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People

Such sad news. She was always amazing, in everything. May she rest in peace.

‘Who’s the Boss?’ star Katherine Helmond dead at 89

LOS ANGELES — Actress Katherine Helmond, an Emmy-nominated and Golden Globe-winning actress who played two very different matriarchs on the ABC sitcoms “Who’s the Boss?” and “Soap,” has died, her talent agency said Friday. She was 89.

Helmond died of complications from Alzheimer’s disease last Saturday at her home in Los Angeles, talent agency APA said in a statement.

A native of Galveston, Texas, Helmond’s credits date back to the 1950s and she worked steadily in small roles through the decades. But her real fame, and all seven of her Emmy nominations, didn’t start arriving until she was nearly 50.

She was probably best known for playing Mona Robinson, Judith Light’s mother on “Who’s the Boss?,” which also starred Tony Danza and a young Alyssa Milano.

She won a best supporting Golden Globe for her work in 1989.

“My beautiful, kind, funny, gracious, compassionate, rock,” Milano mourned on Twitter. “You were an instrumental part of my life. You taught me to hold my head above the marsh! You taught me to do anything for a laugh! What an example you were!”

On the show, Light was an uptight single mother who hired the 1980s heartthrob Danza to be her live-in housekeeper, and Helmond was her foil, a lover of nightlife, pursuer of men and flaunter of sexuality who would have been at home on “The Golden Girls,” which ran during the same years.

“We all lost a national treasure today,” Danza tweeted. “No words can measure my love.”

An only child raised by her mother and grandmother who began acting while a girl in Catholic school, Helmond began her professional career in theatre and returned to it often, earning a Tony Award nomination in 1973 for her Broadway role in Eugene O’Neill’s “The Great God Brown.”

She was a favourite of director Terry Gilliam, who put her in his films “Brazil,” ”Time Bandits,“ and ”Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.“

In “Brazil” a dystopian comedy from 1985, she played a surgery-addicted woman whose elastic face became the most memorable images from the cult film.

Her major break came with “Soap,” a parody of soap operas that aired from 1977 to 1981. She played wealthy matriarch Jessica Tate, one of two main characters on the show which co-starred Robert Guillaume and was also a breakthrough for Billy Crystal, who played her nephew.

She was nominated for Emmys for all four seasons of the show and won a best actress in a comedy Golden Globe in 1981.

Helmond kept working into her 80s doing mostly voice work most notably as the Model T Lizzie in the Pixar “Cars” films.

She had a recurring role on “Everybody Loves Raymond” from 1996 to 2004 as the title character’s mother-in-law.

“Katherine Helmond was such a class act and incredibly down to earth,” tweeted actress Patricia Heaton, who co-starred with Ray Romano on the show. “She was terrific as my mother on ’Everybody Loves Raymond’ and I looked up to her as a role model.”

A memorial is being planned.

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People

It truly is an amazing video, full of performances by an amazing man!!

Ryan Reynolds pays tribute to fellow Canadian John Candy on 25th anniversary of his death

From one Canadian to another…

On Sunday afternoon, actor Ryan Reynolds shared a video tribute to his fellow countryman John Candy commemorating the 25th anniversary of Candy’s passing. “It’s the 25th anniversary of John Candy’s passing. We cooked up a small tribute to a comedic genius and Canadian hero,” he wrote. “If you haven’t seen much of his work, take a look at his films. He was a treasure.”

Alongside this caption, Reynolds shared a nearly two-minute video tribute to Candy, which he compiled with the help of Candy’s children Chris and Jen. The video includes clips from some of the late comic’s most iconic projects, including Planes, Trains & Automobiles, Uncle Buck, Spaceballs, and The Great Outdoors.

Beloved as a comedian and character actor, Candy was well-known for playing the big-hearted buffoon in films throughout the 1980s and early 1990s. He got his start on SCTV, which stands for Second City Television Network — a variety sketch show that was the Canadian equivalent of Saturday Night Live.

Candy died of a heart attack on March 4, 1994 while working on the movie Wagons East in Durango, Mexico. He was only 43 years old.

