U.K. Broadcaster ITV Invests in Believe Entertainment
September 10, 2014 | 09:11AM PT
Believe Entertainment Group, which produces digital series like the animated “The LeBrons” and Jay Mohr’s game show “Money Where Your Mouth Is,” has secured financing from U.K. television broadcaster and producer ITV.
Specific financial terms of the deal were not disclosed, but ITV will join Believe’s board of directors and work to expand the company’s slate of projects with its production expertise, international distribution and talent relationships.
“ITV will offer numerous opportunities for us to grow our efforts in multiple formats, channels and globally to the benefit of both our talent and brand partners,” Believe co-founders Dan Goodman and William Masterson III said.
ITV is one of the largest independent producer of unscripted shows in the U.S., with series like “Hell’s Kitchen,” “Kitchen Nightmares” and “Rich Kids of Beverly Hills.”
New York-based Believe recently started producing “@EpicEDM,” an original series featuring top electronic dance music artists, festivals and clubs designed for Twitter.
Its shows also include “In the Booth,” a YouTube series about DJ Tiesto; and “Inspired by Sabrina,” a women’s lifestyle show hosted by HGTV star Sabrina Soto, available on AOL.
“The LeBrons,” featur...Bron James, launched on YouTube, and is syndicated to Xbox Live.
The company paired up with Paramount Digital Entertainment, in 2010, to help sell and distribute the digital series “The Legion of Extraordinary Dancers,” created by director Jon M. Chu (“G.I. Joe: Retaliation,” the “Step Up” franchise).
Believe’s co-founders previously produced Seth MacFarlane’s “Cavalcade of Cartoon Comedy” and shorts that helped promote Sacha Baron Cohen’s “Bruno.”
“Believe Entertainment Group’s expertise has generated hundreds of millions of views in just under five years,” said Paul Buccieri, chairman of ITV Studios U.S. Group and ITV Studios Global Entertainment. “This added to Dan and Bill’s combined 35 years in advertising, digital, media and entertainment, makes them a compelling strategic partner for ITV.”
.
Ora.TV Brings TV Series ‘Beer Geeks’ to Digital Under Exclusive Deal
September 10, 2014 | 12:32PM PT
Ora TV, the online network owned by Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim, signed a deal with Page Prods. for exclusive digital distribution of 22-episode series “Beer Geeks” about the world of craft beer.
The company will premiere the first two episodes on Sept. 18 on Ora.TV, with new episodes going up every subsequent week. The series was created and exec produced by David Page and Roberta Brackman, best known for Food Network’s “Diner... Guy Fieri.
“Beer Geeks” aired on TV starting in the fall of 2013 through syndication deals with TV stations including Hearst’s WCVB ABC affiliate in Boston, Media General’s WJAR NBC affil in Providence, Gannett’s WTSP afil ABC in Tampa as well as stations owned by Tribune Media, Meredith, Gray and Lin Media.
Series centers on master brewer Michael Ferguson (pictured, above), who is director of brewery operations for BJ’s Restaurants, which has locations in Virginia and Maryland. “Beer Geeks,” nominated for a 2014 Daytime Emmy Award, explores the world of beer creation and the range of beer enthusiasts who “dedicate their lives to making the most distinctive beers in the world,” per Ora TV.
Ora TV launched in July 2012 with “Larry King Now,” available on Hulu and on Ora.tv. Other shows include Haylie Duff’s “Real Girl’s Kitchen,” which was picked up by Scripps Networks Interact...ng Channel; “Brown Bag Wine Tasting” with William Shatner; and “Off The Grid” with Jesse Ventura.
.
Fantastic Fest Adds Salma Hayek's 'Everly,' 'The Hive'
1:38 PM PDT 9/10/2014 by Rebecca Ford
James Gunn, Edgar Wright, Nicolas Winding Ref and Joe Lynch will attend
Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP
Salma Hayek
Fantastic Fest announced its final wave of programming Wednesday, with highlights including the world premiere of David Yarovesky’s The Hive and screenings of Everly starring Salma Hayek and The Town That Dreaded Sundown.
A slew of filmmakers will be in attendance, including Guardians of the Galaxy director James Gunn, who will moderate the red carpet world premiere of The Hive. Edgar Wright will serve on the Next Wave film jury while other guests include Joe Lynch, Liv Corfixen, Nicolas Winding Refn, Ti West, Nacho Vigalondo, Alfonso Gomez-Rejon and David Robert Mitchell.
