Archive for December, 2011

Oh! You Pretty Things’ David Bowie + Elvis Presley Birthday Bash, to be held at (Le) Poisson Rouge on Sunday January 15.

The show will feature the Oh! You Pretty Things orchestra along with Michael T and the Vanities performing larger-than-life arrangements of hit songs from their catalogue. Formika and Queen V will emcee the event, which will also feature performances from Lady Circus, Hickry Hawkins, Corey Tut, Rob Roth, Saphin and many more, along with burlesque by The Flying Fox and Brewster.

Eddie Clendening who originated the role of Elvis in the Broadway production of Million Dollar Quartet and now plays the role Off-Broadway at New World Stages will also participate in the show.

Oh! You Pretty Things’ David Bowie + Elvis Presley Birthday Bash, to be held at (Le) Poisson Rouge on Sunday January 15.

The show will feature the Oh! You Pretty Things orchestra along with Michael T and the Vanities performing larger-than-life arrangements of hit songs from their catalogue. Formika and Queen V will emcee the event, which will also feature performances from Lady Circus, Hickry Hawkins, Corey Tut, Rob Roth, Saphin and many more, along with burlesque by The Flying Fox and Brewster.

Eddie Clendening who originated the role of Elvis in the Broadway production of Million Dollar Quartet and now plays the role Off-Broadway at New World Stages will also participate in the show.

We brought you this story yesterday about the Mackenzie family who were robbed outside Graceland on Christmas Day. The family is in Memphis while their 13 year old son, Dustyn is being treated at St. Jude Children’s Hospital for leukemia.

Shannon MacKenzie said her son gave Memphis police a description of the man, who has not been identified.

“He said after he took my purse, he turned around and started laughing about it,” MacKenzie said. She said she was not sure which aspect of the incident was more painful.

Even more discouraging, MacKenzie said officials at Graceland have not been very helpful to her.

“They’ve been hateful,” MacKenzie said. “They said they didn’t want this kind of publicity and did not file an internal report like they were supposed to.”

MacKenzie said Graceland officials provided video surveillance to authorities in Memphis, but said the footage was poor. She said after the incident, she and her family have sworn off visiting any other parts of the city.

“We just go to the hospital and back to where we are staying,” MacKenzie said. She said authorities have kept her updated on the incident.

MacKenzie said when the thief stole her purse, he also took a cellphone, cash, prescription medication, Dustyn’s St. Jude information, credit cards and a food stamp card. She said police have located and returned the phone to her, and the thief used some of the cards.

“They said they think he still has the food card,” MacKenzie said. “If he uses that, we should be able to find him.”

Calls and emails to the Memphis Police Department were not returned.

If it’s true Graceland staff said this would be bad publicity, treating a St. Jude family this way is far worse publicity! And just so unElvis like!

Many of us often think we are safe by Graceland especially by the gates. It’s Elvis’ house and we are surrounded by fans, right? NO! We are surrounded by criminals in a high crime area. Be alert! It was not long ago that a family was car jacked at the gates. So while it is understandable, Graceland would not want to advertise the crime rate in the area, it’s not exactly good for business. They still have a responsibility to make the area safe. They are encouraging people to travel from all over the world to patronize their business and therefore, they owe it to the public to make it safe. Graceland has yet to comment so we can not put them on blast yet. Let’s just hope that this latest crime is an eye opener. Let’s hope a murder or violent crime does not have to occur before something is done. God forbid.

Just at the end of the Graceland wall is a very dark small alley where I have personally witnessed a night walker or two crawl out of, that needs to be addressed. As well as more cameras (and better equipment considering this footage was such bad quality), more lighting, signs posted to not leave cars unlocked, unattended. And instead of guards sitting in the guard shack all night, they should come out and greet people who drive up to the gate at night. Their presence alone would deter criminals from hanging around the gates and keep visitors safe.

If you are traveling to Memphis for the birthday celebration, be alert and very aware of your surroundings at all times!

St. Jude Patient’s Family Robbed @ Graceland

Source: Zack Southwell – News Star / Megan Murphy – Back in Memphis

Imelda and Bono tear it up as audience dances recession away

Sunday December 18 2011

Looking like an Old Testament preacher on a festive jolly, Guggi was sitting next to me on Friday night at The 02 in Dublin. The artist smiled quixotically at me when I told him what was about to happen next was the worst-kept secret in Ireland.

