Categories
People

May he rest in peace.

Abe Vigoda, from Barney Miller and The Godfather, dead at 94

Character actor Abe Vigoda, whose leathery, sunken-eyed face made him ideal for playing the over-the-hill detective Phil Fish in the 1970s TV series Barney Miller and the doomed Mafia soldier in The Godfather, died Tuesday at age 94.

Vigoda’s daughter, Carol Vigoda Fuchs, told The Associated Press that Vigoda died Tuesday morning in his sleep at Fuchs’ home in Woodland Park, New Jersey. The cause of death was old age.

“This man was never sick,” Fuchs said.

Vigoda worked in relative obscurity as a supporting actor in the New York theatre and in television until Francis Ford Coppola cast him in the 1972 Oscar-winning The Godfather.

Vigoda played Sal Tessio, an old friend of Vito Corleone’s (Marlon Brando) who hopes to take over the family after Vito’s death by killing his son Michael Corleone (Al Pacino). But Michael anticipates that Sal’s suggestion for a “peace summit” among crime families is a setup and the escorts Sal thought were taking him to the meeting turn out to be his executioners.

“Tell Mike it was only business,” Sal mutters to consigliere Tom Hagen (Robert Duvall) as he’s led away.

The great success of the film and The Godfather Part II made his face and voice, if not his name, recognizable to the general public and led to numerous roles, often as hoodlums.

But it was his comic turn in Barney Miller, which starred Hal Linden and ran from 1975 to 1982, that brought Vigoda’s greatest recognition.

He liked to tell the story of how he won the role of Detective Fish. An exercise enthusiast, Vigoda had just returned from a five-mile jog when his agent called and told him to report immediately to the office of Danny Arnold, who was producing a pilot for a police station comedy.

Arnold remarked that Vigoda looked tired, and the actor explained about his jog. “You know, you look like you might have hemorrhoids,” Arnold said. “What are you — a doctor or a producer?” Vigoda asked. He was cast on the spot.

The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows, a reference book, commented that Vigoda was the hit of Barney Miller. “Not only did he look incredible, he sounded and acted like every breath might be his last,” it said.

“Fish was always on the verge of retirement, and his worst day was when the station house toilet broke down.”

Vigoda remained a regular on Barney Miller until 1977 when he took the character to his own series, Fish. The storyline dealt with the detective’s domestic life and his relations with five street kids that he and his wife took into their home.

The show lasted a season and a half. Vigoda continued making occasional guest appearances on Barney Miller, quitting over billing and salary differences.

But he remained a popular character actor in films, including Cannonball Run II, Look Who’s Talking, Joe Versus the Volcano and North.

Stage career

His resemblance to Boris Karloff led to his casting in the 1986 New York revival of Arsenic and Old Lace, playing the role Karloff originated on the stage in the 1940s. (The murderous character in the black comedy is famously said by other characters to resemble Boris Karloff, a great joke back when the real Karloff was playing him.)

Born in New York City in 1921, Vigoda attended the Theater School of Dramatic Arts at Carnegie Hall. In the early 1950s, he appeared as straight man for the Jimmy Durante and Ed Wynn TV comedies.

For 30 years, he worked in the theatre, acting in dozens of plays in such diverse characters as John of Gaunt in Richard II (his favourite role) and Abraham Lincoln in a short-lived Broadway comedy Tough to Get Help.

Vigoda attributed his high percentage in winning roles to his performance in auditions. Instead of delivering the tired soliloquies that most actors performed, he wrote his own, about a circus barker. At a surprise 80th birthday party in New Jersey in 2001, he gave a spirited recital of the monologue to the delight of the 100 guests.

Reflecting on his delayed success, Vigoda once remarked: “When I was a young man, I was told success had to come in my youth. I found this to be a myth. My experiences have taught me that if you deeply believe in what you are doing, success can come at any age.”

Barney Miller became his first steady acting job.

“I’m the same Abe Vigoda,” he told an interviewer.

“I have the same friends, but the difference now is that I can buy the things I never could afford before. I have never had a house before, so now I would like a house with a nice garden and a pool. Hollywood has been very kind to me.”

