Sunday, October 6, 2024
Home Blog Page 843

Critics Choice Awards On Eve of Oscar Nominations Go to “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood,” “The Irishman,” Directors of “Parasite,” “1917”

0

As we await the Oscar nominations at 8:30am Eastern, the Critics Choice Awards were handed out at a glittery ceremony in Santa Monica, California.

Quentin Tarantino’s “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” won Best Picture, and Martin Scorsese’s “The Irishman” won Best Ensemble. Best Director was divided between Bong Joon Ho, who made “Parasite,” and Sam Mendes, of “1917.”

The acting prizes were the same as they were at the Golden Globes. Three of the four winners were present. For some reason, Brad Pitt did not attend.

Television awards were also handed out.

Taye Diggs hosted the event in an airplane hanger at Santa Monica Airport. The menu was all plant based, and it was actually quite awful, just as it was at the Globes. When the show was over, a thousand people scrammed to restaurants and private parties. Pizza never tasted so good.

The one edible item at the Critics Choice was ice cream from Cold Stone Creamery. But man cannot live by ice cream alone.

The winners of the main film awards showed a tremendous divide among critics. Like the Globes, they largely rejected Netflix’s aggressive campaign to win awards — even though they have great movies.

So now we wait for the Academy Award nominations, and the eventual snubs and unexpected choices.

 

 

WINNERS OF THE 25TH ANNUAL CRITICS’ CHOICE AWARDS

FILM

 

BEST PICTURE

Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood (Sony)

 

BEST ACTOR

Joaquin Phoenix – Joker (Warner Bros.)

 

BEST ACTRESS

Renée Zellweger – Judy (Roadside)

 

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

Brad Pitt – Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood (Sony)

 

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

Laura Dern – Marriage Story (Netflix)

 

BEST YOUNG ACTOR/ACTRESS

Roman Griffin Davis – Jojo Rabbit (Fox Searchlight)

 

BEST ACTING ENSEMBLE

The Irishman (Netflix)

 

BEST DIRECTOR (TIE)

Bong Joon Ho – Parasite (Neon)

Sam Mendes – 1917 (Universal)

 

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

Quentin Tarantino – Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood (Sony)

 

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

Greta Gerwig – Little Women (Sony)

 

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY

Roger Deakins – 1917 (Universal)

 

BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN

Barbara Ling, Nancy Haigh – Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood (Sony)

 

BEST EDITING

Lee Smith – 1917 (Universal)

 

BEST COSTUME DESIGN

Ruth E. Carter – Dolemite Is My Name (Netflix)

 

BEST HAIR AND MAKEUP

Bombshell (Lionsgate)

 

BEST VISUAL EFFECTS

Avengers: Endgame (Disney)

 

BEST ANIMATED FEATURE

Toy Story 4 (Disney)

 

BEST ACTION MOVIE

Avengers: Endgame (Disney)

 

BEST COMEDY

Dolemite Is My Name (Netflix)

 

BEST SCI-FI OR HORROR MOVIE

Us (Universal)

 

BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM

Parasite (Neon)

 

BEST SONG (TIE)

Glasgow (No Place Like Home) – Wild Rose (Neon)

(I’m Gonna) Love Me Again – Rocketman (Paramount)

 

BEST SCORE

Hildur Guðnadóttir – Joker (Warner Bros.)

 

TELEVISION

 

BEST DRAMA SERIES

Succession (HBO)

 

BEST ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES

Jeremy Strong – Succession (HBO)

 

BEST ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES

Regina King – Watchmen (HBO)

 

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES

Billy Crudup – The Morning Show (Apple)

 

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES

Jean Smart – Watchmen (HBO)

 

BEST COMEDY SERIES

Fleabag (Amazon)

 

BEST ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES

Bill Hader – Barry (HBO)

 

BEST ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES

Phoebe Waller-Bridge – Fleabag (Amazon)

 

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES

Andrew Scott – Fleabag (Amazon)