Reynolds is a big fan of Candy’s and one astute Reddit user pointed out that in Deadpool 2, Reynolds’ character Wade Wilson can be seen reading The Canadian Mounted, the same book Candy reads in Planes, Trains & Automobiles.

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Movies

It’s almost time for CAPTAIN MARVEL!!!!

How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World flies to second weekend box office victory

Universal’s How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World is far from draggin’ at the box office.

The final entry in the animated franchise continues to soar past the competition, winning the box office for the second weekend in a row with an estimated opening total of $30 million in ticket sales at 4,286 theaters in the U.S. and Canada from Friday through Sunday. It has now earned an impressive $97.7 million in domestic ticket sales boosting its global total to an estimated $375.4 million, far surpassing the previous titles in the franchise at this stage.

New release Tyler Perry’s A Madea Family Funeral takes second place with an estimated $27 million in ticket sales across 2,442 theaters, while the weekend’s other debut title, Isabelle Huppert-led thriller Greta, faltered with a $4.6 million haul across 2,411 theaters for a disappointing eighth place slot.

How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World continues the Dreamworks animation franchise for the third and final entry in the trilogy. It debuted last week with the biggest opening of the year to date, knocking both the first film’s 2010 opening of $43.7 million and the sequel’s $49.5 million 2014 debut out of the sky. It should hold strong in coming weeks due to positive reviews and a glowing A CinemaScore from audiences.

This conclusion follows young Viking Hiccup (Jay Baruchel) and his Night Fury dragon Toothless as they seek out the “Hidden World,” a secret dragon utopia home to other Night Furies. The team must find the secret world before hired tyrant Grimmel (F. Murray Abraham) does and uses it for nefarious purposes. Gerard Butler, Craig Ferguson, Cate Blanchett, America Ferrera, Jonah Hill, and Kristen Wiig also lend their vocal talents to the film. Dean DeBlois continues his directing duties from the first two films.

While The Hidden World signals the end to the How to Train Your Dragon trilogy, second place this week goes to another final cinematic chapter, Tyler Perry’s A Madea Family Funeral. The film marks the end of Tyler Perry’s Madea franchise, which kicked off with 2005’s Diary of a Mad Black Woman. Perry has enjoyed a long partnership with Lionsgate, releasing 21 films with them, but this also closes the door on that relationship for the time being.

A Madea Family Funeral exceeded expectations with its $27 million release, which puts the film in third place overall in the franchise behind 2009’s Madea Goes to Jail $41 million opening and 2006’s Madea’s Family Reunion $30 million opening. In this final Madea tale, Tyler Perry stars as the titular matriarch in a story that finds a family reunion going awry when a trip to backwoods Georgia results in the planning of an unexpected funeral that threatens to unveil unsavory family secrets.

Mike Tyson, Cassi Davis, Patrice Lovely also star, while Perry dons the directing hat to close out this conclusion to a franchise that shot him to superstardom. Audiences gave the film a warm A- CinemaScore. Madea continues to resonate with women, pulling in a 67% female audience.

Other new release Greta fared more poorly, taking in $4.6 million for an eighth place debut. The Focus Features thriller stars Oscar nominee Isabelle Huppert as the title character, an eccentric and lonely French piano teacher who lures a young woman named Frances (Chloe Gracce Moretz) to her with a lost handbag she left on the subway. Frances soon discovers there might be more to Greta than meets the eye in this sinister tale. Maika Monroe, Colm Feore, Stephen Rea, Jeff Hiller, and Parker Sawyers also star in the Neil Jordan (Interview With The Vampire) helmed film.

Robert Rodriguez’s sci-fi epic Alita: Battle Angel fell to third place with an estimated $7 million across 3,096 theaters, bringing its domestic total to a paltry $72.2 after three weekends. The story of a female cyborg has reportedly taken in $350.4 million worldwide, which does little to make a dent in the rumored $200 million production budget.