He was married twice, most recently to Beatrice Schy, who died in 1992. He had his daughter with his first wife, Sonja Gohlke, who has also died. Vigoda is survived by his daughter, grandchildren Jamie, Paul and Steven, and a great-grandson.

Reruns of Barney Miller and repeated screenings of the two Godfather epics kept Vigoda in the public eye, and unlike some celebrities, he enjoyed being recognized.

In 1997 he was shopping in Bloomingdale’s in Manhattan when a salesman remarked: “You look like Abe Vigoda. But you can’t be Abe Vigoda because he’s dead.” Vigoda often appeared on lists of living celebrities believed to have passed away.

Categories
People

Get well soon, Rolly!!

Terry Fox’s father, Rolland Fox, diagnosed with lung cancer

Terry Fox’s father, Rolland (Rolly) Fox, has been diagnosed with lung cancer.

The family made the announcement Tuesday in a statement on the Terry Fox Foundation website.

“It is with heavy hearts that we wish to share with Terry Foxers from coast to coast and around the world that our Dad and Grandfather, Rolland (Rolly) Fox, has recently been diagnosed with lung cancer,” said the statement.

“He remains in very good spirits, confirmed by the dated and overused humour we are forced to endure.”

Rolly Fox will turn 81 years old in March. The post states he started smoking at age 19 but quit 30 years ago.

A resident of Port Coquitlam, Fox is described as a “behind-the-scenes believer of Terry’s mission for 36 years.”

Betty Fox, Terry’s mom, passed away in 2011.

Terry Fox is one of the most beloved Canadians in history because of his 1980 Marathon of Hope — an attempt to run across Canada on a prosthetic leg to raise money for cancer research.

Fox lost his right leg to cancer in 1977 when he was 18-years-old.

After running 5,000 kilometres Terry was forced to stop after the cancer spread to his lungs. He died on June 28, 1981 at age 22.

To date, over $650-million has been raised for cancer research through the Terry Fox Foundation and the Terry Fox Run, staged annually across Canada and around the world.

Categories
Television

Awesome!!!

Larry David to Host ‘Saturday Night Live’ With Musical Guest The 1975

It is finally happening. Larry David will host Saturday Night Live.

The sketch show made the announcement during this week’s episode.

David, a fan favorite for his fantastic impression of Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders, will host the show on Feb. 6.

The Curb Your Enthusiasm star and Seinfeld co-creator will be joined by musical guest The 1975.

Categories
Awards

It could win, and that would be great!!

Producers Guild Awards: The Big Short wins top honors

And the Oscar goes to… The Big Short?

On Saturday night, the Producers Guild presented the Adam McKay-directed film about the collapse of the housing market with its top prize, the Darryl F. Zanuck award for Outstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion Picture. The annual awards show has often been the best predictor of what film goes on to nab the Best Picture honor at the Oscars. In fact, in the past 10 years, its top winner has gone on to win the Best Picture Oscar eight times. Plus, every film in the past 10 years that won the PGA and also earned a screenplay and editing nomination from the academy (like The Big Short has done) wound up being the big winner on Oscar night.

Yet, when The Big Short’s name was announced, why didn’t the ballroom erupt in big applause? Even Dede Gardner and Jeremy Kleiner seemed shocked when their film’s name was called and took awhile to get up to the stage. Their partner Brad Pitt was not in attendance.

The film certainly has its ardent supporters within the academy — those who love the film’s bold stylistic choices and resonate with the outrage McKay conveys through his quirky, well-formed characters played by Steve Carell, Ryan Gosling, and Academy Award nominee Christian Bale.

In an awards season that’s been plagued with controversy and little consensus, perhaps The Big Short becomes the film the academy rallies behind. It didn’t earn the most academy nominations — that honor goes to The Revenant — but with nominations in key categories for a film that feels current and vital, perhaps The Big Short becomes the top choice.

According to one source, the voting tally on the PGAs was very close with five films vying for the prize, including Straight Outta Compton, one of three films that earned a PGA nomination but was snubbed by the academy in the Best Picture category. (The other two are Sicaro and Ex Machina.)

