Tag Archives: entertainment

Goodbye, Phoebe Snow– ‘Poetry Man’ singer, Dies at 60

The amazingly gifted singer Phoebe Snow passed away today.  She was very special.

My partner, Steve, and I were privileged to see her perform at “Birdland” in New York just a couple of years ago.  We sat at a ringside table not more than a few feet from her.  That will always be a great memory for us….

She was an amazing singer and an amazing person….

Here is an excerpt from her obituary and a CBS Profile.

I’ll also post a couple of video clips of her performing…

NEW YORK – It wasn’t long after the release of “Poetry Man,” the breezy, jazzy love song that would make Phoebe Snow a star, that the singer experienced another event that would dramatically alter her life.

In 1975, she gave birth to a daughter, Valerie Rose, who was found to be severely brain-damaged. Her husband split from her soon after the baby was born. And, at a time when many disabled children were sent to institutions, Snow decided to keep her daughter at home and care for the child herself.

The decision to be Valerie’s primary caretaker would lead her to abandon music for a while and enter into ill-fated business decisions in the quest to stay solvent enough to take care of Valerie.

Snow, who worked her way back into the music performing world in the 1980s and continued to perform in recent years, died on Tuesday from complications of a brain hemorrhage she suffered in January 2010, said Rick Miramontez, her longtime friend and public relations representative. She was 60.

Snow never regretted her decision to put aside music so she could focus on Valerie’s care. She was devastated when her daughter, who was not expected to live beyond her toddler years, died in 2007 at 31.

“She was my universe,” she told the website PopEntertainment.com that year. “She was the nucleus of everything. I used to wonder, am I missing something? No. I had such a sublime, transcendent experience with my child. She had fulfilled every profound love and intimacy and desire I could have ever dreamed of.”

After her stroke last year, Snow endured bouts of blood clots, pneumonia and congestive heart failure, said her manager, Sue Cameron.

“The loss of this unique and untouchable voice is incalculable,” Cameron said. “Phoebe was one of the brightest, funniest and most talented singer-songwriters of all time and, more importantly, a magnificent mother to her late brain-damaged daughter, Valerie, for 31 years. Phoebe felt that was her greatest accomplishment.”

Known as a folk guitarist who made forays into jazz and blues, Snow put her stamp on soul classics such as “Shakey Ground,” “Love Makes a Woman” and “Mercy, Mercy Mercy” on over a half dozen albums.

via Phoebe Snow, ‘Poetry Man’ singer, dies at 60 – Yahoo! News.

Here is a clip of a profile from CBS a couple of years ago:

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Happy Birthday, Barbra Streisand and Shirley MacLaine

Two icons were born today:  Barbra Streisand is 69 and Virginia’s own Shirley MacLaine is 77….

Of course, I have to put up a couple of clips:

A little prime Streisand:

And a little MacLaine:

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Judy Garland: Over the Rainbow, and Then Some!

In recognition of her Carnegie Hall Concert 50 years ago tonight, there’s a lot of new interest in Judy Garland.

Here is a great article from this month’s Vanity Fair:

In December 1959, Judy Garland, only 37 but with a quarter-century of hard living behind her, lay near death in New York’s Doctors Hospital. Alcohol and pills were the culprits. When in reasonably good health, Garland, who stood an inch under five feet, weighed 100 pounds. Now she weighed 180. Her tiny frame was grotesquely swollen with fluid and her liver severely compromised. Her eyes were glazed; her memory was failing; her body was shutting down. Walking by Garland’s hospital room, a close friend overheard a clutch of doctors discussing her condition. One of them turned to the friend. “I have to tell you the truth,” the doctor said. “I don’t think she’s going to make it.”

She made it. “She had the constitution of an army,” Garland’s daughter Lorna Luft says. “She just knew she had to keep going.” But three weeks later, after 20 quarts of fluid had been drained from her body, her lead physician told Garland, “For the rest of your life, all your physical activity must be curtailed. You are a permanent semi-invalid.… It goes without saying that under no circumstances can you ever work again.”

Garland fell back onto her pillows. “Whoopee!” she cried, weakly.

More:  Over the Rainbow, and Then Some! | Vanity Fair.

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50 Years Ago Tonight: Judy at Carnegie Hall

Judy Garland’s legendary Carnegie Hall Concert was 50 years ago tonight…

There is a new documentary about the night, “Stay All Night” currently in production.

Here is a another clip about that night:

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Jesus vs The Easter Bunny

I can’t help myself….

I thought this was hilarious and had to share it….

As you can tell from the title, some folks might not like this….

If you think you might be offended, please don’t watch it…

I don’t want to offend, only entertain…

And I found this very entertaining!

There’s a longer version on YouTube if you want to search it out…..

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Rich and Famous

I can’t believe it’s been 30 years since this movie was released….

