Filmmaker Blake Edwards has died. The Hollywood movie director and Oscar-winner –- best known for his work on The Pink Panther and Audrey Hepburn’s Breakfast at Tiffany’s – – passed away in Los Angeles Thursday morning due to complications from pneumonia. He was 88. Blake was born in Oklahoma in 1922. He and his family [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Rosemary’
Former Playboy Playmate â€used gun from Polanski in attempted murder’
A former Playboy Playmate of the Year who allegedly attempted to kill her husband apparently used a gun given to her decades ago by the filmmaker Roman Polanski. 66 years-old Angela Dorian, who was Playmate of the Year in 1968, was arrested in October following a shooting at her Hollywood home. She has pleaded not [...]
Nov. 12, 1935: You Should (Not) Have a Lobotomy
1935: The world’s first modern frontal leukotomy is performed in a Lisbon hospital by Portuguese neurologist Antonio Egas Moniz.
Moniz’s leukotomy (or leucotomy, from the Greek for “cutting white,” in this case the brain’s white matter) soon became popularly known as the lobotomy. It was not, however, the surgical procedure now generally associated with lobotomies. Rather, [...]
Foo Fighters Dates & New Album
TICKETS ON SALE NOVEMBER 9; NEW ALBUM REUNITES GROHL WITH VIG &
NOVOSELIC
![]() Foo Fighters |
Foo Fighters will make their
live return in 2011 at Milton Keynes Bowl on July 2 and 3 2011. Biffy Clyro will perform both nights,
while Death Cab for Cutie and Tame Impala will play on July 2 and Jimmy Eat World and The Hot Rats opens
up July 3. Tickets will go on sale Friday November 5 at 9 AM.
In an interview with BBC’s Zane Lowe, Dave Grohl confirmed that the band are working with
producer Butch Vig on a new album. Grohl said the album was being done “totally old school analog,”
with no acoustic guitars.”
The new record marks the first time Grohl and Butch Vig have worked together since
Nevermind in 1991. Says Grohl, “This whole project has been really cool. I haven’t made a record with
Butch for 20 years.” The new album also features Husker Du frontman Bob Mould on a track called “Dear
Rosemary,” and Grohl’s former Nirvana bandmate Krist Novoselic stopped by to play bass on one
song.
Foo Fighters
Tour Dates
::
Foo Fighters News
::
Foo Fighters
Concert
Reviews
Jennifer Aniston Signs On For Unusual Role
America’s (former) sweetheart is taking on a very different role for her upcoming film, Buttercup! In the film, the actress’ character kisses a priest and has a steamy phone call with her boss! The script includes a line directing Rosemary, (Jen’s character), to: “[lie] half-dressed on her bed. One hand holds her phone to her [...]
Mia Farrow Contradicts Naomi Campbell’s Testimony In War Crimes Trial
On Monday, actress/humanitarian Mia Farrow took the witness stand contradicting model Naomi Campbell’s testimony in the war crimes trial of former Liberian ruler Charles Taylor.Naomi’s former agent — Carole White — also testified that the supermodel told her she was going to be given diamonds by the former Liberian president Charles Taylor. Farrow has told Taylor’s [...]
Emma Watson Haircut — Emma Watson Short Hair [Pictures]
Harry Potter’s Hermione Goes Short…. Emma Watson’s gone Mod! How Justin Bieber of her…. Emma’s grown up before our eyes playing Hermione Granger in the Harry Potter film franchise, but it’s likely you won’t recognize the English lass these days, thanks to a new ‘do that has the well-dressed Ivy Leaguer drawing comparisions to ’60s catwalker Twiggy [...]
15 More Celebrities Who Got Away With It
It’s no secret that celebrities get special treatment. Stars are notorious for getting a wink and a smile from police offers for offenses which would earn the rest of us a baton to the back of the head.