Then, seconds later, Guggi’s best friend, a messianic fella by the name of Bono, joined headliner Imelda May and her band onstage for an audacious version of Desire by his band U2 (the rumour that Larry Mullen was to play drums proved unfounded).

The 12,000 crowd went mental. Harry Crosbie, who owns the venue, had told me earlier in the bar that tonight “we would be witnessing a magical piece of rock ‘n’ roll history — it was 23 years ago that U2 filmed music for the movie Desire in this building”.

When Bono and Imelda did another duet together — a suitably festive and out-of-kilter version of Phil Spector’s Christmas: Baby Please Come Home — everyone, including Guggi beside me and doubtless Harry elsewhere, was up on their feet dancing the recession away.

But this was Imelda May’s night. It is some achievement that the beautiful belle from the Liberties in Dublin sold out Friday and again last night at the country’s biggest venue. Wearing a tight-fitting silver dress that wouldn’t have looked out of place on Marilyn Monroe, she held the audience in thrall for a good two hours with her sassy blend of retro cool, surf guitars and rockabilly with a razor’s edge.

The music throughout, courtesy of Imelda’s bewitching voice, was evocative of what you’d hear in a David Lynch film. I could see why Rolling Stone described her as exuding “the dangerous allure of a Fifties pulp pin-up, the kind with race-car red lips and a dagger in her boot”.

A bluesy rendition of Spoonful by the Chicago bluesman Hubert Sumlin (who only died on December 4) was followed by Psycho, Tear It Up and Big Bad Handsome Man, with her own big bad handsome man, husband Darrel Higham, on guitar beside her.

“The music he plays, the way he moves me and sways,” she sang. “Rocks me to the core/When he sings in my ear/He makes me shiver and leer/Leaves me wanting more and more.”

It was the sentiment of the audience watching her perform, too. She has bona fide star quality; the authenticity of her music emphasises that star quality.

Ireland’s First Lady of Rockabilly isn’t anything you could remotely call manufactured. She isn’t pretending to be Wanda Jackson or Patsy Cline or Billie Holiday. She only knows how to be one thing and that’s herself.

She charms the crowd almost as much with her raw Dublin girl lingo as she does with her songs that have charmed everyone from Jools Holland to Eric Clapton, and Jeff Beck to Van Morrison.

Imelda will be making steps (with a dagger in her boot or not) to the Forum in Waterford tomorrow, the INEC in Killarney on Thursday and the Big Top in Limerick on Friday.

Impossibly hip Irish band The Last Tycoon are the (very) special guests on the last two shows.

“We’re delighted to be asked to open for Imelda again,” Tycoons frontman Stephen Fanning told me — he and his band flew specially from their base in Berlin for the gigs.

“We played with her in Berlin last May and after seeing us, she invited us on the rest of her German tour, which was amazing. She’s been really supportive of us and her fans were great to us as well,” Stephen said, before adding that the hotly tipped group have their own headline show in the Workman’s Club in Dublin on December 28 with a new album on the way in 2012.

Now that will be mayhem.

– Barry Egan / Irish Independent

http://www-tc.pbs.org/s3/pbs.videoportal-prod.cdn/media/swf/PBSPlayer.swf

Watch Actor Robert Blake, Part 1 on PBS. See more from Tavis Smiley.

If you missed this on PBS, check out parts 1 & 2. It’s must see tv! Blake needs a reality show!

In part 1 of an exclusive two-part conversation, the Emmy-winning actor talks about the ghosts that haunt the living when they “get old,” the days he spent in jail before his acquittal on murder charges and the plan he believes God has for his life.

Robert Blake began his acting career at age 5 in MGM’s Our Gang series and went on to appear as a powerful adult performer in leading and character roles. Following his breakthrough role as real-life multiple murderer Perry Smith in the film adaptation of In Cold Blood, he reached stardom with his Emmy-winning three-season star turn on the popular TV cop series Baretta. He also played the title character in the TV miniseries Hoffa and won another Emmy for his performance in the TV biopic Judgment Day: The John List Story. In recent years, Blake has maintained a very low profile.

http://www-tc.pbs.org/s3/pbs.videoportal-prod.cdn/media/swf/PBSPlayer.swf

Watch Actor Robert Blake, Part 2 on PBS. See more from Tavis Smiley.

