Letterman, Hoffman, Zeppelin honored by Obama

WASHINGTON (AP) — David Letterman's "stupid human tricks" and Top 10 lists are being vaulted into the ranks of cultural acclaim as the late-night comedian receives this year's Kennedy Center Honors with rock band Led Zeppelin and three other artists.

Stars from New York, Hollywood and the music world joined President Barack Obama at the White House on Sunday night to salute the comedian, the band, and their fellow recipients: Actor Dustin Hoffman, Chicago bluesman Buddy Guy and ballerina Nata...

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Family: Country singer Slim Whitman dies at age 90Comments Off

MIAMI (AP) — Country singer Slim Whitman, the high-pitched yodeler who sold millions of records through ever-present TV ads in the 1980s and 1990s and whose song saved the world in the film comedy “Mars Attacks!,” died Wednesday at a Florida hospital. He was 90.

Whitman died of heart failure at Orange Park Medical Center, his son-in-law Roy Beagle said.

Whitman’s tenor falsetto and ebony mustache and sideburns became global trademarks — and an inspiration for countless jokes — thanks to the TV commercials that pitched his records.

But he was a serious musical influence on early rock, and in the British Isles, he was known as a pioneer of country music for popularizing the style there. Whitman also encouraged a teen Elvis Presley when he was the headliner on the bill and the young singer was making his professional debut.

Whitman recorded more than 65 albums and sold millions of records, including 4 million of “All My Best” that was marketed on TV.

His career spanned six decades, beginning in the late 1940s, but he achieved cult figure status in the 1980s. His visage as an ordinary guy singing romantic ballads struck a responsive chord with the public.

“All of a sudden, here comes a guy in a black and white suit, with a mustache and a receding hairline, playing a guitar and singing ‘Rose Marie,’” Whitman told The Associated Press in 1991. “They hadn’t seen that.”

For most of the 1980s, he was consistent fodder for Johnny Carson’s monologues on late night NBC-TV, and the butt of Slim Whitman look-alike contests.

“That TV ad is the reason I’m still here,” he said. “It buys fuel for the boat.”

“I almost didn’t do them. I had seen those kinds of commercials and didn’t like them. But it was one of the smartest things I ever did.”

He yodeled throughout his career and had a three-octave singing range. Whitman said yodeling required rehearsal.

“It’s like a prize fighter. He knows he has a fight coming up, so he gets in the gym and trains. So when I have a show coming up, I practice yodeling.”

Born Ottis Dewey Whitman Jr. in Tampa on Jan. 23, 1923, he worked as a young man in a meatpacking plant, at a shipyard and as a postman.

He was able to get on radio in Tampa and signed with RCA Records in 1949 with the help of Col. Tom Parker, who later became Presley’s longtime manager. RCA gave Whitman the show business name Slim — he was a slender 6-foot-1 — to replace his uninspiring birth name.

In 1952, Whitman had his first hit record, “Love Song of the Waterfall,” which 25 years later became part of the soundtrack of the movie “Close Encounters of the Third Kind.” Another Whitman hit from that year, “Indian Love Call,” was used to humorous effect in the 1996 “Mars Attacks!” — his yodel causes the Martians’ heads to explode.

He crossed paths with Presley in July 1954 when he starred at a concert in a Memphis park just as Presley — mistakenly billed as “Ellis Presley” in one ad for the show — was launching his career.

According to Peter Guralnick’s book “Last Train to Memphis,” Presley’s brief, energetic turn on stage caused a wild reaction from the crowd. When Whitman came on for his performance, he told the audience: “You know, I can understand your reaction, ’cause I was standing backstage and I was enjoying it just as much as you.”

With Whitman’s early hits, he became a star on the “Louisiana Hayride” radio show.

His version of “Rose Marie,” the title song from the venerable operetta that spawned “Indian Love Call,” became a huge hit in England in 1955, staying at No. 1 on the charts for 11 weeks.

Whitman’s other hits included “Have I Told You Lately That I Love You,” ”Red River Valley,” ”Danny Boy” and “I’ll Take You Home Again, Kathleen.”