Furthur Festival | 05.28-05.30 | California
By: Garrin Benfield
Furthur Festival :: 05.28.10-05.30.10 :: Calaveras County Fairgrounds ::
Angel’s Camp, CA
Phil & Bobby by Susan J. Weiand |
Arriving at the site of the Furthur Festival, I wondered why it had been so long
since the previous Mt. Aire gathering. The setting is classic Northern California –
rolling golden hills punctuated by groves of oak trees, miles of free form campgrounds,
and a lovely grass concert bowl. Clearly the one narrow, congested road into the grounds
could be a major temporary inconvenience to local residents, but it seems the revenue
generated by this mostly supremely mellow, polite crowd would easily offset any
frustrations. Once inside, things mostly ran like clockwork, and the 10,000 or so
gathered were treated to an intimate, bucolic weekend of rock ‘n’ roll.
Perhaps as a nod to those who thought the notion of Furthur
announcing it would perform six Grateful Dead records a bit, shall we
say, antithetical to the Dead ethos, the first night’s “sound check” featured a circuitous
setlist heavy on classics but not tied to any particular era. An inspired “Eleven” opener
gave way to one hell of a set that was dialed in from the get-go. I was struck right away
by the detail of the mix that allowed every instrumental voice to be heard with clarity
and volume. As a full moon rose over the early arriving crowd, the band patiently made
it’s way through a full one-set show, clearly surprising many who were not sure what to
expect from this first evening. Personal highlights for me included John Kadelecik
quoting Trey’s “First Tube” during a heavy “Let It Grow” and Bobby delivering a
stately “Standing On The Moon,” proving the old adage that “if at first one does not
succeed…” Satiated, we all slowly made our way back to the campgrounds, which were
still springing to life in the chilly darkness.
Dan Bern |
On Saturday, I wandered over to the Acoustic Stage and caught a beautiful set by Mark Karan and
Friends. While I was there they played an assortment of leftfield covers by
Townes Van Zandt, Randy Newman and the Dead. I had never seen Karan in this context and
he really shone, singing and playing with sensitivity and conviction – a lovely way to
ease into the day. On the Sunshine Stage, Dan Bern delivered
newer songs with his usual incisive, sardonic wit, backed by his new project, Common Rotation.
I’m happy to see Dan on the road again, and especially pleased to have his uncompromising
insights floating about the sometimes pollyana-ish jam scene. Next, James Nash, Joe
Kyle Jr. and the rest of a temporary Waybacks lineup
brought their absolute A-game to the sweltering afternoon, pleasing those perhaps
unfamiliar with their own material with masterful versions of “Dupree’s Diamond Blues” and
“Shady Grove.” These guys are virtuosos with real heart and soul.


What was exciting me most about Furthur’s first “classic albums” sets was the tunes I’d
never seen performed live, or in some cases had never seen the light of day at all.
Oddly, the first half of the American Beauty set, comprised of songs these guys
have played hundred of times, was stiff and a bit rusty. This trend continued into the
first rarely performed song, Pigpen’s “Operator,” this time sung tentatively by
Phil. Happily things warmed up significantly with JK’s reading of “Candyman” (who
can resist “Hand me my old guitar…”) and the rest of the set was a pure joy of
monumental pieces from the dead canon, aided by Larry Campbell‘s
fiddle and guitar, and his wife Teresa Williams‘ vocals. I think for many who grew
up going to or listening to live Dead shows it will always be disorienting to hear
“Ripple” and “Brokedown Palace” in the middle of a set, but “Truckin’” brought it all home
with classic slow burn!
The Workingman’s Dead set busted out of the gates with “Uncle John’s Band” and
never let up. The band had clearly relaxed, and spent the next hour reveling in more
classic tunes that this time benefited from years of having been in the performance
repertoire. Larry Campbell’s biting Strat work lent a shimmer to “Cumberland” and
everything that followed, without impeding Furthur’s own identity and chemistry from
clearly emerging. The Anthem of the Sun set, the most anticipated by many as it
represents perhaps the pinnacle of “primal” Grateful Dead, was a monster from top to
bottom, climaxing with crushing versions of “Alligator” and “Caution.” I hope the
bruising guitar exclamations in “Caution” translate to tape, because, wow, they needed no
explanation under the rising moon!
