our hearts. And guess what? A musical is being workshopped soon about Elaine and her regulars called “Everyone Comes to Elaine’s.” I’ll let you know more about it soon.

The picture to the right– me and Gay Talese. He’s 86, I’m 64 and who looks younger? And thinner? Gay is a national treasure, (So is his famous and lovely wife, book editor Nan Talese.)

New York! We’re still here!

 

 

Oscars: Here are the Academy Eligible Docs, Animated Films, International Feature Films

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The Academy has released the titles eligible for Animated Film, Documentary, and Internaitonal Feature films. We’ve already seen so many in each category, and only 5 can be chosen from each. I’m choosing Pedro Almodovar’s “Parallel Mothers” from Spain even though it looks like Spain was not smart enough to do the same. I’m surprised “Summer of Soul” is eligible since its footage is archival was used on TV as specials in the 1970s. Strange. “Flee” is the leading doc so far. Also, I loved “The Mustangs” movie.

Animated Films:

“The Addams Family 2”
“The Ape Star”
“Back to the Outback”
“Belle”
“Bob Spit We Do Not Like People”
“The Boss Baby: Family Business”
“Cryptozoo”
“Encanto”
“Flee”
“Fortune Favors Lady Nikuko”
“Josee, the Tiger and the Fish”
“The Laws of the Universe The Age of Elohim”
“Luca”
“The Mitchells vs. the Machines”
“My Sunny Maad”
“Paw Patrol The Movie”
“Pompo the Cinephile”
“Poupelle of Chimney Town”
“Raya and the Last Dragon”
“Ron’s Gone Wrong”
“Sing 2”
“The Spine of Night”
“Spirit Untamed”
“The Summit of the Gods”
“Vivo”
“Wish Dragon”

Documentary Films:

“Ailey”
“All about My Sisters”
“All Light, Everywhere”
“The Alpinist”
“American 965”
“Ascension”
“Attica”
“Aulcie”
“Aware: Glimpses of Consciousness”
“Barbara Lee: Speaking Truth to Power”
“Becoming Cousteau”
“Beijing Spring”
“Bill Traylor: Chasing Ghosts”
“Billie Eilish: The World’s a Little Blurry”
“Boris Karloff: The Man behind the Monster”
“Brian Wilson: Long Promised Road”
“Bring Your Own Brigade”
“Can You Bring It: Bill T. Jones and DMan in the Waters”
“The Capote Tapes”
“Captains of Za’atari”
“Children of the Enemy”
“Citizen Ashe”
“Convergence: Courage in a Crisis”
“A Cop Movie”
“Courage”
“A Crime on the Bayou”
“Cusp”
“Dave Chappelle Live in Real Life”
“The Deadliest Disease in America”
“Dying to Divorce”
“Enemies of the State”
“Ennio”
“The Faithful: The King, the Pope, the Princess”
“Far Eastern Golgotha”
“Fathom”
“Faya Dayi”
“Ferguson Rises”
“Final Account”
“Finding Kendrick Johnson”

“Fire Music”
“The First Wave”
“Five Years North”

“Flee”
“45 Days: The Fight for a Nation”
“Found”
“Francesco”
“Hell or High Seas”
“Homeroom”
“In the Same Breath”
“Introducing, Selma Blair”
“Iron Temple”
“Jacinta”
“The Jesus Music”
“Julia”
“The Jump”
“Karen Dalton: In My Own Time”
“Kill the Indian Save the Child”
“Kurt Vonnegut: Unstuck in Time”
“LFG”
“The Last Forest”
“The Last Shelter”
“Like a Rolling Stone: The Life & Times of Ben FongTorres”
“Lily Topples the World”
“Little Girl”
“The Loneliest Whale: The Search for 52”
“Los Hermanos/ The Brothers”
“The Lost Leonardo”
“Love It Was Not”
“Magaluf Ghost Town”
“Man in the Field: The Life and Art of Jim Denevan”
“Marx Can Wait”
“Mayor Pete”
“The Meaning of Hitler”
“Minnesota! The Modern Day Selma”
“Misha and the Wolves”
“Missing in Brooks County”
“Mr. Bachmann and His Class”
“Moby Doc”
“The Most Beautiful Boy in the World”
“The Mustangs: America’s Wild Horses”
“My Childhood, My Country: 20 Years in Afghanistan”
“My Name Is Pauli Murray”
“The Neutral Ground”
“A New Dawn”
“No Ordinary Man”
“No Straight Lines: The Rise of Queer Comics”
“Not Going Quietly”
“Nothing but the Sun”
“On Broadway”
“Operation Varsity Blues”
“Ostrov Lost Island”
“Paper & Glue”
“The Paradigm of Money”
“The People vs. Agent Orange”
“The Phantom”
“Playing with Sharks”
“Pray Away”

