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Reply #60 posted 09/01/15 9:02am

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[img:$uid]http://i.imgur.com/ULCelni.png[/img:$uid]



R. Kelly Wrote 462 Songs for His New Album?
Sep 2015
Link

R. Kelly may have set a new mark, writing an astounding 462 songs for his new album, he says.


“The Pied Piper” tells Entertainment Weekly his goal was to have more than enough great material for his 13th studio album, The Buffet, which is scheduled to arrive later this year. “I wanted to be sure that I really nailed it to the point that when I started breaking it down to the 14, 15, 16 songs that go on the album that I had more than enough to choose from,” he says, “and they would all be great choices.”


Kelly named the album The Buffet because he’s including a wide variety of musical styles. “I’ve always wanted to do different types of music and different characters, and this album gave me the chance to do that.”

He adds, “I absolutely think that the audience is expecting the sexual R. Kelly, the steppin’ R. Kelly, maybe a bit of the ‘I Believe I Can Fly’ R. Kelly. They’ve been spoiled for twenty-something years. I don’t want fans mad at me, so I gotta give them what they expect and what they want.”

Fans will also discover some things they might not expect, for example that Kells plans to satisfy his love of country music, and maybe, slip in the blues.


“This is all the different types of music I loved growing up,” Kelly says. “For example, I’ve always said I’d love to do a blues song. I love blues. My grandfather did blues. I always loved country because country music tells stories, and I love telling stories as well. These styles of music really hit home for me, and that’s why I’m doing this Buffet album.”


Kelly recently released the first single from the album, “Backyard Party.”

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Reply #61 posted 09/02/15 4:13pm

JoeBala

Dean Jones, Star Of Classic Disney Films, Dead At 84

The actor was known for lighthearted films such as "That Darn Cat!" and "The Love Bug,"

<span class='image-component__caption' itemprop="caption"><span style="color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.870588); font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11.9999990463257px; line-height: 24.6133365631104px; background-color: #ffffff;">Actor Dean Jones poses for a portrait in circa 1965. </span></span>MICHAEL OCHS ARCHIVES VIA GETTY IMAGESActor Dean Jones poses for a portrait in circa 1965.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Dean Jones, whose boyish good looks and all-American manner made him Disney's favorite young actor for such lighthearted films as "That Darn Cat!" and "The Love Bug," died of Parkinson's disease in Los Angeles on Sept. 1. He was 84.

Publicist Richard Hoffman announced Jones' passing on Wednesday.

Jones' long association with The Walt Disney Co. began after he received an unexpected call from Walt Disney himself, who praised his work on the TV show "Ensign O'Toole," noting it had "some good closing sequences." Jones, himself a former Navy man, played the title role in the 1962 sitcom.

Jones puzzled over Disney's remark until it occurred to him that "Ensign O'Toole" preceded Disney's own Sunday night show on NBC, and he realized Disney probably only watched each episode's ending.

Two years later, Jones heard from Disney again, calling this time to offer him a role in "That Darn Cat!" opposite ingénue Hayley Mills. His FBI agent Zeke Kelso follows a crime-solving cat that leads him to a pair of bank robbers.

Released in 1965, it would the first of 10 Disney films Jones would make, most of them in the supernatural vein.

"I see something in them that is pure form. Just entertainment. No preaching," he told the Los Angeles Times. "We're always looking for social significance but maybe people just like to be entertained."

"The Love Bug" (1969) was the most successful of the genre, with Jones playing a struggling race-driver who acquires a Volkswagen that wins races for him. The Bug, named Herbie, has hidden human traits, and when it feels unappreciated it disappears. Jones must rescue Herbie from the hands of his nefarious rival and issue the car an apology before it wins the big race for him.

After "The Love Bug," Jones returned to the stage, winning the lead role of Robert in "Company," Stephen Sondheim's now-classic musical about marital angst, Manhattan-style. He withdrew from the 1970 production after a short time, citing family problems, but he is heard on the Grammy-winning Broadway cast album.

He had actually begun his career as a singer before going on to appear in a string of mostly forgettable films throughout the 1950s. A notable exception was 1957's "Jailhouse Rock," one of Elvis Presley's best-remembered vehicles, in which Jones had a small role as a disc jockey.

In 1960, Jones made his Broadway debut with Jane Fonda in "There Was a Little Girl," playing Fonda's boyfriend in a short-lived drama about the rape of a young woman.

He had better luck on Broadway later in 1960, when he appeared in the hit comedy "Under the Yum Yum Tree." Sparring with Gig Young, who played a comically wolfish character, Jones had "the right blend of sturdiness and lightness," The New York Times wrote.

He returned to Hollywood to make the film version of "Under the Yum Yum Tree" and to star in television's "Ensign O'Toole" from 1962 to 1964. He also reteamed with Fonda for the film version of a racy stage comedy, "Any Wednesday."

It was in Disney's gentle family comedies, however, that Jones truly hit his stride. Walt Disney himself died in 1966, but the studio and its style of film lived on.

In "Monkeys, Go Home," Jones tried to teach four monkeys to pick grapes at a French vineyard he inherited. In "Million Dollar Duck," he was a scientist with a duck that began laying golden eggs after being doused with radiation.

He returned to the Disney studio in 1977 for one more film, "Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo."

Twenty years later, he had smaller parts in the remake of "That Darn Cat" and the TV version of "The Love Bug."

He worked regularly into his 70s, appearing often on TV and in films. His later credits included "St. John in Exile," ''Beethoven" and "Other People's Money."

In 1969, he was host of a TV variety show, "What's It All About, World?" But he said delivering jokes, stand-up comedy style, was not really his forte.

"My bag is acting or getting into an amusing situation and then sharing my amusement," he told the Los Angeles Times. "I can sense a situation or a character much better than I can sense a line."

The Herbie car in Cannes

The Herbie car on display at the Cannes Film Festival in 2005

Dean Carroll Jones left his hometown of Decatur, Alabama, at 15, supporting himself by picking cotton and cutting timber until he landed a job as a singer in a New Orleans nightclub. When the club closed, he returned to Decatur to finish high school.

After studying voice at Ashburn College in Kentucky, he spent four years in the Navy. Soon after his release, he was signed by MGM, and it appeared for a time that he was being groomed as a possible successor to James Dean.

Jones married Mae Entwisle, a onetime Miss San Diego, in 1954, and the couple had two daughters, Carol and Deanna. He and his second wife, Lory, had a son, Michael.

Over the course of his career, he'd appear in 46 films and five Broadway shows. In 1995, Jones was honored by his longtime employers with a spot in the Disney Legends Hall of Fame.

Jones is survived by Lory, his wife of 42 years; three children; 8 grandchildren; and 3 great-grandchildren.

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Reply #62 posted 09/02/15 4:34pm

JoeBala

Taken 4 Years Ago In NYC:

Jl Balaguerista's photo.

Courtesy Of Joe Bala.

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Reply #63 posted 09/04/15 7:51am

JoeBala

Don Francisco Boulevard: TV Personality To Be Honored With Street In New York

TV personality Don Francisco poses in the press room at the 14th Annual Latin GRAMMY Awards held at the Mandalay Bay Events Center on November 21, 2013 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Jason Merritt/Getty Images

Three weeks from now, everybody's favorite Saturday TV show will go off air. After five decades of entertaining Latino families around the world, "Sabado Gigante" will air its last show ever on Saturday, September 19th.

For the older and newer generations alike, it's truly heart-wrenching. But that doesn't mean we will see the last of the show's beloved host, Don Francisco. Especially his fans in New York City, who soon will be able to snap a selfie at his very own street in the Big Apple!

Univision announced that the Chilean TV personality, whose real name is Mario Kreutzberger, will be honored by the city with his own street name.

Behold, the "Don Francisco Boulevard," which will be located in Washington Heights on 168th street and Broadway. The unveiling of the street and tribute will be held on Tuesday, September 8th by New York City Councilman Ydanis Rodriguez. Great! Now we have a new site to check out while visiting the busy city.

Alejandro Fernandez Car Accident: Mexican Singer Involved In Crash, Suffered Minor Injuries

Alejandro Fernandez performs at the Festival People en Español Presented by Target at The Alamodome on August 31, 2013 in San Antonio, Texas. Rick Kern/Getty Images for Target

It was a close call for Alejandro Fernandez, who suffered a car accident in Mexico ---not too far from his ranch in Guadalajara.

According to a press statement released by his team, the incident happened at around 4 a.m. on September 2nd. Fernandez's driver lost control of the vehicle and flipped over on a slick road due to heavy rainfall in the state of Jalisco. News reports indicate that the Mexican singer suffered minor injuries in and arm and a leg. The "Me Dedique A Perderte" singer confirmed on Twitter that he was released the same day. Fortunately, nothing happened to the people in the car. One of Fernandez's security guards who also suffered injuries is reportedly being treated at hospital San Javier.

Following the mishap, El Potrillo assured fans and loved ones that he was O.K. and in a stable condition. "Friends, family and press who have asked: I'm safe and sound at home, thank you to everyone who worries about me," he expressed via Twitter. Alejandro, we wish you a speedy recovery!

Quincy Jones To Receive ‘Desi Arnaz Pioneer Award’ At Latin Songwriters Hall Of Fame 2015 La Musa Awards

Bob Mosses and Quincy Jones attend the Pensado Awards 2015 at Sony Pictures Studios on August 30, 2015 in Culver City, California. Maury Phillips/Getty Images

Recognized by Time magazine as one of the most influential jazz artists of the twentieth century, Quincy Jones is one of the most rounded and creative artists in the world. With a career spanning more than six decades, Quincy has encompassed the roles of composer, music producer, artist, film producer, arranger, conductor, instrumentalist, television producer, record company executive, television channel owner, founder of a magazine, entrepreneur and philanthropist. For this, Jones will be the recipient of the 2015 "Desi Arnaz Pioneer Award" during the Latin Songwriters Hall of Fame 3rd Annual induction Gala LA MUSA AWARDS to be held this October 15 in Miami Beach presented by WorldArts.

Some of his multiple awards received throughout his career include an Emmy Award, seven Oscar nominations, The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award, 27 Grammys and he’s become the most nominated artist during the Grammy awards with a grand total of 79 nominations. Jones also has the distinction of having produced the biggest selling album of all time… Michael Jackson’s “Thriller,” which has topped over 100 million copies sold worldwide.

In 2001, he added yet another title to his impressive resume. When his autobiography “Q: The Autobiography of Quincy Jones” made the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, and The Wall Street Journal best selling list. In 2010, Jones launched his most recent production, “Soul Bossa Nostra,” an album that includes collaborations from some of the top artists and producers in the industry, includingUsher, Ludacris, Akon, Jamie Foxx, Jennifer Hudson, Mary J. Bilge, T-Pain, Robin Thicke, LL Cool J, John Legend, Snoop Dogg, Wyclef Jean, Q-Tip, Talid Kweli, Three 6 Mafia, David Banner, Bebe Williams, Mervyn Warren, Jermaine Dupri, DJ Paul and Scott Storch; just to name a few. These artists met and recorded contemporary versions of the most popular songs from the multiple Grammy winner.

Most recently, Quincy is focused on his philanthropic pursuits and his company, The Quincy Jones Global Network. His latest projects include the management of a group of young musicians, The Global Gumbo All Stars; which creates social syndicates using various companies around the world to develop various entertainment projects; manage his repertoire of many licensed products and is continuously producing music as well as films.

Within his multiple humanitarian efforts and activist work, one stands out, his participation in actively ending debts in third world countries through the organization Delegation Jubilee 2000, where he met with Pope John Paul II, alongside Bono and Bob Geldof. The visit to this organization resulted in an overall relief of about $27 billion dollars in third world debt. In a joint initiative between his own organizations, Project Q Foundation, and Harvard School of Public Healthy, Jones actively worked with NGO’s (such as UNICEF, the Clinton Hunter Development Initiative and the Inter-American Development Bank) to improve the health and overall quality of life to millions of children in developing countries like Ruanda, South Africa and Asia.

This year the Latin Songwriters Hall of Fame will also induct six of the world's most influential Hispanic songwriters and composers: Hector Ochoa Cárdenas from Colombia,Emilio Estefan from Cuba, Myriam Hernandez from Chile, Gustavo Santaolallafrom Argentina, Alvaro Torres from El Salvador and Diego Torres from Argentina.

‘Legend’: Film Review

2:00 PM PDT 9/3/2015 by Leslie Felperin

The Bottom Line

You spend more time looking at the cocktail glasses than at the performances.

Venue

Toronto Film Festival (Gala Presentations)

Opens

Oct. 2 (Universal)

Cast

Tom Hardy, Emily Browning, David Thewlis

Director

Brian Helgeland

Tom Hardy co-stars with himself to play notorious London gangsters Ron and Reggie Kray in director Brian Helgeland's violent period drama.

There's a British expression, "all mouth and no trousers," which means someone who talks a great game but can't actually deliver on his boasts. It's an apt way to describe Legend, an account of the infamous identical twins Ron and Reggie Kray (both played by Tom Hardy), Cockney gangsters who ran nightclubs and protection rackets, achieving tabloid notoriety in the 1960s.

Written and directed by Brian Helgeland (his script for L.A. Confidential won an Oscar, and he directed 42 and Payback, among others), this ungainly portrait strikes a lot of poses, as if inviting the viewer to admire its impressive cast list, fine period detailing, "cheeky" British humor and insouciant attitude toward violence. But none of it disguises the fact that the film is also tonally incoherent, vacuous and structurally a bleedin' mess. The Brits' fading but still persistent fascination with the Krays will nevertheless ensure reasonable admissions locally, and Hardy's name will draw interest offshore, but it's not likely to stay in theatrical custody for long.

Aficionados of British crime movies and Spandau Ballet fans will recall that the brothers from Bethnal Green were the subjects of the 1990 film The Krays, directed by Peter Medak and starring pop starsGary and Martin Kemp as Ron and Reggie, respectively. The Krays may look dated now, with its crash zooms and synth-heavy score, but it zips through a broader swathe of its subjects' lives than this new film in a shorter running time, and it at least delivers one gold-chip performance from Samuel Beckett's muse, Billie Whitelaw, as the Krays' fearsome mother, Violet.

By contrast, Legend — a title so generic it's practically meaningless and one that's confusingly the same as the 1985 Ridley Scott film about a unicorn-loving Tom Cruise — features a fine actor, Hardy, giving one of his worst screen performances. Or at least half a bad performance, considering that it's his hammy, bug-eyed, slurred-voice Ron Kray that's the more egregious offender here, while his easygoing Reggie is reasonably charming (perhaps too charming, for those who value historical accuracy). The two turns operate in such wildly different registers, it's as if two films have been haphazardly spliced together. One is a sentimental tragedy about a man (Reggie) who can't separate himself from his mentally disturbed brother and, because of that, ends up ruining his marriage. The other a flamboyantly violent black farce about a gay psychopath (Ron) who impetuously destroys everything he touches, reminiscent, in a way, of Nicolas Winding Refn's Bronson, another film starring Hardy as a real-life nutter, but which was a vastly more interesting work.

Struggling painfully to hold the two mismatched parts together, Helgeland has made Reggie's wife, Frances (Emily Browning), the third point in this quasi-incestuous love triangle. In a move that may have been intended from the start but that plays like an act of postproduction triage brought in to create some kind of coherence, Frances' voiceover narrates the film throughout, even past the point where it makes any logical narrative sense for her to do so. Frances, or at least her voiceover, is given to making writerly pronouncements (example: "It took a lot of love for me to hate him [Reggie] the way I do") that suggest she did a correspondence course in screenwriting somewhere in between the secretarial college and the mental asylum that are mentioned in the script.

It wouldn't be that annoying a device, if it weren't for the fact that onscreen Frances shows none of voiceover Frances' capacity for wryness, insight or even much of the "fragility" she's ascribed by others. Indeed, she barely shows any emotion at all, thanks to the decorative but dull Browning's typically inert, blank performance. The film also frequently deploys the VO to both show and tell plot points, like Frances' growing addiction to pharmaceutical pills, as if it can't trust the audience to work these things out for itself.

Although it eschews the birth and childhood parts of the story covered in Medak's film, Legendtrudges through roughly the same criminal career highlights — the key murders of George Cornell(Shane Attwooll) and Jack "The Hat" McVitie (Sam Spruell) especially — but with more emphasis on Frances and Reggie's love affair, the scandal around conservative peer Lord Boothby'srelationship with Ron (Boothby is played with delicious fruitiness by John Sessions) and their connections to the North American mafia, personified by Chazz Palminteri's Angelo Bruno, a factotum for Meyer Lansky. The last plot point seems fashioned to add a bit more relevance for U.S. audiences, although it doesn't really pay off dramatically. Nevertheless, contemporary American crime films are very much a touchstone, visible in the ostentatious references to Martin Scorsese (there's even a long Steadicam shot that follows Reggie and Frances into a club, just like the one in Goodfellas) and, perhaps unsurprisingly, L.A. Confidential in the way the film deploys music and fleetingly introduces real historical characters.

Less effective are the jocular bursts of violence, more Guy Ritchie-like than Scorsesian, such as the scene where Ron and Reg take out a pub full of rival gangsters with little more than household objects in hand and the element of surprise. Likewise, the supporting cast has been encouraged to camp things up to the max to add an extra dose of Lock, Stock-style background color, although, admittedly, Taron Egerton's hyenalike Mad Teddy Smith, Reggie's main bed buddy and henchman, is one of the film's brighter sparks.

For many, the big draw will be seeing Hardy playing against himself. (An early poster for the film even lists his name twice above the title.) But even the deployment of this trick is somewhat disappointing and a bit off, the use of effects technology clearly discernable in some shots. The joins are much less visible in, say, the TV show Orphan Black, possibly because a smaller screen is more forgiving. But the bigger problem is Hardy's failure to generate much onscreen chemistry with himself.

The visuals that didn't require technical jiggery-pokery are more persuasive and pleasing, from DPDick Pope's glittery, rainy-day lighting to Caroline Harris' sharp costumes and, most of all, Tom Conroy's richly detailed production design. That said, there must be something wrong with a film when viewers find themselves spending more time admiring the cocktail glasses and polished-copper wall decorations than the performances.

Production companies: StudioCanal, Anton Capital Entertainment, Working Title Films
Cast: Tom Hardy, Emily Browning, David Thewlis, Christopher Eccleston, Chazz Palminteri, Taron Egerton, Colin Morgan, Tara Fitzgerald, John Sessions, Charley Palmer Rothwell
Director-screenwriter: Brian Helgeland
Producers: Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Chris Clark, Quentin Curtis, Brian Oliver
Executive producers: Kate Solomon, Amelia Granger, Liza Chasin, Tom Hardy
Co-producer: Jane Robertson
Director of photography: Dick Pope
Editor: Peter McNulty
Production designer: Tom Conroy
Costume designer: Caroline Harris
Composer: Carter Burwell
Casting: Lucinda Syson
Sales: StudioCanal

R, 131 minutes

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Reply #64 posted 09/04/15 8:13am

JoeBala

Janet Jackson announces Unbreakable release date, opens tour

September 3, 20155:17 PM MSTJanet Jackson's "No Sleep"
Play
Janet Jackson's "No Sleep"
Rhythm Nation/BMG

Public Enemy to release DVD of rare live concert

September 3, 20154:11 PM MSTPublic Enemy to release DVD of rare live concert
Public Enemy to release DVD of rare live concert
Photo by permission from PR Newswire

Def Leppard reveals first teaser for upcoming studio album

September 3, 201510:19 PM MST

Expected to be released in October, 2015.

Def Leppard

Venice: Johnny Depp Talks Becoming James "Whitey" Bulger in 'Black Mass'

Johnny Depp in 'Black Mass'
Johnny Depp in 'Black Mass'

The superstar also joked about killing his dogs in response to the recent Australian controversy.