The Mother Hips |
I soldiered on and caught sets by three great bands on Sunday prior to Furthur. The
biggest surprise discovery of the weekend was the towering psychedelic progressive rock of
Carney.
Led by a fantastic and charismatic vocalist/guitarist and the most passionate, fiery band
I witnessed all weekend, Carney’s music seemed to fall in the Jeff Buckley meets Radiohead
universe, a welcome change of pace from the mostly Americana proceedings on the side
stages. The always-great Mother Hips were joined on the main stage by Jackie Greene,
who proved himself more than able on organ. The Hips designed their set for a gentle
afternoon and stuck mostly to their sunny Pacific stylings, save for the odd time changes
and riffage of their mid-nineties classic, “Magazine.” I wouldn’t have missed Electric Hot Tuna,
who were next up on the main stage, for the world. Stalwarts of blues, garage rock,
massive riffs and some of the original diplomats of the Haight-Ashbury, Jorma and
Jack have been playing together for 52 years. I was moved not just by their gnarly
set, but also by their longevity and by the Dead organization’s insistence on their
presence at this Festival. Loyalty does exist in the music business!
Hot Tuna |
Initially I thought we were being thrown for a loop when Furthur came out and did not bust
into the expected “Help on the Way” to begin their Blues For Allah set. Instead,
the band leapt into one of those “same tempo as the next song but in a different key” jams
before beginning perhaps the Dead’s most progressive and esoteric collection. “Help >
Slip > Franklin” was pretty happening but not earth shattering. Far more moving was the
intense detail and thunder of “King Solomon’s Marbles,” which I’d vote for most welcome
comeback of the songs Furthur has reintroduced over the last year. “Music Never Stopped”
featured some searing runs by JK, and he delivered “Crazy Fingers” beautifully. Weir’s
dense but lovely “Sage and Spirit” was saved by Jeff Chimenti, who appeared to be
the only person who knew it that well. The “Blues for Allah” suite was a thrill to hear
live, but if you want to hear the only (?) other live version, you might be better off
checking out One From The Vault, as this well-intentioned attempt was gauzy and
confused around the transitional moments. Still, who’s complaining? Standing there
watching these guys try this stuff out and letting these songs wash over me was a thrill.
Joe Russo really distinguished himself deep in this second night with momentum and
focus, as Phil and Bobby seemed to show some wear and tear. There’s more than one reason
to hire a young, talented drummer, right?
Jackie Greene |
After a wonderfully trippy set break that allowed some of the evening mist to begin
seeping into the amphitheater, the band returned and brought us back further in time with
a complete performance of Aoxomoxoa, the record that includes perhaps some of the
least performed Dead material of all. After a typically awesome “St. Stephen” (though I
would argue this might be the most over-performed song of the post-Jerry years), JK segued
right into a “Dupree’s” that also featured Larry Campbell on fiddle. For me, the two most
significant tunes that followed were Phil’s reading of Jerry’s “Rosemary” and the 11-
minute, genuinely psychedelic “What’s Become of the Baby?” which asked the pressing
question clearly on everyone’s mind: “Where is the child that played with the sun chimes
and chased the cloud sheep to the regions of rhyme?” Teresa Williams’ vocal wails and
white gown perfectly embodied the acid-queen-diva-goddess on this excursion. “Cosmic
Charlie” brought us home, and almost sadly, to the precipice of the last set of the
weekend.