“The material I did was lasting material,” Whitman said in 1991. “A lot of people thought I wasn’t doing anything, but I was in the studio. The biggest factor is the material you choose. You hunt, you cut.”

He was survived by his daughter, Sharon Beagle, and his son, Byron Whitman.

Whitman told the AP in 1991 that he wanted to be remembered as “a nice guy.”

“I don’t think you’ve ever heard anything bad about me, and I’d like to keep it that way. I’d like my son (Bryon) to remember me as a good dad. I’d like the people to remember me as having a good voice and a clean suit.”

Critics hail Daniel Radcliffe’s latest stage turnComments Off

LONDON (AP) — Daniel Radcliffe has won magical reviews for his latest stage role as a disabled Irish dreamer in Martin McDonagh‘s “The Cripple of Inishmaan.”

The former “Harry Potter” star plays the title role in a Michael Grandage-directed production of McDonagh’s scabrous tragicomedy at London’s Noel Coward Theatre.

First staged in 1996, the play is a raucously dark take on Irish identity from the writer-director of plays including “The Beauty Queen of Leenane” and movies “In Bruges” and “Seven Psychopaths.”

Radcliffe stars as Billy, a 17-year-old orphan on a remote island in 1930s Ireland, who sees a chance of escape from a life of boredom and mockery when an American film crew arrives on a neighboring island to shoot the film “Man of Aran.”

The 23-year-old actor had to master the part’s taxing physical demands, its emotional shifts — and a strong Irish accent.

The Guardian’s Michael Billington said Wednesday the performance proved that Radcliffe “is a fine stage actor with a gift for playing social outsiders,” while Times of London critic Libby Purves praised his “still, melancholy intensity and resolve.”

In The Independent newspaper, Paul Taylor hailed Radcliffe’s “honest, sensitive, unshowy performance” — though he said “Radcliffe may not have the most convincing Irish accent in Grandage’s vividly quirky ensemble.”

“Unlike many child stars, Daniel Radcliffe has grown up gracefully,” said the Daily Telegraph’s Charles Spencer, who thought “the former boy wizard lends this disconcertingly cruel play what little heart it has.”

Radcliffe has taken on a series of challenging stage and screen roles as he’s moved on from a decade as J.K. Rowling’s magical hero.

“I didn’t just want to take an easy way out of this,” he told The Associated Press in a March interview. “I wanted to really try and take risks and make a career for myself.”

His 2007 stage debut in Peter Shaffer’s “Equus” required him to bare all, emotionally and physically. He made his Broadway debut singing and dancing in the musical “How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying.”

His movie roles have included Beat poet Allen Ginsberg in “Kill Your Darlings” and a bereaved man who mysteriously grows devilish horns in “Horns,” by French horror auteur Alexandre Aja.

And he told the London Evening Standard newspaper on Tuesday that two of his dream roles are musical satirist Tom Lehrer and rocker Iggy Pop.

“The Cripple of Inishmaan,” which runs to Aug. 31, is part of a West End season of plays overseen by Grandage, who has assembled an A-list company of actors that includes Radcliffe, Ben Whishaw, Judi Dench and Jude Law.

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Online: www.michaelgrandagecompany.com

Jill Lawless can be reached at http://Twitter.com/JillLawless

Best-selling author Vince Flynn dies at age 47Comments Off

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Vince Flynn, a best-selling author of political thriller novels, has died at age 47 after a two-year battle with prostate cancer.

A statement from Flynn’s publisher, Simon & Schuster, Inc., said he died Wednesday.

Flynn self-published his first book, “Term Limits,” in 1997 before landing a publishing deal. “Term Limits” became a New York Times bestseller. Most of his books centered on the character Mitch Rapp, a counterterrorism operative.

He averaged a book a year.

Flynn announced in 2011 that he had been diagnosed with stage three metastatic prostate cancer.

Madonna premieres tour film, talks secret projectComments Off

NEW YORK (AP) — Madonna said there were days she was exhausted during her recent “MDNA” world tour, but she decided to press on.