The Oscar jury is still out. Voting for next week’s Screen Actors Guild Awards closes Friday, and if The Big Short wins again, it might be unstoppable on its path to Oscar gold. Then again, it’s up against Spotlight. And concensus in a year like this one might be wishful thinking.

Few remarks were made during the evening’s proceedings about the bigger issue facing the industry: diversity. Mike DeLuca thanked academy president Cheryl Boone Isaacs for her quick implementation of new membership rules aiming to diversify the academy; Cheryl Hines made a joke about it when she presented her award, and Viola Davis referenced it when she introduced Shonda Rhimes as the recipient of the honorary Norman Lear Achievement Award in Television. Blackish star Anthony Anderson probably had the most pointed remarks of the night when quipped, “I’m the only brother up here accepting an award tonight or… in February.” Otherwise, the evening stayed on script.

The other big winners include:

Game of Thrones: Norman Felton Award for Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television, Drama

Inside Out: Award for Outstanding Producer of Animated Theatrical Motion Pictures

Amy: Award for Outstanding Producer of Documentary Theatrical Motion Pictures

Fargo (Season 2): David L. Wolper Award for Outstanding Producer of Long-Form Television

Transparent (Season 1): Danny Thomas Award for Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television, Comedy

The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst: Award for Outstanding Producer of Non-Fiction Televiison

The Voice: Award for Outstanding Producer of Competition Television

Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (Season 2): Award for Outstanding Producer of Live Entertainment & Talk Television

Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel: Award for Outstanding Sports Program

Sesame Street: Award for Outstanding Children’s Program

Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee: Award for Outstanding Digital Series

Categories
Awards

That is good news!!

Oscar producer: Chris Rock is not going to quit

All the recent talk about boycotts at this year’s Academy Awards have yet to deter Chris Rock, who’s apparently “hard at work” on jokes for the Feb. 28 telecast, the show’s producer said.

In an interview with Entertainment Tonight, Oscar producer Reginald Hudlin denied that the comedian was looking to bag his gig as the host of the Academy Awards. In fact, Hudlin said, Rock and his writing staff have “locked themselves in a room. As things got a little provocative and exciting, he said, ‘I’m throwing out the show I wrote and writing a new show.’”

Hudlin added that the audience should expect plenty of yuks about the white Oscars. “Yes, the academy is ready for him to do that,” he told ET at the 47th NAACP Image Awards Nominee Luncheon Saturday. “They’re excited about him doing that. They know that’s what we need. They know that’s what the public wants, and we deliver what the people want.”

In the last week, several Hollywood stars have declared they will not participate in the ceremony due to the dearth of nominees who are people of color. Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith said they planned to stay away from the show, while Spike Lee has said he will attend an NBA game instead. Others have weighed in on the nominations, including as Rashida Jones, Straight Outta Compton producer Will Packer, and actor Don Cheadle, who tweeted at Rock saying he’d be “parking cars on G level” during the show.

Even Rock referenced this year’s nominees in a tweet, calling the ceremony “The White BET Awards.”

The controversy prompted the Academy to change its membership rules with the intent to double the number of women and people of color in its ranks by 2020.

Categories
Movies

It was football and friends for me this weekend, no movies. I’ll likely see THE BOY on Tuesday on cheap day.

Box office report: The Revenant finally hits No. 1 over snowy weekend

Not only did winter storm Jonas pummel the East Coast, but it took a bite out of box office receipts, too.

With multiple theater closures in the northeastern part of the country, it was a quiet weekend at the box office, with The Revenant finally reaching first place after almost a month in theaters. Since going wide in early January, Alejandro González Iñárritu’s survival drama — a fitting topic, considering the weather — has held steady in second place, but it finally defeated the competition this weekend with an estimated $16 million.

With a total domestic gross of $119.2 million, The Revenant marks Iñárritu’s first-ever No. 1 movie, and the Leonardo DiCaprio-starring drama has been one of the buzziest movies of Oscar season, racking up 12 nominations.

Last week’s champion didn’t fare as well, and after failing to match the opening success of its predecessor, Ride Along 2 fell more than 60 percent in its second weekend, earning an estimated $12.3 million. Starring Ice Cube and Kevin Hart, Ride Along 2 has grossed more than $59.1 million domestically.