“We promised that our 10th anniversary was going to be the most deranged yet, and I’m proud to say we’ve delivered on that promise,” festival founder Tim League said in a statement. “Not only have we compiled our biggest slate of exceptional genre films, but the chaos we’ve embraced for our events is going to knock people out. Much like I’m going to do to Ti West.”
League will duke it out with West as part of the “Fantastic Debates” event, which pits two people in a verbal debate followed by a boxing match.
Fantastic Fest, which also announced screenings for Horns, It Follows and Open Windows, will host a 10-year birthday Armageddon opening night party featuring costumed creatures, human pinatas, a breakdance competition and a food fight. The closing night party takes its macabre cues from ABCs of Death 2 by running down the alphabet from A to Z, “unleashing a massive meltdown of madcap mayhem.”
As previously announced, Lionsgate’s Keanu Reeves-starrer John Wick, Nightcrawler starring Jake Gyllenhaal and Tusk also will screen during the fest.
Fantastic Fest 2014 takes place Sept. 18-25 in Austin, Texas.
.
Michael C. Hall to Star in Broadway's 'Hedwig and the Angry Inch'
10:00 AM PST 09/08/2014 by Ashley Lee
AP Images
Michael C. Hall
The "Dexter" actor will take over the lead played by Neil Patrick Harris and Andrew Rannells
A serial killer is headed to Broadway, as Dexter star Michael C. Hall is next in line to don a wig and heels in Hedwig and the Angry Inch.
The actor, who starred in the Showtime series for eight seasons, will take over the title role on Oct. 16 at the Belasco Theatre. His limited engagement will run through Jan. 4, opposite Tony-winner Lena Hall.
Hedwig — which has a book by John Cameron Mitchell and music and lyrics by Stephen Trask — centers on an East German transgender rocker searching for love and completeness in America. The lead character of the Tony-winning musical revival was previously played by Neil Patrick Harris and is currently rocked by Andrew Rannells, who will play his final performance on Oct. 12.
The move marks Hall's first musical theater role in over a decade — he made his Broadway debut as the emcee in Cabaret in 1999 and played Billy Flynn in Chicago in 2002. Most recently, he starred in Will Eno's 2014 Broadway production of the play The Realistic Jones, directed by Sam Gold and co-starring Toni Collette, Tracy Letts and Marisa Tomei.
Off-Broadway, Hall's credits include the Roundabout Theatre Company's Mr. Marmalade, Cymbeline, Macbeth, Timon of Athens and Henry V at the Public Theater/New York Shakespeare Festival, The English Teachers for MCC, the Manhattan Theatre Club's Corpus Christi, Romeo and Juliet at Center Stage, R Shoman at Williamstown and Skylight at the Mark Taper Forum.
.
SiriusXM to Launch Barbra Streisand Channel
8:51 AM PST 09/08/2014 by Hilary Lewis
WireImage/Courtesy of UTA
Barbra Streisand
But after a month, you'll be left with memories of the way things were
SiriusXM is launching an exclusive, limited-run station featuring the works of Barbra Streisand, the satellite radio giant announced Monday.
Starting this Friday (Sept. 12) at 5 p.m. ET, through Oct. 10, fans can tune into The Barbra Streisand Channel on Sirius channel 69, XM channel 73 and the SiriusXM Internet Radio App.
The channel will feature live and studio recordings spanning Streisand's career, from her 1963 debut to her newest album, Partners, set to be released on Sept. 16, as well as personal song selections.
The channel will have a Town Hall special with Streisand in which she'll sit down for an intimate Q&A with SiriusXM listeners in New York. The Town Hall is set to air on Sunday, Sept. 14, at noon and will be available on demand after that.
Streisand's channel joins SiriusXM channels devoted to Bruce Springsteen, Jimmy Buffett, Willie Nelson, Elvis, Frank Sinatra, Eminem, Neil Diamond and more.
Sirius XM president and chief content officer Scott Greenstein said in a statement: "Barbra Streisand is an artist who is the very definition of the word 'icon.' Her original voice, songwriting, performances and life's work has made her a universal star and humanitarian leader. Along the way, she has created some of the best-selling albums of all time, as well as being an award-winning actress known for her work on stage, film and TV. Our exclusive channel celebrating Ms. Streisand is a truly comprehensive and deep dive into the music of one of the world's most important artists ever. We are looking forward to welcoming Ms. Streisand to our studios to be a part of our Town Hall series and discuss her new album with her fans."
.
France's King Crooner Charles Aznavour Comes to Los Angeles
3:14 PM PST 09/10/2014 by Rhonda Richford
AP Images
Charles Aznavour
France's most famous singer talks diplomacy and fame: "They come on 'The Voice' and think they are stars, and they will never be."