You won’t see those behind-the-scenes battles in her new concert film, “The MDNA Tour,” which premieres Saturday on the online and cable network Epix. But you will see the 54-year-old pop icon performing — mainly highlights from her Miami shows — for two hours on her tour, which started in May of last year and wrapped in December.

“There’s no such thing as not in the mood because the show music go on, right?” the singer said at the film’s premiere Tuesday night at New York’s Paradise Theater. “I’m a human being like everybody else, so I would have my nights, my bad nights and I would cry and I would say, ‘I don’t want to do this.’”

Madonna told a feverish crowd of fans, her dancers, her tour team, socialites and members of press that she wanted her shows to be a relief for those paying to see her.

“I sold the tickets and I can’t let my audience down,” she told the crowd of a few hundred. “Before every show everyone came into my dressing room and we got in a circle and said prayers and 50 percent of the time I said them and 49 percent of the time I was crying, usually from over-exhaustion. But there’s something about pushing yourself out there when it’s pouring rain or you’re freezing cold or you don’t feel well or something really crazy happened in the world like Hurricane Sandy.”

Madonna’s tour, which included design help from her 16-year-old daughter, Lourdes, also featured her 12-year-old son, Rocco, as a dancer.

“He was going to go on my tour whether he liked it or not,” said Madonna. “I was thrilled to see him every night. He gave me a boost of energy. However, he does not look like that. In one year he has grown, he’s 6 feet tall and his voice has deepened. I’m a little bit scared of him.”

Madonna also unveiled a secret project Tuesday — a collaboration with Steven Klein. She showed a 1-minute trailer that featured her background dancers and showed the singer being dragged on the floor.

She was answering questions before she premiered the black and white video and told the crowd she was leaving the stage so they could see it.

“No,” they screamed.

“Well I can’t sit in front of the trailer. I’ll just do a stage dive. No. I saw the Billboard Awards — no stage dive,” she said jokingly, referring to R&B singer Miguel’s jump that injured a woman at the awards show last month.

Madonna’s new concert film will be released on DVD on Aug. 27.

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Online:

http://www.madonna.com

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Follow Mesfin Fekadu on Twitter: twitter.com/MusicMesfin

‘Man of Steel’ promoted from the pulpitComments Off

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Seems Warner Bros. has taken movie marketing to a whole new level — even higher than a bird or a plane.

The studio enlisted Christian-focused firm Grace Hill Media to promote “Man of Steel” to faith-based groups by inviting them to early screenings and creating trailers that highlight the film’s religious themes. They also enlisted Craig Detweiler, a Pepperdine University professor and author of “Into the Dark: Seeing the Sacred in the Top Films of the 21st Century,” to create a Superman-centric sermon outline for pastors titled “Jesus: The Original Superhero.”

“Let’s consider how Superman‘s humble origins, his high calling and his transforming sacrifice point us towards Jesus, the original superhero,” the notes read.

The tale of Superman has long been associated with religious allegories. “Man of Steel,” which stars British actor Henry Cavill in the titular role, doesn’t shy away from that theme, including portraying the character as 33 years old, having him seek counsel at a church in a time of crisis and forming a cross-like pose while floating in space.

“I just felt like you could be cute with it and pretend like it doesn’t exist, but what that does is hold back the mythology of Superman,” said “Man of Steel” director Zack Snyder in an interview to promote the film earlier this month.

Snyder added, “Comic books are our mythology now. We don’t really have gods that we believe in that live up on a mountain. We barely believe in the gods that we have, and I just feel like Superman allows us to explain the modern world.”

Hollywood studios frequently market movies to specific religious and cultural groups. Warner Bros. previously marketed films like “The Blind Side,” ”The Notebook,” ”The Book of Eli” and the “Harry Potter” series — but not “Green Lantern” — to faith-based groups.

“Man of Steel” earned $116.6 million in its opening weekend at the box office, giving it the biggest all-time opening in June, as well as the second largest opening of the year behind “Iron Man 3.”

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Online:

http://manofsteelresources.com

http://manofsteel.warnerbros.com

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Follow AP Entertainment Writer Derrik J. Lang on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/derrikjlang .

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