But O’Neill wasn’t the obvious choice. Craig T. Nelson was initially favored, chosen after a literal coin toss. Nelson, however, demanded star money, and his reputation for being difficult, coupled with a controversial remark, soured the network. In contrast, everyone described O’Neill as humble and easy to work with. Willing to take less money, he embodied the grounded patriarch Jay Pritchett. The role reinvented his career, balancing humor with gravitas. For O’Neill, Modern Family was more than a hit: it validated his craft and gave him a second iconic character...
A TRIP DOWN MEMORY LANE
A nostalgic journey to the past to relive the golden days of entertainment!
Sunday, May 10, 2026
A MOMENT WITH ED O'NEIL
Ed O’Neill, remembered as Al Bundy from Married with Children, never wanted to return to sitcoms. By 2008 he was semiretired, enjoying life in Hawaii, and pursuing occasional dramatic roles. When asked to meet Modern Family creators Christopher Lloyd and Steven Levitan, he resisted, declaring he was done with sitcoms. Even after agreeing, he warned them: “I did eleven years on Married with Children, and that’s enough.” His aversion came from disliking live-audience formats, which he felt ruined timing. The creators pitched their idea differently—two cameras, shot like a movie—and eventually convinced him to read the script. He was struck by its quality: “Oh shit, this is good.”
But O’Neill wasn’t the obvious choice. Craig T. Nelson was initially favored, chosen after a literal coin toss. Nelson, however, demanded star money, and his reputation for being difficult, coupled with a controversial remark, soured the network. In contrast, everyone described O’Neill as humble and easy to work with. Willing to take less money, he embodied the grounded patriarch Jay Pritchett. The role reinvented his career, balancing humor with gravitas. For O’Neill, Modern Family was more than a hit: it validated his craft and gave him a second iconic character...
But O’Neill wasn’t the obvious choice. Craig T. Nelson was initially favored, chosen after a literal coin toss. Nelson, however, demanded star money, and his reputation for being difficult, coupled with a controversial remark, soured the network. In contrast, everyone described O’Neill as humble and easy to work with. Willing to take less money, he embodied the grounded patriarch Jay Pritchett. The role reinvented his career, balancing humor with gravitas. For O’Neill, Modern Family was more than a hit: it validated his craft and gave him a second iconic character...
Labels:
Ed O'Neill,
Modern Family,
moment,
television
Friday, May 8, 2026
GUEST REVIEW: HIGH SOCIETY
The late movie reviewer Bruce Krogan is back to our blog pages to review the nearly perfect musical High Society - which turns 70 years old this year...
MGM was pretty lucky to secure the talents of Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra, Grace Kelly, Celeste Holm, and Louis Armstrong to get involved in this great musical adaption of The Philadelphia Story.
Cole Porter contributed a great original score for this film with songs very specifically written to suit the talents of High Society's players. I do wish Celeste Holm had been given more to do than just the duet with Frank Sinatra, Who Wants To Be a Millionaire. On Broadway Celeste Holm was a musical star with Oklahoma and Bloomer Girl to her credit, but MGM didn't want to recognize that.
For this film, the story is reset from Philadelphia to Newport, Rhode Island to bring in the famous Jazz Festival. Philip Barry's social commentary is toned down and a very partisan Greek Chorus is added in the person of Mr. Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong. Satchmo tells you right up front who he's pulling for to win Grace Kelly and he helps musically along the way.
Satch and Bing have that classic Now You Has Jazz duet, so successful was it that they did an album together a few years later. Bing Crosby during his life was crazy about jazz musicians and there was no one he liked better than Louis Armstrong. No one on the planet could resist that man's joy for living.
Cole Porter contributed a great original score for this film with songs very specifically written to suit the talents of High Society's players. I do wish Celeste Holm had been given more to do than just the duet with Frank Sinatra, Who Wants To Be a Millionaire. On Broadway Celeste Holm was a musical star with Oklahoma and Bloomer Girl to her credit, but MGM didn't want to recognize that.
For this film, the story is reset from Philadelphia to Newport, Rhode Island to bring in the famous Jazz Festival. Philip Barry's social commentary is toned down and a very partisan Greek Chorus is added in the person of Mr. Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong. Satchmo tells you right up front who he's pulling for to win Grace Kelly and he helps musically along the way.