“President”
“Procession”
“Qazaq History of the Golden Man”
“Quiet Explosions: Healing the Brain”
“The Race to Save the World”
“Radiograph of a Family”
“The Real Charlie Chaplin”
“Rebel Hearts”
“The Repentants”
“The Rescue”
“Revolution of Our Times”
“Rita Moreno: Just a Girl Who Decided to Go for It”
“Roadrunner: A Film about Anthony Bourdain”
“Ruth Justice Ginsburg in Her Own Words”
“Sabaya”
“Seyran Ates: Sex, Revolution and Islam”
Simple as Water”
“Sisters on Track”
“So Late So Soon”
“The Sparks Brothers”
“Speer Goes to Hollywood”
“Storm Lake”
“Street Gang: How We Got to Sesame Steet”
“Summer Nights”
“Summer of Soul (…Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised)”
“Tigre Gente”
“Tina”
“Torn”
“Truman & Tennessee: An Intimate Conversation”
“Truth to Power”
“Try Harder!”
“2020: The Dumpster Fire”
“Two Gods”
“Val”
“The Velvet Queen”
“The Velvet Underground”
“Whirlybird”
“Who We Are: A Chronicle of Racism in America”
“Wojnarowicz”
“Writing with Fire”
“Wuhan Wuhan”
International Feature Films:
Albania, “Two Lions to Venice”
Algeria, “Heliopolis”
Argentina, “The Intruder”
Armenia, “Should the Wind Drop”
Australia, “When Pomegranates Howl”
Austria, “Great Freedom”
Azerbaijan, “The Island Within”
Bangladesh, “Rehana”
Belgium, “Playground”
Bhutan, “Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom”
Bolivia, “The Great Movement”
Bosnia and Herzegovina, “The White Fortress”
Brazil, “Private Desert”
Bulgaria, “Fear”
Cambodia, “White Building”
Cameroon, “Hidden Dreams”
Canada, “Drunken Birds”
Chad, “Lingui, The Sacred Bonds”
Chile, “White on White”
China, “Cliff Walkers”
Colombia, “Memoria”
Costa Rica, “Clara Sola”
Croatia, “Tereza37”
Czech Republic, “Zátopek”
Denmark, “Flee”
Dominican Republic, “Holy Beasts”
Ecuador, “Submersible”
Egypt, “Souad”
Estonia, “On the Water”
Finland, “Compartment No. 6”
France, “Titane”
Georgia, “Brighton 4th”
Germany, “I’m Your Man”
Greece, “Digger”
Haiti, “Freda”
Hong Kong, “Zero to Hero”
Hungary, “Post Mortem”
Iceland, “Lamb”
India, “Pebbles”
Indonesia, “Yuni”


