Thursday, October 10, 2024
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Paul McCartney Giving Us 82nd Birthday Gift with Rare Live Album Made in 1974

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Paul McCartney has a gift for us on his 82nd birthday.

Come June 14th — four days early — McCartney will finally release the full album called “One Hand Clapping.”

This is a live record he recorded with Wings in August 1974 while “Band on the Run” topped the charts.

Some of the tracks have appeared as “filler” on extended versions of other re-released McCartney albums. But this is the first time it’s been made into one complete package.

There are various formats — CD, LP, etc — but none of them include the video made at the time by David Litchfield at the time. Presumably that footage — shot at Abbey Road Studios — will turn up in a massive Wings documentary being assembled for next year by Morgan Neville.

Tracklist

Disc 1
1. One Hand Clapping 02:15
2. Jet 03:59
3. Soily 03:55
4. C Moon/Little Woman Love 03:19
5. Maybe I’m Amazed 04:52
6. My Love 04:15
7. Bluebird 03:27
8. Let’s Love 01:09
9. All of You 02:04
10. I’ll Give You a Ring 02:03
11. Band on the Run 05:20
12. Live and Let Die 03:26
13. Nineteen Hundred and Eighty Five 05:50
14. Baby Face 01:56

Disc 2
1. Let Me Roll It 04:28
2. Blue Moon of Kentucky 03:05
3. Power Cut 01:33
4. Love My Baby 01:13
5. Let It Be 01:02
6. The Long and Winding Road/Lady Madonna 02:10
7. Junior’s Farm 04:17
8. Sally G 03:28
9. Tomorrow 02:12
10. Go Now 03:35
11. Wild Life 04:30
12. Hi, Hi, Hi 03:57

“Law & Order” Star Sam Waterston Cries, “I’m Not Retired!” at “Cabaret” Opening, Cynthia Nixon Predicts 4th Season of “And Just Like That”

EXCLUSIVE A lot of A-listers and stars packed their way into the two opening nights of “Cabaret” this weekend.

The show is sizzling, so it’s understandable that it required two premieres.

Last night’s show was particularly hopped up, with a ton of top stars in the audience.

I was thrilled to see Sam Waterston, long time star of “Law and Order.” But when I mentioned that I regretted his retirement, he came back instantly.

“I’m not retired!” he cried, shaking his head back and forth.

Thank goodness, I replied. What’s the plan? Sam says he doesn’t have an answer yet. But he’ll be back to work soon, we can count on it. And let’s not forget, he also completed 7 seasons of “Grace and Frankie” on Netflix with Jane Fonda, Lily Tomlin, and Martin Sheen. It’s not like his whole life was spent playing Jack McCoy!

Also in the audience: Cynthia Nixon and wife Christine Marinoni. When I complimented Cynthia on her excellent direction of episodes of “Sex and the City” last season, she gave me bad news.

“I wish I could do it again this season, but And Just Like That is filming at the same time as The Gilded Age! There’s no time! I do think there will be one more season of And Just Like That after this one, so maybe I’ll get do it then.”

And what her “Gilded Age” character, Ada, who just inherited a lot of money from her dead husband? “I don’t know! I can’t wait to see what they have for me.”

Also in the “Cabaret” audience last night: Bryan Cranston and wife Robin. Jesse Eisenberg was spotted during the intermission. And a most unusual sighting: “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” screenwriter and director (of other films) Charlie Kaufman. Is he cooking up something for “Cabaret” star Eddie Redmayne? We’ll have to wait and see, I guess.

As for “Cabaret”: expect to see stars at every show. No one’s going to want to miss this one!

“American Idol” Will Get Ratings Help from Jon Bon Jovi, And Vice Versa (Exposure)

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“American Idol” and Jon Bon Jovi have found each other.

The music contestant show has announced that the famed rock star will mentor their top 3 finalists. The show will crown a new Idol on May 19th.

The singer and the show need each other. “Idol” ratings have been low this season, and falling every week. They need a real rock star to come in and try to jack up the numbers.

Bon Jovi needs the exposure. He and his group released a single recently that immediately disappeared. They’ve got an album coming out soon that can’t be promoted via a tour because Bon Jovi himself is having vocal chord issues.

It’s a marriage made in heaven. Both sides hope their mutual association will do the trick. We’ll see if they’re living on a prayer!

Oscars Change Rules For How Long a Movie Must Play in Theaters, and Where

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The Oscars have upgraded their rules for eligibility.

