Development began in November 2019, when it was reported that the producer Graham King had secured the rights to produce a film about Jackson, with Logan attached to write. Lionsgate announced the film in February 2022. In January 2023, Fuqua was announced as the director and Jaafar was cast as Michael. Further casting took place from January to April 2024. After delays caused by the 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike, principal photography took place between January and May 2024. After a clause was discovered in a legal settlement, references to the 1993 child sexual abuse allegations against Jackson were removed, the third act was revised, and reshoots took place in June 2025.
A TRIP DOWN MEMORY LANE
A nostalgic journey to the past to relive the golden days of entertainment!
Monday, April 27, 2026
RECENTLY VIEWED: MICHAEL
Development began in November 2019, when it was reported that the producer Graham King had secured the rights to produce a film about Jackson, with Logan attached to write. Lionsgate announced the film in February 2022. In January 2023, Fuqua was announced as the director and Jaafar was cast as Michael. Further casting took place from January to April 2024. After delays caused by the 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike, principal photography took place between January and May 2024. After a clause was discovered in a legal settlement, references to the 1993 child sexual abuse allegations against Jackson were removed, the third act was revised, and reshoots took place in June 2025.
Sunday, April 26, 2026
DON AMECHE AND TRADING PLACES
Ralph Bellamy and Ameche "cheerfully admitted" they were unfamiliar with Eddie Murphy and Dan Aykroyd's work prior to working on the film. The two also said that Murphy and Aykroyd acknowledged that they were unfamiliar with Bellamy and Ameche. While this was Bellamy's ninety-ninth film, and Ameche's forty-ninth, this was only Murphy's second film, and he joked: "Between the three of us, we've made one hundred fifty movies!"
This was Ameche's first film since "Suppose They Gave a War and Nobody Came" (1970). He had been doing television guest appearances. Ameche had no agent listed with the Screen Actors Guild, but he was in the phone book, so director John Landis simply called him and asked if he'd play the part. This movie jump started his return to theatrical films, including an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for "Cocoon" (1985)...
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
FRANK SINATRA IN 1994
But then, from the stillness, a single voice rose: “All right, Frank! Because we love you!” The words echoed through the venue, and suddenly the entire audience erupted in applause. It wasn’t polite. It was powerful, roaring, full of warmth. It reached Sinatra like a lifeline, reminding him of who he was and what he meant to people.
Moved by the outpouring, Sinatra turned around, walked back to the microphone, and dove into “Mack the Knife.” The performance that followed had all the old swagger, strength, and soul — a glimpse of the young crooner who had once commanded every room he entered. It was not a comeback. It was a reaffirmation.
That night didn't just save a performance. It extended a legend. Sinatra went on to sing for two more years, continuing to tour despite age, health, and doubt. What might have been his final curtain became one of the most touching moments of his career — not because of perfection, but because of the grace in imperfection.
Frank Sinatra may have been the Chairman of the Board, but in that moment, he was simply a man lifted by love. And thanks to one voice in the dark, the song — and the singer — went on."
Sunday, April 19, 2026
THE LAST DAYS OF CLARK GABLE
In a 2002 documentary, Eli Wallach recalled the mustang wrangling scenes Gable insisted on performing himself, "You have to pass a physical to film that" and "He was a professional going home at 5 p.m. to a pregnant wife." The New York Times found "Mr. Gable's performance as a leathery old cowboy with a realistic slant on most plain things" ironically vital, with his death before the film's release.
On November 6, 1960, Gable was sent to Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center in Los Angeles, California, where doctors found that he had suffered a heart attack. Newspaper reports the following day listed his condition as satisfactory. By the morning of November 16, he seemed to be improving, but he died that evening at the age of 59 from an arterial blood clot. Medical staff did not perform CPR for fear that the procedure would rupture Gable's heart, and a defibrillator was not available.