 

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES

Alex Borstein – The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (Amazon)

 

BEST LIMITED SERIES

When They See Us (Netflix)

 

BEST MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION

El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie (Netflix)

 

BEST ACTOR IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION

Jharrel Jerome – When They See Us (Netflix)

 

BEST ACTRESS IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION

Michelle Williams – Fosse/Verdon (FX)

 

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

Stellan Skarsgård – Chernobyl (HBO)

 

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

Toni Collette – Unbelievable (Netflix)

 

BEST ANIMATED SERIES

BoJack Horseman (Netflix)

 

BEST TALK SHOW (TIE)

The Late Late Show with James Corden (CBS)

Late Night with Seth Meyers (NBC)

 

BEST COMEDY SPECIAL 

Live in Front of a Studio Audience: Norman Lear’s All in the Family and The Jeffersons (ABC)

Exclusive: Broadway Great Frank Langella will Direct and Co-Star with Ageless Hot-as-a-Pistol Elaine May in “Love Letters” Off Broadway

0

No one is more “in” right now than Elaine May. At age 87, she’s just won a Tony Award for “The Waverly Gallery,” she’s loaded up on accolades including a lifetime achievement award this weekend from the LA Film Critics. (She sent a two sentence statement: “Thank you for my lifetime achievement award. I look forward to many more.”)

Now I’m told that May will team with a Broadway legend, Frank Langella, for an off Broadway run of A. R. Gurney’s “Love Letters.” Langella is directing. A formal announcement is forthcoming. I hear that rehearsals have already started and tickets will go on sale maybe this week for a start date in early March after the present production, “Paradise Lost” closes February 23rd.

The venue will be the tiny, 199 seat Acorn Theater on West 42nd St. I’m imagining the lines in front of the Acorn of very squirrely people going nuts trying to get inside.

“Love Letters” has had many incarnations on and off Broadway and around the world. Producers lost money on the last Broadway run in 2014, with Mia Farrow and Brian Dennehy, Candice Bergen, and Carol Burnett all rotating in and out.

But a small theater with these two superstars should be a hit. Not only is Elaine Most Wanted, Langella hasn’t been on stage since a short run in 2016 with “The Father” at Manhattan Theater Club. Can’t wait!

“Star Wars” Declining Fortunes as “Skywalker” Nears Billion Dollars But Way Behind Last 2 Films

0

“Star Wars” is shrinking at the box office. “The Rise of Skywalker” is nearing $1 billion worldwide, but it’s way behind the previous installments.

“The Force Awakens” finished its theatrical run with $2 billion worldwide. That was an enormous hit.

But the next chapter, “The Last Jedi,” ended up with $1.3 billion, a significant fall off.

“Skywalker” shows “Star Wars” fatigue. It’s not quite at $1 billion, and it’s getting ready to say goodbye. Disney will keep it in movie theaters for a while but the big push is over.

In the US, “Skywalker” has earned just half of what “The  Force Awakens” raked in. Of course, maybe a lot of fans are waiting for the streaming and the DVD, with inevitable extras.

Now the studio is threatening us with a new “Star Wars” movie in 2022. Yes, just two years from now. We can only hope they will reconsider and wait longer. You can’t miss something that’s never gone.  It’s time to give “Star Wars” a rest until they have a great– I mean a GREAT — idea, not just more young people wandering around the universe with the inevitable cameos from the other movies. Let some nostalgia sink in first.

In other box office news, “Just Mercy” launched with $10 million. Considering that it’s had almost no marketing or press, that’s pretty exciting. The Michael B. Jordan-Jamie Foxx drama deserves a solid run. It should have been a Best Picture contender. Alas, now we can just hope people see it and learn about Bryan Stevenson.

For Warner’s “Just Mercy” is a last shot in a year of failures for adult-themed movies. They’ve pulled Clint Eastwood’s excellent “Richard Jewell” after 28 days and just $21 million. It’s their biggest screw up after a string of disasters. Only “Joker” stands out in their year. “Richard Jewell” should have been a hit, a contender, and a conversation starter. Eastwood, 89, also deserved better.