Iran, “A Hero”
Iraq, “Europa”
Ireland, “Shelter”
Israel, “Let It Be Morning”
Italy, “The Hand of God”
Japan, “Drive My Car”
Jordan, “Amira”
Kazakhstan, “Yellow Cat”
Kenya, “Mission to Rescue”
Kosovo, “Hive”
Kyrgyzstan, “Shambala”
Latvia, “The Pit”
Lebanon, “Costa Brava, Lebanon”
Lithuania, “Isaac”
Luxembourg, “Io Sto Bene”
Malawi, “Fatsani: A Tale of Survival”
Malaysia, “Hail, Driver!”
Malta, “Luzzu”
Mexico, “Prayers for the Stolen”
Montenegro, “After the Winter”
Morocco, “Casablanca Beats”
Netherlands, “Do Not Hesitate”
North Macedonia, “Sisterhood”
Norway, “The Worst Person in the World”
Palestine, “The Stranger”
Panama, “Plaza Catedral”
Paraguay, “Nothing but the Sun”
Peru, “Powerful Chief”
Poland, “Leave No Traces”
Portugal, “The Metamorphosis of Birds”
Romania, “Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn”
Russia, “Unclenching the Fists”
Saudi Arabia, “The Tambour of Retribution”
Serbia, “Oasis”
Singapore, “Precious Is the Night”
Slovakia, “107 Mothers”
Slovenia, “Sanremo”
Somalia, “The Gravedigger’s Wife”
South Africa, “Barakat”
South Korea, “Escape from Mogadishu”
Spain, “The Good Boss”
Sweden, “Tigers”
Switzerland, “Olga”
Taiwan, “The Falls”
Thailand, “The Medium”
Tunisia, “Golden Butterfly”
Turkey, “Commitment Hasan”
Ukraine, “Bad Roads”
United Kingdom, “Dying to Divorce”
Uruguay, “The Broken Glass Theory”
Uzbekistan, “2000 Songs of Farida”
Venezuela, “The Inner Glow”
Vietnam, “Dad, I’m Sorry”

“Succession” Leads Nominations for Critics Choice TV Awards, “Evil,” “Mare of Easttown” and “Hacks” Also Lead List

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Nominations are out for the 27th annual Critics Choice Awards, TV division. These awards will be presented with the movie awards on January 9th live from Hollywood on the CW and TBS Networks simultaneously. Movie nominations are coming this week. “Succession” leads the list.

TELEVISION NOMINATIONS FOR THE 27TH ANNUAL CRITICS CHOICE AWARDS

 

BEST DRAMA SERIES

Evil (Paramount+)

For All Mankind (Apple TV+)

The Good Fight (Paramount+)

Pose (FX)

Squid Game (Netflix)

Succession (HBO)

This Is Us (NBC)

Yellowjackets (Showtime)

BEST ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES

Sterling K. Brown – This Is Us (NBC)

Mike Colter – Evil (Paramount+)

Brian Cox – Succession (HBO)

Lee Jung-jae – Squid Game (Netflix)

Billy Porter – Pose (FX)

Jeremy Strong – Succession (HBO)

BEST ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES

Uzo Aduba – In Treatment (HBO)

Chiara Aurelia – Cruel Summer (Freeform)

Christine Baranski – The Good Fight (Paramount+)

Katja Herbers – Evil (Paramount+)

Melanie Lynskey – Yellowjackets (Showtime)

MJ Rodriguez – Pose (FX)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES

Nicholas Braun – Succession (HBO)

Billy Crudup – The Morning Show (Apple TV+)

Kieran Culkin – Succession (HBO)

Justin Hartley – This Is Us (NBC)

Matthew Macfadyen – Succession (HBO)

Mandy Patinkin – The Good Fight (Paramount+)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES

Andrea Martin – Evil (Paramount+)

Audra McDonald – The Good Fight (Paramount+)

Christine Lahti – Evil (Paramount+)

J. Smith-Cameron – Succession (HBO)

Sarah Snook – Succession (HBO)

Susan Kelechi Watson – This Is Us (NBC)

BEST COMEDY SERIES

The Great (Hulu)

Hacks (HBO Max)

Insecure (HBO)

Only Murders in the Building (Hulu)

The Other Two (HBO Max)

Reservation Dogs (FX on Hulu)

Ted Lasso (Apple TV+)

What We Do in the Shadows (FX)