Mark Karan |
Despite mild exhaustion setting in, the Terrapin Station set rocked. To segue from
the set break music, Radiohead’s In Rainbows to a 14-minute “Estimated Prophet” was
perfect. (As a side note, all weekend the house music was very inspired, from Beck at
sunset to James Brown and Billy Preston! Yeah!) “Dancin’ in the Streets” was given its
full disco treatment (minus the convoluted outro jam of the celebrated ’77 versions),
“Passenger” was spot on, and Bobby really rallied for “Samson.” The last awesome surprise
was Teresa Williams returning for a song most people in attendance had surely never seen
performed, the Jerry-penned Donna Gauchaux showcase “Sunrise.” I felt a real affection in
the crowd for this one, a deep track that those of us who spent a few years scouring Dead
records before entering the tape trading community remember fondly. Teresa received a
real ovation before we glided into the B-side of this record, the entire 26-minute
“Terrapin Station” suite. What a way to bring it home!
Sir Joe Russo by Susan J. Weiand |
After Phil thanked the crowd for being at our “family picnic,” he generously mentioned all
the people who worked so hard to make the festival happen, which received the largest
cheer of the weekend, hands down. Deadheads can be a wonderfully gracious bunch. The
appreciation was heartfelt, though. The whole weekend had that inescapable quality of
people fully absorbing the music, the scene, the memories, the personal connections, and
the uniqueness of a phenomenon that is not going to last forever. As I listened to the
weave of “Lady with a Fan”, convinced the band had intended this to be a sonic response to
the ecological tragedy unfolding in the Gulf of Mexico, I closed my eyes and said my own
thank you. Thanks, San Francisco! Thanks, Grateful Dead! Now what are we gonna do with
this energy?
JamBase | Awakened
Go See Live Music!
Weekend Setlist Roundup
Memorial Day serves as a day to honor all U.S. men and women killed or missing in action
in war. It is their sacrifice that allows us to speak, live and freak freely. It also
signifies the un-official start of Summer, and with it comes a flurry of live music
activity. Here is a smattering of setlists curated from shows and festivals around the
country that you might enjoy.
![]() Furthur |
Furthur, Angels Camp, CA
5/27: Soundcheck Jam
Space > Eleven > Eyes of the World > Dark Star > Bird Song > Loose Lucy, Dear Mr. Fantasy,
Scarlet Begonias > Fire on the Mountain, Let It Grow, Unbroken Chain, Standing on the
Moon, Playing in the Band > Dark Star
E: Donor Rap, Going Down the Road Feeling Bad
5/28 Furthur Fest, Angels Camp, CA
I: American Beauty: Box of Rain, Friend of the Devil, Sugar Magnolia, Operator,
Candyman, Ripple > Brokedown Palace, Til the Morning Comes, Attics of my Life, Truckin
II: Workingman’s Dead: Uncle John’s Band, High Time, Dire Wolf, New Speedway
Boogie, Cumberland Blues, Black Peter, Casey Jones
III: Anthem of the Sun: Cryptical Envelopment > The Other One > New Potato Caboose
> Born Cross Eyed, Alligator, Caution
E: Donor Rap, New Song, One More Saturday Night
5/28 All Star Late Night Jam
*Viola Lee Blues (V1), *New Speedway Boogie, *#Fennario (Peggy-O), *#Tennessee Jed,
*%Viola Lee Blues (V2), *$Sugaree $$, *%@Death Don’t Have No Mercy, *%@I Know You Rider,
*%@Viola Lee Blues (V3)