Kristen Stewart has a bomb in “Underwater,” DOA, her second in a row after “Charlie’s Angels.” It’s not a big deal. She’s not an action star. I guarantee you she will win an Oscar soon for a great drama or quirky indie movie. These were just bad movies anyway, they’re not her fault.

Annette Bening Gets AARP Lifetime Achievement Award, Chokes Up About Warren Beatty, Don Johnson Explains Why He Had 3 Kids After Age 65

0

UPDATED Tony Danza emceed the annual AARP Movies for Grown Ups dinner last night at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel with aplomb and genuine excitement. He announced from the stage: “I’m the anti- Ricky Gervais!” And indeed he was, thank goodness. The night — which will air on PBS January 19th — was so authentically pleasant even Hollywood superstar Warren Beatty remarked to me, “I really enjoyed this!”

And so he should have as his wife, Annette Bening, stunning with platinum blonde hair, was honored for Lifetime Achievement by her “20th Century Women” co-star Billy Crudup. She gave a moving, and funny speech, thanked everyone she knew, but at the last minute — during her presentation — she cut the part about Beatty other than to say “I love you.” She did say, “He’s a great filmmaker…” but then choked up and decided to keep the rest to herself.

Among the other honorees was Linda Ronstadt, who came down to Los Angeles from her home in San Francisco. Fighting Parkinson’s Disease, Linda used a wheelchair to get around but stood when her old friend singer Maria Muldaur presented her with her award. Linda told me: “This may be my last trip down here. It’s too hard for me. It’s very painful.” She was surrounded by friends including her bff and career adviser John Boylan. Among those who were lined up to say hello: the great songwriter Diane Warren.

Another hero dealing with Parkinson’s is Alan Alda, who was seated early with wife Arlene. They’ve been married over 60 years, a record for show business couples. Alda presented an award to his “Marriage Story” director Noah Baumbach, who was pretty hilarious in his description of turning 50. (PS Tony Danza is turning 70 this spring and looks younger than most of these people!)

I asked Alda how he wrote the screenplay for his now classic movie “The Seduction of Joe Tynan” on coast to coast flights back in the 70s. I can barely get any work done on a plane.

“I was obsessed,” he said, “and focused. I had to get it done. But of course, now, forget it!”

The Aldas and the Beattys stayed to the very end, with Annette declaring, “Why are we always the last to leave?” She’s right, they are a very sociable couple, and love to hang out no matter the event. Warren was particularly happy to see three time Oscar nominee Diane Ladd, who presented Best Supporting Actress to daughter Laura Dern with a swell reminisce of raising a precocious kid in Hollywood. When Beatty saw Ladd, he told me: “We’ve known each other since we’re 19!”

Some other notes:

Juliette Lewis gave the Best Director award to Martin Scorsese and said, “Marty gave me my creative wings when I was 18 in Cape Fear.”

Adam Sandler who received the Best Actor award noted, “I’m a comedian who can act, and that’s good.”

Renee Zellweger, who got the Best Actress Award made the crowd feel better by saying, “I don’t feel like we are getting older, I feel like we are winning.”

Alan Alda giving to the award to Noah Baumbach for his best screenwriter  quipped, “I’ve been married to the same person for 62 years.  Since I just played a divorce lawyer in “Marriage Story,” people have been  asking me if I ever considered divorce?  I answer no, but my wife has considered murder.”

Noah then replied, “You were that rare person I’d hope you’d be. “

Diane Ladd, who previously won the for Best Supporting Actress award for her work in “Joy,” which was presented to her by her daughter Laura Dern now had the honors and presented Laura Dern with hers for “Marriage Story.”  Laura then loving described her mother as “my muse.”

Don Johnson noted that when he first got the infamous birthday card from AARP, “I was pissed.  Then I went on to have 3 more kids,  I was never really good at math.”

