Tony Bennett died on Friday, July 21. He was 96 years old.
03.07.2023 - 08:25 / nypost.com
Variety reported. A cause of death was not given.
A UCLA graduate, Turman began producing movies in the 1960s, with films including “The Young Doctors,” starring Ben Gazzara, “I Could Go On Singing,” starring Judy Garland, and “The Best Man” starring Henry Fonda. “The Graduate,” the comedy-drama starring Dustin Hoffman and Anne Bancroft, received seven Oscar nominations, including Best Picture, and Mike Nichols, who was tabbed by Turman, won for Best Director.
“Every studio turned it down,” Turman told the Post in 2017. “They read the book and hated it, and no one thought it was funny.” It’s also the film that made Hoffman a star though Turman admitted the casting wasn’t an obvious decision.“Truth be told, we didn’t jump up and down and say, ‘Wow, Dustin! That’s our guy!’ After watching six [screen] tests in a row, I turned to Mike and said, ‘I think I’d be OK with Dustin and Katharine [Ross].’ Mike didn’t say a word, walked to the door, and said, ‘Yeah, me too,'” Turman recalled.In the 1970s, Turman began producing with David Foster.The Turman/Foster Company produced for decades despite the duo being dissimilar.
“That’s why it works,” Turman told the LA Times in 1994. “One of the beauties of our partnership is we don’t have to agree.”“Larry is the opera and the symphony,” Foster said.
“I like to go to the football game and scream and carry on.”Among the movies they produced were the 1975 thriller “The Drowning Pool,” starring Paul Newman, the 1982 sci-fi classic “The Thing,” the 1984 drama “Mass Appeal,” starring Jack Lemmon, the 1986 comedy “Running Scared,” starring Billy Crystal and Gregory Hines, and the 1998 drama “American History X,” starring Edward Norton. Turman served as the director of The Peter Stark
.Tony Bennett died on Friday, July 21. He was 96 years old.
Matt Donnelly Senior Film Writer “Masters of the Universe,” a live-action movie based on He-Man and a slew of other popular Mattel toys, is officially dead at Netflix, according to multiple Variety sources. Insiders said that close to $30 million has already been spent on development costs and the cash that’s been shelled out to hold on to talent – like previously announced lead Kyle Allen and the film’s heatseeking directing duo Adam and Aaron Nee (“The Lost City”). Other knowledgable sources estimate all-in costs for development at twice that figure. The latest headaches for He-Man and friends only further complicates the property’s torturous journey to the screen, one that goes as far back as 2007. It’s a long road that’s crossed through two other studios, Warner Bros. and Sony Pictures, and countless writers and directors like Jon M. Chu and McG. The latest implosion at Netflix, according to five individuals with knowledge of the project, was over budget concerns.
Jeremy Allen White just scored his first Emmy nomination for playing chef Carmy Berzatto on FX’s The Bear, but most Chicagoans still recognize him as heartbreaker Lip Gallagher from Shameless.
The Emmys served up 13 nominations on a silver platter for FX’s The Bear Wednesday morning. Among them was a nod for Ebon Moss-Bachrach in the Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series category for his turn as Carmy’s (Jeremy Allen White) cousin Richie Jeremovich.
The Idol? In every single category? JKJK, I don't even think it's eligible until next year. No, the 2023 Emmy nominations are, unsurprisingly, dominated by The White Lotus and Succession, but there's still room for other shows to make an impact!FX's stressful, chaotic, beautiful Chicago-based restaurant series The Bear received nominations for its first season, including best comedy series, as well as nominations across all acting categories.
EXCLUSIVE: Oscar-nominated actress Terry Moore, one of the last surviving stars of Hollywood’s golden age, is prepared to tell her story for an upcoming documentary, including her romance with Howard Hughes.
told the Associated Press, per ABC. “This was before people were that aware.
Daytime drama actor, Andrea Evans, has died at the age of 66.
John Hopewell Chief International Correspondent O2 Play, the distribution-sales arm of Brazil’s O2 Filmes group, co-owned by “City of God” director Fernando Meirelles, has boarded “Broken” (“Partido”), which is co-directed by Oscar-nominated “City of God” DP César Charlone. O2 Play has acquired Brazilian and world sales rights to the doc feature. O2 Play founder Igor Kupstas will introduce “Broken” to buyers at Locarno Pro, which runs Aug.3-9. Charlone, also “The Two Popes” DP and director of “3%,” South America’s first Netflix series, has directed alongside Sebastián Bednarik (“Maracaná,” “Sangre de Campeones”) and Joaquim Castro (“Máquina do Desejo – 60 Anos do Teatro Oficina”).
I have just two words for producer Lawrence Turman, who died Saturday at 96. “Thank you.”