* Phil (bass), Larry Campbell (guitar), Jackie Greene (guitar), Jeff Chimenti (keys), Joe
Russo (drums)
# with Teresa Williams (vocals), Larry Campbell on fiddle
% with Bob Weir (guitar), Jackie Greene (bass)
$ with Mark Karan (guitar)
@ with Jorma Kaukonen (guitar), Jack Casady (bass), Jackie Greene (keys), Bob Weir, Joe
Russo
5/29, Furthur Fest, Angels Camp, CA
I: Blues For Allah: Help on the Way > Slipnot! > Franklin’s Tower, King’s Soloman’s
Marbles, Music Never Stopped, Crazy Fingers, Sage & Spirit, Blues for Allah, Sandcastles
and Glass Camels, Usual Occurrences in the Desert
II: Aoxomoxoa: St. Stephen, Dupree’s Diamond Blues, Rosemary, Doin’ That Rag,
Mountains of the Moon, China Cat Sunflower, What’s Become of the Baby, Cosmic Charlie
III: Terrapin Station: Estimated Prophet, Dancing in the Street, Passenger, Samson
and Delilah, Sunrise, Lady With a Fan > Terrapin Station > Terrapin > Terrapin Transit >
At a Siding > Terrapin Flyer > Refrain, Donor Rap
E: Not Fade Away
Setlist Sources: PhilZone.com & #furthur
|
The Disco Biscuits |
The Disco Biscuits
5/27/10 Boulder Theater, Boulder, CO
I: Flash Mob, Rivers, Story Of The World1> Aceetobee> Boom Shanker> Aceetobee
II: Save The Robots, The Very Moon> Digital Buddha> Lunar Pursuit> Digital Buddha
Encore: Spy
1 unfinished
5/28/10 Ogden Theater, Denver, CO
I: Voices Insane> Run Like Hell1> Voices Insane, The Bridge2, Jigsaw Earth
II: Spectacle, Air Song, Basis For A Day1> Rock Candy> Tricycle> Rock Candy
E: Once The Fiddler Paid
1 Unfinished, 2 1st time played
5/29/10 Red Rocks Amphitheatre, Morrison, CO
Bisco Inferno
Other acts include The Crystal Method, Booka Shade, Aeroplane, The Pnuma Trio and The
Glitch Mob
I: Hot Air Balloon> Gangster> Portal To An Empty Head1, Mindless Dribble> The Great Abyss>
Hot Air Balloon
II: House Dog Party Favor, On Time, M.E.M.P.H.I.S.1> Minions> Basis For A Day2, Magellan
Encore: Home Again
1 with Chris Michetti (RAQ) on guitar, 2 completes 5/28 version
Source: Phantasy Bisco
![]() moe. |
moe.
5/28/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
I: Rebubula, She Sends Me, All Roads Lead to Home, Day Dreaming*, Zed Nought Z, Rise>
Happy Hour Hero**, Mexico
II: Late Night in the Barn: George, Cissy Strut, Big World > Ricky Marten > Recreational
Chemistry, Brent Black > Interstellar Overdrive > Brent Black
E: Johnny Lineup
* New song, first time played (Rob)
** w/ Ivan Neville on keys
5/29/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
I: Akimbo > Sensory Deprivation Bank, Haze# > Wormwood > St Augustine, McBain > Skrunk,
Waiting For The Punchline*
II: Dr. Graffenberg > Buster, 32 Things**, Billy Goat## >(nh) Moth > Low Spark Of High
Heeled Boys JAM > Farmer Ben
Encore: Lazarus
# FTP – new al. song
* w/ Danny Barnes
** w/ Brendan Bayliss
## FTP – new rob. song
5/30/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
I: Bearsong >(nh) Timmy Tucker, One Life#, Deep This Time, Not Coming Down, Wind It Up,
San Berdino* > {moe. / ZPZ bandswitch} > Muffin Man
II: Crab Eyes > Threw It All Away > Crab Eyes, Okayalright, Blue Jeans Pizza**, Puebla##
>(nh) The Road > The Pit > The Road
Encore: Down Boy > Seat Of My Pants
{# FTP – new chuck. song
* w/ Dweezil Zappa
** w/ Kyle Hollingsworth
## FTP – new al. song}
Setlist Source: Phantasy moe. & Hidden
Track
![]() Umphrey’s McGee |
Umphrey’s McGee
5/28/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