Johnny Depp appeared in high spirits during a Friday press conference in Venice to promote his new film Black Mass, directed by Scott Cooper.

The actor is already generating Oscar buzz for his transformation into one of Boston’s most infamous crime lords, James “Whitey” Bulger.

Dressed in a green jacket and sporting his signature blue-lens glasses and holding a beer, Depp told the media before beginning, “I just want to point out that this is nonalcoholic and if I slur, this is your fault.”

He also made a joke about his dogs when asked if he had brought them with him on the press tour. “No I killed my dogs, and ate them, under direct orders of some kind of, I don’t know, sweaty, big-gutted man from Australia,” he said, referring to the incident earlier this year when Australian authorities threatened to put down his dogs for being brought into the country without the necessary permits.

Depp, who has had a fair share of more playful roles in his career, was asked if he had to get in touch with his evil side to play the part. “I found the evil in myself a long time ago, and I’ve accepted it. We’re old friends,” he said.

The actor has been credited for bringing a human side to the crime boss who was indicted for 19 murders after being given carte blanche from Boston’s FBI to help take down the rival Patriarca Italian American crime family.

“For a character like James Bulger, I think you just have to approach him as a human being,” he continued, “in the sense that nobody wakes up in the morning and shaves or brushes their teeth and looks in the mirror and thinks 'I am evil' or 'I am going to do something evil today.'”

“I think in the context of his business, not only was the violence just a part of the job, let’s say, it was also kind of a language that the people that he associated with and the people that he opposed, understood the same language. It was a language,” he continued.

On playing the part of a real-life crime boss, Depp explained that he didn’t have much to work from, other than a few videotapes. He asked to meet with Bulger, who is currently serving two life sentences plus five years in jail, but the former mob boss respectfully declined. “I don’t think he was a great fan of the book Black Mass or any of the books written about him,” he explained. But Bulger’s lawyer, Jay Carney, helped Depp with the part and found Depp's performance to be overwhelming.

“Jay came to the set and watched a couple of times and he gave me a lot of confidence because he said he could feel his old friend in what I was doing,” explained Depp.

For Depp the thrill in playing Bulger was taking on such a complicated character. “It’s exhilarating when you can switch gears, when you can go from 90 to 20 and you can go from 20 back up to 120,” he said. “It’s challenging. I can’t say satisfying, because I think satisfaction is a bad thing to feel because then you get lame. He was complicated and there was a part that he would take in an old lady’s groceries into a house and 10 minutes later he might be bashing someone’s scull in, but to him that was all he knew.”

The intense physical transformation of Depp into a balding, blue-eyed mobster was created by his frequent collaborator Joel Harlow, who created four or five tests before finalizing the look. “I thought it was very, very important to look as much like Jimmy Bulger as humanely possible. My eyeballs are black as the ace of spades. The blue contacts were hand-painted because they needed to be piercing. They needed to cut right through you.”

As one of the festival’s top tickets, thousands of people lined up alongside the red carpet, starting as early as six in the morning, to get a glimpse of Depp. “I’ve never liked the term fans,” he said of the attention. “But I consider those people essentially our employers. They’re the boss because they’re the ones who go to the cinema and spend their hard earned money to escape for two hours to watch a film. I thank my bosses outside.”

Maia Mitchell

On-screen, JUST JARED’s SPOTLIGHT COVER STAR Maia Mitchellplays the classic all-American teenager in the hit show The Fosters, but in real life, she’s a bubbly millennial who holds true to her roots from Down Under.

  • PHOTOGRAPHY: JUSTIN CAMPBELL
  • WRITER: NICOLE PAJER
  • EDITOR: DAVID NIEDERHOFFER
  • STYLIST: MONTY JACKSON
  • HAIR: DEREK YUEN
  • MAKEUP: MAI QUYNH
Maia Mitchell with an M
-MAIA MITCHELL | PHOTOGRAPHED BY JUSTIN CAMPBELL

Maia Mitchell in black and white wearing a floral suit

FASHION CREDITS

STYLED BY: MONTY JACKSON

Maia Mitchell sitting on the ground wearing thigh high boots

The budding actress got her start acting in school plays and local theater productions in Australia, starring in several local shows, such as the children’s series Mortified, Trapped, andCastaway before catching the attention of Disney Channel producers. She’s since risen to prominence through her role as “Mack” in Disney’s Teen Beach Movie franchise. Relocating to the U.S. hasn’t appeared to make Mitchell’s swoon-worthy accent falter though. And one of her greatest feats has been her ability to rapidly bury it to become flawlessly American. The rising star jokes, however, that she promised her “mum” that her efforts to be convincingly American won’t impair her from speaking off-screen in her native tongue. “She’d kill me if I had American accent,” she admits with a smirk.

Off camera, Mitchell has a smile that lights up any room she enters. The Ozzie stunner is bubbly, endearing, and comes across as the ultimate girl that you’d want in your squad (Take note Taylor Swift). She’s the gal that everyone wants to befriend and she always appears to be having a good time, no matter what the day throws at her. Her Instagram account, which has garnered 1.5 million fans, is stocked with photos of the young actress doing everything from lounging on the couch with beau Rudy Mancuso to beaching it with Bieber and snuggling with her pug pup, Sadie. And though her social media life looks extravagant, Mitchell assures us that she’s a typical adolescent -- who grew up with posters of The O.C. plastered on her bedroom walls, has a fear of tripping while filming in heels, and spends her free time frolicking at the dog park.

Portrait of Maia Mitchell sitting on a block

When she’s not paling around with onscreen flame “Brady” (Ross Lynch) on the Disney set, Mitchell is busy portraying “Callie Jacob” on ABC Family’s groundbreaking series The Fosters, a show that Mitchell is extremely grateful to be a part of. The role has opened her up to a new realm of acting, tackling issues such as growing up in an abusive home, being fostered by a bi-racial lesbian couple, and exploring feelings for adopted brother Brandon (David Lambert).“I’m super proud and lucky to be on a show that is pushing some barriers and maybe opening people up to things they haven’t seen or types of families they haven’t seen before,” says the budding actress. “It’s super cool.” And after three seasons on the show, a blossoming fandom, and the success of the Teen Beachfranchise, it’s clear that Mitchell’s career is just getting started.

“Maia is the most talented younger actor that I've ever had the pleasure working with,” says The Fosters creator Bradley Bredeweg. “When we first started, she had such an honest and pure way in, wide-eyed and excited about the process and the show that we were putting out into the world. She always plays each moment straight from the heart. To watch her grow and become the incredible young woman that she is today, now three seasons later, has been one of the most cherished experiences of my career. I'm a lucky man to have Maia around!”

Next up for Mitchell is a role in Elijah Bynum’s directorial debut, Hot Summer Nights, where she will star oppositeTimothee Chalamet (Interstellar) and will portray the love interest of Alex Roe (The 5th Wave). And while Disney has been mum on the details, we would be down with seeing her hop on a surfboard one last time for a Teen Beach 3!

Maia Mitchell standing while showing a hint of leg

Maia Mitchell sitting on a block while wearing thigh high boots

Just Jared: Congrats on the success of Teen Beach 2 - over 13 million people have seen it! What was your favorite memory of filming the Teen Beach movies?

Maia Mitchell: Definitely mucking around in between takes. We had the most ridiculous locations and outfits. Our cast was ridiculous too. We made the most of it, which was fun. Filming the sequel, we were all together again after being separated for so long, so it was kind of like a big reunion. We’d all hang out and sing campfire songs.

JJ: Any word on a Teen Beach 3 happening and if so, are you on board?

MM: I have no idea about Teen Beach 3. I’m sure they are buzzing about it right now but I don’t know. We’ll see! It would definitely be something I’d be interested in talking about.

JJ: What’s it been like to be part of such a groundbreaking show like The Fosters?

MM: The show has been really huge for me. It’s what’s kept me in America. The cast and crew definitely feel like home to me now. But in terms of what it’s about and what the show reflects, I’m super proud of it. Two moms raising foster kids and adopted kids, it’s a part of reality now that hasn’t been explored as much in the media and should be. A lot of people’s stories aren’t being told. I feel very lucky. I don’t feel an entitlement or ownership over it. I’m very lucky that I’m an actor that got employed and I get to be on that show. And I’m very, very lucky that I am and very, very grateful. It feels great to be a part of something that’s doing good things.

JJ: Noah Centineo just replaced Jake T. Austin as your brother on The Fosters. How has that switch been for you?

MM: It’s been good. We’re all very excited to have Noah. He’s awesome and super cool. I think we’re just ready for a fresh start and I’m really excited to be working with him.

JJ: Jennifer Lopez produces The Fosters. What has it been like to work with her? Were you starstruck when you first met her?

MM: I was pretty starstruck when I met her, but she’s very easy to be around. She’s really engaging, connected and will look you in the eye and give you the time of day. She supports our show 100%, which feels really nice. I love having her be a part of it. She’s very real.

Portrait of Maia Mitchell wearing a feathered look
JJ: You were recently cast in Hot Summer Nights playing the love interest of Alex Roe. What can you tell us about the movie and your character?

MM: I play a character named Amy in a coming of age film. It’s about this kid who basically goes to Cape Cod for the summer and gets involved with drug dealing with a friend that he meets there. It’s kind of a bad boy older kid who is sort of a big fish in a small pond in Cape Cod. And he falls in love and my character Amy plays the girlfriend of this character who is kind of this bad boy from the wrong side of the tracks and so she shows him the light. She’s the daughter of the sheriff. It’s an independent film, which is exciting and I loved the script. Elijah [Bynum], the director, is amazing.

JJ: You started performing as a child in school plays. Do you have a most memorable performance?

MM: My favorite play was Hating Alison Ashley. I got to play Alison Ashley and my friend was Erica Yurken. We got to just hate each other and it was really really fun.

JJ: What about the most embarrassing play that you’ve ever starred in?

MM: I did this play, I don’t even remember what the name of it was, but it was based on a book. And I had to play a woobly, which is basically like a Teletubby, except we just say “woobly.” My mom was like, “Really? I paid this much money for you to be a woobly?”


JJ: In addition to acting, you also sing. Tell us about the first time that you ever sang in front of people. Were you super nervous?

MM: Yeah. I was very nervous. I don’t claim to be a singer or performer in terms of music. I did it in high school and that was always really nerve-wracking when we had performances. And even recording for Teen Beach 2 was pretty scary. I’ve become a little bit more comfortable with it but I don’t think I’m going to try and have a singing career. It’s just not where I’m comfortable.

JJ: What was the biggest on-screen blooper that you’ve ever had?

MM: There’s been a lot. Teen Beach 2 was pretty ridiculous. We were shooting some crazy numbers and I was having to dance in platform heels, which is a nightmare for me. So there were many times when we were doing this scene in Teen Beach 2 for “Gotta Be Me,” the dance number. The bleachers were moving and so they had the bleachers on wheels and they had people moving in and I had to walk down the bleachers with Ross at the same time, but they kept asking me to look up and to not look at my feet. These things are moving and I’m in heels, but we’re doing dance moves while we’re walking down. It was like the scariest thing ever. And I almost tripped butGrace [Phipps] luckily grabbed me and I don’t think it made it in the movie. There was a lot of stuff like that, which was kind of crazy. But I fall over all the time. There are a ton of bloopers of me.

JJ: Everyone seems to have a Twitter blooper in this day and age. What’s your biggest social media blunder?

MM: I feel like everything I tweet is potentially a social media blooper. Last night I was really tired and I was Googling pillows with holes in the face so that you can just literally sink into it. And I tweeted that last night. So I’ll probably delete that. (laughs)

JJ: What are your favorite bands?

MM: My favorite bands are The Cure, The Talking Heads… I love Joni Mitchell. I’m kind of old school, but I like a bit of everything. I like Fetty Wap. I like a bit of everything.

JJ: Whose posters did you have on your wall as a kid?

MM: I had so many phases when I was a kid. I had like every poster. There was a point when I had Adam Brodyjust everywhere. Seth Cohen everything! I moved past that now thank God! I used to love Avril Lavigne. I had this giant Avril poster during the “Girlfriend” days and I thought she was such a rocker and I was so edgy by loving her. It’s weird to think about now.

JJ: What’s your favorite phone emoji?

MM: Probably the little monkey [that covers up his eyes]. It changes all the time.

JJ: Something you never leave your house without?

MM: Gum because I have an intense fear of bad breath. I never leave the house without my phone. If I’m wearing heels and I have a meeting or something, I always take flats as an alternative, always.

JJ: Current celebrity crush?

MM: Jeff Goldblum. I’m weird.

JJ: What’s the weirdest American slang you learned after coming here from Australia to work?

MM: It’s weird to think about American slang now because it feels like my vocabulary. When I go home, often people are like, “What did you just say to me?” But you guys say you’re going to “take a shower.” Where are you going to take the shower? We say, “Have a shower.” Stuff like that is different to me.

JJ: People have said that if Kendall Jenner and Selena Gomez had a baby, it would be you. Who is the celebrity that you get mistaken for the most? Who do people tell you that you look like?

MM: I get so many different people, I can’t even keep track. I’m like, “I look like me guys!” I get Kendall Jenner, which I don’t really see. Selena Gomez. That GIF thing that went around was like the bane of my existence for a second. I get so many different people. Some people have said Zendaya. I don’t know. Like everyone! I apparently look like a hybrid of everyone.

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Hackers, Drug Dealers and a Springsteen-Loving Mayor: THR Critics Pick Summer's Best Shows

Denis Leary's rock 'n' roll return, a trans-Atlantic rom-com, a politically charged miniseries, a smart drama (on Lifetime?!) — the season's 7 must-see new shows.

This story first appeared in the Sept. 11 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. To receive the magazine, click here to subscribe.

It should surprise no one that summer viewing would be stocked with both high quality and highly entertaining fare as the Platinum Age of televisioncontinues unabated. With so many alluring options, viewers had to choose wisely yet again, but were able to pick from buzz-heavy surprises like USA'sMr. Robot, Amazon's out-of-nowhere comedy Catastrophe and the heavier but worthwhile political and issue-oriented miniseries Show Me A Hero from HBO. If the plethora of high-end choices did nothing else, it kept viewers sharp for the fall task of quickly winnowing the massive amounts of shows about to splash through their screens.

1. Show Me a Hero (HBO)

David Simon's six-part miniseries, directed by Paul Haggis and based on real events, initially gives off a slight "eat your vegetables" whiff. But the first-class storytelling and acting will hook you. Starring Oscar Isaac as a 1980s Yonkers, N.Y., mayor embroiled in a racially charged public housing dispute, the drama richly rewards viewers for their investment — and emerges as a potential Emmy heavyweight for 2016.

2. Sex&Drugs&Rock&Roll (FX)

This sharply funny and wonderfully spot-on comedy features creator Denis Leary as an aging New York rocker who discovers he has a very talented daughter. Channeling the star's searing sense of humor into an entertaining and accessible package, each half-hour episode also is full of insights into aging, family, friendship and love.

3. Mr. Robot (USA)

In this gripping cyberthriller, Rami Malek plays a computer programmer who is recruited by Christian Slater's eponymous Mr. Robot to join an elite team of hackers. Stylish, enthralling and buoyed by Malek's charismatic performance, this was one of the summer's most exciting small-screen surprises.

4. Documentary Now! (IFC)

Creators Fred Armisen, Bill Hader and Seth Meyers hilariously spoof nonfiction film in riotous half-hour episodes, each a parody of a celebrated documentary (Grey Gardens, Nanook of the North, etc.). This is no scattershot takedown of the genre, but a loving lampoon that makes you appreciate the movies being satirized all the more.

5. Unreal (Lifetime)

This fascinating, addictive fictionalized behind-the-scenes look at reality dating shows (created by Marti Noxon and Sarah Gertrude Shapiro and starring Shiri Appleby) will validate every cynical thought you've had about the genre. But it's also a provocative and engaging drama teeming with love triangles, mother issues and other juicy themes and storylines.

6. Catastrophe (Amazon Prime)

A fling between an American adman and an Irish teacher leads to an unplanned pregnancy and then romance in this charming, laugh-out-loud Brit com. Those craving more after watching all six half-hour episodes can rejoice: Season two started shooting this summer.

7. Narcos (Netflix)

Director Jose Padilha's compelling 10-part series, created by Chris Brancato, does more than trace the rise and fall of Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar — it portrays various people entangled in his larger-than-life story on both sides of the law and around the globe. With its fine cast and impressive depth and breadth, this could be the international breakthrough the streaming site's been hoping for.

Tim Goodman's Most Wanted Fall TV List

'Fargo'
'Fargo'
Chris Large/FX

THR's chief TV critic endured and outlasted the TCA panels and came away with five cable and streaming picks (from returners like 'Fargo' to martial-arts newcomer 'Into the Badlands') that he can't wait to watch this season.

This story first appeared in the Aug. 21 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. To receive the magazine, click here to subscribe.

You're overwhelmed. You can't decide what to pick from this non-stop flood of TV shows. I get you. If you're willing to add one or two new offerings (or better yet, drop some faded old favorite and then add five or more quality newcomers), then here's a quick and easy short-list for you. It's not definitive -- there are too many excellent offerings. But these will work:

1. Fargo (FX, Oct. 12)

This is the one to watch. I’ve seen the first episode of the sophomore season (which features Kirsten Dunst and Ted Danson), and my reaction was: "Gimme all the rest, right now." Not a bad way for this funny, bloody, weird and smart show to return.

2. Ash vs. Evil Dead (Starz, Oct. 31)

It will be interesting to see if Sam Raimi’s cult Evil Dead franchise can become a viable TV series, but the sitcom created by Raimi and starring Bruce Campbell and Lucy Lawless looks, from initial materials, to be a wildly fun mix of horror and humor.

3. Into the Badlands (AMC, Nov. 15)

This martial-arts-meets-knives-meets-weird-clans-in-desolate-lands story is a genre-bender that could make for a much-needed new hit for the channel. At the very least, it looks action-packed and addictive.

4. The Bastard Executioner (FX, Sept. 15)

An ambitious, 14th century-set costume drama from Kurt Sutter, full of swords, castles and dialects, this one couldn’t be farther from Sons of Anarchy— but has the potential to pull in an entirely different audience. It featuresStephen Moyer and Anarchy’s Katey Sagal.

5. The Man in the High Castle (Amazon, Nov. 20)

The well-received pilot of this alternative-history series based on the Philip K. Dick novel (which imagines what would have happened if the Nazis had won World War II) already is up on Amazon but generated even more buzz with its TCA panel. Bonus: The sets are amazing.

Will Smith's 'Concussion' Drama: NFL Plots Embrace-the-Debate Strategy (Exclusive)

Sony's 'Concussion'
Sony's 'Concussion'
Courtesy of Sony Pictures

The league says it would even entertain the prospect of working with Sony on raising awareness about football safety.

Facing an onslaught of potentially damaging PR, the National Football League has drafted its own game plan for dealing with the upcoming Sony film Concussion.

The league will host a series of discussions, conferences and scientific strategy meetings about player safety over the coming months in the run-up to Concussion’s release Christmas Day. In fact, the NFL says it welcomes theWill Smith-led film’s ability to spark dialogue on the subject, despite being portrayed as an organization that tried to conceal findings about the long-term effects of football-related head trauma.

“When something like this movie comes up and people want to talk about concussions or football or the future of the sport, that’s an opportunity for us to engage,” Jeff Miller, NFL senior vp health and safety policy, told The Hollywood Reporter. “We intend to do just that over the course of the movie and long after that.”

Among the events planned are a convening of concussion experts at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center that is being funded by a grant from the NFL Foundation (beginning Oct. 15) and the International Professional Sports Concussion Research Think Tank in London (Oct. 23-25).