Fourth place goes to another animated sequel Lego Movie 2: The Second Part, with an estimated $6.6 million haul across 3,458 theaters in its fourth week out. The latest entry in the Lego franchise now has a domestic cumulative total of $91.7 million, only coming in ahead of 2017’s The Lego Ninjago Movie in four week totals. Despite its all-star voice cast, which includes Chris Pratt, Alison Brie, Nick Offerman, and Will Arnett, the sequel pales in comparison to its smash-hit predecessor.

Following its Oscar Best Picture victory, Green Book rounds out the top five with an estimated $4.7 million across 2,641 theaters in its sixteenth week at the box office. The film added 1,388 locations on the heels of its Oscar success, which also included wins for Best Original Screenplay and Best Supporting Actor for Mahershala Ali.

The film follows driver Tony Lip (Viggo Mortensen) and pianist Don Shirley (Ali) on a 1962 trip through the American South, where the pair forge an unlikely friendship as they encounter virulent racism, homophobia, and more. Peter Farrelly directed the award-winning film. It now boasts a $75.9 million total, putting it ahead of last year’s Best Picture winner The Shape of Water, which ended its theatrical run with a $63.9 million domestic gross.

Overall box office is down 25.8 percent year-to-date, according to Comscore, still lagging behind the juggernaut success of last year’s Black Panther release. Check out the Feb. 22-24 numbers below.

1. How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World— $30 million
2. Tyler Perry’s A Madea Family Funeral— $27 million
3. Alita: Battle Angel— $7 million
4. Lego Movie 2: The Second Part— $6.6 million
5. Green Book— $4.7 million
6. Fighting With My Family— $4.7 million
7. Isn’t It Romantic— $4.6 million
8. Greta— $4.6 million
9. What Men Want— $2.7 million
10. Happy Death Day 2U — $2.5 million

Categories
Awards

It had a few nice moments, and that Olivia Coleman win was an amazing surprise!!! Overall, it needed to have a host!!

Oscars: ‘Green Book’ Overcomes Backlash to Win Best Picture

Peter Farrelly’s film nabbed three wins on Sunday night, including the top honor at the 91st Academy Awards.
Green Book won best picture at the 2019 Oscars on Sunday, beating out frontrunner Roma and robbing Netflix of its first-ever win in the coveted Academy Awards category.

“This is like a dream,” said producer Jim Burke while accepting the trophy with the Green Book cast and team, including Charles B. Wessler, Brian Currie, Peter Farrelly and Nick Vallelonga, on Sunday night. “We made this film with love, and we made it with tenderness and we made it with respect.”

Farrelly added, “This whole story is about love. It’s about loving each other despite our differences and finding the truth about who we are; we’re the same people.”

The director then thanked the film’s star Viggo Mortensen and co-star Mahershala Ali, who, earlier in the night, won his second best supporting actor award. He becomes the second black actor to win more than one Oscar for acting.

Wessler then dedicated the win to the late Carrie Fisher before presenter Julia Roberts signed off on behalf of the Academy and its hostless show.

The win marks a somewhat surprising development for what was anticipated to be an unpredictable Oscar year. The 2019 best picture category was considered one of the toughest to predict going into Sunday night. For one, both presumptive fronrunners Roma and Green Book have proven to be divisive among Academy members — the former because of box-office rival Netflix, the latter because of awards season missteps.

The best picture race also included box-office hits favored by viewers — Black Panther, Bohemian Rhapsody and A Star Is Born — and the Hollywood guilds, which usually settle on a consensus by Oscar night, had not agreed during the 2019 Oscars season. The Directors Guild feted Roma, the Producers Guild picked Green Book and the Screen Actors Guild awarded the cast of Black Panther.

Farrelly’s Green Book tells the story of Tony Lip (Mortensen), a bigoted Italian-American who was hired as a driver and bodyguard by pianist Don Shirley (Ali) for a tour through the civil rights-era South.

Universal’s Green Book was an early Oscar favorite, until passionate debate about the racial dramedy grew along with its awards season rise. Some of Shirley’s family members criticized the film’s portrayal. Then Vallelonga, Lip’s son and screenwriter, had to apologize for a resurfaced anti-Muslim tweet. Farrelly, who did not earn a best director nom, also had to apologize for exposing himself in the past.