See below

For Academy Awards consideration, a feature film must have a qualifying theatrical release between January 1, 2024, and December 31, 2024. Drive-in theaters will no longer be a means of qualification, and the six qualifying U.S. metropolitan areas will now include Dallas-Fort Worth, in addition to Los Angeles County; the City of New York; the Bay Area; Chicago, Illinois; and Atlanta, Georgia.

In the Best Picture category, the expanded theatrical eligibility requirements, approved by the Board of Governors in June 2023, will take effect for the 97th Oscars®. Upon completion of an initial qualifying run, currently defined as a one-week theatrical release in one of the six U.S. qualifying cities, a film must meet the following additional theatrical standards for Best Picture eligibility:

Expanded theatrical run of seven days, consecutive or non-consecutive, in 10 of the top 50 U.S. markets, no later than 45 days after the initial release in 2024.

For late-in-the-year films with expansions after January 10, 2025, distributors must submit release plans to the Academy for verification.

Release plans for late-in-the-year films must include a planned expanded theatrical run, as described above, to be completed no later than January 24, 2025.

Non-U.S. territory releases can count towards two of the 10 markets.

Qualifying non-U.S. markets include the top 15 international theatrical markets plus the home territory for the film.

In addition to the theatrical eligibility requirements, eligibility for consideration in the Best Picture category remains contingent upon submission of a confidential Academy Representation and Inclusion Standards Entry (RAISE) form and the film meeting the requirements of two of the four standards. Also, distributors and/or producing teams should submit for PGA Mark Certification or awards determination no later than the date of the film’s first commercial screening in its qualifying run.

Other awards rules changes include:

Animated feature films submitted in the International Feature Film category are now eligible for consideration in the Animated Feature Film category if eligibility requirements outlined for both categories are met.

The new eligibility period for the International Feature Film category is November 1, 2023, to September 30, 2024.

In the Music (Original Score) category, three composers will be allowed to receive individual statuettes if, in rare circumstances, they all contributed fully to the score. Previously, three composers were required to submit as a group. The rules now clarify the definition of a group as a recognized band. The shortlist will increase from 15 to 20 titles.
In the Writing categories, a final shooting script will now be required for submission.
Changes were also made to the testimonial awards presented at the Governors Awards. The Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award, given to a creative producer whose body of work reflects a consistently high quality of motion picture production, will now be presented as an Oscar® statuette. The definition of the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award was revised to clarify the broad term humanitarian efforts; the award will be “given to an individual in the motion picture industry whose humanitarian efforts have brought credit to the industry by promoting human welfare and contributing to rectifying inequities.”
Two special awards presented at the Scientific and Technical Awards have been renamed:
Gordon E. Sawyer Award to “Scientific and Technical Lifetime Achievement Award”
John A. Bonner Award to “Scientific and Technical Service Award”

Cannes Adds Animated Holocaust Film from “The Artist” Director, and Oliver Stone Doc About Former Brazilian President

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The Cannes Film Festival has added a few movies to its schedule.

The two most important ones for us are from Oliver Stone, and from Michael Hazanavicius, Oscar winning director of “The Artist.”

Stone’s film is a documentary called “Lula,” about former Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Lula is now the head of the G20. When Stone followed him to Cuba to film him for the doc, Lula got COVID. This man is a big player in South America. Looking forward to this one.

Hazanavicius’s film is called “The Most Precious of Cargoes” and it’s animated. Since all the acclaim for “The Artist,” this director has struggled to make a good follow up. This should be it, a Holocaust film with music by Alexandre Desplat. Narration is by Jean-Louis Trintignant.

The story? “During World War II a French Jewish family is deported to Auschwitz. On the train to the death camp, in a desperate gesture, the father throws one of his twins out into the snow, where he’s discovered by a childless Polish couple.”

In competition, this one could be a surprise success.

Broadway: Ouch! Drama League Awards Nominate Everything on the Boards Except “The Great Gatsby” Musical

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On Broadway, The Drama League is not the Drama Desk. They’re an outlier group like the National Board of Review that nominates everything so everyone will come to their dinner.

So ouch! Today they nominated everything and everyone except for the musical version of “The Great Gatsby.” They threw one nom to actress Evelyn Noblezada. Otherwise they ignored this show. That’s not a good omen.

Their event is a lunch set for May 17th at noon. You can read the whole deal at www.dramaleague.org.

Disney Trailer for “Deadpool & Wolverine” Features Most F Words Ever, Plus Cocaine Joke

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The F word is heard often in the trailer for “Deadpool and Wolverine.”

The trailer is from Disney-Marvel, and it’s a first. Walt Disney ad Mickey Mouse are turning in their graves.

It’s also an indication of how raunchy and funny and full of double entendres this meta movie will be when it hits this spring.