The NFL isn’t shirking from the media glare in the wake of Monday'sConcussion trailer debut, which prompted major news coverage from networks and national outlets. Miller says the NFL will speak to any press outlet that wants to know about the health and safety questions in football and what the league is doing to reduce concussions. Perhaps more intriguing, the NFL would even entertain the prospect of working with Sony on raising awareness.

“The studio hasn’t asked,” Miller added. “And if they were to and it gives us the opportunity to talk about the health and safety of our sport, we would do that. But there hasn’t been any communication to this point.”

Sony declined comment.

To date, no one from the NFL has been invited to see the film, which has been screened mostly for sports journalists, including writers and editors at Sports Illustrated, which made the film its cover story this week.

Meanwhile Sony is scrambling in the aftermath of a New York Times article — citing a series of hacked emails — that claims the studio softened the film’s take on the NFL. In response, the studio has put the film’s director Peter Landesman on the record for a number of news outlets including THR in an effort to reverse the perception that it caved to pressure. The NFL, too, is bristling at the suggestion that it applied any pressure to alter the film. THRcould find no evidence in the trove of leaked emails from last year that the studio and the NFL had any contact regarding Concussion beyond a brief email exchange between Landesman and NFL communications chief Paul Hicks in which the director requested a meeting that never materialized (Hicks asked for and was denied a copy of the script).

“It’s probably something that we, the league, need to do a better job of in terms of talking about the things we do [to educate] as well as continuing to do the things we do to improve the [safety of the] game,” Miller added. “If this [movie] presents an opportunity to engage in that conversation, then that’s terrific for us."

And while Sony and the NFL are waging their own PR campaigns over the film’s treatment of the league, Dr. Christopher Giza, director of UCLA's Steve Tisch BrainSPORT Program, offered up an outside perspective on theConcussion debate.

“One concern I have is that the film might paint too dire a picture of a post-concussion prognosis,” Dr. Giza said. “People who have suffered concussions need — and should have — hope because there’s a lot that can be done, and we are learning more every day.”

'In Jackson Heights': Venice Review

In Jackson Heights Still - H 2015
Courtesy of Venice Film Festival

The Bottom Line

A portrait of a community by an artist.

Venue

Venice Film Festival

Writer-Director

Frederick Wiseman

Frederick Wiseman's latest three-hour-plus opus looks at the culturally diverse Queens neighborhood of the title.

If America's documentary doyen Frederick Wiseman’s latest feature, In Jackson Heights, is something of a colorful patchwork, that’s only because the Queens neighborhood he’s portraying is one, too. Not as rigorously composed and dense as some of his recent films, such as La Danse orNational Gallery, this three-hour-plus feature, boiled down from over 120 hours of footage, has, appropriately, a slightly more grungy structure and appearance and manages to give a sweeping (if necessarily never complete) overview of not only the countless nationalities that call Jackson Heights home but also some of the most pressing problems that the locals face, including the devastating effects of gentrification on small businesses; the struggles of often newly arrived, undocumented immigrants and pressing issues related the LGBT community, such as transphobia. Beyond the fall festival trifecta of Venice, Toronto and, of course, New York, this has some niche theatrical potential in major metropolises in Europe and at the usual stateside venues.

This is the third time that Wiseman, still going strong at 85, has tackled the non-fiction subgenre of the community portrait, after 1991’s Aspen and Belfast, Maine, from 1999, both much smaller and more isolated communities than the northwestern part of Queens he portrays here. An early speech by New York Council MemberDanny Dromm, at an LGBT gathering at the Jackson Heights Jewish Center, illustrates just how many nationalities live there, when he admits that he “shouldn’t have started naming nationalities, because now I need to do all,” with the out politician subsequently rattling off a long and surely still incomplete list as those present shout out helpful suggestions and laugh about him having taken on such an impossible task.

As always, Wiseman remains consistently in the present and avoids any kind of editorializing or background information via voice-over or graphics, simply relying on editing to construct his observational film. The footage, edited by Wiseman himself, is marbled with short shots of the streets, business and places of worship that give a sense of local color around the larger sequences that are roughly organized into three “days,” with an approximate morning-till-night cycle repeated three times. As can be gleaned from the multicolored, occasionally disorderly supporters of the various national teams playing in the Soccer World Cup, the film was shot over nine weeks in the summer of 2014.

The very un-American sight of streets swarmed with soccer enthusiasts is but one of the ways in which the extreme culturally diversity of Jackson Heights is rendered visible. The neighborhood is a true melting pot, with over 160 languages spoken and large, quite young communities from especially Latin America -- about three-quarters of the film is in Spanish -- and the Indian subcontinent flanking older generations of Italian, Irish and Jewish immigrants. The film's comedic highlight, a visit to a course on "Brooklyn" for aspiring taxi drivers, all of whom appear to be of foreign origins, suggests both the rich diversity of nationalities and the newcomers' efforts to try and fit in.

By simply contrasting short sequences that each tell a small story, Wiseman constructs a much larger mosaic. There’s a conversation between a 98-year-old white lady who tells a heavily accented older European women about how lonely she feels or a religious gathering of some elderly Jews, practically lost in a sea of empty chairs, who listen to a text about the Shoah. These stand in stark contrast to the much younger and more numerous Hispanics, who work in restaurants or cleaning businesses and who come to find support in community groups that try and inform them about and defend their rights or the energetic, ethnic (street) performers that Wiseman weaves in throughout the narrative, with the film further suggesting something about the diverse makeup of the population as it cuts from the face of one onlooker/listener to the next.

That there’s at least some interaction between the many diverse and occasionally overlapping minority groups is shown several times, with an elderly white lady trying to teach Asian newcomers who hope to apply for an American passport English -- her advice: say you want a passport to vote and participate in the democratic process -- or when English native speakers switch to Spanish to try and help those who don’t (yet) speak English deal with issues such as adoption or regularizing their presence on U.S. soil.

One of the most surprising elements, perhaps, is Wiseman’s clear engagement with the queer and trans communities, which have not been foregrounded in his oeuvre this explicitly. Like organizations such as Make the Road New York, which helps and informs Spanish-speaking immigrants, the Jackson Heights LGBT community’s various efforts are returned to repeatedly. They organize joyous events such the Queens Pride Parade but also offer support for marginalized, elderly gay people or transsexuals who deal with discrimination and harassment. Through simple inclusion, Wiseman lets the various parts of his material enter into dialogue with one another, so the claim from NYC mayor Bill de Blasio, a Queens Pride Parade special guest, that the city and the NYPD stand with the LGBTs, stands in stark contrast to the stories of transsexuals who claim that the police are staking out the nightclubs where they work.

Another recurring topic is the subject of gentrification, with a planned Business Improvement District (BID) in Jackson Heights being seen as potentially fatal for the many ethnic restaurants and small businesses operated by immigrant families. Even before the vote on the BID, the interest of big chain stores is making the faceless owners decide not to renew the lease of countless smaller stores so they can be converted into bigger ones, often ending the run of businesses that have been there for years and employ people who are now in their forties and fifties and for whom it’s hard to find employment elsewhere. Here too, the material speaks for itself, with Wiseman intentionally devoting a lot of time to endless meetings. And just like in real life, they are repetitive and boring but necessary, with community organizers trying their best to mobilize those potentially affected across language and cultural barriers. This suggestion of potentially disastrous socio-economic malaise for the local working class in the near future in turn contrasts with the footage of all those who have come and seem to keep coming to Jackson Heights from abroad to work and escape much worse situations in their home countries.

If anything, In Jackson Heights highlights to what an extend this neighborhood is -- for now -- a place in which people have got each other's backs, which is perhaps an old-school but mighty fine definition of what a neighborhood can be.

Production companies: Moulins Films, PBS

Writer-Director: Frederick Wiseman

Producer: Frederick Wiseman

Executive producer: Karen Konicek

Director of photography: John Davey

Editor: Frederick Wiseman

Sales: Doc & Film International

A Walk in the Woods' is a light, fun and satisfying journey

September 4, 20158:07 AM MST"A Walk in the Woods" (2015)
"A Walk in the Woods" (2015)
Broad Green Pictures


'Boulevard' review: The understated genius of Robin Williams

September 2, 20156:38 PM MST
A devoted husband in a marriage of convenience is forced to confront his secret life.
Play
A devoted husband in a marriage of convenience is forced to confront his secret life.
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Boulevard
Rating: 3 stars

"Boulevard" was released on iTunes, On Demand, DVD & Blu-ray yesterday through Starz Digital Media and Anchor Bay Entertainment. Special features are exclusive to the digital release of the film.

Robin Williams in his final on-screen role in "Boulevard."
Robin Williams in his final on-screen role in "Boulevard."
Photo courtesy of Starz Digital Media, used with permission.
The official Blu-ray cover of "Boulevard."
Photo courtesy of Starz Digital Media, used with permission.

Nolan Mack (Robin Williams) has been living a lie his entire life. He's worked at the same job for nearly 26 years and his marriage to wife Joy (Kathy Baker) just seems to be a representation of how fake his 60-year-old life has truly felt for as long as he can remember. One night, on a whim, he takes a turn down an unfamiliar road. That road leads him to a male prostitute named Leo (Roberto Aguire), who then guides the two of them to the nearest hotel room. Now Nolan is faced with trying to cover up what happened in an effort to keep living his charade of a life or continuing with the one thing that has truly made him feel alive perhaps for the first time ever.

Directed by Dito Montiel, director of "A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints," "Boulevard" is the final on-screen performance from Robin Williams. With the film being released nearly 13 months after Williams death, it seems easy to say that this is one of Williams best performances. While it may not top whatever is your favorite performance from the Chicago-born actor, you will be able to establish that this is one of the most finely crafted Robin Williams' performances.

Williams gives an incredibly subtle performance as Nolan Mack. Nolan is very polite, soft spoken, and well-mannered. He apologizes often and is extremely sweet-natured. He seems to genuinely care about everyone in his life. Even when his life gets more complicated, Nolan still admits to loving his wife. Williams has this absorbing aura when it comes to his on-screen presence; everything from the way he says his lines to his body language and his intimate facial expressions. Williams is known for being quite animated and he is the exact opposite of that here. Williams is constantly half-smiling in a way that seems to hint that he's hiding something, which fits the Nolan Mack character perfectly. You can never tell if he has sparkles in his eyes or he's about to burst into tears, which also gives another layer to the character.

With all of the attention Robin Williams is getting for the film, it's easy to overlook Bob Odenkirk. Odenkirk plays Winston; a teacher and long-time friend of Nolan. Odenkirk's acting feels very genuine. His lines just roll off his tongue in a natural way. His performance will always be outshined by the final appearance of Robin Williams, but Odenkirk is charming and caring in the small amount of screen time he does have.

While Nolan is polite, he also has this disquieting quality to him. The film does a good job of allowing you to understand what Nolan is going through, but witnessing it is still unnerving. It's as if Nolan is crawling into a bed of filth before rolling out of it and running around expecting no one to notice how dirty he is. It isn't just about homosexuality either. Nolan turns his life upside down for feelings he's hidden from everyone his whole life. He's given a harsh introduction to the ugly side of what he views as beautiful. Nolan learns the hard way that sometimes in order to get what you really desire you have to lose the things that matter to you the most.

There's this ambiguous nature to "Boulevard" that is both frustrating and tasteful. Nolan's meetings with Leo are never graphic other than one brief shot of nudity, but they typically fade to black when they arrive in the hotel only to fade in as they're leaving. The film's vagueness gives Nolan and Leo's relationship the opportunity to breathe. You pay more attention to how they act around each other and the lies they tell to other people rather than how physical they are with one another.

"Boulevard" is this dramatic representation of it never being too late to start living the life you want to live. No matter how old you get you can always travel down uncharted roads. Robin Williams sculpted this complex performance and it just so happens to be his swan song. It's a distressing, but elegant note to go out on. Williams along with Bob Odenkirk, Roberto Aguire, Kathy Baker, and Dito Montiel have delivered a contemplative film that is controversially thought provoking.


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iZombie Season 2 Trailer

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Check out Arrow season 4 trailer.

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JoeBala

Love iZombie I missed a couple of the last episodes, which I will catch up online. Some some reason I'm not a Arrow fan, but maybe I will give it a another go on Netflix.

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JoeBala

Harrison & Simon

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.

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Mets Jam Music Festival feat. Tori Kelly and A Great Big World

tori-kelly

September 12, 2015

12:00 pm

Pier 2 in Brooklyn Bridge Park

Brooklyn Bridge Park

Brooklyn, NY

All Ages

Event Link

Google Calendar iCal

Z100 New York brings the Mets Jam Music Festival back to Pier 2!

Listen to live music from Tori Kelly and A Great Big World, and meet Mets legends Edgardo Alfonzo, Darryl Strawberry, Howard Johnson, and Ed Kranepool, all hosted by your favorite NYC radio DJs.

Want to get active? Hop in the batting cage or clock your pitching speed. Then, grab some free swag and enter to win Mets tickets.

See Z100’s website for more details.

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Fall Premiere Dates for New and Returning Shows
September 2015

Link

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JoeBala

Whoa Thanks ID! I dunno if I missed it, but I did not see Agent Carter on the list. Looks like it's coming back next year, dang.

Agent Carter Season 2 News: Everything We Know

News Mike Cecchini 9/4/2015 at 12:37PM

Marvel's Agent Carter season 2 is happening and we've got all the details on it right here...

Agent Carter season 2 is a go at ABC! The network will bring Peggy Carter and her corner of the Marvel Universe back for another eight episodes. Agent Carter season 2 will once again air during the Agents of SHIELD break, much like season one did.

The Latest News

It looks like Daniel Sousa has gotten quite a promotion at the SSR forAgent Carter season 2...

So what else can we expect from Agent Carter season 2?

Agent Carter Season 2 Story

We don't know that much at the moment, but there's an official synopsis, for starters:

“Peggy must now journey from New York City to Los Angeles for her most dangerous assignment yet,” where she “discovers new friends, a new home… and perhaps even a new love.”

The Los Angeles move is probably a good thing. Much of the Marvel Universe is already NYC-centric, and the New York sets on Agent Carter weren't the most convincing.

What else do we know?

There was also that teaser in the prison with Arnim Zola and Dr. Faustus/Fenhoff during the finale. It was a nice nod to some of the events of Captain America: The Winter Soldier and Agents of SHIELD season 2. Showrunners Michelle Fazekas and Tara Butters had a little to say about the their ideas for Agent Carter season 2.

Ms. Fazekas said:

"We’ve certainly been talking about what a second season would look like, and there’s a lot of different ideas, but I don’t think just because you see Toby Jones at the end of this season that, “oh, next season’s going to be about Toby Jones.” That was really just to tie it into the Winter Soldier program. That being said, the best ideas will win the day, so I think once we really get into talking about a second season… we have a lot of ideas, and what’s great about the structure of this show is, you can tell so many different stories and go so many different directions."

As for what might be in store for Peggy in season two, Ms. Butters added: "We’ve talked about exploring more of Peggy’s past; how did she end up working for the SSR, what drove her to that? Just exploring Peggy — that’s the great thing about television, it allows you to explore these characters more in-depth than you get in a movie."

The whole interview over at Variety is illuminating, and you should give it a read.

Agent Carter Season 2 Cast

It looks like a significant chunk of the supporting cast from season one will be back for Agent Carter season 2. James D'arcy will return as Edwin Jarvis, Enver Gjokaj is back as Agent Sousa, and yes, Dominic Cooper's Howard Stark will return.

Entertainment Weekly also reports that Chad Michael Murray (Agent Jack Thompson), Bridget Regan (Dottie Underwood) and Lyndsy Fonseca (Angie Martinelli) are expected back, but they're still waiting on deals to be signed.

A modern Marvel villain is getting sent back to the 1940s for Agent Carter season 2. Madame Masque (recently used to great effect in issues of Hawkeye) is getting drafted. Madame Masque is usually armored (and masked) and has skill with robotics, so it will be interesting to see how far they take that this year.

Speaking with SlashFilm, Agent Carter executive producer Tara Butters described their version of Madame Masque as "very much a Marvel villain that we co-opted a little bit like we did Dr. Fennhoff in the first season." Fennhoff was a slightly sideways version of Dr. Faustus from the comics, so expect something similar with Madame Masque.

"I think we’ve changed the look of her a bit obviously," Ms. Butters said. "We’ve made her an actress, which is very Hedy Lamar. She was a ‘40s siren actress who was also a scientific genius, so that’s part of what we’re mining with this character."

Since Madame Masque is the daughter of Count Nefaria, perhaps we'll see a little of him this year, too. Well, I can dream, right?

What's more, Madame Masque has already been cast, but they're waiting to make a more official announcement.

Agent Carter Season 2 Production

It sounds like Agent Carter season 2 will have more episodes than the first season. Not too many more, though, so that's a good thing. Season one had a concise eight episode run, but we'll get a couple of more for season two. The news comes straight from the star of the show, Hayley Atwell, during a moment at Comicpalooza in Houston Texas when she was discussing this year's new location of Los Angeles.

"So it's going to be set in LA and with 10 episodes it's going to be a very glamorous, dark world of 1940s Los Angeles."

I'll gladly take an extra two episodes, especially if it's up to the quality level we saw during season one! (thanks to Digital Spy for the tip on that one)

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Remembering Joan Rivers 1 Year After Her Death: 26 Tributes That Proved Just How Iconic She Really Was

Joan Rivers
Marc Stamas/WireImage

Joan Rivers' death one year ago today is still firmly juxtaposed in our minds with the word untimely. Not to mention unreal.

At 81, she was as spry as could be, sharp as a tack and maintaining a work schedule that still provokes a little anxiety when we think about it. She had an indefatigable spirit and was always cracking wise about one taboo subject after another. And as much as she was known for poking fun at others, Joan made sure that she was always right in her own line of fire as well.

There are countless reasons to keep Joan in our thoughts forever, let alone move on with life under the assumption that she most definitely is out there, somewhere, making those lucky enough to be in that circle of heaven laugh. (Oh, the Trump jokes we're missing out on, for shame...) She not only helped blaze a career trail for fellow comedians, but she was also fearless and a stellar example of someone who loved her life's work.

Joan, of course, was also considered part of the Hollywood rite of passage—get a role, go to an awards show, get made fun of by Joan. Being picked apart by the Fashion Police host and red carpet game-changer meant that you had arrived.

And touchingly, once Joan was gone, the stories about what she meant to people were countless, with seemingly everyone who had ever crossed paths with her or who just watched her on TV having a memorable moment to share. Ultimately, that was just about everybody.