It’s not the best film in the world, but I do love it…

It’s a guilty pleasure…

Jacqueline Bisset, Candice Bergen, Hart Bochner….all in their prime.

It was the last film George Cukor directed and the first film for Meg Ryan….

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Tyler Perry To Spike Lee: ‘Go Straight To Hell’

This is an interesting dynamic….

All I’ll say is that I tried to watch the first Tyler Perry Madea movie on HBO and thought it was just awful.  I couldn’t believe the stereotypical characters and the bad acting and writing….

I couldn’t watch the whole thing it was so bad….

But this isn’t my fight…

From The Huffington Post:

The long-simmering war of words between Tyler Perry and Spike Lee is heating up again.

Perry, in both a message on his website and a press conference to promote “Madea’s Big Happy Family,” hit out against Lee, who in 2009 said, among other things, that Perry’s films “harken back to ‘Amos n’ Andy’.” While Perry’s website message was vague and resilient, defending his work as both spiritually uplifting and fun, his words for Lee were blunt and harsh in the press conference.

“I’m so sick of hearing about damn Spike Lee,” Perry said during the press conference (via Box Office Magazine). “Spike can go straight to hell! You can print that. I am sick of him talking about me, I am sick of him saying, ‘this is a coon, this is a buffoon.’ I am sick of him talking about black people going to see movies. This is what he said: ‘you vote by what you see,’ as if black people don’t know what they want to see.”

Perry’s films are consistent high performers at the box office; all independently financed, they’ve taken in over $520 million in ticket receipts over the past six years. He recently extended his deal with distributor Lionsgate, with whom he has worked since 2005. Lee was critical in spite of that success.

“Each artist should be allowed to pursue their artistic endeavors, but I still think there is a lot of stuff out today that is coonery and buffoonery,” he said in ’09. “I know it’s making a lot of money and breaking records, but we can do better. … I am a huge basketball fan, and when I watch the games on TNT, I see these two ads for these two shows (Tyler Perry’s ‘Meet the Browns’ and ‘House of Payne’), and I am scratching my head. We got a black president, and we going back to Mantan Moreland and Sleep ‘n’ Eat?”

via Tyler Perry To Spike Lee: ‘Go Straight To Hell’.

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Happy Birthday, Patti Lupone

Broadway’s original Evita is 62 today….

Here are a couple of clips of her at her best….

Here she is in her first Tony Award winning performance in “Evita 32 years ago…

I won’t post her second Tony Award winning performance as Moma Rose in “Gypsy” because I just hated her performance….

She was on a total ego trip in that show….It was over the top and out of control.

But I have also seen her in concert and found her  quite charming…

But here is a taste of her in better form today…

Say what you will, the woman sure knows how to own the stage….

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Michael Sarrazin: Rest in Peace

I read today that Michael Sarrazin had died…

He was one of my favorite actors when I was a pre-teen and a teenager…I had looked him up on IMDB.com not too long ago to see what he was doing…

He hit fairly big in the late 1960’s and early 1970’s, but his career never really took off from there…

His eyes were unforgettable…

He missed his big chance when his studio would not release him to do “Midnight Cowboy” and Jon Voight got the part instead…

I remember Michael Sarrazin well from “They Shoot Horses, Don’t They”, “Sometimes a Great Notion” and the TV Mini Series”Frankenstein:  The True Story”.   He made many other films and TV appearances that will live on….

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100 Best Albums of the Eighties | Rolling Stone

A trip down memory lane for a few of us…

I kept thinking of missing albums, like Boz Scaggs “Silk Degrees”  and Fleetwood Mac’s “Rumors” when I realized they were from the late 1970’s…

I am getting senile…

This has been the first rock  roll decade without revolution, or true revolutionaries, to call its own. The Fifties witnessed nothing less than the birth of the music. The Sixties were rocked by Beatlemania, Motown, Phil Spector, psychedelia and Bob Dylan. The Seventies gave rise to David Bowie, Bruce Springsteen, heavy metal, punk and New Wave.

In comparison, the Eighties have been the decade of, among other things, synth pop, Michael Jackson, the compact disc, Sixties reunion tours, the Beastie Boys and a lot more heavy metal. But if the past ten years haven’t exactly been the stuff of revolution, they have been a critical time of re-assessment and reconstruction. Musicians and audiences alike have struggled to come to terms with rock’s parameters and possibilities, its emotional resonance and often dormant social consciousness.

The following survey of the 100 best albums of the Eighties, as selected by the editors of Rolling Stone, shows that the music and the values it stands for have been richer for the struggle. Punks got older and more articulate in their frustration and rage, while many veteran artists responded to that movement’s challenge with their most vital work in years. And rap transformed the face — and voice — of popular music.

via 100 Best Albums of the Eighties | Rolling Stone Music | Lists.

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