  • Career Achievement: Annette Bening
  • Best Picture/Best Movie for Grownups: The Irishman
  • Best Actress: Renée Zellweger (Judy)
  • Best Actor: Adam Sandler (Uncut Gems)
  • Best Supporting Actress: Laura Dern (Marriage Story)
  • Best Supporting Actor: Tom Hanks (A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood)
  • Best Director: Martin Scorsese (The Irishman)
  • Best Screenwriter: Noah Baumbach (Marriage Story)
  • Best Ensemble: Knives Out
  • Best Intergenerational Film: The Farewell
  • Best Foreign Language Film: Pain & Glory (Spain)
  • Readers’ Choice: A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood
  • Best Time Capsule: Harriet

Additional reporting by Leah Sydney

Surprise! “Grey’s Anatomy” Star Justin Chambers Left the Show Last November as ShondaLand Downsizes Again

0

It’s a shonda, but Dr. Alex Karev will not be answering any more pages at Grey Sloan Hospital in Seattle.

Actor Justin Chambers left the show in November without a farewell episode, and won’t be back. He’d been there for 15 years, since the first episode.

But his contract must have expired without a re-negotiation, and executive producer Shonda Rhimes was  evidently done with Dr. Karev.

There’s no word from ShondaLand, but Chambers wrote on social media: “There’s no good time to say goodbye to a show and character that’s defined so much of my life for the past 15 years,” Chambers said. “For some time now, however, I have hoped to diversify my acting roles and career choices. And, as I turn 50 and am blessed with my remarkable, supportive wife and five wonderful children, now is that time.”

No actor with five kids leave a series he’s been on for 15 years voluntarily. But these long running shows have to cut budgets to keep going. “Grey’s Anatomy”  is unaccountably still on the air, and it’s very interesting. It’s actually turned into a daytime soap opera at night.

Only three cast members now remain from the first season, including Ellen Pompeo, Chandra Wilson, and James Pickens, Jr. (Hopefully Wilson and Pickens are getting decent checks.) Their secret to sticking around  is to keep adding younger, less expensive cast. ABC has been smart in sending Wilson over to “General Hospital” to play various cameos, a good PR stunt to connect their two medical shows.

Chambers now joins Patrick Dempsey, Sandra Oh, Katherine Heigl, Sara Ramirez and many others who have matriculated from “Grey’s.” I remember when he was on “Another World” a hundred years ago and took off like a rocket. I’m sure we’ll see him soon on a new show.

PS Has it really been 15 years? “Grey’s Anatomy” debuted on a Sunday night when I was in Santa Maria, California covering Michael Jackson’s trial. I remember watching it and “Desperate Housewives” in the Santa Maria Holiday Inn. Time flies!

Golden Globes Book Tina Fey, Amy Poehler For 2021 Show Just Six Days After Host Ricky Gervais Calls Them Racists

0

That didn’t take long.

Six days after Ricky Gervais hosted the Golden Globes and called members of the Hollywood Foreign Press racists, the group has taken action.

The HFPA has booked Tina Fey and Amy Poehler to return for a third time and host the 2021 Golden Globes. Usually they’d wait til the fall to make such an announcement. But Gervais was so brutal to them– he also said they didn’t understand English– that the 90 member group acted swiftly.

Fey and Poehler are certainly a popular duo, and they won’t be as angry or as cruel as Gervais seemed to be last Sunday. He just appeared to be off his usual rhythm, not even wearing a tie or proper tuxedo. Also, in past years Gervais would do a victory lap at the HBO after party following the show. This year he just vanished, not even showing up (I don’t think) at the Netflix party. He has a series called “After Life” on the platform.

The Globes ratings were down from last year, but that was to be expected. Awards shows overall are down. Plus, their winning movie — “1917”– hadn’t been released yet. The Globes should really push back a week, they are too early. They were always better on the second Sunday in January. Maybe they’ll return to that date next year.