In honor of the talent that we were deprived of way too soon, here are 26 pitch-perfect tributes to Joan Rivers from the surreal year without her that just passed:

From the stars who took their lumps and laughed:

"I can't even comprehend the fact that I was @Joan_Rivers last best dressed on@e_FashionPolice. It was a dream come true. Thank you Joan." —Sarah Hyland

"RIP Joan Rivers... You made fun of my boobies just last week and it was an HONOR. Thanks for making so many people laugh here on Earth." —Demi Lovato


"What's the point of wearing all these dumb costumes if Joan's not here to rip them apart RIP Joan Rivers. You are a one of a one." —Katy Perry

"The one time I met Joan Rivers she said to me: "I have no idea how you get laid in those outfits". Legend." Alexa Chung

"RIP Joan Rivers. Being publicly told that my dress is hideous will never feel quite as awesome. You will be truly missed." —Anna Kendrick


"Dear Joan , 12 years being the butt of your jokes ...Then we met, had a laugh and I learned you were something amazing . Shine on." —Russell Crowe

"She was always very nice to me and even when she wasn't I still laughed, she still made me laugh." Reese Witherspoon

From the subsequent generations of comedians who came up in her wake:

"What a full life. Every woman in comedy is indebted to her. She was there at the beginning and funny to the end." —Amy Poehler

"Joan was hilarious and relevant all the way to the end. She inspired every comic I know and we will carry her with us and quote her jokes forever." Amy Schumer

Jimmy Kimmel, Joan RiversABC

"Besides being a pioneer for women in comedy—for everyone in comedy—she was a very lucky person because Joan loved her job so much. She never wanted to stop, and she didn't have to stop because she was so great at it." —Jimmy Kimmel

"She loved with her whole heart and she also hated with her whole heart, which I loved." —Sarah Silverman

Joan Rivers, Sarah Silverman, Famous FriendsJemal Countess/Getty Images

"Watching Joan Rivers do standup at age 81 was incredible: athletic, jaw-dropping, terrifying, essential. It never stopped. Neither will she." —Lena Dunham


"She would come out here and sit in this chair and say some things that were unbelievable, just where you would have to swallow pretty hard and twice, but it was hilarious. And she stood behind her jokes, and to my knowledge, would say these things and never apologize because she always felt, 'Hey, I'm a comedian. These are jokes. There are no victimless jokes.' And she was harder on herself than anyone, really. She would tell these God-awful jokes about herself." David Letterman

W Magazine, Joan RiversW Magazine

"She wanted to know how everything worked and how people were communicating now and she wanted to understand digital content. I adored her and she was lovely and a pioneer. She never stopped working—such an inspiration." —Chris Hardwick


"She wrote every day, and to write every day for that long is just so impressive to me. [She was] the nicest person in the world when I got to talk to her backstage...I wish she were here right now, because if she were here right now, she would make a joke about how she just passed away—and she would get away with it, because it would be really funny." —Seth Meyers

"I just hope that when Joan meets the man upstairs, he is wearing something she can insult." —Craig Ferguson

"I feel very lucky that I knew Joan Rivers and I feel very sad that she's gone. She was a great comedian and a wonderful person. I never saw someone attack a stage with so much energy. She was a controlled lightning bolt. She was a prolific and unpredictable, joyful joke writer. She loved comedy. She loved the audience. She was a great actress and should have done that more. She loved living and working. She was kind. She was real. She was brave. She was funny and you just wanted to be around her. I looked up to her. I learned from her. I loved her. I liked her. And I already miss her very much. It really f--king sucks that she had to die all of a sudden." —Louis C.K.


She always had new material. A lot of comedians, they hit their later part of their career and they rest a little bit. They do a greatest hits act. She was always fresh. She always had a new take on new subjects, and I don't know anybody else you could say was relevant into their eighties." Jeff Ross

From her devoted friends, colleagues and admirers:

"She was not only the funniest woman I have ever met but was incredibly loving, honest, and lived her life with no regrets. Working with her for the last 13 years has been one of the true joys of my life. She could put a smile on your face, instantly, no matter how hard your day was." —Giuliana Rancic


"Had the pleasure of working with #JoanRivers .... She made me laugh, made me blush and gave me her watch... What a woman!" —Cat Deeley

"Unapologetically offensive, kind, tough, complicated, irrepressible, supremely energetic...and above all, bloody funny." —Piers Morgan

"Thanks for the laughs @Joan_Rivers ! The last woman to bed me!" Lance Bass

"Not only did she make us laugh, she made us think." —President Barack Obamaand Michelle Obama, as relayed in a story told by Melissa Rivers about the condolences she received from the first couple.

Joan Rivers, Diary of a Mad DivaPenguin Group

Joan won the Grammy for Best Spoken Word Album for the audio version of her final memoir, Diary of a Mad Diva.

Joan Rivers Cartoon, The New YorkerBenjamin Schwartz /The New Yorker - Condé Nast

The New Yorker made sure to pay homage to Rivers, both an icon and a Brooklyn-born girl.

Joan Rivers, The SimpsonsFOX

And The Simpsons, still pretty much the arbiter of what matters in pop culture, made sure to put Joan in her place as well: A box seat in Heaven's VIP section.

We miss you, Joan.

Zelda Williams Pens Emotional Letter About Grief and Depression One Year After Robin Williams' Death

Robin Williams, Zelda WilliamsGregg DeGuire/FilmMagic

More than one year after Robin Williams' untimely death, his daughter Zelda Williams is speaking out and providing hope to others grieving the loss of a loved one.

In an emotional Instagram posted Saturday afternoon, the 26-year-old shared a beautiful shot of a sunrise right on the lake.

It's the story behind the image, however, that provides much deeper meaning.

"I spent this night shivering and laughing under a clear, cold sky full of stars with people I love just to witness something beautiful," she wrote in the caption. "We mooned the moon and laughed ourselves hoarse, and I'm so incredibly grateful for every silly second."

It's innocent, summer fun that the actress learned is necessary to carry on after a tragic loss.

"I came to a realization this year that I feel compelled to share here, for whomsoever may need it: Avoiding fear, sadness, or anger is not the same thing as being happy. I live my sadness every day, but I don't resent it anymore," she explained. "Instead, I do it now so that the wonderful moments of joy I do find are not in order to forget, but to inhabit and enjoy for their own sake."

She continued, "It's not easy. In fact, I'd say it takes much more effort to consciously do than it does to just stay sad, but with my heart, I cannot tell you how worth it it is."

Zelda WilliamsJB Lacroix/WireImage

Ever since their father's death, Zelda and her brothers have continued to cope with his loss in individual ways. Everyone has helped continue Robin's charity work with the Challenged Athletes Foundation and St. Jude while Zelda also got a tattoo of a hummingbird in honor of her dad.

As for the reason why she's speaking out about grieving and mental health this weekend, it appears Zelda simply wants to share her story to prove life gets better.

"For those suffering from depression, I know how dark and endless that tunnel can feel, but if happiness seems impossible to find, please hold on to the possibility of hope, faint though it may be," she wrote. "Because I promise you, there's enough nights under the same yellow moon for all of us to share, no matter how or when you find your way there."

Jodie Sweetin Full House: Steph Tanner Discusses Netflix ‘Fuller House’ Plot! [PHOTOS]

Apr 28, 2015 01:37 PM EDT | By Victoria GuerraJodie Sweetin

(Photo : Instagram)
Jodie Sweetin
(Photo : Instagram)
Jodie Sweetin
(Photo : Instagram)
Jodie Sweetin
(Photo : Instagram)

Nostalgic millennials everywhere jumped for joy when John Stamos announced the return of the show that made him a star back in the day, and the new Jodie Sweetin "Full House," focused on the two oldest sisters of the Tanner clan, is set to begin shooting sometime soon.

With the "Twin Peaks" remake in the works and Jodie Sweetin's "Full House," there seems to be a new wave of rehashings of beloved and iconic television series, but there's always room for more when it comes to those that hold on to nostalgia.

Food World News has updated step by step how things have gone down for the Jodie Sweetin "Full House" spinoff, from the first rumors all the way to the Olsen twins, who shared the role of Michelle Tanner, being completely unaware that there was a remake in the works after the actor who played uncle Jesse announced the show on "Jimmy Kimmel Live!"

Now, according to The Inquisitr, Jodie Sweetin from "Full House," who played middle sister Steph on the original show, has finally spoken out a little more about what's to be expected of the new Netflix version, after the streaming giant and producer asked for a 13-episode deal.

As Digital Spy reports, the new Jodie Sweetin "Full House" project is basically a gender-twist version of the old show; in it, the grown-up and widowed older sister DJ Tanner (Candace Cameron Bure) will be raising her two boys and another one on the way with the help of her sister Steph and her BFF since childhood Kimmy Gibbler (Andrea Barber).

Stamos, the producer, will be making regular appearances, but it's unknown whether other cast members like the Olsen twins, Bob Saget or Dave Coulier will also come back.

"It will be very similar, certainly, to the first Full House, but we're definitely trying to bring it back as a little more modern take," said Jodie Sweetin about "Full House" remake, according to Web Pro News. "Stephanie has sort of been the wild world traveler, and I'm looking forward to bringing to life Stephanie as she is today and creating a real backstory for her. She's a free spirit, and that will be obvious in the character she's become."

Netflix Fuller House Logo Fuller House TV Series Logo Revealed By Netflix

‘Fuller House’: Lori Loughlin Shares Adorable New Pic From Set Of Spinoff

Fri, September 4, 2015 11:01pm EDT by bshilliday1

Courtesy of Twitter

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Rod Stewart Reunites With the Faces for First Non-Awards Concert in 40 Years

For the first time in 40 years, Rod Stewart sang a concert with the surviving members of the Faces. The show was a benefit for Prostate Cancer U.K. and took place before 5,000 fans at the Hurtwood Polo Club in Ewhurst, Surrey, England.

Joined by a horn section and backup singers, they played seven songs, two of which, “(I Know) I’m Losing You” and “I’d Rather Go Blind,” appeared on Stewart’s solo albums but featured the Faces. The songwriting contributions of Ronnie Lane, who passed away in 1997, was represented by a performance of “Ooh La La.” The full setlist is below.

Despite the years apart, the Telegraph‘s report suggests that the spontaneous, anything-goes spirit of the Faces was still intact. “We’ve only had a few hours rehearsal so there’s bound to be a few cock-ups,” Stewart said shortly after taking the stage, to which Ron Wood added, “Just like the old days.”

The Faces broke up in 1975, but talks of a reunion had escalated in recent years, with Stewart’s solo career and Ron Wood’s committment to the Rolling Stones putting those plans on hold. The sudden death of keyboardist Ian McLagan in December caused drummer Kenney Jones, the only other surviving original member, to say that getting back together was “more important now than ever.” Back in January, the trio performed two songs at Stewart’s 70th birthday party.

After the show, all three original members tweeted. Stewart wrote, “A perfect rockin’ evening with my mates @RonnieWood @KenneyJones! #FacesReunion.” Wood decided to reference one of the Faces’ best songs. “Had me a real good time tonight THANK YOU! xx @ProstateUK @KenneyJones @rodstewart.” Jones went for a simple, “What an amazing night last night was! The biggest thank you to everyone involved.”

The Faces Sept. 5, 2015 at Hurtwood Polo Club Setlist

1. “I Feel So Good ”
2. “You Can Make Me Dance, Sing or Anything ”
3. “Ooh La La”
4. “I’d Rather Go Blind”
5. “(I Know) I’m Losing You”
6. “Stay With Me”
7. “Sweet Little Rock & Roller ”


The Faces, Hurtwood Park Polo Club, review: 'worth the 40-year wait'

Ronnie Wood, Kenney Jones and Rod Stewart reunite as The Faces for the first in 40 years
RONNIE WOOD, KENNEY JONES AND ROD STEWART REUNITE AS THE FACES FOR THE FIRST IN 40 YEARS CREDIT: REX

"It's great to be up here with these guys!" declared Rod Stewart, arm around the scrawny neck of Ronnie Wood.

After a 40-year absence, Stewart reunited with The Faces, and rediscovered his inner rocker. Playing to just 5,000 lucky fans in a field in Surrey, the long-awaited reunion of one of Britain's best loved bands was a glorious shambles, a wonderful reminder of the joyous spirit that still exists beneath the increasingly respectable facade of rock and roll.

In their Seventies glory days, The Faces were celebrated as much for their ragged (and often drink-fuelled) bonhomie as their buccaneering musicianship. Their secret was always their very live-ness, a quality of spontaneity that made each moment really count, accentuated by the feeling that it could all fall apart at any point. They were a band who were so clearly enjoying themselves on stage that it was impossible for audiences not to respond. Forty years of experience has apparently done little to dampen their pleasure or iron out mistakes. "Am I in the right key?" Wood asked at the beginning of a rambunctious version of Losing You.

"Ronnie, you want a drink?" Stewart teased his old foil. "Oh no, you don't do that anymore."

Rod Stewart, Ronnie Wood and Kenney Jones
Rod Stewart, Ronnie Wood and Kenney Jones CREDIT: REX

They may all be considerably more sober these days, but they remained magnicently sloppy, throwing themselves around the songs with a spirit of joyous rediscovery. There were false starts and loose tempos, all of which added to the party atmosphere."We've only had a few hours rehearsal so there's bound to be a few cock ups," Stewart apologised in advance.

"Just like the old days," added Wood. He may have spent the past 40 years as a foil to Keith Richards in the Rolling Stones, but it is with Stewart that his limited but lively guitar swagger really makes sense. He looked like he was having the time of his life.

Drummer Kenney Jones organised the show at Hurtwood Park Polo Club in Ewhurst, in aid of Prostate Cancer UK. The frequently mentioned absence of founding members Ronnie Lane (who died in 1975) and Ian McGlagan (who passed away last year) was not allowed to dampen the joy, although it took nine musicians to replace them, with horns and backing vocals fleshing out the ragged, soulful sound.

The three surviving Faces themselves may be a bit more haggard of feature but their hair remains mysteriously the same, coloured by dye and stiffened by gel, feather cuts standing proudly against the law of gravity. What really hasn't changed though was the mood of humour and camaraderie that lends their performances such a sense of celebration.

Stewart remains a much bigger draw as a solo artist than The Faces ever were, even in their prime. And yet, they bring something out in him that his solo shows never will. For decades he has resisted this reunion, but by the time they finished their short, seven-song set, he looked and sounded like a man who had rediscovered his purpose. I hope he doesn't make us all wait another 40 years to do it again.

Not so new Faces! Rod Stewart, Ronnie Wood, and Kenney Jones reunite 40 years later for Rock 'n' Horsepower charity concert

The three surviving members of the Faces - Ronnie Wood, Kenney Jones, and Rod Stewart - reunited onstage the Rock 'n' Horsepower charity concert in Surrey on Saturday.

It's hard to believe it's been 40 years since the English rock band's debaucherous heyday when they hired a bartender to serve them onstage during shows.

On the website, Jones said the bass player Ronnie Lane - who died in 1997 - and keyboard player Ian McLagan - who died last December - 'will be dearly missed but we’ll raise a glass to them.'

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Stay with me! The three surviving members of the Faces - Ronnie Wood, Kenney Jones, and Rod Stewart - reunited onstage the Rock 'n' Horsepower charity concert in Surrey on Saturday

Stay with me! The three surviving members of the Faces - Ronnie Wood, Kenney Jones, and Rod Stewart - reunited onstage the Rock 'n' Horsepower charity concert in Surrey on Saturday

The band's drummer - who turns 67 this month - hosted the festivities at his very own Hurtwood Park Polo Club in Ewhurst, and each £50-£1000 ticket benefited Prostate Cancer UK.

Kenney - who later joined The Who - also happens to be a prostate cancer survivor, and he famously overcome it with 'magic beads' aka 4D brachytherapy.

70-year-old singer Rod - whose solo career amassed him a $220M fortune - is a thyroid cancer survivor and he was excited to 'jam.'

The way they were: It's hard to believe it's been 40 years since the English rock band's debaucherous heyday when they hired a bartender to serve them onstage during shows (pictured in the 1970s)

The way they were: It's hard to believe it's been 40 years since the English rock band's debaucherous heyday when they hired a bartender to serve them onstage during shows (pictured in the 1970s)

Mastermind: Kenney (C) - who later joined The Who - also happens to be a prostate cancer survivor, and he famously overcome it with 'magic beads' aka 4D brachytherapy

Mastermind: Kenney (C) - who later joined The Who - also happens to be a prostate cancer survivor, and he famously overcome it with 'magic beads' aka 4D brachytherapy

Good pals: These two go back a long long way

Old friends: Rod and Ronnie seemed delighted to be back in each other's company

On form: Just like old times the band members gave their performance their all

On form: Just like old times the band members gave their performance their all

Missing friends: The band was also featured bass player Ronnie Lane (far right) and keyboard player Ian McLagan (far left)

Missing friends: The band was also featured bass player Ronnie Lane (far right) and keyboard player Ian McLagan (far left)

Two gone: On their website, Jones said that Ronnie  (L) - who died in 1997 - and Ian  (R) - who died last December - 'will be dearly missed but we’ll raise a glass to them'

Two gone: On their website, Jones said that Ronnie (L) - who died in 1997 - and Ian (R) - who died last December - 'will be dearly missed but we’ll raise a glass to them'

'Being in the Faces back in the day was a whirlwind of madness but my God, it was beyond brilliant,' the Grammy winner and father-of-eight marveled.

Stewart - who's sold over 100M records worldwide - will drop his 29th studio album Another Country on October 23.

And 68-year-old Ronnie - who later joined The Rolling Stones - had himself a 'real good time' getting back onstage with 'the lads.'

Polo enthusiast: The band's drummer (L) - who turns 67 this month - hosted the festivities at his very own Hurtwood Park Polo Club in Ewhurst, and each £50-£1000 ticket benefitted Prostate Cancer UK

Polo enthusiast: The band's drummer (L) - who turns 67 this month - hosted the festivities at his very own Hurtwood Park Polo Club in Ewhurst, and each £50-£1000 ticket benefitted Prostate Cancer UK

'It was a whirlwind of madness but my God, it was beyond brilliant!' 70-year-old singer Rod - whose solo career amassed him a $220M fortune - is a thyroid cancer survivor and he was excited to 'jam'

'It was a whirlwind of madness but my God, it was beyond brilliant!' 70-year-old singer Rod - whose solo career amassed him a $220M fortune - is a thyroid cancer survivor and he was excited to 'jam'

'Playing Stay with Me and other favourites will be a blast and will make this a very special night,' the spiky-haired guitarist said.

'Being in the Faces was a mad and brilliant time for all of us and although we don't have Ronnie and Mac with us anymore this is our chance to remember them.'

The Faces - which formed in 1969 - released their final album Ooh La La in 1973, and they were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame back in 2012.

The Englishmen later posed with Ronnie's third wife Sally Humphreys and Rod's third wife Penny Lancaster.

'Being in the Faces was a mad and brilliant time for all of us': And 68-year-old Ronnie - who later joined The Rolling Stones - had himself a 'real good time' getting back onstage with 'the lads'

'Being in the Faces was a mad and brilliant time for all of us': And 68-year-old Ronnie - who later joined The Rolling Stones - had himself a 'real good time' getting back onstage with 'the lads'

Formed in 1969: The Faces released their final album Ooh La La in 1973, and they were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame back in 2012

Formed in 1969: The Faces released their final album Ooh La La in 1973, and they were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame back in 2012

Fit as a fiddle! Rod definitely didn't hold back

Fit as a fiddle! Rod definitely didn't hold back

Young at heart: The 70-year-old rocker sure knows how to put on a performance

Young at heart: The 70-year-old rocker sure knows how to put on a performance

Good times: The band put on a performance to remember

Good times: The band put on a performance to remember

Throwback! It's been forty years since The Faces sang together

Throwback! It's been forty years since The Faces sang together

Loving life: The men were clearly in their element as the performed to the crowd

Loving life: The men were clearly in their element as the performed to the crowd

The big three: The trio seemed pleased with their reception

The big three: The trio seemed pleased with their reception

Light-hearted: Rod showed off his silly side as they performed some of their classic hits

Light-hearted: Rod showed off his silly side as they performed some of their classic hits

Having a good time? The British singer-songwriter had a blast on stage
Thirsty work: Rod ensured he kept hydrated throughout the gig

Having a good time? The British singer-songwriter had a blast on stage

Behind every strong man...: The Englishmen later posed with Ronnie's third wife Sally Humphreys (2-L) and Rod's third wife Penny Lancaster (2-R)

Behind every strong man...: The Englishmen later posed with Ronnie's third wife Sally Humphreys (2-L) and Rod's third wife Penny Lancaster (2-R)

Warming his raspy pipes! The Grammy winner - who's sold over 100M records worldwide - will drop his 29th studio album Another Country on October 23

Warming his raspy pipes! The Grammy winner - who's sold over 100M records worldwide - will drop his 29th studio album Another Country on October 23

Penny Lancaster and Rod Stewart spotted on London night out

The father-of-four and his 37-year-old ladylove will celebrate their third wedding anniversary on October 30.