I: Rocker Part 2, Walletsworth, Turn & Dub > The Linear > Hajimemashite > Plunger, Gulf
Stream, Lisztomania
II: 40s Theme, Ocean Billy > #5, In The Kitchen > Girlfriend Is Better > Booth Love >
Glory, Ocean Billy
E: Cemetery Walk II
5/29/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
I: Phil’s Far, Syncopated Strangers, Tribute to the Spinal Shaft, Conduit, All In Time,
Cemetery Walk*, Sledgehammer*
II: Intro, The Triple Wide, Mantis > Hangover > Mantis, Women Wine And Song*, Don’t Stop
’til You Get Enough*, Nothing Too Fancy
E: Mulche’s Odyssey
* w/ horns
5/30/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
Afternoon Set: JaJunk, Much Obliged -> Partyin’ Peeps, The Fussy Dutchman, We’re Going to
War*, Seven Bridges Road**, Bridgeless > August > Bridgeless
*w/ Mike Rackey on steel pedal guitar
**first time played in full; last played 10.9.04
Late Night Set: Pay the Snucka > Bright Lights, Resolution*, Wappy Sprayberry** > Slacker
-> I’m On Fire# > Slacker^, Voices Inside My Head -> 1348, The Floor, ^^Pay the Snucka
*w/ Roy Ponce (Brainchild) on guitar
**w/ 25 or 6 to 4 jam
#no lyrics
^w/ Jesse (The Macpodz) on keys
^^w/ Rain Song intro
![]()
| Umphrey’s McGee 5/30/10 Summer Camp 2010, Chillicothe, IL Click below to preview tracks from this show |
Source: UMLive.net, Hidden
Track & @umphreysmcgee
![]() Gov’t Mule |
Gov’t Mule
5/29/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
I: Out Front Jam* > Thorazine Shuffle, Railroad Boy > Trane** > Eternity’s Breath > St.
Stephen Jam > The Shape I’m In > Low Spark Of High Heeled Boys^ Steppin’ Lightly, Broke
Down On The Brazos, Loser^^ Wild Horses$, Mule > Whole Lotta Love > Mule
Notes: * With Unring The Bell Tease. ** With 3rd Stone From The Sun and Norwegian Wood
Teases. ^With Chuck Garvey. ^^With Al Schnier. $ With Danny Barnes & Jeff Austin
5.29.2010 Hookahville, Legend Valley, Thornville, OH
I: Hammer & Nails, She Said, She Said > Tomorrow Never Knows with Day Tripper Tease, Banks
Of The Deep End, Rocking Horse, Devil Likes It Slow, Feel Like Breaking Up Somebody’s Home
with Steve Sweney, Patchwork Quilt > I’m A Ram with Shakedown Street Tease
II: Broke Down On The Brazos, Blind Man In The Dark, Kind Of Bird with The Wind Cries Mary
Tease, Fallen Down > The Other One Jam > with Gimmie Shelter Tease, Drums > Any Open
Window, Inside Outside Woman Blues > Going Out West > Bang A Gong > Going Out West
E: Into The Mystic > Soulshine with Gospel Intro
Setlist Source: Mule.net, Hidden
Track & Jambands.com Box Scores
![]() STS9 |
STS9
5/29/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
I: Really Wut?, Kamuy, Tooth, Beyond Right Now, Instantly, Equinox, Inspire Strikes Back,
Aimlessly, Lo Swaga
5/30/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
Late Night Set: This Us, EHM, Rent, Move My Peeps, What is Love?, One a Day, Hi-Key, 118,
Somesing, Hidden Hand Hidden Fist, Moonsocket, Unquestionable Supremacy of Nature
E: Twilight-> Monkey Music
Setlist Source: Hidden Track & The Lowdown
![]() Railroad Earth |
Railroad Earth
5/27/10 DelFest @ Allegany County Fairgrounds – Cumberland, MD
I: 420, Walk Beside Me, Dance Around Molly – > Dandelion Wine, Elko, Happy Song, The
Hunting Song, Black Bear, Cuckoo’s Medley *, Where Songs Begin, Head, Railroad Earth
E: RV
Comment: * with Ronnie McCoury on mandolin. DelFest 2010.