Box Office: World War 1 Movie “1917” Roars Out of Gate with $40 Mil Wide Release Weekend, Poised for Multiple Oscar Nominations

0

Universal Pictures has the odd distinction of having the best and worst movie of the 2019 season.

“Cats” has been a spectacular failure, and a meme, and just an unmitigated disaster. There aren’t enough jokes in the world for the furry adaptation of the Broadway musical. Now and never.

But Sam Mendes’s extraordinary “1917” has gone into wide release and it’s a major, major hit. On Friday, “1917” went into wide release and scored $13,970,000. That should give the “one-shot” movie at least a $40 million weekend. And this is a war movie with no stars, just good actors and brilliant technology, as well as a terrific screenplay.

Last weekend, “1917” won the Golden Globe for Best Feature, and Mendes won Best Director. Its later release in the season has put the film and its director (as well as cinematographer Roger Deakins and editor Lee Smith) in position for multiple Oscar nominations on Monday morning, and potential wins.

This must come as a shock to Netflix, which came into the Oscar race with four very good films that seemed like they’d be overwhelming the competition: “The Irishman,” “Marriage Story,” “Two Popes,” and “Dolemite is My Name.”

The first two of those were all but assured Oscars dominance. They’ve already won many accolades. The question remains how Netflix will battle “1917” after Monday’s announcements. Can “The Irishman” be resurrected? Or has the whole theater vs platform debate crystallized with this situation?

I wrote after its initial screening that “1917” was a masterpiece and I meant it. Make no mistake, it’s sensational. But Martin Scorsese’s work on “The Irishman” is, too. Let’s call it a masterwork. It is neither too long nor a retread of his previous work. But not having it in theaters after its first month may have damaged the cause. On a smaller screen, with interruptions at home, “The Irishman” can be lost to divided attention. It requires your full focus. Maybe Netflix can put it back into theaters with an intermission and snacks starting next Friday, make it an event.

Meantime, Universal can claim this phrase: “well played.” Indeed.

 

Oprah Exits a Me Too Documentary about DefJam’s Russell Simmons After Filmmakers Change Course Away from Harvey Weinstein as Subject

0

Oprah Winfrey is certainly in the news right now. It seem she’s been busy advising Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, if reports are correct.

But Oprah is also involved in another surprising scenario. She was listed as executive producer of a documentary about rap music impresario and philanthropist Russell Simmons. The founder of Def Jam Records almost immediately became embroiled in the #MeToo movement after accusations of small time sexual malfeasance and rape. He was the subject of lawsuits as well. Simmons shut down his charity and businesses and moved to Tibet, where’s been posting photos and videos of meditation retreats and so on.

The documentary, by Kirby Dick and Amy Ziering, is premiering at the Sundance Film Festival on January 25th. But now Oprah has suddenly pulled out of the project, and decided not to include it in her presentations on AppleTV+.  The film will still premiere at the festival, but it now lacks Winfrey’s imprint.

Dick and Ziering are highly regarded doc makers. Their “The Hunting Ground” was nominated for lots of awards and was shown on CNN. The pair have issued a statement after Oprah announced she was off the project because it wasn’t ready, in her opinion. The filmmakers told Deadline.com: “Revealing hard truths is never easy, and the women in our documentary are all showing extraordinary strength and courage by raising their voices to address sexual abuse in the music industry. While we are disappointed that Oprah Winfrey is no longer an Executive Producer on the project, we are gratified that Winfrey has unequivocally said she believes and supports the survivors in the film.”

But this isn’t the first time Oprah has caused a major problem for Dick and Ziering on this same film. The doc was originally going to be centered on Harvey Weinstein and how the #MeToo era launched. In October 2017 just two weeks after Weinstein was exposed in the New York Times and the New Yorker, the pair announced they were making the film.

This past December, however, Dick and Ziering announced that their film had changed focus, to the record business and “major figure.” Oprah was suddenly on board. Weinstein was no longer being discussed, as Simmons took his place.