Thursday, April 16, 2026
JACKIE COOGAN: THE ORIGINAL CHILD STAR
The legal battle focused attention on child actors and resulted in the 1939 enactment of the California Child Actor's Bill, often referred to as the "Coogan Law" or the "Coogan Act". It required that a child actor's employer set aside 15% of the earnings in a trust (called a Coogan account), and specified the actor's schooling, work hours, and time off.
Coogan continued to act throughout his life, later earning renewed fame in middle age portraying a bumbling Uncle Fester in the 1960s television series "The Addams Family". After suffering from heart and kidney ailments, Coogan died of heart failure on March 1, 1984, at the age of 69, in Santa Monica, California. Coogan had a long history of heart trouble and hypertension and had previously suffered several strokes. He had been undergoing kidney dialysis when his blood pressure dropped. Coogan was taken to Santa Monica Hospital, where he died from cardiac arrest.At Coogan's request, his funeral was open to the public and was attended by several fans. John Astin, Coogan's co-star from The Addams Family, delivered the eulogy...
Sunday, April 12, 2026
KITTY CARLISLE AND A NIGHT AT THE OPERA
Kitty Carlisle, on working with the Marx Brothers on "A Night at the Opera" (1935):
"Groucho would come up to from time to time to ask me, 'Is this funny?'' Then, totally deadpan, he'd try out the line. I'd say, 'No, I don't think it is funny', and he'd go away absolutely crushed and try it out on everyone else in the cast. Chico was always playing cards in the back room and had to be called on the set. Harpo would work well until about eleven o'clock. Then he'd stretch out on the nearest piece of furniture and start calling at the top of his voice, 'Lunchie! Lunchie!'"
Carlisle initially refused to take the part when she was asked to mime to someone else's voice. She won, and the song she performs, "Alone", later became her signature tune.
The first sneak preview for this film, held in Long Beach, California, is generally considered one of the greatest bombs in Hollywood history. The Marx Brothers and Irving Thalberg wanted to survey the public's reception to the film, which contained greater continuity and a lengthier side-story romance than the troupe's previous films with Paramount. The audience at Long Beach, the first stop on the preview tour, despised the film and barely uttered a laugh. Cast members reported that Groucho Marx was despondent, and nearly suicidal, immediately following the poor Long Beach reception, while Chico Marx suggested that the crowd may have simply been feeling the after-effects of the recent death of the town's mayor. The reasons for the cool reception in Long Beach is unclear, but Thalberg urged the brothers to continue with the tour, and the next night's preview in San Diego produced riotous laughter that called the nerves of everyone involved...
Wednesday, April 8, 2026
A DISCOGRAPHY MOMENT: GENE KRUPA - APRIL 8, 1946
On this day in 1946 - 80 years ago the great Gene Krupa and his orchestra recorded a series of transcription discs in Hollywood, California...
Date: April 8, 1946
Location: Radio Recorders, 7000 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood, CALabel: Capitol
Gene Krupa and his Orchestra
Charlie Kennedy, Harry Terrill (as), Charlie Ventura, Buddy Wise (ts), Joe Koch (bar), Jimmy Millazzio, Red Rodney, Joe Triscari, Ray Triscari (t), Bob Ascher, Nick Gaglio, Tasso Harris, Dick Taylor (tb), Mike Triscari (g), Teddy Napoleon (p), Irv Lang (b), Joe Dale, Gene Krupa (d), Carolyn Grey, Buddy Stewart (v)
1. Yesterdays
2. Baby, Won’t You Please Come Home
3. Prisoner Of Love – vBS
4. 1 Ain’t Nowhere – vCG
5. Sweet Lorraine
6. Wire Brush Stomp
7. Old Folks At Home – vBS
8. You Go To My Head – vBS
9. Bird House*
10. Bugle Call Rag
11. In The Moon Mist – vBS
12. Where Or When – vBS
13. It’s Up To You
14. What Is This Thing Called Love
15. Idaho
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