The multiple Emmy winner continues his exclusive conversation with Tavis and reflects on his life as a child star and the TV fame of “Baretta.”

Career Highlights:

The Murder of his wife:

Donna Douglas & Elvis Presley

DONNA DOUGLAS is best known to Elvis fans as Elvis’ co-star in Frankie And Johnny. But she also had another memorable role known to most Americans as Elly May Clampett on the “The Beverly Hillbillies.” Douglas and toymaker Mattel Inc. and CBS Consumer Products Inc. have settled their legal battle.

Donna Douglas & Mattel’s Elly May Barbie

They settled a lawsuit claiming the companies didn’t get Donna’s approval to use her name and likeness for a Barbie doll as The ENQUIRER previously reported.

Douglas shone as the critter-loving tomboy sexpot for nine seasons of the CBS TV sitcom about a backwoods family that strikes oil and moves to Beverly Hills.

U.S. District Court in Baton Rouge said in a one-sentence order that a settlement had been reached.

Details of court settlements typically are kept private.

The ENQUIRER had reported Douglas’ lawsuit sought a minimum payback of  $75,000.

Earlier, both CBS and Mattel said they didn’t need her approval because they claimed they held exclusive rights to the character of Elly Mae Clampet.

Donna Douglas and Elvis Presley in the film, Frankie And Johnny

Donna Douglas & Elvis Presley

DONNA DOUGLAS is best known to Elvis fans as Elvis’ co-star in Frankie And Johnny. But she also had another memorable role known to most Americans as Elly May Clampett on the “The Beverly Hillbillies.” Douglas and toymaker Mattel Inc. and CBS Consumer Products Inc. have settled their legal battle.

Donna Douglas & Mattel’s Elly May Barbie

They settled a lawsuit claiming the companies didn’t get Donna’s approval to use her name and likeness for a Barbie doll as The ENQUIRER previously reported.

Douglas shone as the critter-loving tomboy sexpot for nine seasons of the CBS TV sitcom about a backwoods family that strikes oil and moves to Beverly Hills.

U.S. District Court in Baton Rouge said in a one-sentence order that a settlement had been reached.

Details of court settlements typically are kept private.

The ENQUIRER had reported Douglas’ lawsuit sought a minimum payback of  $75,000.

Earlier, both CBS and Mattel said they didn’t need her approval because they claimed they held exclusive rights to the character of Elly Mae Clampet.

Donna Douglas and Elvis Presley in the film, Frankie And Johnny

Eleven-year-old Dustyn Ates and his family were visiting Graceland when a Grinch stole their Christmas joy. Photo courtesy Shannon MacKenzie.

FAST FACTS:

13-year-old Dustyn Ates was just diagnosed with leukemia.
 After getting out of intensive care, he wanted to visit Graceland.
 A man stole a purse out of the family car while Dustyn and his brother were in the back seat.

(Memphis, TN 12/26/11) A family whose 13-year-old son is undergoing treatment for leukemia was robbed outside Graceland on Christmas Day.

Dustyn Ates was diagnosed with leukemia on Dec. 15 and flown from his home near Shreveport, LA, to Memphis, to be treated at St. Jude.

“We thought he had the stomach flu. Had no idea. He was the picture of health. And the next thing you know, it was a whirlwind. We were all just here,” said Shannon MacKenzie, his mother.

Since being released from intensive care, the family decided to leave the hospital and do something in Memphis.

“He said, ‘Mom, I just want to get out. I want to go to Graceland,” she said.
The family pulled up to the gates of Graceland, not knowing it was closed on Christmas Day. MacKenzie got out of the car to talk to the security guard, to see when would be best to come back for a visit.

After a while, MacKenzie’s husband went to check on her, telling their two sons he’d be right back.

Dustyn and his brother, Dakota MacKenzie, were in the back seat of their car, when they saw a strange man approach.

“All of a sudden this person came up from behind our car and leaned up against the door that my brother was sitting right beside. He leaned against the door, and then he popped the door open,” said Dakota.

Dakota described a man in dark blue jeans and a black football jacket with tan sleeves, standing by the propped door for a couple of minutes.