Ride Along 2’s steep drop cleared the way for Star Wars: The Force Awakens to retake second place with $14.3 million. To date, it’s grossed an estimated $879.3 million domestically, and on an international level, it surpassed Jurassic World earlier this week to become the fourth-highest grossing international film of all-time, with $1.06 billion. Globally, it’s still the third-biggest film of all time with $1.94 billion in total.

As for the rest of the top five, three new releases were battling for the last two spots, and Dirty Grandpa and The Boy emerged victorious. Dirty Grandpa, starring Robert De Niro and Zac Efron, took fourth with an estimated $11.5 million and a B CinemaScore, while the horror flick The Boy, starring Lauren Cohan, managed to scare up an expected $11.3 million for the weekend with a B- CinemaScore.

This weekend’s other new release, the young adult sci-fi drama The 5th Wave, got shut out of the top five with only $10.7 million and a B- CinemaScore.

Here are this weekend’s top five at the box office:

1. The Revenant — $16 million
2. Star Wars: The Force Awakens — $14.3 million
3. Ride Along 2 — $12.3 million
4. Dirty Grandpa — $11.5 million
5. The Boy — $11.3 million

Categories
Doctor Who

The show was getting a bit stale under Moffat anyway.

‘Doctor Who’ Showrunner Steven Moffat to Exit After Season 10

“Doctor Who” showrunner Steven Moffat will exit the series after the conclusion of its tenth season, it was announced Friday.

News of Moffat’s exit was first revealed by the UK’s Radio Times magazine, and was later confirmed by the official “Doctor Who” Twitter account:

Steven Moffat will step down as Head Writer & Exec Producer after S10… Chris Chibnall to take over! pic.twitter.com/iMhNoEAegy

— Doctor Who Official (@bbcdoctorwho) January 22, 2016

“Broadchurch” writer and self-proclaimed “Doctor Who” fan Chris Chibnall will replace Moffat.

“Feels odd to be talking about leaving when I’m just starting work on the scripts for season 10, but the fact is my timey-wimey is running out. While Chris is doing his last run of ‘Broadchurch,’ I’ll be finishing up on the best job in the universe and keeping the TARDIS warm for him,” Moffat said in a statement. “It took a lot of gin and tonic to talk him into this, but I am beyond delighted that one of the true stars of British Television drama will be taking the Time Lord even further into the future. At the start of season 11, Chris Chibnall will become the new showrunner of ‘Doctor Who.’ And I will be thrown in a skip.”

“‘Doctor Who’ is the ultimate BBC program: bold, unique, vastly entertaining, and adored all around the world. So it’s a privilege and a joy to be the next curator of this funny, scary and emotional family drama,” said Chibnall. “I’ve loved ‘Doctor Who’ since I was four years old, and I’m relishing the thought of working with the exceptional team at BBC Wales to create new characters, creatures and worlds for the Doctor to explore. Steven’s achieved the impossible by continually expanding ‘Doctor Who’s’ creative ambition, while growing its global popularity. He’s been a dazzling and daring showrunner, and hearing his plans and stories for 2017, it’s clear he’ll be going out with a bang. Just to make my life difficult.”

Charlotte Moore, Controller, BBC One says: “I want to thank Steven Moffat for everything he has given ‘Doctor Who’ – I’ve loved working with him, he is an absolute genius and has brought fans all over the world such joy. I will be very sad to see him leave the show but I can’t wait to see what he will deliver in his last ever series next year with a brand new companion. I have decided to schedule Steven’s big finale series in Spring 2017 to bring the nation together for what will be a huge event on the channel. 2016 is spoilt with national moments including the Euros and Olympics and I want to hold something big back for 2017 – I promise it will be worth the wait! I would also like to take this opportunity to welcome Chris Chibnall, a wonderfully talented writer who I know will bring something very special to the hit series.”

Added Polly Hill, Controller, BBC Drama Commissioning: “Like Charlotte I would like to thank Steven for his brilliance, which has made ‘Doctor Who’ a global hit under his tenure. Chris Chibnall is the perfect successor to take over the reins of this incredible show, so I am delighted that his love for ‘Doctor Who’ has made it impossible for him to resist! Chris is an incredible writer and his vision and passion for Doctor Who gives it an exciting future and promises to be a real treat for ‘Doctor Who’ fans across the world.”