Satch and Bing have that classic Now You Has Jazz duet, so successful was it that they did an album together a few years later. Bing Crosby during his life was crazy about jazz musicians and there was no one he liked better than Louis Armstrong. No one on the planet could resist that man's joy for living.
Grace Kelly got a chance to bat 1000 in the recording industry. She was no singer as she would have freely admitted, but Cole Porter wrote True Love specifically to accommodate her limited range and when she does the last two bars of True Love with Der Bingle she got a million selling record for her one and only platter. As for Bing he got his 20th Gold record and the only one not with Decca records.
True Love was nominated for Best Song at the Oscars but lost to Doris Day's Que Sera Sera which boomed all over the charts in 1956. It was sadly Cole Porter's last opportunity to win an Oscar for one of his movie songs.
Frank Sinatra got a couple of good ballads in You're Sensational and Mind If I Make Love to You, but what he's best remembered for is that classic Well Did You Evah duet with Bing. Today's fans can't possibly appreciate the screen meeting of the two best and best known singers for the previous generations. A musical summit conference.
High Society's tone is a lot lighter than the Philadelphia Story. The cast in terms of acting ability are not in the same league as Grant, Stewart, Hepburn, and Hussey. But folks it is a musical. I doubt those stars could have carried off the Cole Porter score.
You can't miss with a cast like this, in either film for that matter...
True Love was nominated for Best Song at the Oscars but lost to Doris Day's Que Sera Sera which boomed all over the charts in 1956. It was sadly Cole Porter's last opportunity to win an Oscar for one of his movie songs.
Frank Sinatra got a couple of good ballads in You're Sensational and Mind If I Make Love to You, but what he's best remembered for is that classic Well Did You Evah duet with Bing. Today's fans can't possibly appreciate the screen meeting of the two best and best known singers for the previous generations. A musical summit conference.
High Society's tone is a lot lighter than the Philadelphia Story. The cast in terms of acting ability are not in the same league as Grant, Stewart, Hepburn, and Hussey. But folks it is a musical. I doubt those stars could have carried off the Cole Porter score.
You can't miss with a cast like this, in either film for that matter...
BRUCE's RATING: 10 out of 10
MY RATING: 10 OUT OF 10
Tuesday, May 5, 2026
THE QUIET LOVE STORY OF MAXENE ANDREWS & LYNDA WELLS
This past weekend, Hollywood manager and model Lynda Wells passed away at the age of 84 after a vallant battle witth cancer. She was the manager and companion of Maxene Andrews as well. For much of her life, Maxene Andrews lived in harmony—literally and figuratively—with the world watching. As the soprano voice of the Andrews Sisters, she helped define the sound of America during World War II, her voice ringing out from radios, USO stages, and movie screens as a symbol of patriotism and optimism. Yet behind the carefully maintained public image of smiling glamour and perfect harmony existed a private life shaped by restraint, secrecy, and ultimately, devotion. At the center of that life was Lynda Wells.
When Maxene met Lynda Wells in the early 1970s, she was in her mid‑50s and already a legend. The Andrews Sisters’ heyday had long passed, and Maxene’s relationship with her surviving sister, Patty, had deteriorated into estrangement. It was a period of personal recalibration following decades of fame and pressure, and it was during this quieter chapter that she and Wells connected. Various accounts describe Wells first as Maxene’s manager, but describing her role that way alone misses the depth of their bond. Wells soon became Maxene’s most constant companion, her advocate, and eventually her family in every way that mattered, even if the law did not yet recognize it.
Their partnership unfolded in an era when same‑sex relationships, especially among public figures tied to patriotic imagery, were not merely frowned upon but could have destroyed careers and legacies. Maxene had already experienced how carefully image had to be managed. Earlier in her life, she had married music publisher Lou Levy, a union that ended in separation in 1949, and while she later entered relationships with women, these remained deeply private. With Wells, however, something shifted. Friends and later historians have noted that this was not a fleeting romance but a lasting, stabilizing relationship that endured for more than two decades, until Maxene’s death in 1995.