BEST ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES

Iain Armitage – Young Sheldon (CBS)

Nicholas Hoult – The Great (Hulu)

Steve Martin – Only Murders in the Building (Hulu)

Kayvan Novak – What We Do in the Shadows (FX)

Martin Short – Only Murders in the Building (Hulu)

Jason Sudeikis – Ted Lasso (Apple TV+)

BEST ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES

Elle Fanning – The Great (Hulu)

Renée Elise Goldsberry – Girls5eva (Peacock)

Selena Gomez – Only Murders in the Building (Hulu)

Sandra Oh – The Chair (Netflix)

Issa Rae – Insecure (HBO)

Jean Smart – Hacks (HBO Max)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES

Ncuti Gatwa – Sex Education (Netflix)

Brett Goldstein – Ted Lasso (Apple TV+)

Harvey Guillén – What We Do in the Shadows (FX)

Brandon Scott Jones – Ghosts (CBS)

Ray Romano – Made for Love (HBO Max)

Bowen Yang – Saturday Night Live (NBC)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES

Hannah Einbinder – Hacks (HBO Max)

Kristin Chenoweth – Schmigadoon! (Apple TV+)

Molly Shannon – The Other Two (HBO Max)

Cecily Strong – Saturday Night Live (NBC)

Josie Totah – Saved By the Bell (Peacock)

Hannah Waddingham – Ted Lasso (Apple TV+)

BEST LIMITED SERIES

Dopesick (Hulu)

Dr. Death (Peacock)

It’s a Sin (HBO Max)

Maid (Netflix)

Mare of Easttown (HBO)

Midnight Mass (Netflix)

The Underground Railroad (Amazon Prime Video)

WandaVision (Disney+)

BEST MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION

Come From Away (Apple TV+)

List of a Lifetime (Lifetime)

The Map of Tiny Perfect Things (Amazon Prime Video)

Robin Roberts Presents: Mahalia (Lifetime)

Oslo (HBO)

Zoey’s Extraordinary Christmas (The Roku Channel)

BEST ACTOR IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION

Olly Alexander – It’s a Sin (HBO Max)

Paul Bettany – WandaVision (Disney+)

William Jackson Harper – Love Life (HBO Max)

Joshua Jackson – Dr. Death (Peacock)

Michael Keaton – Dopesick (Hulu)

Hamish Linklater – Midnight Mass (Netflix)

BEST ACTRESS IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION

Danielle Brooks – Robin Roberts Presents: Mahalia (Lifetime)

Cynthia Erivo – Genius: Aretha (National Geographic)

Thuso Mbedu – The Underground Railroad (Amazon Prime Video)

Elizabeth Olsen – WandaVision (Disney+)

Margaret Qualley – Maid (Netflix)

Kate Winslet – Mare of Easttown (HBO)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION

Murray Bartlett – The White Lotus (HBO)

Zach Gilford – Midnight Mass (Netflix)

William Jackson Harper – The Underground Railroad (Amazon Prime Video)

Evan Peters – Mare of Easttown (HBO)

Christian Slater – Dr. Death (Peacock)

Courtney B. Vance – Genius: Aretha (National Geographic)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION

Jennifer Coolidge – The White Lotus (HBO)

Kaitlyn Dever – Dopesick (Hulu)

Kathryn Hahn – WandaVision (Disney+)

Melissa McCarthy – Nine Perfect Strangers (Hulu)

Julianne Nicholson – Mare of Easttown (HBO)

Jean Smart – Mare of Easttown (HBO)

BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE SERIES

Acapulco (Apple TV+)

Call My Agent! (Netflix)

Lupin (Netflix)

Money Heist (Netflix)

Narcos: Mexico (Netflix)

Squid Game (Netflix)

 

BEST ANIMATED SERIES

Big Mouth (Netflix)

Bluey (Disney+)

Bob’s Burgers (Fox)

The Great North (Fox)

Q-Force (Netflix)

What If…? (Disney+)