Season 10 of “Doctor Who,” comprised of 12 episodes, is scheduled to air in the UK in Spring 2017, with Chibnall’s season set to debut in 2018. No US airdate has been set, but in recent years the Stateside schedule has been brought into alignment with the UK airings. Moffat will still be on hand to oversee the 2016 “Doctor Who” Christmas special, per the Radio Times, although it has yet to be determined whether the Doctor’s new companion will be a part of the episode.

Categories
Awards

Hope this all helps.

Academy Overhauls Membership, Voting Rules to Promote Oscar Diversity

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences has approved a series of major changes, in terms of voting and recruitment, also adding three new seats to the 51-person board — all part of a goal to double the number of women and diverse members of the Academy by 2020. The changes were approved by the board Thursday night in an emergency meeting.

Also on Thursday, the Academy met with ABC officials and reps of Chris Rock, confirming that he will host the Feb. 28 ceremony, according to sources. Jada Pinkett Smith, Spike Lee and Will Smith said they will not attend. Some other activists had urged Rock to withdraw; he never addressed those directly, but insiders said he believes he can do more good by remaining, since the Academy Awards reach a worldwide audience.

The membership changes were announced Friday in a statement, with Academy president Cheryl Boone Isaacs adding, “The Academy is going to lead and not wait for the industry to catch up. These new measures regarding governance and voting will have an immediate impact and begin the process of significantly changing our membership composition.”

The moves also affect the voting status of several new and longtime members.

Beginning later this year, each new member’s voting status will last 10 years, and will be renewed if the new member has been active in film during that decade. In addition, members will receive lifetime voting rights after three 10-year terms; or if they have been nominated for an Academy Award. The Acad will apply these same standards retroactively to current members. In other words, if a current member has not been active in the last 10 years they can still qualify by meeting the other criteria. Those who do not qualify for active status will be moved to emeritus status. Emeritus members do not pay dues but enjoy all the privileges of membership, except voting. This will not affect voting for this year’s Oscars.

In order to immediately increase diversity on the board, the Academy will establish three new governor seats, to be nominated by the president for three-year terms and confirmed by the board. The current board consists of 51 people.

At the same time, the Academy will supplement the traditional process in which current members sponsor new members by launching an ambitious, global campaign to identify and recruit qualified new members who represent greater diversity.

The proposals were passed unanimously at an emergency board meeting Thursday night. Academy honchos opted not to wait for the regularly scheduled board meeting on Jan. 26.

After worldwide media criticism over the Jan. 14 Oscar nominations, Academy officials knew they had to make some bold moves, and make them quickly. The image of the Oscars and the Academy were tarnished when the all-Caucasian lineup of 20 actors immediately led to bigger questions about the lack of diversity within the Academy — and ultimately within the industry.

Nobody was asking for quotas or affirmative action; instead, the protests were angry at Hollywood’s longtime failure to recognize racial and gender diversity in the country. The U.S. Census Bureau estimates that non-whites constitute nearly 40% of the population. Yet studio decision-makers are overwhelmingly white and male, which is reflected in their films and especially their awards hopefuls.

Out of 305 eligible films, only a handful were made by directors of racial minority; only a few were directed by women.

Along with Boone Isaacs, the board’s membership and administration committee, chaired by Academy governor Phil Robinson, led the efforts to enact these initiatives.

Academy CEO Dawn Hudson and Boone Isaacs have helped champion a push to invite more diverse members; in June, the org announced invitations to a record 322 new members, representing a cross-section of the population. But with 6,261 voting members, the new additions apparently didn’t make much of a dent.

The Academy has 17 branches; actors nominate actors, editors nominate editors, and so on; the entire eligible membership votes on final Oscars.

Four days after the Jan. 14 announcement of nominations, Boone Isaacs issued a statement saying there would be “dramatic steps to alter the makeup of our membership.” She did not give details at the time.

The Academy said it will also take immediate action “to increase diversity by adding new members who are not governors to its executive and board committees where key decisions about membership and governance are made. This will allow new members an opportunity to become more active in Academy decision-making and help the organization identify and nurture future leaders.”