“I stuck in a corner and I just started shaking,” he said.

Dustyn yelled, and the two tried to call their mother, but were too nervous to dial correctly.

Dakota said the man finally “swung [the door] open, grabbed her purse, turned around, looked through the window and just laughed at us.”

The man had taken their mother’s purse, containing a Droid phone, cash, prescription medication, Dustyn’s St. Jude information, credit cards, and EBT card.

After police were called to the scene, someone located the Droid phone at a nearby Citgo gas station. MacKenzie said that a couple of her cards were also used.

“How could some low-life do this? With my son being a St. Jude patient, how can you look that child in his face, on Christmas Day, and take everything from him?” she said.

Memphis police said that Graceland does have surveillance video of the suspect, but that it was not made available yet. Graceland representatives did not wish to comment on this story.
Shannon MacKenzie hopes to see the suspect arrested and prosecuted to the fullest extent.

“We will face our fears and get through this, because we’re a strong family, and love keeps us together. And you won’t ever get that. You might have took everything else I had,” she said.

WREG

Eleven-year-old Dustyn Ates and his family were visiting Graceland when a Grinch stole their Christmas joy. Photo courtesy Shannon MacKenzie.

FAST FACTS:

13-year-old Dustyn Ates was just diagnosed with leukemia.
 After getting out of intensive care, he wanted to visit Graceland.
 A man stole a purse out of the family car while Dustyn and his brother were in the back seat.

(Memphis, TN 12/26/11) A family whose 13-year-old son is undergoing treatment for leukemia was robbed outside Graceland on Christmas Day.

Dustyn Ates was diagnosed with leukemia on Dec. 15 and flown from his home near Shreveport, LA, to Memphis, to be treated at St. Jude.

“We thought he had the stomach flu. Had no idea. He was the picture of health. And the next thing you know, it was a whirlwind. We were all just here,” said Shannon MacKenzie, his mother.

Since being released from intensive care, the family decided to leave the hospital and do something in Memphis.

“He said, ‘Mom, I just want to get out. I want to go to Graceland,” she said.
The family pulled up to the gates of Graceland, not knowing it was closed on Christmas Day. MacKenzie got out of the car to talk to the security guard, to see when would be best to come back for a visit.

After a while, MacKenzie’s husband went to check on her, telling their two sons he’d be right back.

Dustyn and his brother, Dakota MacKenzie, were in the back seat of their car, when they saw a strange man approach.

“All of a sudden this person came up from behind our car and leaned up against the door that my brother was sitting right beside. He leaned against the door, and then he popped the door open,” said Dakota.

Dakota described a man in dark blue jeans and a black football jacket with tan sleeves, standing by the propped door for a couple of minutes.

“I stuck in a corner and I just started shaking,” he said.

Dustyn yelled, and the two tried to call their mother, but were too nervous to dial correctly.

Dakota said the man finally “swung [the door] open, grabbed her purse, turned around, looked through the window and just laughed at us.”

The man had taken their mother’s purse, containing a Droid phone, cash, prescription medication, Dustyn’s St. Jude information, credit cards, and EBT card.

After police were called to the scene, someone located the Droid phone at a nearby Citgo gas station. MacKenzie said that a couple of her cards were also used.

“How could some low-life do this? With my son being a St. Jude patient, how can you look that child in his face, on Christmas Day, and take everything from him?” she said.

Memphis police said that Graceland does have surveillance video of the suspect, but that it was not made available yet. Graceland representatives did not wish to comment on this story.
Shannon MacKenzie hopes to see the suspect arrested and prosecuted to the fullest extent.

“We will face our fears and get through this, because we’re a strong family, and love keeps us together. And you won’t ever get that. You might have took everything else I had,” she said.

WREG

Dolores Hart & Elvis Presley

In the little town of Bethlehem, a cloistered nun whose luminous blue eyes entranced Elvis Presley in his first on-screen, 1957 movie kiss is praying for a Christmas miracle.

Dolores Hart, 73, who walked away from Hollywood stardom in 1963 to become a nun in rural Bethlehem, Conn., now finds herself back in the spotlight. But this time, it’s all about serving the King of Kings, not smooching the King of Rock and Roll.