Charles Aznavour, France’s most famous crooner will take to the stage at the Greek Theater Saturday for the first of three North American shows. While the singer, best known for hits such as Toi et Moi, Hier Encore and She, downplays the cross-continent trip that will also take him to Montreal and New York – “I’m too old to tour,” he says – the ninety-year-old will follow with performances in Antwerp and Moscow before recording a new album in Paris for a December release.
Songs in both Spanish and Russian will be on the L.A. bill to please the diverse local audience, only a small sampling of the many languages he speaks and sings in.
The singer, who started his career under Edith Piaf, palled around with Ray Charles and drank Petrus with Frank Sinatra, now serves as the Armenian ambassador to Switzerland and the country’s permanent delegate to the UN. He is also active in international diplomacy and humanitarian causes through his foundation.
Aznavour sat down with The Hollywood Reporter in his villa just outside of Avignon, which the ever creative singer designed and decorated himself in traditional south of France style. Before sitting down in the music room where he writes and composes, we were greeted by his Chihuahua mix Loki, a rescue from Los Angeles where his daughter and grandchildren reside.
What keeps you working so consistently at an age when most people are retired?
If you don’t constantly work and have ideas, we age in our minds and that is the most terrible aging. The knees are difficult, but as long as the mind is working, everything works. I have plenty of plans for another ten years. I want to be the only singer still singing on stage at 100 years old. That will be great, the only one in the world! Only 10 years to wait. Unfortunately, that’s really short.
How do you approach your role as ambassador?
I am able to be active in diplomacy; for example, we have brought 12,000 people to Armenia from Syria. We have to get them out of the country because they are going to be killed because they are Christian. Not just Armenians who are Christian, Yadizis, and some Kurds too which are Muslim but live differently. It’s not politics, no politics at all. It’s diplomacy.
I work by myself and I tell people what I have done afterwards. I don’t ask the president what I should do. I think that would be too difficult. For example, I have an upcoming appointment with the ambassador of Turkey, which is rare. I don’t want to say before that I am going to go, because they’ll say ‘Don’t do that’ or ‘Don’t go there’ and I want to be a free man. There are difficulties with not only Turks that don’t want to recognize the genocide but some Armenians that don’t want me to be friendly with the Turks. So I have to be careful. But I want to be on the contrary and have good relations with the Turks. I have nothing against the Turks because they didn’t create the genocide, it came from their grandfathers. On April 15th it will be 100 years that they haven’t recognized it, so if I can help in any way I’m gonna do it. I hope that I can help something happen between the two countries.
Is your humanitarian work an extension of that?
I have my association which is Aznavour for Armenia. It’s difficult if you don’t have a telethon or something like that, but I’ve built it. I do everything myself. I give benefit concerts and some of the income from songs. The benefit concerts will sell thousands of tickets so we make money from that. I don’t ask for donations from anyone. I work from inside, it all comes from the heart and goes directly there. I go to Armenia every year to find out for myself what the humanitarian needs are, the immediate needs. We have built new and rebuilt 47 schools and 3 surgery centers.
But be clear, I have nothing to do with the politics, I don’t want to. In my audience I have all religions, all colors, all incomes, all languages. I’m not going to betray one for the other. I’m open to everyone who likes my songs. I visit countries for my pleasure too. I went to Cambodia and Thailand, not to the beaches, but across the country to take photos. I went to China, I haven’t sung in China, but I do want to do a concert there.
You’ve been in over 70 films and were recently the French voice of Up. Any upcoming roles?
I’m retired from film. Acting takes too long. I don’t want to spend two months away from my family and my work. If there is a small part I would accept it, but I want the time to write. For the past four or five years I have started to write books, seven now, and I’m writing a fiction book for the first time. I’ve just written a musical that will be on Broadway soon called Vive le Vie about Lautrec.
There is something I would like to talk to Atom Egoyan about. I see myself having a small part. The subject is very unusual; it’s something that has never been done before. I wrote it, not for me exactly, but there is a small part that could be for me. If he doesn’t like it, well, I won’t be mad about it. I’m going to meet with him in Canada and propose the story to him, and see if he’s interested. I’ll meet with him in September when I go to Montreal.
Are there any pop stars you admire or want to work with, or new music you like?
I see the new stars, I buy their records, and I’ve done plenty of duets with rock stars. You know, there is not ‘styles of music,’ ‘kinds of music’ there are two types – the good and the bad. I’ve written a lot to help young people understand what we are doing is not easy. You can’t become a star in one day. That’s very important to help the youth understand. They sing and they will never be a big star because they sing what they think is good, but are imitating Americans, which is not their own language. I don’t know any French songs that have been famous lately in America, before it was La Vie en Rose, C’est Ce Bon, strong French songs. Pop songs, the Americans do it much better.