The pretty theatre production company owner gushed over Twitter: 'So unbelievably proud of my Ronnie. Smashed it out of the park!'

Sally is only eight months older than Wood's only daughter Leah, whom he had with his ex-wife #2 Jo.

Three-decade age difference: The father-of-four and his 37-year-old ladylove will celebrate their third wedding anniversary on October 30

Three-decade age difference: The father-of-four and his 37-year-old ladylove will celebrate their third wedding anniversary on October 30

The pretty theatre production company owner gushed over Twitter: 'So unbelievably proud of my Ronnie. Smashed it out of the park!'

The pretty theatre production company owner gushed over Twitter: 'So unbelievably proud of my Ronnie. Smashed it out of the park!'

Darling daddy: Sally is only eight months older than Wood's only daughter Leah (R), whom he had with his ex-wife #2 Jo

Darling daddy: Sally is only eight months older than Wood's only daughter Leah (R), whom he had with his ex-wife #2 Jo

On September 22, Genesis Publications will publish Ronnie's memoir How Can It Be? A Rock & Roll Diary.

The raven-haired rocker will do his first reading/signing September 11 at Waterstones in London's Piccadilly neighbourhood.

Meanwhile, fans on the field were doing a double take when they spotted this impressive Ronnie Wood lookalike.

First reading/signing September 11 in London! On September 22, Genesis Publications will publish Ronnie's memoir How Can It Be? A Rock & Roll Diary

First reading/signing September 11 in London! On September 22, Genesis Publications will publish Ronnie's memoir How Can It Be? A Rock & Roll Diary

Could be his brother! Meanwhile, fans on the field were doing a double take when they spotted this impressive Ronnie Wood lookalike

Could be his brother! Meanwhile, fans on the field were doing a double take when they spotted this impressive Ronnie Wood lookalike


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Reply #76 posted 09/06/15 9:49am

purplethunder3
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eek Who would've thunk it after 40 years...

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #77 posted 09/07/15 5:41am

JoeBala

purplethunder3121 said:

eek Who would've thunk it after 40 years...

The Ol' gezzers still have it. Check out youtube for the videos. Waiting for the full concert to post.

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JoeBala

Jean Darling, silent movie Our Gang member, has died

September 6, 2015 9:28 AM MST
Jean Darling
public domain image

Alabama Preview the Mountain Music of 'Southern Drawl' Album

After nearly a decade and a half, country heavyweights return with new, harmony-heavy album

By Chris Parton September 3, 2015
Alabama Alabama's new album returns the award winners to the sound of their Eighties glory days. Rick Diamond/Getty Images

Sidebar Arguably the most influential country band in history, Alabama are set to return September 18th with their first album of originals in 14 years. Called Southern Drawl, the project finds the Country Music Hall of Famers "getting off the porch" with a sound that revives the magic of country in the Eighties and Nineties. Sidebar

Alabama
Hear Alabama and Alison ...c Duet » The band's three core members (and cousins) — lead singer Randy Owen, guitarist Jeff Cook and bassist Teddy Gentry — see the album as a labor of love, and tell Rolling Stone Country they were inspired to make new music after realizing fans wanted them back. "Getting out here and touring like we have for a few years, seeing the response from the crowd, selling the tickets that we are, we realized there's still a lot of fan interest and support out there," says Gentry. "When you're away from it for 11 or 12 years, you start wondering if you're still relevant or not. But I think after getting back out there, one step led to another." Their relevance should not have been in question, really. Alabama was the band that shook up the status quo of their day, much like their acolytes Jason Aldean, Luke Bryan and Florida Georgia Line are doing now. Playing instruments on their own records, incorporating a rock influence, wearing casual street clothes and essentially inventing the idea of a country band — along with staging massive concerts with lights and sound that would rival anything in any other genre — Alabama laid the groundwork for country's mainstream explosion. Those days were long ago, though, and the bandmates are frank about encountering some obstacles on their way back into the fold, like getting in shape vocally. Famous for their stunning three-part harmonies, the band had to dig deep to revive their signature sound. Plus, nothing will ever compare to the clout they once commanded. "We had a deadline for this one," Gentry explains. "That was one of the things we got used to in the Eighties and Nineties: we'd have an unlimited budget. We never had anybody say, 'You're on the clock. You gotta be through in an hour-and-a-half.' That was tough on this album. . . But to me, we're doing the same thing and taking the same approach as we did in the Eighties and Nineties, where you work hard to find the very best songs you can, and try to make a great record out of a great song." The band was given the chance to produce the album completely themselves, though, and they say their record label never heard a track until the whole thing was finished. They wrote about half of the songs and sourced the rest from outside songwriters on Nashville's Music Row, coming up with a stylistically and emotionally diverse set of 13 tracks. With an undeniable air of Southern authenticity, Southern Drawl is at times charming, tender, lighthearted and defiant. "Wasn't Through Loving You Yet" is a very current-feeling, mid-tempo song, "Hillbilly Wins the Lotto Money" offers a splash of absurdity and "Footstompin' Music" does its title justice with help from a stomp-clap beat. Cook and Gentry each sing lead on their own tracks, and the guys say they were never trying to capture a particular modern sound — just something true to each story. In fact, many of the tracks fit right in alongside classics like "Song of the South" and "Mountain Music." Written by Tim James, George Teren and Rivers Rutherford, "This Ain't Just a Song" spells out the power behind the band's biggest hits, brimming with those famous harmonies and full of emotion.

"It's amazing to me; almost everybody we've talked to has picked out that song," says Gentry. "The first time I played it for Randy, we talked about how it's kind of an inside, songwriter's song. We were a little skeptical about whether it was ready for prime time, but we thought, 'It's such a cool song, we’ve gotta give it a shot.' And I think our fans will get it, too."

Conversely, "Southern Drawl" plays up the strong Southern identity the band has always possessed, but filters it through a checklist of un-wussified truisms, blaring guitars and protest-like shouting. "We drive trucks, we drink beer / We shoot whiskey and hunt deer," goes the chorus.

"The guys who started writing this song — Chip Davis, Damon Carroll and Ronnie Rogers — one of them is a trainer, not a songwriter, and he brought this chorus up as a joke," Gentry explains. "They were talking about all the songs that talk about pickup trucks and stuff, and when I saw the title I thought 'What a cool title.'"

Owen eventually helped finish the track, although it may still see some revision.

"It already has a parody started," Cook jokes. "It goes, 'I can't hear, I can't see / I can't tell when I pee.' We call that one 'Southern Drool.'"

The band is serious about the state of the nation's farms, though. At a time when country music's popularity is booming in the suburbs and less than five percent of the population works in agriculture, Alabama felt someone needed to speak up. A bumper sticker reading "No Farms No Food" was the catalyst for "American Farmer."

"That's who we are," says Owen about the prideful anthem, penned by Dave Gibson. "Teddy grew up on a farm, Jeff's a member of the FFA and 4H, and we feel like the most misunderstood and under-appreciated members of our society are the farmers and ranchers. We have the greatest famers in the world, and it seems like we do everything we can to discourage their creativity and productivity, and that's bullshit. We need to make it cool to become a farmer or a rancher."

And of course, there's plenty of hot, sweaty romance for fans of classics like "Love in the First Degree" and "Feels So Right." Alison Krauss lends her fiddle and harmony vocals to the delicate "Come Find Me," while "One on One" (written solo by Owen) gives off the hazy aura of an Eighties music video, suddenly closing a door and dimming the lights on the listener. Owen starts the song off with a breathless, spoken-word promise to make his woman's night the best of her life, and his adoration swells from there. It's romantic in a way that country often isn't anymore, almost to the point of being uncomfortable.

"Good," Owen responds to the idea with a smile. "Have you heard of a guy named Conway Twitty?. . . That's the thought. You look out here at these girls driving down the road, and this guy in the song wants to make her night beautiful so she's got something to drive home to. When you sing, ‘Look at me, don't say a word / My heart is hearing, I'll kiss where you hurt,’ that's maybe getting a little uncomfortable. But for me, that's the kind of uncomfortable I like."

Black Sabbath announce The End; final tour to play LA in February

September 3, 2015 12:37 PM MST
Ozzy &amp; Black Sabbath will play The Forum on February 11
Ozzy & Black Sabbath will play The Forum on February 11
Credit: Elliot Levin NY Hard Rock Examiner

Behind the picture Jim Morrison levitating a woman the follow up

September 6, 2015
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Jim Morrison 'levitates" Pam Courson during Frank Bez photo shoot 1968.
Photo courtesy Frank Bez

You may call this a mea culpa, a correction, clarification or any other synonym. A little over a week ago I ran the article “The Story Behind Jim Morr...ng a Woman”, which relates how Jim Morrison “levitated” model Cathy Cristiansen. There is also a second picture of Morrison “levitating” a red-haired woman who has been identified online as Pam Courson. I thought the red-haired woman had been misidentified as Courson, but after contacting Frank Bez he did indeed confirm the woman was Courson.

Why wouldn’t I think the woman was Courson? A few reasons. The first being there are many pictures online of women with Jim Morrison misidentified as Courson. The second, why would Courson be included in one of Morrison’s photo shoots? And lastly, it just didn’t look like Courson to me.

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The original intention of the first article was to verify with photographer Frank Bez if the woman was or was not Courson. Nothing came of going through the galleries that represent Bez. So, thinking it couldn’t be Courson for the above reasons, I published the original article. Then I was able to make a connection with Mr. Bez and he confirmed the second red-haired woman was indeed Pam Courson.

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According to Bez the reason the pictures were taken with Courson was because “Pam was just tagging along with Jim and wanted to try the trick.” But the pictures of Courson “levitating” almost didn’t work out because Courson was “quite a bit larger than Cathy,

she did a good job of balancing on the rig.” The one sad bit of information is that Bez took a lot more pictures of Morrison that day but they were stolen.

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If you would like to check out other examples of Frank Bez’s work he has a Facebook page, or his gallery pages on the Fine Art America website.

I would like to thank Frank Bez for being kind enough to share his memories of the Jim Morrison photoshoot and for permission to use the picture.

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Reply #79 posted 09/07/15 7:59am

JoeBala

Star Wars - Episode VIII: Benicio Del Toro officially confirms his role as villain

  • September 7, 2015 13:29 BST
Benicio Del Toro Confirms ‘Star Wars 8’ Villain Talks
Benicio Del Toro has finally confirmed he will feature in Star Wars: Episode VIIIJuan Naharro Gimenez/Getty

It has been rumoured for weeks that Benicio Del Toro will feature in Star Wars: Episode VIII, and now it looks like fans can finally get excited as the 48-year-old Oscar-winner has officially revealed that he will be playing the villain in the forthcoming eighth film.

In an interview with Spanish news outlet Rac 1, the Savages star said: "Star Wars is coming up, we will see how that turns out," when the radio station asked him how his schedule was looking for the near future. "I think we start shooting in March," he continued. "The thing is, they don't let me talk too much about it. I'm like the villain. But we'll see." His vague response as to whether he will be the movie's sole villain has sparked up even more rumours suggesting that there may be a group of bad guys within the picture.

Whether it was an unplanned slip or whether he was given the go-ahead to strategically unveil the casting by the studio bosses is unknown but typically, details surrounding the Disney/Lucasfilm instalments have remained top secret, despite all of the speculation surrounding them often hitting the nail on the head when it comes to the upcoming projects. So Del Toro may have just landed himself in hot water with the definitive confirmation if his reveal falls more into the latter.

The extreme privacy guidelines are understandable given how eagerly-anticipated the films are, as well as there being a significant amount of time before they are actually released. Episode VII: The Force Awakens isn't even hitting cinemas until December 2015, therefore Episode VIII will not reach the big screen until the following year. The movie will be directed by Looper's Rian Johnson and will see Del Toro acting alongside Oscar Isaac.

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Officially signing on for Star Wars means that Del Toro could soon be a part of two huge successful fantasy franchises simultaneously. He previously starred as The Collector in the 2014 film Guardians Of The Galaxy and while Marvel has suggested that his character might not pop up in the direct sequel, studioheads have hinted that there could be a place for him to reprise his role, somewhere else within the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

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Meanwhile, he will next be seen in Cannes Film Festival favourite Sicario, opposite Jon Bernthal, Josh Brolin and Emily Blunt. The film, which follows FBI agent Kate Macer as she is enlisted by a government task force to help thwart the escalating war against drugs on the Mexican/US border, will open in October.

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Reply #80 posted 09/07/15 11:38am

JoeBala

Martin Milner, Star of ‘Adam-12,’ ‘Route 66,’ Dies at 83

Courtesy of NBC

September 7, 2015 | 10:29AM PT

Martin Milner, who starred on TV on “Adam-12” with Kent McCord and, earlier, on “Route 66” with George Maharis, died Sunday night, Diana Downing, a representative for his fan page, confirmed. He was 83.

Image result for Martin Milner Sweet Smell of SuccessImage result for Martin Milner Sweet Smell of Success

Milner was also known for his roles as a jazz guitarist in the brilliant 1957 film “Sweet Smell of Success” and in the 1967 camp classic “Valley of the Dolls.”

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Milner began acting in movies while a teen, after his father got him an agent, first appearing in the 1947 classic “Life With Father.” The film starred William Powell and Irene Dunne, and thus Milner, along with his co-star Elizabeth Taylor, bridged the generations in Hollywood between the golden age and contemporary era.

He appeared as Officer Pete Molloy alongside Kent McCord’s Officer Jim Reed in NBC’s “Adam-12” from 1968-75. Molloy was the seasoned, savvy veteran bringing along Reed who was, at first, a rookie.

The innovative series had a more realistic quality than previous cop shows: The partners, on which the show narrowly focused, would patrol with no idea what they would encounter through the course of the day, and viewers got to witness the highs and lows in their lives.

Milner had a long association with Jack Webb, whose Mark VII Ltd. produced “Adam-12” and had produced “Dragnet” since 1951. After Webb and Milner met on the set of the movie “Halls of Montezuma” in 1950, Webb cast Milner in various roles on “Dragnet” in the early ’50s, first on radio and then when the crime drama transitioned to TV, where Milner appeared in six episodes of “Dragnet” from 1952-55.

Milner even appeared as a drummer in the Webb-directed 1955 feature “Pete Kelly’s Blues.” (The actor did not know how to play the guitar, so he was not really playing in “Sweet Smell of Success.”)

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Webb later chose Milner to star in “Adam-12” and directed the pilot episode; as a producer, Webb liked to do crossover episodes between his various series for promotional purposes; Officers Molloy and Reed were introduced on episodes of “Dragnet” and also appeared on episodes of the brief Mark VII show “The D.A.,” starring Robert Conrad, as well as on “Emergency.”

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“Route 66” ran on CBS from 1960-64, about a decade before “Adam-12” and resolutely not produced by Webb: Written and lensed across North America and inspired by the spirit of Jack Kerouac’s “On the Road,” the series followed Milner’s Tod Stiles and George Maharis’ Buz Murdock as they traveled from town to town in a Corvette, exploring social issues and the changing cultural landscape.

As “Adam-12” ended in 1975, Milner transitioned smoothly to the Irwin Allen-produced series “Swiss Family Robinson,” in which he played the paterfamilias. When that series proved short lived, Milner went on to appear in a variety of TV movies; there was also a guest spot on “Police Story.”

Image result for martin milner adam 12

In the 1989 TV movie “Nashville Beat,” Kent McCord (who had a story credit) and Milner reunited onscreen, with McCord as a cop from L.A. who visits Milner, a onetime LAPD officer who moved to Nashville and rose to captain. Together they fight a man behind increasing gang activity.

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Also in the ’80s Milner guested on “Fantasy Island,” “Airwolf” and “MacGyver” (playing MacGyver’s father), among other shows. On “Murder, She Wrote” he appeared in five different roles between 1985 and 1996.

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After his last visit with Jessica Fletcher, the actor appeared on “Diagnosis Murder” in 1997 and thereupon retired from the screen.

Back at the beginning of his career, the young, clean-cut Milner appeared in a number of war movies, including two with John Wayne, “Sands of Iwo Jima” and “Operation Pacific,” and one with Richard Widmark, “Halls of Montezuma.” (The actor did a sizable number of war movies, of varying quality, over the course of his film career.) But Milner also did a teen-centered comedy and a teencentric social-issues drama.

He got his start in television early in his career and early in the history of the medium, guesting on “The Lone Ranger” in 1950 and recurring on eight episodes of “The Stu Erwin Show” in 1950-51.

Milner moved between film and TV throughout the 1950s.

In 1951’s “I Want You,” starring Dana Andrews, Dorothy McGuire and Farley Granger, Milner’s character has been drafted for service in the Korean War, and his father pleads with Milner’s employer to declare the kid “indispensable,” which would mean he could continue working and avoid the fight. Milner’s employer, played by Andrews, refuses, and Milner’s character is later killed in action. Milner had not yet made it: Though his role (if not, perhaps, his performance) is central to the film, the New York Times did not mention him by name in its review.

The actor appeared in the film noir “The Captive City”; the comic fantasy “My Wife’s Best Friend,” starring Anne Baxter; and the Western “Springfield Rifle,” with Gary Cooper, to give a sense of the miscellany of assignments Milner was drawing in the early ’50s.

In 1955 he appeared in a small role in”Mister Roberts,” starring Henry Fonda, James Cagney and William Powell.

By 1956 the tide had turned for Milner: He was now doing more television than film, perhaps frustrated that he was still relegated to little more than bit parts in A pictures and had to rely on B pictures for somewhat more substantive supporting roles. Still, he had a couple of his most memorable film roles ahead of him.

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In 1957 he appeared in two pictures starring Burt Lancaster. The first was “Gunfight at the O.K. Corral,” in which Milner played James, the youngest of the four Earp brothers (at least in the movie).

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The second was “Sweet Smell of Success,” a very different film in which Lancaster played a caustic New York columnist who’s inappropriately possessive of his sister, who becomes romantically involved with Milner’s jazz guitarist; Lancaster’s character stops at nothing to destroy this relationship.

Milner finally turned in an impressive performance in an A picture, and even got his mention in the New York Times: “Marty Milner is sincere and believable as her indomitable romantic vis-a-vis.”

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He subsequently had decent supporting roles in A pictures “Marjorie Morningstar,” starring Natalie Wood and Gene Kelly, and “Compulson,” starring Orson Welles, Dean Stockwell and Bradford Dillman.

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Reviewing the latter, the Times said, “Mention should be made, too, of Martin Milner’s restrained depiction of her fiancé.”

Despite the success these newest film roles represented Milner was spending more and more of his time guesting on various TV series, and he seemed to decide that exploitation films would afford him more exposure.

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In 1960 he made two very silly, very bad movies with Mamie Van Doren and the horror film “13 Ghosts,” produced by William Castle. He was prominently featured in all of these.

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But then “Route 66” changed the course of his career.

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Martin Sam Milner was born in Detroit. Both his parents were in showbiz: His father was a film distributor, his mother a dancer.

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Milner was a man of various interests. He tried Broadway in 1967 in brief-running “The Ninety Day Mistress.”

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After he stopped acting, he co-hosted a radio show in Southern California, “Let’s Talk HookUp,” about freshwater and saltwater fishing, for a number of years. In the early 1970s he bought a 24-acre avocado farm where he lived with his family.

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Survivors include Milner’s wife, Judith Bess “Judy” Jones, a former singer and actress to whom he had been married since 1957; daughter Molly; and sons Stuart and Andrew.

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Daughter Amy, who appeared in an episode of “Adam-12,” died of acute myeloid leukemia in 2004.