Green Book earned five nominations, including a best actor nom for Mortensen. Brian Hayes Currie and Farrelly claimed the award for best original screenplay.

A win for Roma would have nabbed Alfonso Cuaron’s black-and-white autobiographical drama a number of firsts, including the first non-English film to win best picture. Roma had several strikes against it going into the Oscars. Many Academy members resented that the film comes from rival streaming giant Netflix.

Roma did earn Netflix its first-ever noms for best director, actress in a leading role — for first-time actress Yalitza Aparicio — original screenplay, foreign-language film, production design, sound editing and sound mixing. Of those categories, Roma won best director for Cuaron and best foreign-language film, a first for Mexico, on Sunday. Cuaron also won best cinematography.

In taking home the best picture trophy, Green Book also beat out the timely BlacKkKlansman, fan-favorite A Star Is Born, groundbreaking Black Panther, global box-office hit Bohemian Rhapsody, female-fronted The Favourite and the politically charged Vice.

Roma and The Favourite were tied for a total of 10 nominations going into Sunday. Roma also tied the record for most noms received by a foreign-language film. Netflix nabbed 15 nods in all.

Queen biopic Bohemian Rhapsody walked away with the most wins of the night with four.

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Awards

“I want these people to like me to a degree I find embarrassing.”

Here are the best jokes of the 2019 Oscars

Without a host, the Oscars ceremony this year was a little short on jokes. Instead of an opening monologue, we had Adam Lambert singing with Queen, and though we did get Tina Fey, Amy Poehler, and Maya Rudolph giving a slightly lengthened presentation for Best Supporting Actress, most of the laughs in the ceremony were more of the “polite chuckles during awkward celebrity banter” variety.

That said, here are the best zingers from show:

“Just a quick update, in case you’re confused: There is no host tonight, there won’t be a popular movie category, and Mexico is not paying for the wall.” (Maya Rudolph)

“We will be presenting commercials during the awards… Say, ‘Hellman’s Mayonnaise, we are on the side of food,’ instead of your speeches.” (Amy Poehler)

“Buster Scruggs, I hardly know her!” (Tina Fey)

[Sarcastically:] “Roma’s on Netflix, what’s next my microwave makes a movie?!” (Tina Fey)

“Don’t worry, Bradley — after four kids, I too have peed myself at the Grammys.” (Maya Rudolph)

“Justice Ginsburg, if you ever want to borrow the dragons, ring me.” (Game of Thrones actress Emilia Clarke)

“Even backstage, Mel Gibson came up to me and said, ‘Wakanda forever.’ He said another word after that, but ‘Wakanda’ was nice.” (Trevor Noah)

“I want these people to like me to a degree I find embarrassing.” (John Mulaney)

“I can’t believe a film about menstruation just won an Oscar!” (Best Documentary Short winner Rayka Zehtabchi)

“The same kind of magic that allows audiences to believe that I am an actor.” (Paul Rudd, presenting the award for Best Visual Effects)

“We were both raised in Brooklyn… and we both love hats!” (Barbra Streisand, on her similarities with BlacKkKlansman director Spike Lee)

“This is hilarious.” (Olivia Colman, winning Best Actress)

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People

May they all Rest In Peace.

Oscars 2019: Carol Channing, Stanley Donen, more left out of In Memoriam segment

Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences President John Bailey acknowledged to viewers before introducing this year’s In Memoriam segment at the Oscars that not everyone could make the cut. Still, some omissions left viewers smarting.

Among the most notable late greats not included was Carol Channing, best known for her work on sitcoms and variety shows but also an accomplished film actress — indeed, an Oscar nominee even, for her 1967 breakout Thoroughly Modern Millie.

Among other performers left off, many on social media noticed the absence of beloved character actor Dick Miller, who appeared in more than 100 films across his career, including Gremlins, The Little Shop of Horrors, and The Terminator; frequent Clint Eastwood collaborator Sondra Locke, who received an Oscar nomination as well for her turn in The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter, her film debut; and Emmy-nominated favorites Reg E. Cathey (House of Cards, The Wire) and John Mahoney.