What makes their love story particularly poignant is the way it was lived: plainly, quietly, and without bitterness toward a world that gave them no vocabulary for legitimacy. Wells traveled with Maxene, managed her later career, and cared for her in health and illness. They made a home together, not as a rebellion but as a natural extension of companionship. In later interviews, Wells emphasized that Maxene did not frame her life through labels or activism; singing remained her great love, and Wells was the person who made life around that love possible.
Because same‑sex marriage was not an option, Maxene and Wells took a step that may seem unusual today but was a known legal strategy among queer couples in the twentieth century: Maxene legally adopted Wells as her daughter. This act was not about redefining their personal relationship but about ensuring basic protections—hospital access, inheritance rights, and recognition as family—at a time when the law offered no other path. Historians have since documented this practice as a quiet form of resistance and survival rather than secrecy for its own sake.
Their bond remained largely invisible to the public during Maxene’s lifetime, but it was undeniable to those who knew her. When Maxene died of a heart attack on October 21, 1995, she was vacationing on Cape Cod with Lynda Wells at her side. Wells was there not as a footnote, not as an assistant, but as the person who had shared Maxene’s private world for over twenty years. In death, as in life, their connection was quietly acknowledged, even if never publicly celebrated in the way it might be today.
In recent years, as scholars, journalists, and filmmakers have revisited the lives of historical figures with fuller honesty, the love story of Maxene Andrews and Lynda Wells has begun to emerge from the margins. Projects like An All American Affair: The True Story of Maxene Andrews aim to tell that fuller story—not to diminish Maxene’s legacy, but to deepen it by acknowledging the reality of the woman behind the voice.
Their story is not one of scandal or tragedy. It is a story of endurance, of choosing companionship in a world that demanded silence, and of finding love not in defiance of identity but in its quiet acceptance. Maxene Andrews spent her life singing in perfect harmony with others. With Lynda Wells, she finally found a harmony that required no performance at all...
When Maxene met Lynda Wells in the early 1970s, she was in her mid‑50s and already a legend. The Andrews Sisters’ heyday had long passed, and Maxene’s relationship with her surviving sister, Patty, had deteriorated into estrangement. It was a period of personal recalibration following decades of fame and pressure, and it was during this quieter chapter that she and Wells connected. Various accounts describe Wells first as Maxene’s manager, but describing her role that way alone misses the depth of their bond. Wells soon became Maxene’s most constant companion, her advocate, and eventually her family in every way that mattered, even if the law did not yet recognize it.
Their partnership unfolded in an era when same‑sex relationships, especially among public figures tied to patriotic imagery, were not merely frowned upon but could have destroyed careers and legacies. Maxene had already experienced how carefully image had to be managed. Earlier in her life, she had married music publisher Lou Levy, a union that ended in separation in 1949, and while she later entered relationships with women, these remained deeply private. With Wells, however, something shifted. Friends and later historians have noted that this was not a fleeting romance but a lasting, stabilizing relationship that endured for more than two decades, until Maxene’s death in 1995.
What makes their love story particularly poignant is the way it was lived: plainly, quietly, and without bitterness toward a world that gave them no vocabulary for legitimacy. Wells traveled with Maxene, managed her later career, and cared for her in health and illness. They made a home together, not as a rebellion but as a natural extension of companionship. In later interviews, Wells emphasized that Maxene did not frame her life through labels or activism; singing remained her great love, and Wells was the person who made life around that love possible.
Because same‑sex marriage was not an option, Maxene and Wells took a step that may seem unusual today but was a known legal strategy among queer couples in the twentieth century: Maxene legally adopted Wells as her daughter. This act was not about redefining their personal relationship but about ensuring basic protections—hospital access, inheritance rights, and recognition as family—at a time when the law offered no other path. Historians have since documented this practice as a quiet form of resistance and survival rather than secrecy for its own sake.
Their bond remained largely invisible to the public during Maxene’s lifetime, but it was undeniable to those who knew her. When Maxene died of a heart attack on October 21, 1995, she was vacationing on Cape Cod with Lynda Wells at her side. Wells was there not as a footnote, not as an assistant, but as the person who had shared Maxene’s private world for over twenty years. In death, as in life, their connection was quietly acknowledged, even if never publicly celebrated in the way it might be today.