5/28/10 DelFest @ Allegany County Fairgrounds – Cumberland, MD
I: Saddle of the Sun, Bread and Water, Old Dangerfield *, For Love, Colorado, Mighty River
- > Like a Buddha, Any Road, Seven Story Mountain, Long Way To Go *, Warhead Boogie – >
Hard Livin’
E: Little Rabbit
Comment: * with Ronnie McCoury on mandolin. DelFest 2010. Late Night Stage.
5/30/10 Summer Camp @ Three Sisters Park – Chillicothe, IL
I: Mighty River, Happy Song, Been Down This Road, The Forecast – > 1759, ‘Neath the Stars,
Bird in a House, New Jam (SHJ), Bringin’ My Baby Back Home
Setlist Source: Setlist.com
If you know of another noteworthy performance from the past few days, please add the
setlist to the comments below.
JamBase | Memorial Day
Polanski Lawyer States U.S. Wants Him
On Saturday in Reuters, Paris the attorney of the filmmaker Roman Polanski has impeached the U.S. court for the desire of seeing the filmmaker “in shackles” as they had earlier in 1977 disapproved the bid to be sentenced in absentia for making sex with a girl who was just 13 years old, a minor. In [...]
Michael Bay To Helm “Rosemary’s Baby†Remake
Rosemary’s Baby is about to be reborn. The horror classic Rosemary’s Baby is set to be revived for the big screen once again, according to film critic Roger Ebert: Transformers lensman Michael Bay is remaking the 1968 flick.
In 2008, gossip had it that Bay would helm a remake of Pervy Roman Polanski’s cinema gem, [...]
Mia Farrow calls for support for Haitian orphanages
Actress Mia Farrow has called for support to help children in Haiti as they struggle for survival in the quake-ravaged region.
The 64-year-old activist, who looks after 11 adopted children, spoke after 10 American members of a Christian charity group were charged with attempting to illegally smuggle 30 kids to the US, reports the Daily Express.
The [...]
Polanski drags French mags to court
Roman Polanski has made up his mind to drag two French magazines and a newspaper to court for allegedly publishing pictures of him serving house arrest in Switzerland.
The Rosemary’s Baby director is presently staying at a ski chalet in the country, waiting for the final verdict of a Swiss court on his extradition to the [...]
Roman Polanski illegal sex case hearing ends without ruling
A California appeals court ended the hearing of Roman Polanski’s long-drawn illegal sex case without taking a decision.
The appeals court in LA has to make a decision if it should ask a Superior Court judge to consider dismissing the case of the Rosemary’s Baby director without his appearance in court.
The three judges heard over an [...]
Polanski’’s Swiss chalet being prepared in house arrest anticipation
Workers were spotted clearing the snow away on the road that leads to Roman Polanski’s luxury resort of Gstaad on Monday, even as Swiss authorities still work out the final tit bits of his 4.5million dollars bail and house arrest.
The Swiss Justice Ministry is yet to reveal the date when the famed film director would [...]
Samantha Geimer, Roman Polanski Rape Victim, Wants Charges Dropped
The woman at the center of the Roman Polanski statutory rape case is pleading with a California appellate court to drop the charges against the legendary lensman, because she just wants to be “left alone.”
The Los Angeles Times reports that Samantha Geimer, who was only 13 when she was drugged and sexually assaulted at Jack [...]
Kirstie Alley Blasts Roman Polanski
Kirstie Alley is one Hollywood star not supporting revered filmmaker Roman Polanski as he battles extradition to the U.S. to face sentencing for a 32-year-old sex crime.
The Rosemary’s Baby director fled America on the eve of sentencing for the offense and has lived in exile in France for 30 years. Polanski was apprehended by Swiss [...]
Roman Polanski arrested after over 30 years!!!
Wow! Guess you can’t hid from the long arm of the law forever!
Film director Roman Polanski has not been to the US for over 30 years for a reason: There is a warrant for his arrest! The director was charged with giving drugs and alcohol to a minor having sex with her! The girl was [...]