BEST TALK SHOW

The Amber Ruffin Show (Peacock)

Desus & Mero (Showtime)

The Kelly Clarkson Show (NBC)

Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

Late Night with Seth Meyers (NBC)

Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen (Bravo)

BEST COMEDY SPECIAL

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Review: Maggie Gyllenhaal Makes an Impressive Directing Debut, “The Lost Daughter,” with Powerful Olivia Colman

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Maggie Gyllenhaal has long been known as one of our finest actresses and now she adds ‘Director’ and ‘Screenwriter’ to that with her hugely impressive, dynamic debut, Netflix’s “The Lost Daughter” based on Elena Ferrante’s best-selling book of the same name.

Gyllenhaal’s debut is a sophisticated, thoughtful adaptation which tackles the mostly taboo subject of motherhood not being all that natural or fulfilling for some women and the judgement, from self and society, that stems from that.

Olivia Colman gives, once again, a master class of an acting performance. She plays Leda, a middle- aged introverted language professor who decades earlier walked out of her marriage and her young daughters.

On a working holiday in a small beach town in Greece, Leda — reading at the beach — becomes rudely interrupted by a loud and large shady family from Queens, New York who are vacationing at their family home.  She’s intrigued and then fascinated by a young woman, Nina, part of that rowdy clan, as Nina struggles to keep her own toddler daughter calm, happy and occupied.  When the little girl wanders away Leda helps find her, and the plot thickens from there.

Nina is played by Dakota Johnson who gives an enigmatic, thoughtful performance. Leda via Nina, is reminded her of her own tumultuous early life decades prior with her then two young daughters Bianca and Martha.  Colman makes us understand Leda, without condemning her and even empathizing with her. Leda chooses self-love and liberation from gender and society’s ‘norms.’

Gyllenhaal doesn’t sugar coat; she stays in the uncomfortable moments which are truthful and painful.  How Colman plays her is uncanny; being so present and so contradictory and complex, selfish, loving, messy, a woman struggling to be true to herself and to her nature.  Jesse Buckley beautifully plays young Leda, with all her contradictions of young motherhood.  Because of Gyllenhaal’s talents in the writing and direction,  Buckley and Colman’s performances weave perfectly together.  Dagmara Dominczyk, Ed Harris, Peter Sarsgaard and Paul Mescal are all terrific in their supporting roles.

In her directing debut, Gyllenhaal has created a foreboding film that’s gutsy and detailed with artistry in every lingering corner, besides the script and performances, the cinematography, the sound design, are all superb.  There are no right or wrongs in Gyllenhaal’s “Lost Daughter” she doesn’t take the easy way out.  Gylllenhaal and her actors create an intricate, mesmerizing and unnerving film experience.  “The Lost Daughter” is a profound cinematic triumph.

“The Lost Daughter” will be released theatrically on  Dec 31st and streaming on Netflix as well.

Broadway: “Mrs. Doubtfire” Musical Opens to Tepid Reviews in a Slow Fall Season

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“Mrs. Doubtfire” opened on Broadway last night to tepid, if not negative, reviews. The New York Times panned it, and so did The New York Post, and they never agree on anything. Variety and Deadline.com were also negative.

The mixed reviews came from the Washington Post and New York Magazine. Only the NY Daily News review, written by the Chicago Tribune’s Chris Jones, liked the musical based on the Robin Williams-Sally Field-Pierce Brosnan movie that hasn’t aged well. But even Jones failed to mention any of the songs or the music — and it’s a musical! So much for that.

So far, “Mrs. Doubtfire” has a rough road ahead selling tickets. The advance sale isn’t great even for a sbow with a brand name. But it’s doing a lot better than “Diana: The Musical,” which isn’t selling balcony seats and has seas of blue– unsold seats — for weeks and weeks– in the mezzanine and orchestra.

It’s actually a mystery how or why “Diana” is still playing since no one liked it on Netflix and the stage reviews were miserable. Getting through the holidays will not be easy. Look for closing notices right after January 1st.