In recent years, as scholars, journalists, and filmmakers have revisited the lives of historical figures with fuller honesty, the love story of Maxene Andrews and Lynda Wells has begun to emerge from the margins. Projects like An All American Affair: The True Story of Maxene Andrews aim to tell that fuller story—not to diminish Maxene’s legacy, but to deepen it by acknowledging the reality of the woman behind the voice.
Their story is not one of scandal or tragedy. It is a story of endurance, of choosing companionship in a world that demanded silence, and of finding love not in defiance of identity but in its quiet acceptance. Maxene Andrews spent her life singing in perfect harmony with others. With Lynda Wells, she finally found a harmony that required no performance at all...
Monday, May 4, 2026
RECENTLY VIEWED: THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA 2
My daughter wanted to see The Devil Wears Prada 2, and I said to myself - "oh no not another sequel". I was pleasantly surprised. I liked that the movie touched on what is happening to journalism in 2026 with everything going digital and AI. A sequel to the 2006 film The Devil Wears Prada, it sees Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway, Emily Blunt, and Stanley Tucci reprising their roles, with Justin Theroux, Lucy Liu, and Kenneth Branagh joining as new additions.
Despite the success of The Devil Wears Prada, starring cast members Streep and Hathaway were initially hesitant on the prospects of a sequel. Development on the film began in July 2024, with all four leading actors – Streep, Hathaway, Blunt, and Tucci – signing on to reprise their roles, and Frankel and McKenna returning to direct and write, respectively. Additional castings for new characters were revealed between then and November 2025. Principal photography took place from June to October 2025 in Manhattan and Milan, with additional filming in Newark, New Jersey.
As of May 3, 2026, The Devil Wears Prada 2 has grossed $77 million in the United States and Canada, and $157 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $234 million. In the United States and Canada, The Devil Wears Prada 2 is projected to gross $75–80 million from 4,150 theaters, with some estimates going as high as $100 million. The film made $10 million in Thursday previews. Internationally, the film is projected to debut to around $100 million from 35 countries. It made $40.5 million on its first day of release.
Despite the success of The Devil Wears Prada, starring cast members Streep and Hathaway were initially hesitant on the prospects of a sequel. Development on the film began in July 2024, with all four leading actors – Streep, Hathaway, Blunt, and Tucci – signing on to reprise their roles, and Frankel and McKenna returning to direct and write, respectively. Additional castings for new characters were revealed between then and November 2025. Principal photography took place from June to October 2025 in Manhattan and Milan, with additional filming in Newark, New Jersey.
The cast was stunning and perfect, and Meryl Streep is perfect in evey film she is in. For me though, the standout was Stanley Tucci. I think he stole the movie in this film, and was great without trying. A nice added face to the movie was BJ Novak, from The Office fame, in a nice supporting role.
Like I said, I thought the movie does a great job showing how the characters from 2006 are now dealing with the reality of 2026. It is a different world now, and the magazine business has definitely changed. There were some really good laughs, even though the tempo at certain parts of the movie seemed slow. The movie was darker, which actaully made it better. For a sequel, this film can stand on its own, and there is never a dull moment with Streep, Anne Hathaway, and Emily Blunt on the screen...
MY RATING: 8 out of 10
Sunday, May 3, 2026
Thursday, April 30, 2026
ROBERT ARMSTRONG AND HIS APE MOVIES
It was in 1932 that Robert Armstrong became acquainted with an ambitious and adventurous pair of Hollywood filmmakers. Both were World War I fliers, big-game hunters and animal trappers, and partners in high adventure documentaries, Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack had found a friend in rising producer David O. Selznick, who brought them on board at RKO, with Cooper as production idea man. Schoedsack was the technical side of the pair, knowledgeable about the actual physical and technical side of filmmaking, and became the actual director of their projects, with Cooper as an associate producer and sometime co-director. They turned out what would be the first of a string of horror-tinged adventure movies, "The Most Dangerous Game" (1932), with Armstrong having a part in it, albeit a less dimensioned character who had an early demise--the film centered on Joel McCrea and still young silent screen veteran Fay Wray. Cooper saw much of himself in Armstrong's general personality and wanted him for a film that he had been wanting to make for quite a few years, an adventure yarn dealing with the stories he had heard during his years making films in jungles all over the world of giant, vicious apes.