So now there’s no Weinstein film, and Oprah has dealt the filmmakers a significant blow by making a public exit. She’s also declared their film somehow unfit for release, at least under her auspices.

All of this comes a year after Oprah unwisely involved herself in the Michael Jackson documentary, “Leaving Neverland.” After the film– which accused Jackson of child molestation with no evidence other than two young men’s unfounded complaints– Oprah did a live interview with the subjects on HBO. Again, without supporting evidence, she simply decided they were telling the truth.

We’re getting into a strange area here where Oprah makes the call, based on her gut feeling, about which victims have validity and which don’t. Jackson was dead, so it was easy for her to go against him. In the cases of Weinstein and Simmons, she can’t be objective. Weinstein put her in the movie “The Butler,” in which she garnered great reviews. She also got an Oscar campaign and became very friendly with the movie mogul.

In Simmons’ case, he and Oprah are long time friends. Back in December, Simmons took to Instagram to urge Oprah to stop the film once he learned she was involved with it. She obviously took what he said seriously. (See his plea below.)

It’s hoped that Dick and Ziering will find a new distributor or platform at Sundance now that Oprah is gone. Like Winfrey, I’ve known and liked Simmons for years and years. But the accusations against him are serious and must be aired, and discussed. I also hope that these filmmakers, unlike the director of “Leaving Neverland,” have presented all sides of the stories.

Here’s what Simmons wrote to Oprah:

“Dearest OPRAH,you have been a shining light to my family and my community. Contributing so much to my life that I couldn’t list a fraction of it in this blog.Ihave given you the gift of meditation and the groundbreaking book”THE POWER OF NOW “we bonded to say the least. This is why it’s so troubling that you choose me to single out in your recent documentry. I have already admitted to being a playboy more (appropriately titled today “womanizer”) sleeping with and putting myself in more compromising situations than almost any man I know. Not 8 or 14 thousand like Warren Beatty or Wilt Chamberlain, but still an embarrassing number. So many that some could reinterpret or reimagine a different recollection of the same experiences. Please note that ur producers said that this upcoming doc was to focus ONLY on 3 hand chosen women. I have refused to get in the mud with any accusers, but let’s acknowledge what i have shared. I have taken and passed nine 3-hour lie detector tests (taken for my daughters), that these stories have been passed on by CNN, NBC, BUZZFEED, NY POST, NY MAG, AND OTHERS. Now that you have reviewed the facts and you SHOULD have learned what I know; that these stories are UNUSABLE and that “hurt people hurt people”. Today I received a call from an old girlfriend from the early 1980s which means that they are using my words/evidence against me and their COMMITMENT/ (all of the claims are 25 to 40 years old) It is impossible to prove what happened 40 years ago, but in my case proof exists of what didn’t happen, mostly signed letters from their own parents, siblings, roommates, band members, interns, and in the case of 2 of your 3 accusers,their own words in their books. Shocking how many people have misused this important powerful revolution for relevance and money. … In closing, I am guilty of exploiting, supporting, and making the soundtrack for a grossly unequal society, but i have never been violent or forced myself on anyone. Still I am here to help support a necessary shift in power and consciousness. Let us get to work on uplifting humanity and put this moment and old narrative behind us”

 

View this post on Instagram

 