The former brass factory that houses Mother Dolores and about 40 other nuns who are cloistered at the Abbey of Regina Laudis needs millions of dollars in renovations to meet fire and safety codes, add an elevator and make handicap-accessibility upgrades.

Now the historically self-supporting nuns have launched a fund-raiser for the $4 million renovation project.

“This work may not be in my lifetime that it’s finished, but we’re sure trying,” Mother Dolores said of the upgrades.

They hope to break ground in January.

 They’re not in imminent danger of needing to move out, but many of the older nuns can no longer navigate the narrow steps to the main building’s third floor and must live in another building. And without adequate fire escapes, the monastery has caught the eye of local inspectors, though they’ve worked closely with the nuns on the improvement plans and haven’t ordered them to close the building.

For Mother Dolores, the monastery has been home since she was a 24-year-old actress in 1963 and walked away from Hollywood for a life of contemplation and prayer as a postulant.

The abbey’s chapel, workshops, livestock pastures and other features are part of her soul now, and its wood-paneled monastery is the only home she’s known for 50 years. Its theater holds a special place in her heart, harkening to the former career that landed her on talk shows, in magazines and twice as Elvis Presley’s co-star.

Dolores Hart was a vivacious, quick-witted blond starlet when she charmed Hollywood in the 1950s and early 1960s. She shared a kiss with Presley in the 1957 Paramount film, “Loving You’’ — a modest liplock over which Mother Dolores still fields frequent questions about whether the King was a good kisser.

“I don’t know why they ask me. It’s right there on the screen to see; it’s right there for the looking,’’ she said Thursday.

Hart acted in 10 movies alongside stars including Montgomery Clift, Myrna Loy, Connie Francis and Anthony Quinn.

She said she was engaged to be married before joining God’s service and leaving the acting world behind. She broke off her engagement, though her fiance remained a close friend and was a frequent visitor and supporter of the abbey until his recent death.

The nuns also received support and help over the years from Mother Dolores’ longtime friend and fellow actress Patricia Neal, who was buried at the abbey after her death in August 2010.

Mother Dolores is still a voting member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, receiving copies of movies to watch in her small room — or cell, as they’re known in the order — to help select yearly Oscar winners.

Her own movies, including the highly popular “Where the Boys Are,’’ were made before stars routinely could negotiate to collect later royalties, she said, so that’s not a potential source of income for the upgrades to the abbey.

The abbey is financially independent from the Archdiocese of Hartford and supports itself through the sale of everything from artisan cheeses and hand-crafted pottery to recordings of its choir. Mother Dolores even recently signed autographs at a New Jersey convention, a rare foray out of cloistered life as a favor for a friend, and one that helped boost the fundraising efforts.

Sister Angele Arbib, a coordinator of the New Horizons renovation and fundraising efforts, said the order is applying for grants and the nuns are trying to spread the word among the abbey’s supporters, but are not disclosing publicly how much they’ve raised so far.

Unlike some orders, the Abbey of Regina Laudis has retained a steady number of nuns and new postulants, including two starting in the next few weeks — but that can’t continue if the housing and other facilities keep eroding with age.

“We have focused on building our community, which has been wonderful, but now it’s time that we really have to address our space,’’ said Sister Angele, 63, who left a thriving career of managing opera singers when she was 50 to join the order.

“None of this, not one single thing we’re doing, is an extravagance,’’ she said of the upgrades. “It’s to make it possible for us to grow, for the elderly among us to live with as much independence as possible and to allow us to live together in surroundings that let us continue our service.’’

Sister Angele said the nuns are not in any imminent danger of needing to move out, though she acknowledges they’d be in dire straits if they had not anticipated the problems early enough to prepare the upgrade plans and launch the fundraising efforts.
As word has spread of their needs, supporters of the nuns and those who’ve visited the abbey, prayed in its chapel and picked up items in its gift shop have tried to help in ways of their own.

Liz Carpenter, a Watertown resident who owns the Children’s Dance Workshop, said its children have raised $600 to help through a raffle. She’s been a grateful supporter since the nuns helped her through a cancer battle about 10 years ago and now volunteers to clean the church once a week.

“I wanted to teach the kids that it’s important to give back,’’ she said of their fundraiser, “especially for a place that does as many wonderful things as this one does.’’

My Mom & I had the pleasure of spending the day with Mother Dolores back in October.