Categories
People

Rest In Peace, Glenn Frey.

Don Henley on Glenn Frey: ‘It will be very strange going forward in a world without him in it’

Glenn Frey, founding member and guitarist for seminal American rock band the Eagles has died at the age of 67. Fellow founding member of the group Don Henley issued a statement following the news, in which he called Frey “the one who started it all.”

Henley praised his fellow musician’s work ethic, “encyclopedic” knowledge of music, and devotion to his family. Read Henley’s moving and profound statement below:

“He was like a brother to me; we were family, and like most families, there was some dysfunction. But, the bond we forged 45 years ago was never broken, even during the 14 years that the Eagles were dissolved. We were two young men who made the pilgrimage to Los Angeles with the same dream: to make our mark in the music industry — and with perseverance, a deep love of music, our alliance with other great musicians and our manager, Irving Azoff, we built something that has lasted longer than anyone could have dreamed.

“But, Glenn was the one who started it all. He was the spark plug, the man with the plan. He had an encyclopedic knowledge of popular music and a work ethic that wouldn’t quit. He was funny, bullheaded, mercurial, generous, deeply talented and driven. He loved his wife and kids more than anything.

“We are all in a state of shock, disbelief and profound sorrow. We brought our two-year ‘History of the Eagles Tour’ to a triumphant close at the end of July and now he is gone. I’m not sure I believe in fate, but I know that crossing paths with Glenn Lewis Frey in 1970 changed my life forever, and it eventually had an impact on the lives of millions of other people all over the planet. It will be very strange going forward in a world without him in it. But, I will be grateful, every day, that he was in my life.

“Rest in peace, my brother. You did what you set out to do, and then some.”

Categories
People

This is shocking and horrible news! May he rest in peace.

Eagles Co-Founder Glenn Frey Dies at 67

The musician had been battling intestinal issues that caused the band to postpone its Kennedy Center Honors.

Glenn Frey, a founding member and guitarist of the Eagles, one of the most popular and commercially successful artists of the 1970s, has died. The band confirmed the news on Monday (Jan. 18) with a statement on its website.

“Glenn fought a courageous battle for the past several weeks but, sadly, succumbed to complications from Rheumatoid Arthritis, Acute Ulcerative Colitis and Pneumonia,” read the statement. “Words can neither describe our sorrow, nor our love and respect for all that he has given to us, his family, the music community & millions of fans worldwide.”

Frey had been battling intestinal issues that caused the band to postpone its Kennedy Center Honors. A statement from the band said then the recurring problem would require “major surgery and a lengthy recovery period.”

Eagles drummer and vocalist Don Henley issued the following statement: “He was like a brother to me; we were family, and like most families, there was some dysfunction. But, the bond we forged 45 years ago was never broken, even during the 14 years that the Eagles were dissolved. We were two young men who made the pilgrimage to Los Angeles with the same dream: to make our mark in the music industry — and with perseverance, a deep love of music, our alliance with other great musicians and our manager, Irving Azoff, we built something that has lasted longer than anyone could have dreamed. But, Glenn was the one who started it all. He was the spark plug, the man with the plan. He had an encyclopedic knowledge of popular music and a work ethic that wouldn’t quit. He was funny, bullheaded, mercurial, generous, deeply talented and driven. He loved his wife and kids more than anything. We are all in a state of shock, disbelief and profound sorrow. We brought our two-year ‘History of the Eagles Tour’ to a triumphant close at the end of July and now he is gone. I’m not sure I believe in fate, but I know that crossing paths with Glenn Lewis Frey in 1970 changed my life forever, and it eventually had an impact on the lives of millions of other people all over the planet. It will be very strange going forward in a world without him in it. But, I will be grateful, every day, that he was in my life. Rest in peace, my brother. You did what you set out to do, and then some.”

Frey was born on Nov. 6, 1948, in Detroit and grew up in nearby Royal Oak. He grew up on both the Motown sounds and harder-edged rock of his hometown. He played in a succession of local bands in the city and first connected with Bob Seger when Frey’s band, the Mushrooms, convinced Seger to write a song for them. Frey can also be heard singing extremely loud backing vocals (particularly on the first chorus) on Seger’s first hit and Frey’s first recorded appearance, 1968’s “Ramblin’ Gamblin’ Man.”