Dearest OPRAH,you have been a shining light to my family and my community. Contributing so much to my life that I couldn’t list a fraction of it in this blog.Ihave given you the gift of meditation and the groundbreaking book”THE POWER OF NOW “we bonded to say the least. This is why it’s so troubling that you choose me to single out in your recent documentry. I have already admitted to being a playboy more (appropriately titled today “womanizer”) sleeping with and putting myself in more compromising situations than almost any man I know. Not 8 or 14 thousand like Warren Beatty or Wilt Chamberlain, but still an embarrassing number. So many that some could reinterpret or reimagine a different recollection of the same experiences. Please note that ur producers said that this upcoming doc was to focus ONLY on 3 hand chosen women. I have refused to get in the mud with any accusers, but let’s acknowledge what i have shared. I have taken and passed nine 3-hour lie detector tests (taken for my daughters), that these stories have been passed on by CNN, NBC, BUZZFEED, NY POST, NY MAG, AND OTHERS. Now that you have reviewed the facts and you SHOULD have learned what I know; that these stories are UNUSABLE and that “hurt people hurt people”. Today I received a call from an old girlfriend from the early 1980s which means that they are using my words/evidence against me and their COMMITMENT/ (all of the claims are 25 to 40 years old) It is impossible to prove what happened 40 years ago, but in my case proof exists of what didn’t happen, mostly signed letters from their own parents, siblings, roommates, band members, interns, and in the case of 2 of your 3 accusers,their own words in their books. Shocking how many people have misused this important powerful revolution for relevance and money. … In closing, I am guilty of exploiting, supporting, and making the soundtrack for a grossly unequal society, but i have never been violent or forced myself on anyone. Still I am here to help support a necessary shift in power and consciousness. Let us get to work on uplifting humanity and put this moment and old narrative behind us

A post shared by Russell Simmons (@unclerush) on

Is the New West Side Story Cursed? Second Actor Sidelined by Injury and Replaced, Opening Date Pushed Back, Creative Team Still Up in Air

0

The new version of “West Side Story” was supposed to open on Broadway on February 6th.

But then the actor who plays Tony, Isaac Powell, fell and hurt his knee badly. His understudy stepped in. Opening night was pushed back to February 20th, when Powell will presumably be healed.

Now Ben Cook, who is said to be excellent as Riff, the other male lead, has hurt himself. The show isn’t saying what happened and they’re not waiting for Cook to get better. They’ve replaced him– completely– with Dharon E. Jones, who was already playing another role.

Director Ivo van Hove is using color blind casting, so Jones– who is African American — is replacing Cook, who is white with reddish brown hair. Powell, who is dark haired and Latinx, is playing Tony, described in the show even now as “a Polak.”

Meanwhile, even though the box office has been great over the holidays, there’s still grumbling from the audience about many changes van Hove has made to the legacy musical. New wave choreographer Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker has chucked Jerome Robbins’ dances and replaced them with her own, odd pieces. There’s no snapping, I’m told, in the “Cool” number. Also Officer Krupke brandishes a gun. What used to be a scene of Anita being harassed by the boys now is an implied rape. And Anita’s great song, “I Feel Pretty,” is gone. Producers are hoping new audiences won’t know the difference. But more traditional choreographer Sergio Trujillo has been brought in to try and smoothe out Keersmacker’s changes.

Stay tuned…

Alex Trebek and “Jeopardy: Greatest of All Time” Increases Already Huge Audience Numbers on 3rd Day of Mega Competition

0

I’ll take HUGE RATINGS for 15 million.

That’s right. After hovering just under that number for two nights in a row, “Jeopardy: GOAT”– which means Greatest of All Time — jumped over 15 million viewers last night to 15.38 million.

Alex Trebek must be very happy, especially if he’s getting ready to step down after almost 36 years. When the competition resumes next week, expect the audience to grow some more. Even though Ken Jennings in the lead, I’ll bet Brad Rutter and James Holzhauser will try and slow him down.

For ABC, getting this goat is quite a score. “Jeopardy” is giving their 9pm a great lead in. Last night, over 6 million people tuned in to see their report on Jeffrey Epstein. There’s an irony there since ABC reporter Amy Robach was caught off camera saying she’d had the story three years ago and ABC News refused to run it.

ABC loves its prime time game shows. They just announced a revival of “Supermarket Sweep” hosted by our beloved SNL star Leslie Jones. I wish Leslie were doing more sophisticated things, but she’s got to make money and we can’t blame her. ABC is searching for an equivalent to Ellen Degeneres’s “Game of Games” show. Maybe Leslie will be that person.