“Cousins” was selected as a finalist in this year’s ShortList Film Festival, presented by TheWrap. You can watch the films and vote for your favorite here.To paraphrase one of the many quips Billy Crystal throws down in “When Harry Met Sally”: “In a city of 8 million people, you’re bound to run into your ex.” This is the shrewd setup for Karina Dandashi’s “Cousins,” a 13-minute, Brooklyn-set short centering on Layla (played by Dandashi) and Tarek (Ribal Rayess), two cousins whose reunion is turned upside down when Layla’s ex (Monica Sanborn) turns up at the same bar.“This is the first time I’ve actually done a comedy,” Dandashi told TheWrap.
Oscar nominated producer Lawrence Turman died Saturday at the Motion Picture and Television Country Home and Hospital at age 96 after a stellar career not only as a producer of such seminal films as The Graduate (1967), The Great White Hope (1970), American History X , and many more in a producing career that lasted six decades, but also significantly took a turn when he left his partnership with another producer David Foster to head the prestigious Peter Stark Producing Program at USC in 1991, an association that continued until his retirement just two years ago in 2021.
Pat Saperstein Deputy Editor Lawrence Turman, producer of films including Oscar winner “The Graduate,” and longtime chair of the Peter Stark Producing program at USC, died Saturday at the Motion Picture Home in Woodland Hills. He was 96. Turman’s producing career spanned 50 years, and he served as director of USC’s Peter Stark Producing program from 1991 until he retired in 2021 at age 94. Born in Los Angeles in 1926, Turman graduated from UCLA and broke into the industry after answering an ad in Variety to work at the Kurt Frings agency. He represented actors, and after getting a meeting with Alfred Hitchcock through their friend Ernest Lehman, he was able to book four of his agency’s clients in “North By Northwest.”
Brent Lang Executive Editor Alan Arkin etched many indelible performances over his long career in movies. From heroin-snorting grandfathers (“Little Miss Sunshine”) to ornery movie producers (“Argo”) to harried dentists (“The In-Laws”), Arkin, who died on June 29 at the age of 89, played an extraordinary range of roles with great gusto. But it’s fair to say that none of it would have been possible were it not for 1966’s “The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming,” a Cold War comedy that marked Arkin’s first major screen role. It’s the film that earned him the first of four Oscar nominations (he’d win for 2006’s “Little Miss Sunshine”) and a part that launched his career as a shape-shifting character actor.
There won’t be a TCA Summer Tour this year, but the Television Critics Association is out with the nominees for its 39th annual TCA Awards. Wrapped HBO Emmy winner Succession, sophomore FX dramedy The Bear and HBO’s freshman drama The Last of Us lead the field with five noms each. See the full list below.
John Hopewell Chief International Correspondent Japan’s Hiroshi Teshigahara, who seemed on track for greatness after winning two Oscar nominations for “Woman in the Sands,” will be the subject of a San Sebastian Festival retrospective. Nominated for best foreign-language film in 1964, and winning Teshigahara a best director Academy Award nomination a year later, “Woman in the Sands” was just Teshigahara’s second feature, a social and erotic allegory which yoked the political convictions of Teshigahara and screenwriter Kobo Abe, both members of Japan’s communist party in their youth, with Abe’s penchant for the darkly surreal. Turning on an entomologist from Tokyo who discovers a young widow living at the bottom of an enormous sandpit on a deserted beach, it also won a Cannes Special Jury prize. Hailed as a masterpiece, and building on 1961’s “The Pitfall,” a political allegory which won Teshigahara fans, with Abe adapting his TV play, it looked like Teshigahara would find a niche on the same pantheon as contemporaries Nagisa Oshima and Shohei Imamura.
McKinley Franklin editor Rob Young, the Oscar-nominated sound mixer of “Unforgiven,” died June 11 in Albi, France from complications of a fall he sustained during a trip to Morocco. He was 76. Young was a sound mixer in the feature film industry for nearly 40 years, earning an Oscar nomination in the category of Best Sound for Clint Eastwood’s 1992 Western “Unforgiven.” He mixed sound for other popular projects including “William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet” and “Jumanji” in the mid-1990s. Among his other notable credits were “Catwoman,” “She’s the Man,” “Final Destination 3” “Night at the Museum,” “Jennifer’s Body” and “Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief.”
Jennifer Lawrence is living out a Bravo fan's dream! After she was a guest on Monday's episode of , things got steamy between Lawrence and host Cohen during the «After Show» segment.«I'd be totally into kissing you,» Cohen told Lawrence. «I just feel like you kissed John Mayer, but you never kissed me. He's more your type, I guess,» Lawrence said, acknowledging the openly gay TV personality's preferences. «I mean, he is but I'm attracted to you,» Cohen said.
Scientology has been in the news a lot recently after Danny Masterson, a member, was found guilty of rape.
Scientology has been in the news a lot recently after Danny Masterson, a member, was found guilty of rape.