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[Edited 9/7/15 11:42am]

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Reply #81 posted 09/08/15 7:15am

JoeBala

Sananda Maitreya 2015

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Reply #82 posted 09/09/15 7:18am

JoeBala

The Monkees TV series is coming to Blu-ray

September 8, 2015 4:05 PM MST

The Monkees

The Monkees
Rhino Records - used by permission.
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Reply #83 posted 09/09/15 7:58am

JoeBala

September 9, 1956: Elvis stuns TV viewers with his first appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show

Sixty million Americans watched either spellbound or shocked as a gyrating Elvis Presley made a sensational debut on the country's most popular television programme, the Ed Sullivan Show.

  • Elvis Presley appearing on the Ed Sullivan show.
    Chas Early
    Last updated: 09 September 2015, 07:22 BST

    It can be argued that September 9, 1956 is the day that rock ‘n’ roll truly established itself as the dominant musical genre in America – and therefore the western world – as its poster boy Elvis Presley made his sensational debut on the country’s most popular TV programme, the Ed Sullivan Show.

    Sullivan, a lugubrious former journalist, was initially against the idea of Presley performing on his show, but his mind was changed when the singer made his first national television appearance with rival Steve Allen, immediately boosting Allen’s ratings.

    In fact, he had earlier turned down an offer of single appearance by Elvis on the show for $5,000; by the time he realised his mistake Presley was a major star, and his wily manager Colonel Tom Parker was able to negotiate three appearances for $50,000.

    As it happened, Sullivan was in hospital recuperating from a car accident on the day of Presley’s debut. It was down to stand-in host Charles Laughton to introduce the young idol, who performed Don't Be Cruel, Love Me Tender, Hound Dog and Ready Teddy.

    Elvis and Ed Sullivan meet during the singer's later appearance on the programme.

    Contrary to popular belief, this was not the performance in which Presley was only filmed from the waist up. Although cameras mainly stayed on the top half of his body as he sang his first number, he was shown in full-length for his final two songs.

    However, it was clear that his movements were causing excited reactions from some of the girls in the studio audience, so during his final number the cameras began to find tighter shots of the singer so as not to disturb the more easily offended members of the viewing public.

    The episode was watched by 60 million people, an impressive 82.6% of the evening’s TV audience, but Sullivan was still concerned about the questions of taste surrounding Presley’s hip-swivelling performances.

    By the time of his third appearance on the show in January 1957, somebody – either the series’ producers, or Sullivan himself – had decided enough was enough. Elvis performed a total of seven songs – but for each, he was filmed solely from the waist up.

  • What did you make of the controversy over Elvis’s gyrations? How was he perceived in Britain at the time? Tell us your thoughts in the Comments section below.

Rita Ora & Chris Brown Perform “Body On Me” On Jimmy Kimmel

Watch Rita Ora & Chris Brown perform their collab "Body On Me" on Jimmy Kimmel.

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To promote her new single “Body On Me,” Rita Ora made her way onto Jimmy Kimmel Live Tuesday night to serve as the evening's musical guest.

Red Hot Rita Ora Goes Braless, Later Performs Skit At Jimmy Kimmel Live

Turning Kimmel’s set into her own stage, watch as Rita walks through an applauding crowd of fans and show off some choreographed dance moves, before getting all close and personal with featured guest Chris Brown in a living room and on the main stage. Fans of these two should definitely enjoy this hot and steamy performance.

Red Hot Rita Ora Goes Braless, Later Performs Skit At Jimmy Kimmel Live

Arriving at ABC Studios.

Look for the record itself to see life on Rita’s upcoming U.S. debut album which drops later this year. Watch the official video here.

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Martina McBride, Kelly Clarkson Unite for Musicians on Call Tour

Reba will also make an appearance at the Nashville stop, honoring friend and tireless volunteer, Shane Tarleton

By Denise Quan September 9, 2015
Martina McBride, Kelly Clarkson Martina McBride and Kelly Clarkson will perform at the Nashville stop of the Rock the Room Tour. Ed Rode/Getty Images

A trio of powerhouse vocalists are lending their support to Musicians on Call, the non-profit organization that brings live and recorded music to the bedsides of patients in healthcare facilities across the country. When the four-city Rock the Room Tour kicks off October 21st in Nashville, the benefit will feature performances by Martina McBride and Kelly Clarkson, along with a special appearance by Reba and other surprise guests.

Warner Music Nashville's Creative Director Shane Tarleton is set to receive the "Golden Ukulele" award at the Music City show, acknowledging his leadership in music and eight years of volunteer work with the charity. McBride tells Rolling Stone Country she's a fan of both the cause and the honoree. "Musicians on Call is truly an inspiring and wonderful organization," the country superstar tells Rolling Stone Country. "Shane is a dear friend, and I'm honored he asked me to be there on this special night when we will celebrate his beautiful heart and generous spirit."

"I've been very fortunate throughout my career to witness first-hand the healing power of music," adds Reba. "I am so honored to support Musicians on Call and most especially to recognize my good friend Shane Tarleton for all that he has done and continues to do to improve the lives of patients and families."

Last year, Clarkson was honored at the group's star-studded 15th anniversary gala in New York.

After its inaugural date in Nashville next month, the Rock the Room Tour will travel to New York, Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., with performers in each location to be announced at a future date. Since Musicians on Call was founded in 1999 at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, volunteer artists have performed for nearly half a million patients across the United States, in facilities that range from children's hospitals, to VA centers and hospices. MOC supporters have included Bruce Springsteen, Justin Timberlake, Lady Antebellum, Pharrell and Darius Rucker.

Kacey Musgraves, Chris Stapleton Highlight Seattle's Bumbershoot Fest

Elle King revs things up before country's foremost neo-traditionalists reward a rain-soaked crowd

By Mike Seely September 7, 2015
Kacey Musgraves
Kacey Musgraves covered TLC's "No Scrubs" at Seattle's Bumbershoot Festival. Tim Mosenfelder/Getty Images

Since 1971, Seattle has held a music and arts festival called Bumbershoot on the grounds surrounding the iconic Space Needle on Labor Day weekend. A bumbershoot is an umbrella, and woe to the patron who didn't bring one to Saturday's proceedings, which included wet sets on the Mural Amphitheater stage from the likes of Kacey Musgraves and Chris Stapleton.

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Around 2:00 p.m., while the skies were still bright, Phoebe Bridgers took the stage in sunglasses and forgot to plug in her acoustic guitar. "This is my first festival, guys, bear with me," she mused. Platinum-blonde and outfitted in a bedazzled jacket, Bridgers' voice is pure, high and fragile. She's in her early twenties, and just put out a seven-inch produced by Ryan Adams. Despite her confident, cool-chick demeanor, her songs were unflinchingly sulky; midway through, she quipped, "I hope I'm getting you guys pumped." For her set closer, she covered Evan Dando's "Hard Drive," and revealed that a close friend of hers went to high school with Elle King, who was to follow.

Although you'd never suspect it by looking at her or reading her name, King is the daughter of Saturday Night Live and Deuce Bigalow funnyman Rob Schneider. The pedigree is intact, as she's got a great sense of humor. Dressed in white as she marched onstage after her band, King was a perfect mid-afternoon pick-me-up. A curvier Gwen Stefani with a bleach blonde bob and neck tattoos, she could make a handsome living standing in for afternoon coffee pots at offices nationwide. "I've only been dumped once but I'm not gonna get dumped again, probably because I wrote this song," she said before bursting into "It's Good to Be a Man."

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"I get away with talking crap, and people clap for it," she said at the conclusion of the song. "People think I hate men, but I don't. I wrote a whole album about sleeping with them." She then sang a track, "Good for Nothin' Woman," about a pack of gals who talked trash about her. "You know what happens when you make Elle King mad? I write a song about 'em," she quipped.

Half a mile from the Space Needle sits the Two Bells, a downtown institution that serves juicy burgers smothered with caramelized onions on French rolls. (If you have a beard, be prepared to taste that sandwich until your next shower, and scrub vigorously.) The bar has no televisions, unless you count the time that Dave Matthews, a Seattle resident who plays a rival stand at the Gorge each Labor Day weekend, brought one in to watch election-night proceedings a few years back.

The optical canvas, therefore, is the sky. And shortly before 5:00 p.m., thunder cracked, releasing a merciless rain that reminded Seattleites that they don't live in southern California, in spite of a drought-stricken summer where temperatures in the eighties have been the norm. It got so wet that the outdoor shows were temporarily postponed, virtually unheard of in a town that plays through its showers. When things let up at the Mural Amphitheater, a large, shaggy ensemble called Elephant Revival tore through a jam-packed set that compelled the resilient remainders to kick off their Birks and baptize toes.

Only in a festival setting would a band like this play prior to Chris Stapleton. Look up "man" in an encyclopedia, and Stapleton's photo had best be featured. He's got a beard that could hold a hornets' nest and long tresses leaking out of his cowboy hat. If they were to recast the southern drug drama Rush, Stapleton would play Gregg Allman's role. Sprinkling in a cover of Tom Petty's "You Don't Know How It Feels," Stapleton's set drew heavily from his sensational album Traveller, his rawhide voice pairing so exceptionally with his wife's on "Stars Come Out" that you swiftly realize exactly why they took the plunge.

As the Weeknd warbled in a gigantic football stadium a short walk away, Kacey Musgraves took the stage, her band outfitted in pink cowboy suits with blinking lights. If lightning still threatened, they'd have been in trouble. But the jet-black sky promised no such calamity, and a tipsy, tallboy-fueled crowd swayed appreciatively to such hits as "Follow Your Arrow," "Merry Go Round" and "Biscuits" — as well as a clever cover of TLC's "No Scrubs." For neo-traditionalists, the Stapleton-Musgraves coupling was a way back to go forward — antlers strapped to the roof of a rusty old Ford, with cactus and tumbleweeds in the rearview as Hank's voice finally comes in clear on the left side of a manual dial.

Lucille Ball Biopic: Cate Blanchett to Star as 'I Love Lucy' Comedian in Aaron Sorkin Movie

by Wanda J Coppage Sep 3, 2015 11:30 AM EDT

Lucille Ball (Photo : David McNew/Getty Images)

No name is more familiar to classic TV fans than Lucille Ball of the '50s sitcom I Love Lucy. The show was centered around a vibrant red head with tons of personality, married to a Cuban singer (Desi Arnaz), who always found herself in some form of trouble. Fans loved her character but most of her personal life still remains a mystery. Who was Lucille Ball the person? A new biopic by Aaron Sorkin about the comedian is underway with Cate Blancett in the lead role, hoping to answer that question.

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US Weekly reported that Blanchett is set to take on the role as Lucille Ball in an authorized biopic. The film is set to be written by Sorkin, who has yet to put pen to paper to draft the film but already has an idea of what the biopic will focus on.

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According to The Hollywood Reporter, the film will center on the life of the iconic actress who starred in shows like The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour, The Lucy Show, Here's Lucy, Life with Lucy and of course I Love Lucy. Sorkin is no stranger to biopics, though he typically features male subjects. Previously, he has written scripts for films like The Social Network, Moneyball and the upcoming biopic of Steve Jobs starring Michael Fassbender.

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This project could be out of his comfort zone but he has plenty of help to get the story right. Working with Sorkin are two of Ball's children, Lucie Arnaz and Desi Arnaz Jr. who were involved with selecting Blanchett for the role of their mother. Blanchett is known for her work in Cinderella and Carol, which premiered at the Cannes Film Festival," according to THR.

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'I Love Lucy' also starred actors Vivian Vance (Ethel), William Fawley (Fred), Desi Arnaz as Ricky and the only living cast member, Richard Keith who starred as Lucy and Ricky's son Little Ricky. With Keith's assistance coupled by Ball's children, an accurate depiction of her life on and off camera should come to life in this biopic.http://www.corbisimages.com/images/Corbis-U1710484.jpg?size=67&uid=36398442-bf7c-4506-9c3d-fbbd16318d5b
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Identity




A first look at the Netflix documentary Keith Richards: Under The Influence.

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Reply #85 posted 09/09/15 8:10pm

JoeBala

WISE WORDS: Sananda Maitreya, Previously Terence Trent D'Arby, On Lessons Learned And The Italian Lady Who Keeps Him Grounded

Posted: 09/09/2015 17:41 BST Updated: 09/09/2015 17:59 BST

In the latest in our WISE WORDS interview series - where stars from a whole range of fields share the important life lessons they've learned along the way - we’re posing some of the big questions to ... Sananda Maitreya.

If you don't at first recognise the name, you'll be sure to recognise the voice. Because this is the more recent epithet of one Mr Terence Trent D'Arby, who can boast a Grammy Award and a string of massive hits, including 'Wishing Well' and 'Sign Your Name'.


Why's the name change? Well, Sananda has previously explained it's on account of an important set of dreams he had in 1995, when his previous incarnation "died a noble death". In his place, Sananda continues to create, most recently with his double album 'The Rise Of The Zugebrian Time Lords', on which the upbeat single 'Blanket on the Ground' shows his unique voice shows no sign of disappearing.

sananda maitreya

"Our masters said it right, 'And In The End, The Love You Make is Equal To the Love You Take'"

Below, Sananda speaks to HuffPostUK about the lessons he's learned along the way, and the lady close to home who keeps him grounded...

What do you do to switch off from the world?
What I do to switch off from the world is to simply go to the greater world within. As children, we learn early that there are always 3 worlds, the one they want us to see, the one they wish to hide from us and the world we create for ourselves with our imagination. Being exposed to early traumas will almost guarantee that we will create a world for ourselves where we can be safe from how rude & ugly & possessive our day to day world is. The gift of trauma is that it invites us to create AN INNER WORLD. And this bipolar nature is what also allows for a disposition towards detachment. I switch off by going to the mothership that lies within my heart. I hear the world very well, but I do not listen to it. I listen to my inner voice, all other voices confuse my simple brain.

How do you deal with negativity?
I deal with negativity mainly by avoiding it. It seems Counter-Evolutionary otherwise. Artists are who they are precisely because of their ‘oversensitivity’, it is our blessing and our cross to bear. Looking for more crosses to bear is a masochist’s yoga. But when negativity can’t be avoided, I use it as fuel to fire up further creations. Preferred or not, negative energy is powerful & great raw matter, it can always be transformed into something useful.

When and where are you happiest?
I am happiest when I am reminded that I am a musician & am not required to be more than that. I am also happy when I look at my two sons & realize that there is nothing more on earth of importance left for me to do anymore, having passed myself on. Which means that it doesn’t matter what I do now, it just matters that I do it. And try to have some fun, so that I can pass that on to my boys also.

What’s the best piece of advice you’ve ever been given?
“Believe Half of What You See Son & None Of What You Hear.”- Marvin Gaye. I was also fortunate enough, as a young soldier in Germany another lifetime ago, to have been told this sage advice by a distinguished old gentlemen who had survived the Nazi’s into an advanced age, “Remember Son, 90% of Everything Is Shit.” Excuse me the liberty of having translated from the Original German.

What has been the hardest lesson you’ve learned?
The hardest lesson I’ve learned is that Just Because You Change Your Name, doesn’t mean that They Will Change Your Social Security Number. Because, you can change your name to Santa Claus, but if your social security number is registered to Rudolf, it’s going to STAY registered to Rudolf, Valentino or otherwise.

What would you tell your 13-year-old self?
I would tell him to just be patient, and wait until he started smoking, and then he would understand everything!

What 3 things are at the top of your bucket list?
At the top of my bucket list would be to have complete control of the military and see what would happen.
To play in a rock band with my sons, Francesco Mingus and Federico Elvis, if the Lord wills.
To give back the years to my wife Francesca that her youth absorbed in helping to give birth to this new life.

What do you think happens when we die?
What happens when we die is mainly what dreams we have invested in our lives along the way. But even in the worst-case scenarios, Salvation Comes, At Any Time, to remind us that we do not HAVE TO suffer our beliefs forever. One way, or another, what we think of ourselves catches up to us, until we are willing to say “fuck it” and move on.

When do you feel a sense that we live in the presence of something bigger than ourselves?
Luckily for me, my ego is willing to debate the idea that ‘There Is Something Bigger Than Ourselves!” And besides the exercise in humility, why are we obliged to assume that the force that gave birth to us, is bigger than us? For we too, are that very force which gave birth to what we now observe as us. Though naturally, when my spirit is depressed I NEED to buy into SOMETHING BIGGER THAN ME, to pull me up to the proper levels. Knowing that naturally, no sooner does it pull you back up to its level, than you resume smacking it in the face. Apart from all of that, people know when they are in the presence of the divine. And each one is right.

sananda

Sananda remained inspired by the words of other musicians, from Marvin Gaye to the Beatles

What do you try to bring to your relationships?
A Big Dick & A Bigger Heart. What more do I owe? Otherwise, the only thing that I can give is my earnest desire to give back at the very least, as much as I may have taken. Our masters said it right, “And In The End, The Love You Make is Equal To the Love You Take”- The Beatles. If I can stay close to that, I am good.

I give what personality inspires while aiming at a large measure of why I am. In my own dark & screwed up way, I forever aim to uplift life in all of its many graphic forms. I favor the fabulous & the freaks!

What keeps you grounded?
I can promise you that what keeps me grounded is AN ITALIAN WIFE. And a Milanese, just for a little overkill! Upon my marriage announcement to her, some Italian friends took me out for a drink in Milano and let me in on a tribal secret. After a few grappas had taken my brain for a train, but before it started to rain, I was told by these few intimates, “Now You Will Understand Why Italian Men Are Crazy. It’s Because We Have To Marry Italian Women. Salute!” Even better, I hit the lottery when I found my wife, she has helped to restore, much of my faith in God and the life I deserve. Fortunately, I am a Catholic, which means that naturally, I am a masochist as well.

What was the last good deed or act of kindness you received?
The last good deed received by me is that The Huffington Post has interest in my life expedition! And that I get a chance to promote with this very valuable opportunity, my latest project, ‘THE RISE OF THE ZUGEBRIAN TIME LORDS’. I aspire always to earn my way through life and understand first hand that ‘COMMERCE IS GRACE’. In any event, thank you for including my situation! And may we all realize, in our own sweet time, that life is what WE say it is! The last good deed I gave was to announce that www.Sananda.org has your back and is looking to grow a spine together!

Sananda Maitreya's double album 'The Rise Of the Zugebrian Time Lords' will be released on 9 October. Information here.

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JoeBala

Remember the Warriors: Behind the Chaotic, Drug-Fueled, and Often Terrifying Making of a Cult Classic

The D, F, N, and Q trains all converge at Stillwell Avenue near the southern most tip of Brooklyn. Visitors are funneled through the newly polished Coney Island Terminal, past the growing line of souvenir shops, until they are shot out toward the bustle of Surf Avenue and Bowery Street. The boardwalk's iconic Wonder Wheel spins lazily behind Nathan's Famous, the 99-year-old hot dog joint, which serves as something of a welcome center for those seeking the winding row of amusements that line the beach.

Amid the refurbished boardwalk and laughter of children, it's easy to forget that Coney Island was once a place where tourists did not venture. For much of the latter half of the twentieth century, street gangs dominated this neighborhood. They ran rampant through the area's neglected housing projects, tearing along Surf and Neptune avenues toward West 8th Street. Those gangs, or gangs like them, and that incarnation of Coney Island would form the backbone of author Sol Yurick's 1965 debut novel, The Warriors, about the young members of a street gang. More than a decade after the novel's publication it would be optioned and, eventually, turned into a major motion picture of the same name.