The resulting film, "King Kong" (1933), would put Armstrong at stage center as big-time promoter Carl Denham (very much Cooper himself). The film also began co-star Fay Wray on the road to stardom. With Copper and Schoedsack co-directing and the legendary Willis H. O'Brien heading up a visual effects team supporting his for-the-time astounding animated miniature sequences, the film was a treasure trove for RKO, bringing newfound respect for a studio known mostly for its "B" action films and westerns. It was Armstrong's defining moment and set the stage for the plethora of leading man and second lead roles he would play through the 1930s.
Cooper--gorillas still on his mind--came calling for Armstrong again for his "Mighty Joe Young" (1949), which he made about midway in his association with partner John Ford in their Argosy Pictures venture under the wing of RKO. Armstrong was again a reincarnation of Carl Denham as Max O'Hara, a fast-talking promoter looking for a sensation in "Darkest Africa". The Ford touch is perhaps seen in the cowboys who go along with young Ben Johnson as romantic lead to enthusiastic--to say the least--Terry Moore with her pet gorilla Joe (about half as big as King Kong but definitely no ordinary gorilla). It is a great little movie, with more light-hearted tone than "Kong" and a red-tinted fire scene recalling silent films...
The resulting film, "King Kong" (1933), would put Armstrong at stage center as big-time promoter Carl Denham (very much Cooper himself). The film also began co-star Fay Wray on the road to stardom. With Copper and Schoedsack co-directing and the legendary Willis H. O'Brien heading up a visual effects team supporting his for-the-time astounding animated miniature sequences, the film was a treasure trove for RKO, bringing newfound respect for a studio known mostly for its "B" action films and westerns. It was Armstrong's defining moment and set the stage for the plethora of leading man and second lead roles he would play through the 1930s.
A sequel, "Son of Kong" (1933), followed almost immediately with the same production team and, though not achieving the critical or box-office acclaim as its predecessor, showcased another Armstrong strength--a great sense of comedic timing that had been evident, but not really traded upon, in previous films.
Cooper--gorillas still on his mind--came calling for Armstrong again for his "Mighty Joe Young" (1949), which he made about midway in his association with partner John Ford in their Argosy Pictures venture under the wing of RKO. Armstrong was again a reincarnation of Carl Denham as Max O'Hara, a fast-talking promoter looking for a sensation in "Darkest Africa". The Ford touch is perhaps seen in the cowboys who go along with young Ben Johnson as romantic lead to enthusiastic--to say the least--Terry Moore with her pet gorilla Joe (about half as big as King Kong but definitely no ordinary gorilla). It is a great little movie, with more light-hearted tone than "Kong" and a red-tinted fire scene recalling silent films...
Labels:
King Kong,
Mighty Joe Young,
Robert Armstrong,
Son Of Kong
Monday, April 27, 2026
RECENTLY VIEWED: MICHAEL
Growing up in the 1980s, Michael Jackson was everywhere. My sister loved his music, and we both grew up with the Jackson sound. This past weekend with my daughter we went to see the Michael Jackson bio pic Michael. It follows the life of Michael Jackson, covering his involvement in the Jackson 5 in the 1960s to the Bad tour in the late 1980s. Jackson is portrayed by his nephew Jaafar Jackson and as a child by Juliano Krue Valdi, both in their film debuts. The supporting cast includes Nia Long, KeiLyn Durrel Jones, Laura Harrier, Jessica Sula, Mike Myers, Miles Teller, and Colman Domingo.
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.
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.
The result is a really great movie. The movie ends in 1988, before the dark side of Michael Jackson's life happens. The end of the film leaves an opening for a sequel, but I would much prefer it to end here. The movie shows the abuse that Michael had to endure at the hands of his father. His father is played by Colman Domingo, and Domingo should win an acting award for his portrayal of Joe Jackson. Yes, there was a dark side of Michael Jackson, and not to take away from that, but the movie does an excellent job laying the ground work for why possbily Michael Jackson did what he did in later years. If you like Michael Jackson or solid movie biographies, then I think you'll enjoy Michael...
MY RATING: 9 out of 10
Labels:
biography,
Michael,
Michael Jackson,
movie review,
recently viewed
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