What do you think of the state of French music then?
French music is slowly coming back. The French people never found any rhythm, we have tango and jazz, but everything has come from outside. So I used that with French lyrics, to bring them together, which works for the public. I’m a French artist, I’m not American or Italian or Armenian. I’m French, and I want to show the public the best of what we can do in France. We are the best lyric writers, because we have kept the language alive through songs. Young people are coming back to the French songs, and they will be proud of their culture.
There’s all these contest shows, The Voice, Do you Know the Lyrics? They come on and think they are stars, and they will never be. Maybe one in ten thousand will make it. Maybe. And the shows are selling it as a dream, but to have a dream it can become a nightmare one day. We have to get young people to realize it doesn’t happen like that, it is hard work.
I’ve had three books on this matter, and now I am writing the fourth one. They were very well received. It started a conversation with young people and people in show business. I’m the boss in this country. Sinatra was the boss in America, [Julio] Iglesias is the boss in Spain, and I’m the boss in France of course. I think it’s important to have somebody to follow. I had my bosses, three: Piaf, Charles Trenet, Maurice Chevalier. They were the best.
Is there a theme for the new album?
The past. Things I have lived, things I have seen. For the first time I wrote a song about the war. It’s the first time, I have never done that before. But you know, the ideas are always in the air and right now they are all coming back so I’m coming back with them. I’m almost finished writing it. I’m correcting some things. I’m never really happy with what I have done. I have to work through it again and again and again. For one word I can stay awake two days and two nights for that one word because it doesn’t have the right balance to my ear. Nobody can replace one word in my songs. No one. The lyrics are my pride.
Look, I had this wall full of golden records, and I had to say, ‘That’s enough!’ To always look at myself there. I’m going to replace it with only pictures of family and friends.
[Walking THR through the pile of photos waiting to be hung on the empty wall, it’s not only his family - from historical snapshots of his great grandmother and elementary school photos to candids of his wife, children and grandchildren - but photos of the singer with Gerard Depardieu, Bono, Harvey Keitel, Robert DeNiro, Jackie Chan, Bob Dylan, Charles Trenet, Jean Cocteau, Yul Brynner, Lino Ventura and Piaf.]
The whole wall will be only pictures. It’s better than a wall of gold records. No more ‘Look, I sold so many records.’ I’m free now. There’s the [French medal] Legion d’Honneur. I put it in the corner so nobody can see it. I used to be proud, I’m finished with that. I say to young people, don’t be too proud, just do the work.
.
Simon Le Bon on David Lynch's 'Duran Duran: Unstaged': "It's Quite Bizarre"
4:03 PM PST 09/10/2014 by Tim Appelo
Courtesy of Press Here Publicity
The makers of 'Girls on Film' meet the auteur of 'Eraserhead'
The video-driven 1980s band Duran Duran — which "made MTV," as VJ Martha Quinn has said — will screen David Lynch's new cut of his 2011 film Duran Duran: Unstaged in about 300 U.S. theaters. The one-night-only event will take place Sept. 10, presented by Screenvision in alliance with Phase 4 Films. "It was shot at our show at the Mayan Theater in L.A.," says Simon Le Bon, lead singer for the group, which was named after the character who tries to kill Jane Fonda with an orgasm-inducing device called the Excessive Machine in the 1968 film Barbarella. The Lynch film is excessive in a way, says Le Bon. "It was an art project, and we gave him utter control over the visuals — you don't try and direct a director like David Lynch, really. It was quite bizarre, the Mayan Theater, and he set it up in a very strange way, with little niches and nooks and crannies all the way around the theater, with little tableaus, grottoes with decorations and tables and things." The film stars the original band members — Le Bon, Nick Rhodes, John Taylor and Roger Taylor — and guest performers Gerard Way (My Chemical Romance), Beth Ditto (Gossip), Kelis and Mark Ronson.
The screening, which features material from the band's All You Need Is Now album, will help promote Duran Duran's untitled 2015 album, which Le Bon says is "just going into its mixing phase," as well as Lynch's first-ever art museum retrospective, "David Lynch: The Unified Field." That exhibit opens Sept. 13 at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts in Philadelphia, where Lynch won his first art prize for his first artwork to incorporate film, 1967's Six Men Getting Sick. Its projection of images onto human forms somewhat resembles his superimposition of Lynchian weird scenes onto Duran Duran performing live, such as a scary house reminiscent of Blue Velvet to visually complement the tune "Planet Earth". "The most surreal moment for me is where he intercuts footage of somebody barbecuing sausages into the song 'Come Undone'," says Le Bon. "Not what we had in mind, but it's absolutely hilarious." Lynch also prepared a new trailer for the film.