Shot almost entirely on location in the streets, trains, and subway stations of New York, the film was released with great fanfare — and controversy — and, to this day, maintains a rabid fan base around the world. In the last decade it has enjoyed a new relevance as an oft-referenced pop-cultural touchstone with the release of various comic books, video games, and modernized action figures, thrilling old fans while picking up new ones along the way. Because while The Warriors is in many ways a fantastical journey — more spaghetti western than cinéma vérité — it nonetheless portrayed something true about Coney Island, the five boroughs, and America at that time. In the Seventies, when Coney Island's first low-income housing complex, Carey Gardens, was built, there were gangs that ruled nearly every neighborhood in New York. They were born out of the street crews and underserved ghettos of the Fifties and Sixties. During the crack epidemic of the Eighties, the gang situation would go from bad to worse, but the five boroughs were already reaching record highs in homicide rates. By the time The Warriors was in production in the summer of 1978, an atmosphere of danger hung menacingly over the city.

In the ensuing three-plus decades following the film's release, New York City, on many levels, has become virtually unrecognizable from the gritty version portrayed (realistically, at the time) in the film. Perhaps because of this, the film has, over the years, earned the sometimes dubious status of "cult classic." By the time the film was set to hit theaters, in February of 1979, gangland America had become a powder keg ready to explode. But for the first time, a film did not seek to explain away gang violence, nor rationalize its existence through bourgeois social theory. Instead, The Warriors attempted to present the experience of America's downtrodden youth as it was, with no moral judgment.

"With film and literature on street gangs there tends to be two different voices, two different kinds of views," says Sudhir Venkatesh, a professor of sociology at Columbia University and author of Gang Leader for a Day: A Rogue Sociologist Takes to the Streets. He uses The Warriors to teach one of his courses. "One is the social problems: 'Why are these kids in this and how do we get them out of it?' The other one is the idea of looking at street gangs as modern-day knights — that [they exist] out of this purported universal need for men to defend their group. I put The Warriors' aesthetic vision in that camp. In the modern-day city, this is valor."

For many troubled young people, The Warriors would mean seeing a part of themselves reflected onscreen for the very first time, the film's director, Walter Hill, tells the Voice today.

"Our film doesn't say everyone is supposed to be a lawyer or a doctor or something," he says. "The movie sees gangs as a defensive alignment in order to help you survive in a harsh atmosphere."

On September 13, members from the cast — some of whom went on to long Hollywood careers, others of whom never acted again — will reunite on Coney Island for perhaps the last time. Some 36 years after the movie's release, the actors will celebrate the legacy of a project that was almost derailed by personality conflicts, a near-impossible filming schedule, and the real-life gang violence that plagued New York City at the time of production.

Thomas Waites was billed as the next James Dean after being cast in The Warriors.
Thomas Waites was billed as the next James Dean after being cast in The Warriors.
Celeste Sloman

Thomas Waites as Fox

Thomas Waites as Fox

In 1978, Thomas Waites was poised to be a big Hollywood star: the kind of brooding, charismatic figure that the right film could turn into the next James Dean. He was 23 and he'd just finished wrapping his first feature — a prison flick called On the Yard, which co-starred John Heard. Already, new scripts were starting to pile up on his agent's desk.

That spring, two major studios were casting gang films in New York City: One was The Wanderers, a coming-of-age tale bankrolled by Warner Bros. and set in the Bronx of the early 1960s. The other was the Paramount Pictures adaptation of a then largely unknown novel called The Warriors. Though being made on a small budget, The Warriors promised to be a bold, run-and-gun action movie charting the exploits of a Coney Island street crew as they fought their way back from the Bronx to Surf Avenue. Locked in competition to secure the best local talent, both pictures were interested in Waites for the lead role.

It was the first time the actor — who'd been raised in the post–World War II working-class neighborhood of Levittown, Pennsylvania — would experience the opulence of major film studios. The Wanderers held its auditions in the luxurious Sherry Netherland Hotel on 59th Street in Manhattan; The Warriors was headquartered in the black-and-silver-striped Gulf and Western Building overlooking Central Park. Waites was taken to expensive dinners and Broadway shows by casting directors who told him he was one of the most interesting young actors coming up in the city, where he now lived. And while Levittown was only some 67 miles from the bright lights of New York, it may as well have been another planet.

"For me, just being there was a big deal," Waites says today. "I grew up in a violent neighborhood and there was a lot of fighting and I used to really be into that sort of bullshit. It was just awful for people."

Waites was raised in a home with eight other children — six siblings and two cousins. Money was often tight and his father was rarely around, busy working three jobs to keep the family afloat. So as a teenager, left to his own devices, Waites joined a neighborhood crew known as the Bristol Terrace Gang. They would rumble with their rivals on the rooftops of nearby schools, charging toward one another and smashing wildly at each other's bodies with pipes and fists. "I really hurt a guy one night," he remembers. "There was a big circle around us and we started fighting and I picked this guy up and threw him down and heard this girl say, 'He's really tough!' That went right to my suffering, depleted ego. I thought, 'That's what I'm going to be. That's what I'm going to do well: fuck people up.' "

Despite his tough-guy image, he discovered drama in high school, taking on the role of a Russian spy in a stage production of Woody Allen's Don't Drink the Water.

"The audience listened," he says of his first experience onstage. "It was the first time in my life anyone had ever listened to me."

After high school he was accepted to Juilliard in Manhattan. And by his early twenties he found himself reading a script for a major motion picture that spoke directly to his own experiences, a story that illustrated the trials of rough-and-tumble street kids as they clawed their way out of a hopeless situation. He felt the screenplay was a little thin, with the gratuitous violence portrayed in its pages striking a bit too close to home — but he could connect with the narrative. Waites wanted to be a Warrior.

He traveled to the Gulf and Western Building one last time to meet with the film's producer Lawrence Gordon, director Hill, and Deborah Van Valkenburgh, who would later be cast to play the movie's smoky-eyed femme fatale, Mercy. Though Philip Kaufman, the director of The Wanderers, had asked him not to accept any roles until his picture had cast its lead, the next day Paramount offered Waites the lead role of Fox in The Warriors, $1,500 a week, and an additional $50,000 option deal — more money than he had ever seen in his life.

Remember the Warriors: Behind the Chaotic, Drug-Fueled, and Often Terrifying Making of a Cult Classic

Illustration by Mike Tofanelli

Larry Gordon first came across Yurick's novel while browsing through a bookstore in Hollywood, searching, as he often did, for new film projects to snatch up. Gordon already had a few small films under his belt, but was still a few years away from becoming one of Hollywood's most successful producers. He would go on to launch the Die Hard and Predator movie franchises and serve as president of 20th Century Fox from 1984 to 1986. But in the late Seventies, he dug through the bargain book bins himself.

The novel was shabby-looking and missing its cover, but something about the story — eight boys from Coney Island battling their way through enemy territory after attending a gang summit in the Bronx — caught Gordon's eye. He called Yurick up himself and made a deal for the rights before shopping them to Paramount.

"It was a big gamble," Gordon remembers of producing the film. "The movie was a very difficult movie, but I knew we were making something exceptional."

While The Warriors was Gordon's idea, it was Hill's vision that would ultimately shape the film. The two had worked together twice before: first on 1975's Hard Times, and then again on The Driver, a crime thriller starring Ryan O'Neal that would be released in July of 1978.

Hill took an earlier screenplay of The Warriors drafted by writer David Shaber — a fairly faithful adaptation of the novel — and stripped it down to its bones. The dialogue was now hard-boiled and spare, the action sprawling. Hill planned to film the picture on location in some of the roughest neighborhoods in New York City while using a cast of young, untested actors in the leads and real gang members as extras. The film's aesthetic would blend the grime of 1970s New York with the hyperrealism of a graphic novel — an approach inspired in part by a character in Yurick's novel who busies himself reading a comic-book adaptation of Xenophon's Anabasis, the ancient story of 10,000 Greek mercenaries who warred their way out of the depths of the Persian empire.

"I was — how do I say this — half-crazy in those days," explains Hill, whose Driver would bomb terribly at the box office shortly after he'd begun production on The Warriors. "I had the feeling that I wasn't going to last very long as a director, so I wanted to get my licks in."

The Warriors director Walter Hill: “You have to remember, this was a long time ago. I was, how do I say this, half-crazy in those days.”
The Warriors director Walter Hill: “You have to remember, this was a long time ago. I was, how do I say this, half-crazy in those days.”
Amanda Lopez

Even with just one movie credit to his name, Waites was among the most experienced actors on set. To support him and Van Valkenburgh, Gordon and Hill auditioned dozens of New York City actors, assembling a ragtag group to portray the likes of Swan, Cleon, Ajax, Cowboy, Cochise, Snow, Rembrandt, and Vermin. Together they would form the Coney Island Warriors. Hill had handpicked Michael Beck, the actor cast to play the gang's de facto leader, Swan, after seeing him perform alongside Sigourney Weaver in a small Israeli film called Madman. But even more than résumés and acting ability, Hill was looking for actors who could physically withstand the grueling pace of his shooting schedule.

In the late Seventies, Paramount was notorious for being one of the toughest Hollywood studios to work for; they wanted their films made fast and cheap. To be a Warrior would mean running all night, every night, through the sweltering summer streets of Brooklyn, Manhattan, Queens, and the Bronx. It would mean showing up for work at six in the evening and not wrapping until the crew could see the sun rise over the East River. It would mean hopping subway turnstiles and enduring the taunts of the local street gangs. The line separating art and life would become blurred, the making of the film an adventure in and of itself.

"I was really going to put them through it out there," Hill remembers. "You never quite knew what you were going to run into."

The trouble started almost immediately. Hill and Frank Marshall, the film's executive producer, had badly miscalculated just how difficult it would be to shoot on location in New York City — and in the middle of the night. Both had grown up along the beach in Southern California, and neither anticipated how short the summer nights could be in New York City. The film needed to take place in total darkness, and a normal day of shooting shrank to just a few shadowy hours in the early, predawn morning. The picture quickly fell behind schedule and ran increasingly over budget. Run-ins with real gang members and hostile residents often threatened to derail the production even further.

It was Marshall's job to deal directly with the street crews. In those days, to film in a neighborhood anywhere in the five boroughs, a production had to pay off whichever individual or gang ran that piece of turf. The film had a contact inside the NYPD who would tell Marshall which gang members needed their palms greased.

"Our gang adviser would tell us what gang was part of what neighborhood, whether it was a dangerous gang or not, and we tried to go where the friendly gangs were," says Marshall, who over the years has become one of the premier film producers in Hollywood. "In those days it was really about fists and being macho. I think the worst thing that could have happened was somebody would have pulled a knife.

"It was exciting and it was dangerous," he adds. "You could never make this movie today."

If the right person didn't receive his fair share of the cut, a truck's tires might get mysteriously slashed, or a brick might fall unexpectedly from a rooftop. Once, while filming below an elevated subway track one night, Hill says a local gang began urinating on the actors from above. According to Beck, another shoot had to be called off after dozens of kids swarmed the block's abandoned buildings, jeering the Warriors incessantly from the normally vacant windows.

"There were city permits that you had to have to shoot, and those cost a standard amount, but then there was the cash you had to have on hand to spread around to keep everybody happy," Marshall says. "It was all part of getting permission to be in the neighborhoods. The different territories were very much like in the movie. We would be on some gang's turf, and even though it was a movie, sometimes they were upset by our guys wearing their colors."

As the cast began to bond during filming — feeling more and more like a real gang each day — the actors would wear their costumes out in the city between takes. The uniforms were leather vests, or "cuts," with the Warriors insignia and colors patched to the backs, loosely resembling those of the Hell's Angels. The cuts put fear in some and drew derision from others. On more than one occasion the actors were challenged to prove their machismo, dared to convince the local gangs that they were worthy of wearing their colors. Whether they were actors filming a movie or not, cuts could not be worn through a gang's turf without risking a fight.

"It didn't bother me because I'm a New Yorker. On the Lower East Side, where I grew up, there were gangs galore," remembers David Harris, the actor who played Cochise. Now 56, he's sitting with his legs folded on a curb outside the 72nd Street subway station, the location where the Warriors first meet one of their fiercest rivals, the Baseball Furies. "It was the times. Gangs were boppin'. They were doing their thing. Especially in the South Bronx. I mean, the South Bronx was riddled with real bad gangs."

NYC native David Harris, a/k/a Cochise
NYC native David Harris, a/k/a Cochise
Courtesy David Harris

Remember the Warriors: Behind the Chaotic, Drug-Fueled, and Often Terrifying Making of a Cult Classic

One of the film's most iconic sequences — the conclave scene, in which gangs from all five boroughs gather in the hopes of forming a citywide crime syndicate — was set in the Bronx's Van Cortlandt Park, but shot at Riverside Park on the Upper West Side. In the movie, thousands of juvenile delinquents are supposed to have gathered to hear Cyrus, the prophetic leader of the Gramercy Riffs (played by the late Roger Hill), speak of uniting an army strong enough to take on the city's police force.

With the budget too tight to wardrobe hundreds of extras, and the film feeling a dire need to make peace with the neighborhood's ruling crews, the production enlisted local gang members to join the mob. Ultimately, it is their fists the audience sees raised in the air in solidarity, their cries of angst heard in response to Cyrus's message of revolution.

As Hill, Marshall, and Gordon struggled to stay on schedule and keep the gangs at bay, the production ran into another problem: Thomas Waites was unhappy. Though the cast was growing closer each day, he thought it was unfair that eight grown men, sweating and stinking in the dog days of summer, should be forced to share one trailer. Waites was the star, after all, and felt he had a responsibility to look out for the others.

Instead of calling his agent, he threatened to report the production to the Screen Actors Guild himself. Working on a shrinking budget, and facing mounting pressure from the studio, the film responded by bringing in one extra trailer, putting four Warriors in each.

Hill and Waites had been on shaky ground from the beginning. Seeing Waites as his James Dean, Hill had invited the young actor to the Gulf and Western to watch movies like Rebel Without a Cause and East of Eden for inspiration. Waites remembers Hill offering him a glass of liquor during the screenings, but he declined. Though Waites would eventually struggle with alcoholism, he wasn't yet a heavy drinker and felt uneasy at the prospect of bonding over a drink with his new director.

Today, sitting on a park bench near his home on the Upper East Side, Waites is no longer a hardheaded 23-year-old fresh from Pennsylvania, but open, honest, and forthright — a father and a teacher. Now sober and in his sixties, his wild, curly brown hair has gone bone-white and wavy, his eyes a deep, pale blue. He's made a living over the years as a performer and an acting coach, but he maintains the slightly somber air of a man with regrets.

"It was a big mistake," he says of refusing Hill's invitation that day. "If you're going to drink, you may as well drink with your director and bond with him. And that's what the guy was asking me to do."

As filming continued, the schism between Waites and Hill grew deeper. The two would clash over dialogue, the arc of the story, and the way the shots were framed. Waites began to sneak off set between takes to get high, coming back stoned and belligerent. The violence of the scenes was starting to disturb him. The film, he thought, was drifting further and further away from the redemptive tale he had once envisioned for his character.

"We started shooting and we were laboring over these scenes with all this violence. Laboring over them," Waites recalls. "And I was getting really fucking frustrated, because I could see this was almost obscene with violence. It wasn't what I signed up for. I signed up to be part of a love story, in difficult circumstances, that changes these people."

Finally one night, roughly seven weeks into shooting, Hill had enough. The production was filming at the Hoyt-Schermerhorn station in Downtown Brooklyn — a scene in which the Warriors must make a mad dash from the cops across the subway platform. Craig Baxley, the stunt coordinator on the film, remembers Hill turning to him during the shoot and saying, "You have to come up with a way to kill this guy, because I don't want him in the movie anymore."

Stunned, Baxley demurred. Such a critical scene would take careful planning. But Hill was insistent. "I don't give a shit how you kill him," Baxley recalls the director saying. "Kill him."

After finding a crew member who resembled Waites from behind, Baxley quickly staged a stunt in which Fox is thrown off the platform by a police officer just as a train comes barreling through the station. His body is ultimately trampled on the tracks, the character all but forgotten for the final hour of the film.

"It was like someone cut my soul out and left a shell," Waites remembers. He would later demand that his name be removed from the cast altogether; he remains uncredited to this day.

The incident devastated Waites, but didn't keep him down for long. Later that same year he would appear alongside Al Pacino in the critically acclaimed courtroom drama ...And Justice for All, and in 1985 he became a member of New York City's prestigious Actors Studio. Having mended his relationship with Hill, today he only blames himself for the rift that developed between them. As an acting coach, he now helps his pupils avoid making the same mistakes he did, encouraging them to stay humble and levelheaded on set.

"I've taken responsibility for my own actions and I got a chance to apologize to Walter and make amends with him," Waites explains. "I was belligerent. And believe me, you pay for that shit. You pay for every act of belligerency and rebelliousness you engage in. Along the line, you will face the consequences for it."

Michael Beck relaxes at his lake home near Memphis, Tennessee.
Michael Beck relaxes at his lake home near Memphis, Tennessee.
Brandon Dill

Michael Beck as Swan

Michael Beck as Swan

On January 18, 1979, Michael Beck found God. He had spent much of his early life resisting the religious upbringing of his Christian family in Tennessee, instead leaving home to study acting at London's Central School of Speech and Drama. He had dabbled in the Eastern philosophies in college, nodded politely when his younger sister spoke of her devotion to Christ, but spirituality was just something that never stuck. But now, three weeks away from the release of his first big Hollywood movie — standing on the precipice of having everything he had ever dreamt of — Beck was somehow left feeling empty.

During shooting, once Waites was out of the picture, and with his own spiritual awakening still months away, Beck became the star of The Warriors. The chemistry between him and Van Valkenburgh, the female lead, was undeniable, even back in the early days of filming. With the death of Fox, Hill quickly made the decision that Beck's character, Swan, would now not only lead the gang back to Coney Island, but also get the girl.

"He was a very impressive specimen, and he was even more impressive on film," Hill says of Beck's physicality and presence onscreen. "If it wasn't working with Thomas, it wasn't too hard to figure out who was going to be the next [star]."

But hedonism was everywhere on the set, and, all of a sudden, cocaine and women were now available to Beck in even greater quantities as leading man.

"I had money in the bank. I had a couple of girlfriends. I had all the drugs I wanted to take. And my career was on the threshold," he recalls. "All of those things that I wanted were either there or potentially there, in greater intensity going forward. And the knowledge of that, or the realization of that, just didn't answer that hole in myself. That God-shaped hole."

So on January 18, just as The Warriors was about to open, Beck had what they called back home in Tennessee his "come-to-Jesus meeting." He knelt down and prayed to God and was overcome with the feeling that he had to call his sister. He listened one more time to her preach the Gospel, and was changed.

"Like Saul, the scales fell from my eyes," he remembers. "I could see and hear the truth."

From that moment on, Beck would live his life as a born-again Christian.

Despite all the hurdles, all the budget battles, all the run-ins with the gangs, The Warriors opened in 670 theaters nationwide on February 9, 1979, debuted at number one at the box office, and pulled in $10 million in its first two weeks — nearly double the film's production costs. People were lining up around the block at screenings. In a rave review for the New Yorker, Pauline Kael declared that "with Walter Hill's The Warriors movies are back to their socially conscious role of expressing the anger of the dispossessed." (Voice critic Andrew Sarris was less ef...his review, calling the film "too studiously unreal" and not "as glorious and memorable as some of its less discriminating admirers would have it.")

But the celebration was short-lived. On Monday, February 12, a nineteen-year-old boy was fatally shot at a drive-in showing of the film in Palm Springs, California. That same night, an eighteen-year-old bled out after being stabbed in a movie theater 165 miles away in Oxnard. Other incidents of violence between rival gangs and moviegoers were also reported throughout the country. The news media raced to blame the production for inciting riots.

The morning after the incidents, Larry Gordon was called in to see the bosses at Paramount — then-chairman Barry Diller, and president Michael Eisner. Gordon's job for the majority of the shoot had been to keep the bosses out of Hill's hair, giving the director the room he needed to stretch the schedule and keep on shooting. But the violence had pushed matters past the point of budget concerns.