But it wasn’t long before warmer climes called and Frey followed then-girlfriend Joan Silwin to Los Angeles. Her sister Alexandra was a member of Honey Ltd., a girl group associated with Nancy Sinatra producer Lee Hazelwood, and she introduced Frey to her friend John David Souther.

It was a portentous introduction. Before long the two were living as roommates in East L.A. with another aspiring songwriter named Jackson Browne. All three quickly became deeply involved in the burgeoning L.A. country-rock scene centered around the Troubadour nightclub that started with The Byrds, proliferated with Gram Parsons and The Flying Burrito Brothers and would, in softer form, dominate American airwaves for the bulk of the 1970s. But first, Frey and Souther would pay their dues as an unsuccessful duo, Longbranch Pennywhistle. The pair released a self-titled album on the short-lived indie Amos Records in 1969 but soon split up.

In 1971, fellow future country-rock superstar Linda Ronstadt was seeking a backing band and, on the advice of Souther, her boyfriend, hired Frey along with drummer Don Henley, ex-Poco bassist Randy Meisner and former Burritos guitarist Bernie Leadon. The band gelled so well that they broke off on their own after completing the tour and became one of the early artists signed to David Geffen’s then-new label, Asylum Records. The group was an instant success, riding on the back of its first single, “Take It Easy,” a song written almost entirely by Browne, with some lyrics added by Frey.

Via a long string of mid-’70s hits including “Peaceful Easy Feeling,” “Desperado,” “Tequila Sunrise,” “Best of My Love” (No. 1, March 1975) “Witchy Woman,” the funkier “One of These Nights” (No. 1, August 1975) and the harder-edged “Already Gone” (many written by bandmembers in collaboration with Souther), the Eagles became the standard-bearers — and Asylum became the epicenter — of the California soft-rock explosion. Guitarist Don Felder filled out the band’s sound in 1974, and after Leadon left the following year, guitarist Joe Walsh joined, beefing up the band’s sound and lifting them to even greater heights with the 1976 Hotel California album, which spawned No. 1 singles with the title track and Frey’s “New Kid in Town,” possibly his defining song. Along with Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours, those albums defined the denim, drugs and decadence of the jet-setting late ’70s California rock scene.

But drugs, egos and success soon took their toll, and it was some three years before the Eagles released a follow-up album with The Long Run. Spurred by the Hot 100 No. 1 single “Heartache Tonight,” the effort was a commercial success — and helped bring the music industry out of a post-disco sales tailspin — but the band succumbed to infighting and split in 1980.

Frey embarked on a successful solo career, enjoying a series of ’80s hits, the biggest of which were tied to the soundtracks of Beverly Hills Cop (“The Heat Is On”) and Miami Vice (“You Belong to the City”).

But the Eagles’ solo hits began to dry up in the 1990s, and before long a reunion tour was masterminded by Azoff, the group’s longtime manager. The tour’s title mocked the acrimony with which the band split up: “Hell Freezes Over.” The group continued to tour periodically — and lucratively — over the past two decades, releasing just scattered new material and focusing on solo works. In 2012, Frey released his first solo album since the 1990s, a collection of pop standards called After Hours.

While the Eagles were reviled as much as they were revered during their heyday, there’s no questioning the enduring quality of their hits or the freshness of their sound, particularly the keening harmonies of Henley, Frey and Meisner. But more lasting may be its success: For years the group’s 1976 collection Their Greatest Hits 1971-75 regularly swapped places with Michael Jackson’s Thriller as the top-selling album of all time and has been certified a whopping 29 times platinum by the RIAA.

Discussing the superb 2013 documentary History of the Eagles, Part 1 with Billboard, Frey said: “You couldn’t have asked for a better script for a bunch of guys in their 20s trying to make it into the music business. We were young, we made mistakes, we still make mistakes. It’s the story of an American band, but it’s also the story of the songs we wrote and what those songs did to [people]. We’re here because everybody likes the songs.”