The original Mayan Theater concert sold out in less than five minutes, and the re-release will be over in 112 minutes.
.
My night with Joan Rivers
FILE: Grand Marshall Joan Rivers at the Winterfest Boat Parade on December 12, 1991 in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. Rivers was laid to rest Sunday after she died last week from complications related to a surgery. (Photo by Manny Hernandez/GettyImages)
In my younger life, like half the writers in Los Angeles who imagine themselves being wittier and funnier than they really are, I thought I could be a comic and spent too many evenings on try-out nights at the Comedy Store on the Sunset Strip.
SEE ALSO: Joan Rivers is remembered for pushing comedic boundaries
On one of those nights, as I’m in line to go on stage, I get a tug on my butt, and think it’s one of the other wannabe comedians.
I look around, and it’s Joan Rivers. This was around 1980, when she was still opening for acts in Vegas and just before making it big.
“Sorry, just checking to see if those were your buns,” she dead-panned.
This was around the time that she, Billy Crystal, Richard Pryor and many of those who were already established would still come around regularly to check out other comics and sometimes work on their material.
I should also explain that my buns were in a slinky black evening gown, the designer kind women wear on the red carpet at the Oscars. I had on a long black wig, and some people from that time knew me as Raquel. I was doing my stand-up in drag.
Joan checked me out. I weighed around 125 pounds, if that. I was slender and small-boned. I also fit in a size 6 dress, and I had on great rhinestone-studded stilettos.
“My compliments,” Joan said. “Not what I would expect, to see on a drag queen looking so elegant on the Sunset Strip.”
I had a girlfriend my size, I told Joan, who did a double-take.
“Oh, how, I’d love to have a man like you,” she said in that gargly girly voice of hers, “a man who could help me double my wardrobe!”
Jesus. I rocked on stage that night.
How I got to meet Joan on stage
“First of all,” I began, “let me explain that the reason I’m dressed this way is that I just came from the weekly meeting of Transvestites Anonymous where we not only not tell anyone our identity, hell, we don’t know it ourselves.
“I discovered my own sexual identity crisis about a year ago when I first arrived in Hollywood from New York and attended a cocktail party at the Beverly Hills Hotel where I walked into the wrong ballroom — a ballroom that full of what I thought were beautiful women, who were actually beautiful men.
“I was just starting to realize this when one of the hostesses there unnerved me even more by looking at my name on my New York press pass and asking, “So, Mr. Castro, you’re from New York — are you one of the Castro Convertibles?”
Like what you’re reading? Check out our partner VOXXI
This is in a roomful of beautiful men pretending to be women and common courtesy telling me I couldn’t just turn and walk away.
Well, talk about my machismo springing a leak. My body broke out in a sweat of premature ejaculation! I mean, do you know what a Castro Convertible is? Do you? I sure as hell didn’t. Oh, yeah, much, much later, I learned that a Castro Convertible is a sofa with a hideaway bed — a big item in New York that made the Castro family a fortune there. Well, I’m originally from Texas – where we have no beautiful men, much less any wanting to be beautiful women — and I had no idea what a Castro Convertible was.
“I mean, I thought it was someone with both male and female genitals or something.
“Really. After all, I have a friend in the State Department who thinks a Castro Convertible is a Castro-government Cuban spy who’s been turned into a double agent by the CIA.
“I have another friend, a non-polluting, polyunsaturated, biodegradable non-smoker who swears that a Castro Convertible is a Havana cigar that’s both low in tar and high on socialism.
“And I have still another friend, an actor who moonlights as a used car salesman, who believes that a Castro Convertible is an imported Cuban sportscar – that, of course, steers only to the left.”
I would say this got me on the “Tonight Show” or even a paid gig at one of the comedy clubs in town. It didn’t.
It did get me a couple of drinks with Joan later that evening at a bar up the Strip. She said wanted to look at more of my work. But I got the impression she really wanted to see more of my wardrobe.
She recognized the gown as Christian Dior. She knew the shoes were Gucci.
Joan Rivers was even familiar with the drag queen slang.
“Do you get clocked much?” she asked. To get clocked was to be recognized as a man in drag. “I almost didn’t make you. You’re so small! I don’t think our waiter clocked you.”
“It’s the bar’s dim lights,” I said.
“Oh, hell,” said Joan. “Everyone else in here probably thinks we’re both female impersonators!”