That weekend, Gordon had broken up a fight himself in the lobby of a movie theater in Westwood, California, where he had gone to see the film with his wife, sons, and mother. Inside, the audience was screaming and stomping their feet from the moment the Wonder Wheel flashed across the screen. "It was like watching Ali and Frazier fight in Madison Square Garden," Gordon recalls.

The meeting didn't go well: Despite the film's financial success and an impassioned protest from Gordon, Paramount ultimately decided to pull the movie from theaters.

"It wasn't worth having somebody else get stabbed or shot or killed in line because of a movie we made. It just wasn't worth it," Eisner, who would later become the CEO of the Walt Disney Company, tells the Voice. "Thirty years later it maybe was an overreaction, but I think it was the right reaction." (Sarris's Voice review agrees with Eisner's modern-day assessment that pulling the film was an overreaction: "The gang members on the screen are pussycats next to many of the people I see walking in the streets," he wrote. "Hence, there is no point in banning The Warriors.")

The chemistry between Deborah Van Valkenburgh, the female lead, and Beck was undeniable, even back in the early days of filming.
The chemistry between Deborah Van Valkenburgh, the female lead, and Beck was undeniable, even back in the early days of filming.
Amanda Lopez

Van Valkenburgh as Mercy

Van Valkenburgh as Mercy

Today, remnants of that Warriors-era Coney Island can still be found. Clumps of housing projects continue to flank the beach, looming drearily over the boardwalk below. Nearby storefronts are burnt out and graffiti-ridden. Rusty barbed wire is strung haphazardly around vacant lots and desolate junkyards. On West 22nd Street, across from the sprawling Carey Gardens houses, there is a mural featuring the names of those from the neighborhood who have lost their lives to violence over the years. Scrawled next to an image of a black snub-nose pistol, the list of deceased is so long it threatens to spill off the side of the building.

Today, the gangs, the violence, and the vice depicted in the movie all still exist, but have been pushed further and further toward the city's periphery — away from 42nd Street and deeper into the shadows. The Warriors has enjoyed a second life as a cult classic, in part because it allows viewers to re-experience the grit and grime of what has become a largely romanticized vision of 1970s New York.

When the cast reconvenes later this month as part of a fan-driven effort to unite them all in Brooklyn once again, they will be returning to a Coney Island boardwalk vastly different from the one they strutted down in '78. Instead of rival gangs, they'll be swarmed by droves of enthusiastic fans eagerly awaiting the opportunity to take a picture or snag an autograph — the chance to be a part of the adventure at last.

"What we haven't said yet, and many times never quite gets said, is how much fun the movie is," Hill notes. "People liked going to the movie, and they had fun going. In a certain way, it was a very positive and pleasurable experience. That's the biggest trick of all."

Having repaired his relationship with Hill and made peace with his part in the film, Waites says he plans to attend the reunion and stand under the Wonder Wheel, once again donning his leather Warriors cut.

"The film has an innocence and a youthfulness that I don't really see that often in other pictures. There's an energy that Walter managed to harness," Waites says. "I'm sure we all wish we had do-overs in life, right? But if I had a do-over, I wouldn't have been such a pain in the neck."

The 1979 Coney Island of The Warriors

The 1979 Coney Island of The Warriors
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Scandal Season 5 Trailer: Olivia Pope and the Prez are still hooking up.

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Julio Iglesias 'Mexico': Singer To Debut First Spanish-Language Studio Album In 12 Years

Julio Iglesias will release "Mexico," his first Spanish-language album in over a decade. Courtesy/Sony Music

It's been over a decade since Julio Iglesias last released a Spanish-language album with "Divorcio" in 2003. Now, 12 years later, the romantic crooner from Spain will release "Mexico," his new studio album set for release on September 25th.

In this album, which includes 12 tracks with Mexican flavor, Iglesias pays homage to Mexico’s greatest songwriters. “This record is dedicated to the outstanding composers who, generation after generation, filled our lives with love, nostalgia, memories and moments. After all these years, they remain alive in our souls. With all my respect and profound admiration," he said.

This isn't the first time that the 71-year-old GRAMMY Award-winning singer pays tribute to the country. His first album to Mexico was in 1976, following his first performance in the country, where he quickly won over the support of many.

“Mexico is a country that I love dearly. The Mexican people have given me many indelible moments in my life. I know this country as if it was my homeland, and I always carry it in my soul. Mexican music is universal, and its composers are legendary," Mr. Iglesias said.

"Mexico" is already available for pre-order on iTunes. The album's first single "Fallaste Corazon" can be enjoyed below.

Inside John Belushi's Long Lost Punk Song With Fear

'SNL' actor recorded "Neighbors" with Lee Ving & Company in 1981, but it's getting its first release this year

By Kory Grow September 10, 2015
John Belushi; Lee Ving John Belushi teamed with Lee Ving and the rest of L.A. punk band Fear for the 1981 single "Neighbors." Barbara Biro

For years, Lee Ving, the vocalist and leader of impish punk bruisers Fear, has been teasing the release of a song the group recorded with John Belushi in 1981. He's finally putting out the tune — the appropriately snotty-sounding "Neighbors," which was supposed to accompany the Belushi movie of the same name — digitally on Halloween and as a special seven-inch in November. But even before the decades-long wait for its release, the origins of the recording were steeped in strife.

40 Best 'Saturday Night L...l Time »

The SNL actor became a fan of Fear after catching them on the L.A.-based music-TV show New Wave Theatre in 1980. He got in touch with the show's host, Peter Ivers, who gave the actor Ving's phone number. "We had a couple of beers and became fast friends," the Fear frontman recalls. Belushi asked Fear to write a song for the movie he was making at the time, Neighbors, a comedy about a family whose lives change when a younger couple, played by Dan Aykroyd and Cathy Moriarty, move in next door. The group obliged him on the offer, writing a plodding, charging barnburner.

Fear recorded the tune at Cherokee Studios in Los Angeles with Belushi's Blues Brothers buddy, legendary Stax Records house guitarist Steve Cropper, producing. But initially Belushi didn't want to sing on it. "I kept arguing with John, 'I wrote the lyrics for you to sing,'" Ving recalls. "I was quite militant on the punk-rock issue of being punk-correct in that I wasn't looking forward to singing lyrics that I had written for someone else to sing that were based on a movie that didn't touch my life. The lyrics weren't authentic enough for me to sing them. We went back and forth, and eventually John says, 'OK, OK, I'll sing it.' John, being such a good mimic, sings it, and you can tell it's not me." Ving sang backup on the recording, and then eventually he relented and recorded his own lead vocal take with Belushi on backup, which he did not intend to release at the time.

The three-minute tune kicks off with a typically punk — and typically Fear — "1-2-3-4, 1-2-3-4!" before a throbbing guitar line comes in and Belushi asks, "Where the fuck are we?" Then it kicks in with a powerful chorus ("Neighbors/Like your neighbors"), sung with the same the sort of slanted melody that made songs like "Let's Have a War" and "I Don't Care About You" on Fear's 1982 debut The Record snide punk classics. The lyrics directly reference the movie's characters and plot, including some spoilers, all sandwiching the sound of Belushi hawking up a loogie and saying, "Sorry folks, but you can color us gone." It closes with a sax solo and elastic guitar solo, as Belushi and Ving shout the title. The movie, which was Belushi's last before his death of an overdose in 1982, would go on to become a box-office hit. But it wouldn't include his recording with Fear.

Fear; John Belushi John Belushi arranged for Fear to perform on 'Saturday Night Live' after their song was cut from his movie 'Neighbors.' (c) 2015 FEAR/Barbara Biro

When Belushi presented the song to Neighbors' producers, they were appalled by it and refused to use it, much to the actor's chagrin. So Belushi, feeling like he wanted to do right by his new friends, arranged for Fear to be booked as the musical guests for Saturday Night Live's Halloween episode in 1981. It would become one of the show's most notorious musical segments. Rowdy punks — including Belushi, then–Minor Threat frontman Ian MacKaye and the Cro-Mags' Harley Flanagan and John Joseph — moshed and stormed the stage as the group played "Let's Have a War." It didn't go the way NBC had hoped it would when they agreed to have the band on.

"It was great," Ving remembers. "Apparently everyone has a problem with the censors at SNL. We had nothing to do with the expletive uttered by an audience member. John had called some of friends of his from Washington, D.C., and said, 'Would you come to New York to be in the audience for Fear?' He wanted 15 to 20 people, but they stopped in Baltimore and Philly before they got to New York and arrived with 35, 45 people. It was members of punk-rock bands so it was an actual punk-rock audience.

"The real audience at Saturday Night Live was scared to death," he continues. "They didn't know what was happening with all the mayhem. The camera people were trying to protect their cameras. Dick Ebersol, who was stage manager, got hit in the chest with a pumpkin. It smashed all over his shirt. As we finish 'Let's Have a War,' one of the kids grabs the microphone, stuck it in his mouth and screamed, 'Fuck New York!' And the main NBC guy was at home watching with his wife and freaked out, calling the station saying, 'Go to stock footage. Cut, cut, cut.' They swore that night they'd never rebroadcast our footage. As a result, I have become one of the esteemed members of the permanently banned."

Fear Fear performs on 'Saturday Night Live' on October 31st, 1981. Alan Singer/NBCU Photo Bank/Getty

Although the show's producers have since allowed the footage to air, in truncated form, Ving is still miffed at the way they've been treated. "It was shortsighted of the Saturday Night Live staff and ownership to dis-include the performance in their anniversary episodes," he says. "It has to be looked at as historical footage, which it is. They seem to be overlooking the fact and losing the sense of humor about the whole idea. I had a sense of humor at the whole idea of starting Fear. It was extremely humorous to me, and I think John saw that humor. That's what attracted him to the whole idea, but there are those who have their finger on the 'Yes' and 'No' buttons at SNL that did not have that sense of humor."

Belushi died of an overdose of cocaine and heroin in March of the following year, crushing the singer's spirits. "It was such a tragedy," Ving says. "And it could have happened to any of us at that time. It was an extremely bad luck turn of events; it was nobody's plan and nobody's fault. Not even the girl who administered it. It's just a tragedy with a capital 'T.'"

Fear; John Belushi Belushi with Fear on October 31st, 1981. (c) 2015 FEAR/Barbara Biro

In the months that followed the actor's death, the Fear frontman didn't feel comfortable issuing the song. "What happened was so devastating to all of us that we almost didn't want to do anything with anybody we knew prior to that terrible event," Ving says. "It disrupted all of our lives."

The singer held onto a "beat-up old cassette tape" of the song he'd grabbed as a reference for years. The idea to put it out now came up while Ving was prepping for the October release of a 30th-anniversary reissue of Fear's More Beer LP. "I didn't know what the rights were to the song or who had the two-inch tape," he says. "It turns out my business partner is friends with [John Belushi's widow] Judy Pisano, so he contacted her — she's a sweetheart — and she had the two-inch." Ving worked out an arrangement with Belushi's estate, arranging for its official release.

Ving touched it up at Dave Grohl's Studio 606 earlier this year ("It's not exactly Steve Cropper's mix, but it's based off that," he says), and prepped two unique sides for the seven-inch: The first will feature Belushi singing with Ving on backup, and the flipside will sport the version with Ving on lead with Belushi backing him up. "We're very proud of it," Ving says.

The "Neighbors" single is available for preorder, as is the 30th-anniversary edition of More Beer.

Carrie Underwood Plots New Tour and London Performance

With 'Storyteller' due out October 23rd, country megastar preps for European festival and headlining trek

By Andrew Leahey September 9, 2015
Carrie Underwood Carrie Underwood's schedule remains filled, thanks to a newly-added performance at Apple Music Festival. Rick Diamond/Getty Images

Six months after the birth of her first child, Carrie Underwood is gearing up for another headlining tour.

Speaking with CMT, Underwood hinted at plans to hit the highway in early 2016, explaining, "We're working out the details right now — tour routing and figuring out who's going to come out with us and all that stuff. It takes a lot of love and a lot of planning. I feel like within the next couple of months, we should be announcing everything. We’ll just put it out there!"

The tour will help promote Storyteller, Underwood's first album of new material in more than three years. Released on the heels of Greatest Hits: Decade #1, the album already sports a Top Five radio hit in "Smoke Break," a song Underwood wrote with Chris DeStefano and Hillary Lindsey. Although she's kept a tight lid on the rest of the album's sound, "Smoke Break" points toward the familiar intersection of modern country and polished, punchy pop-rock, an area the singer has mined with platinum-selling results before. Storyteller arrives October 23rd.

Also on the horizon is a headlining appearance at this year's Apple Music Festival in London. Underwood will perform on September 21st, three days into the 10-day festival, and joins a roster that also includes Pharrell Williams, Ellie Goulding, One Direction, Florence + The Machine, Mumford & Sons, Take That and Disclosure. Although the event takes place inside the 168 year-old Roundhouse, Underwood's set will also be streamed live via Apple Music. She is the first country music artist ever to headline the event.

Israel’s debt with Dominicans unpayable: Nobel laureate

Sep 10 at 11:52 PM
http://www.dominicantoday.com/image/article/32/460x390/0/A7EA3913-16ED-45F4-8B66-DA33B168A216.jpeg
Daniel Shechtman Nobel presentation. Photo.ats.org

Santo Domingo.- President Danilo Medina met in the National Palace Wednesday with Nobel Chemistry Prize laureate, Israeli Daniel Shechtman, to strengthen ties between the two nations.

After the meeting Shechtman thanked Medina for Dominican Republic´s welcoming Jewish refugees during World War II. "There were many Jews during the Second World War which other countries wouldn’t receive.”

The Nobel laureate in Chemistry in 2011 said his country has an unpayable debt to the Caribbean nation for that action.

He said he invited Medina to Israel, adding that they discussed high technology, the biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries among other issues, and possible ties between in Israel and Dominican universities.

Janet Jackson's Unbreakable World Tour announces new 2016 dates

September 10, 2015 4:25 PM MST
Janet Jackson's Unbreakable Tour continues into 2016
Janet Jackson's Unbreakable Tour continues into 2016
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JoeBala

Live Review: James Morrison @ Wilton’s Music Hall

I’m sure you’ve all heard those radio competitions to win tickets “for an exclusive intimate live show with…” but like me, you probably never thought you’d actually get to one. Well tonight, for me and few hundred others, we got to witness one such evening courtesy of James Morrison. The venue is Wilton’s Music Hall, one of London’s oldest original music halls, beautifully restored but with a capacity of only 300.

James Morrison plays an intimate album launch show at Wiltons Music Hall, London (Andy Sampson)James Morrison plays an intimate album launch show at Wiltons Music Hall, London (Andy Sampson)

Given this is one of his first live performances in 3 years, I’m sure he could have launched the new album Higher Than Here at The O2 or a similarly sized super-venue, so this is an interesting choice. However, as soon as he runs on stage, high-fiving the front row, you got the impression this was going to be a special night and I’m sure nobody came away disappointed.

James Morrison plays an intimate album launch show at Wiltons Music Hall, London (Andy Sampson)James Morrison plays an intimate album launch show at Wiltons Music Hall, London (Andy Sampson)

The set opens with the energy filled Under The Influence from his first album Undiscovered, before flowing straight into two more older numbers in Nothing Ever Hurt Like You and the poppier I Won’t Let You Go. They’re a perfect start to set the mood and get the crowd moving, but for me it’s the introduction of the newer songs that really raise the evening. Clearly enjoying being back on stage with this new material, James really rips into these songs with standouts for me being Heaven To A Fool and later on in the set, the really different Demons, complete with a looped backing track.

James Morrison plays an intimate album launch show at Wiltons Music Hall, London (Andy Sampson)James Morrison plays an intimate album launch show at Wiltons Music Hall, London (Andy Sampson)

Underpinning all of this is James’s truly amazing rasping soul filled voice, which is pretty effortless in its delivery and although he has a full band, and a group of 3 backing singers, they’re just there to add the layers. Yes of course there’s time for some great sing-along’s, in particular Broken Strings (“there’s been a lot of girls practicing that one” he jokes after) and some slower paced songs in the middle. But ultimately this is a seamless blend of old and new with some great modern soul songs sung from the heart.

James Morrison plays an intimate album launch show at Wiltons Music Hall, London (Andy Sampson)James Morrison plays an intimate album launch show at Wiltons Music Hall, London (Andy Sampson)

The main set closer, the more rocky Call The Police, tees everything up nicely for the encore involving You Give Me Something and the first single from the new album, the gospel influenced Higher Than Here which sends everyone off with a warm contentment that they really were part of that special intimate show.

James Morrison plays an intimate album launch show at Wiltons Music Hall, London (Andy Sampson)James Morrison plays an intimate album launch show at Wiltons Music Hall, London (Andy Sampson)

There may be a bunch of new pretenders trying to muscle in to the soul-pop genre at the moment. But all I can say is watch out Sam Smith and John Newman, James Morrison is full of new songs and energy, and he’s definitely back.!

Photography & Live Review by Andy Sampson.

http://static1.stereoboard.com/images/stories/2013/images/A-Z%20Main%20Artist%20Images/J/600x600xjames_morrison_lj_110915.jpg.pagespeed.ic.hw0_V0oM0A.jpg

James Morrison will release his fourth studio album, 'Higher Than Here', on October 30.

Live: The Monkees @ The Apollo

The 1960s music/TV phenomenon is back in town. Now reduced to just two members – Mickey Dolenz and Peter TorkThe Monkees are introduced by a series of video clips on a huge screen overhanging the stage of the Apollo.

The Monkees at Eventim Apollo in London on 4 September 2015. (Imelda Michalczyk)The Monkees at Eventim Apollo in London on 4 September 2015. (Imelda Michalczyk)

Opening up with Last Train To Clarksville, the pair and their five-strong backing band kick off with a winning first gambit for their audience of still loyal fans. Dolenz and Tork clown around and engage in charming and self-depreciating banter right from the start. It’s a relief that they’re as much fun now and in ‘real life’ as their characters appeared to be in the TV series.

The set is split into two parts, with the first including tracks such as The Girl I Knew Somewhere, Words and Mary,Mary. There are a number of references to former bandmate Mike Nesmith’s songwriting skills and rarer mentions of the fourth Monkee, Davy Jones, who passed away in 2012.

The Monkees at Eventim Apollo in London on 4 September 2015. (Imelda Michalczyk)The Monkees at Eventim Apollo in London on 4 September 2015. (Imelda Michalczyk)

Dolenz introduces Alternate Title with an explanation of its origins, telling us the song was written after a party thrown by The Beatles for The Monkees. The original title – Randy Scouse Git – was deemed too offensive by their record company, hence the incongruously bland alternative title for what is quite an admirably shouty song.

The Monkees at Eventim Apollo in London on 4 September 2015. (Imelda Michalczyk)The Monkees at Eventim Apollo in London on 4 September 2015. (Imelda Michalczyk)

Part two of the evening begins with a section devoted to some more stripped down, acoustic versions of familar numbers, before the long-awaited slide into the big classics.

The Monkees at Eventim Apollo in London on 4 September 2015. (Imelda Michalczyk)The Monkees at Eventim Apollo in London on 4 September 2015. (Imelda Michalczyk)

(I’m Not Your) Stepping Stone, Pleasant Valley Sunday and I’m A Believer finish off the night with the audience dancing (after a mostly reverently seated show) and a rush of golden feel good factor.

The Monkees at Eventim Apollo in London on 4 September 2015. (Imelda Michalczyk)The Monkees at Eventim Apollo in London on 4 September 2015. (Imelda Michalczyk)

The Monkees still pull off a truly entertaining performance – partly due to some very catchy songs and partly due to their humour and showmanship. Definitely an enjoyable revisitation of some good pop music. And an excuse not to grow up.

Photos and words by Imelda Michalczyk.


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