At the end of it, there’s a little chat about cocaine between Ryan Reynolds’ Wade Wilson and Leslie Uggams’ Big Al that is hilarious. I’m surprised they didn’t work in “Snow White.”

Years of effort from Reynolds and Hugh Jackman went into building up excitement for this movie. They’re going to have a big payday from it (not like Reynolds needs more money).

Big hit coming. Stay tuned…

RIP Soap Opera Actress and Writer Meg Bennett, 75, of “Search for Tomorrow” and “YR” Fame

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I am really sorry to hear about the passing of Meg Bennett.

The beautiful and witty soap opera actress and writer was 75, and died after a long battle with cancer according to her Legacy obit. She’d been married for 20 years to former soap writer Bob Guza, Jr.

Bennett got her start on “Search for Tomorrow” on CBS in the mid 70s and immediately became the star of the show. She was in a popular coupling with the also new star Michael Nouri. This was at a time when there were over a dozens soaps and they each one had millions of viewers.

Meg Bennett was a fresh face and instantly engaging. She moved to Los Angeles and played the first wife of Eric Braeden’s Victor Newman on “The Young and the Restless.” Braeden posted a note about her — see below — on Twitter.

The actress eventually became a soap writer for the remaining shows, picking up awards along the way. Condolences to her family. What a shame.

Broadway: Eddie Redmayne, Bebe Neuwirth, Entire Cast Thrilling in Spectacular London Import of “Cabaret”

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By 10am you will not be able to get a ticket for the six month run of “Cabaret” on Broadway.

The sensational revival, imported from London, features a thrilling and award winning performance from Eddie Redmayne as the emcee. His work transcends everything he’s done including his Oscar turn in “The Theory of Everything” and a previous Tony Award in the play, “Red.”

Londoners got to see this last year although US production adds Bebe Neuwirth in a show stopper of a role, and the equally good Steven Skybell. They, and Gayle Rankin as Sally Bowles, and Ato Blankson Wood, will all be Tony nominees.

Director Rebecca Frecknhall and the producers, working with Redmayne and the tech people, have scooped out the August Wilson Theater and turned into a real Kit Kat Club. New Yorkers may think they’re at the Tunnel or the Ritz from the 1980s. There are several different bars, and all kinds of performers slinking around before the show starts to give the feel of a decadent nightclub in Berlin as the Nazis took power.

This “Cabaret” is a totally immersive experience but can it also be very intimate and emotional. Of course, the Kander and Ebb score doesn’t hurt. The whole production results in one of the most satisfying nights of theater seen in a long, long time.

“Cabaret” takes place, as you know in pre-war Berlin. Jews think the Nazi’s are passing phase. But already there is trouble as an older couple — he’s Jewish. she’s not — are discouraged vigorously from marrying. The writing was on the wall if you wanted to see it. The story resonates today with antisemitism rising in subtle ways. Unlike the movie, the live stage musical of “Cabaret” is stark and foreboding.

Nothing prepares you for Redmayne’s performance. It’s one a kind, and had better be filmed before his time is up. While both Joel Grey and Alan Cumming are celebrated for playing the emcee in previous landmark productions, Redmayne turns the work inside out and stands it on his head. Fans who only know him from movies like “Fantastic Beasts” will not believe it’s the same person.

More tomorrow.

Cher Makes the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Plus Foreigner, Dave Matthews, Peter Frampton, Dionne Warwick, MC5 (At Last!)

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Cher is being inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. She’s been eligible since 1988. But last year she told an interviewer that she no longer cared –” You know what, I wouldn’t be in it now if they gave me a million dollars … I’m never going to change my mind. They can just go you-know-what themselves.” she said. Now. she’s in. That was the way to do it!

So are others who’ve waited too long: Dionne Warwick, the late Big Mama Thornton, the MC5, Temptations songwriter Norman Whitfield (also deceased), John Mayall, 90, the most influential blues musician, is in. So is the late Alexis Korner.

Suzanne DePasse, the hardest working woman in the music biz, who has guided Motown for 50 years, will get the Ahmet Ertegun Award.

Also in: Ozzy Osbourne, Dave Matthews Band, Peter Frampton. Foreigner, and the late Jimmy Buffett.

In R&B, Kool & the Gang, and Mary J. Blige are in. So is the cutting edge group A Tribe Called Quest.

The Rock Hall ceremony will take place in October, in Cleveland. It will be a long show, but well worth it. The Hall is righting wrongs incurred while Jann Wenner was in charge. It’s like the fall of the Berlin Wall. Congrats to John Sykes for getting this so right!