Author Gordon Burn dies aged 61
Cancer kills celebrated explorer of the boundaries between fact and fiction
The writer and novelist Gordon Burn, whose work explored the boundaries between fact and fiction, has died aged 61, his publisher announced today. Burn died on Friday 17 July, having been suffering from cancer.
Burn examined the contemporary obsession with celebrity in a series of books spanning three decades, including an account of the Yorkshire Ripper, a study of Fred and Rosemary West and a Whitbread award-wininng novel which imagined an alternative life for the British singer Alma Cogan.
His editor at Faber, Lee Brackstone, hailed his work as “far ahead of the rest of the literary world”, and lamented the loss of “one of the great literary innovators of these times”.
“Gordon’s subject of choice was often trauma, spectacle and dysfunction,” Brackstone said. “He was drawn to the dark side of celebrity … his literature and impulse always represented to me an attempt to find comfort, meaning and compassion in the most appalling or baffling of events.”
For the author himself, the central role of fame and mortality in his own work was clear. “Almost everything I have written,” Burn said last year, “has been about celebrity, and how for most people celebrity is a kind of death.”
Born in Newcastle on 16 January 1948, Burn began work as a journalist, writing for publications such as the Guardian, Rolling Stone and Esquire and remained a prolific interviewer and feature writer, making a name in recent years as an expert on contemporary art. Deliberately following in the footsteps of In Cold Blood and The Executioner’s Song, his first book, Somebody’s Husband, Somebody’s Son, was an attempt to tell the story of the Yorkshire Ripper from the inside out; he spent three years getting to know Peter Sutcliffe’s family after the killer’s conviction in 1981, turning up night after night to hear stories of the murderer’s early life. He turned next to the world of professional snooker, at its zenith during the era of Steve Davies and Dennis Taylor, following the circus for a year to research Pocket Money, published in 1986.
His first novel, Alma Cogan, revisited questions of death and fame, entwining the case of the Moors murderer Myra Hindley with an imaginary post-celebrity existence for the popular singer, who died in 1966, in a meditation on artifice and obscurity which won the Whitbread first novel prize in 1992. Novels of Fleet Street and showbiz followed with 1995′s Fullalove and 2003′s The North of England Home Service, but it was with his most recent novel, 2008′s Born Yesterday, that Burn’s fiction reached its logical conclusion. Hatched in a discussion over dinner with the CEO of Faber, Stephen Page, the book was an attempt to bring the non-fiction novel into the era of 24-hour rolling news.
“The idea was to find a story, and the moment the news explosion happened to go there and write about it, turn it into a novel in the way that happens all the time through rolling news, newspapers, blogging,” Burns explained. “And to turn it around fast, so that the novel came out while the news coverage was still fresh in people’s minds.”
For Brackstone, Born Yesterday was “an experiment as brave as anything attempted by Pound, BS Johnson, or Foster Wallace”. “Having worked as a journalist with a sharp eye for a story in the 70s, Gordon understood, questioned and celebrated, more than any of his peers, the advent of 24-hour news on loop – the pornographic, compulsive intensity of it,” Brackstone said. Written in a burst of just over a month at the beginning of 2008, the novel shapes the extraordinary events of the summer of 2007, including the resignation of Tony Blair and the disappearance of Madeleine McCann, into the dream-like vision of an insomniac version of Burn himself. As a cast garnered from the blaring headlines of 24-hour breaking news – Kate Middleton, Carol Thatcher, Jacqui Smith – crosses the boundary between fact and fiction, Burn confronts the subject which governed his writing life: the limits imposed on fiction and non-fiction alike.
“The news is always holding out the promise that we will know more and more and more, but we don’t,” Burn said. “With the West case, I had everything: I had access to their belongings, to the police interviews – everything, basically, that you could possibly wish to get – and you spend three years writing a book, and you still don’t know what made these two people do the kind of things that they did.”





Phil & Bobby by Susan J. Weiand
Dan Bern
The Mother Hips
Hot Tuna
Jackie Greene
Mark Karan
Sir Joe Russo by Susan J. Weiand