Others expressed their dismay that neither independent film titan Mark Urman (Murderball, Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead) nor On the Town and Singin’ in the Rain director Stanley Donen didn’t make the cut. (In the case of Donen, at least, it was likely a matter of timing: He died on Thursday.)

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Movies

Can you see it?!? Can you see CAPTAIN MARVEL coming down the highway?!? The Winter Dumping Ground is almost over!!!

How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World roars to top of box office with biggest debut of the year

It’s an animated weekend at the box office with Universal’s How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World soaring to the top.

The latest in the animated franchise breathed fire its competition with an estimated opening weekend haul of $55.5 million in ticket sales at 4,259 theaters in the U.S. and Canada from Friday through Sunday. This marks the biggest debut of 2019 to date and also the highest opening for a How to Train Your Dragon film, beating both the first film’s 2010 opening of $43.7 million and the sequel’s $49.5 million 2014 debut.

After a soft opening last week, MGM’s Fighting With My Family expanded wide to take the fourth spot with an estimated $8 million across 2,711 theaters. The weekend’s other new release, Roadside Attraction’s Run the Race takes tenth place with an estimated total of $2.3 million across only 853 theaters.

How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World continues the Dreamworks animation franchise for the third and final entry in the trilogy. This conclusion follows young Viking Hiccup (Jay Baruchel) and his Night Fury dragon Toothless as they seek out the “Hidden World,” a secret dragon utopia home to other Night Furies. The team must find the secret world before hired tyrant Grimmel (F. Murray Abraham) does and uses it for nefarious purposes. Gerard Butler, Craig Ferguson, Cate Blanchett, America Ferrera, Jonah Hill, and Kristen Wiig also lend their vocal talents to the film. Dean DeBlois continues his directing duties from the first two films.

The movie far exceeded box office expectations — it’s rare for the third film in a franchise to beat its predecessors so heftily. It also released internationally early, bringing its global total to an estimated $274. 9 million. The threequel is likely buoyed by glowing reviews and audience reaction seems favorable with a solid A CinemaScore.

MGM opened Fighting With My Family in only four theaters last weekend before expanding to 2,711 theaters for a wider release. It takes the fourth spot with an estimated $8 million haul, bringing its cumulative two weekend total to $8.2 million.

Former professional wrestler Dwayne Johnson produced this WWE comedy about a reformed gangster/wrestler Ricky Knight (Nick Frost) and his wife Julia (Lena Headey) who make their living performing with their children. Johnson makes an expansive cameo as himself, and the film also stars Jack Lowden, Florence Pugh, and Vince Vaughn. Stephen Merchant (Extras) writes and directs.

This weekend’s other new release, Run the Race, takes the tenth spot with a very solid estimated $2.3 million total across 853 theaters. Produced by former NFL player Tim Tebow, the sports drama follows two brothers, one who plays high school football and one who runs tracks, as they face rising tensions from their different world views. This story of brotherhood features Frances Fisher, Mykelti Williamson, Tanner Stine, Mario Van Peebles, Kristoffer Polaha, and Evan Hofer. Chris Dowling directed the faith-based film.

Holdovers rounded out the top five this weekend with sci-fi epic Alita: Battle Angel taking second place with an estimated $12 million total. That brings the Robert Rodriguez flick to a cumulative total of $60.7 million, which still falls far below its rumored $170 million production budget. It fell by nearly 60 percent in its second weekend, though it does have an A- CinemaScore, which suggests it could continue to limp towards recouping its budget with its cumulative global total an estimated $263.4 million.

In its third weekend, Lego Movie 2: The Second Part continues to stay in the top three, taking in an estimated $10 million for third place. That brings its total over three weekends to $83.6 million, which still falls far below the original 2014 film, which stayed atop the box office for three weekends in a row bringing in a total $188.3 million in that time.

Fifth place goes to Warner Bros. meta romantic comedy Isn’t It Romantic, which fell about 47% percent from its opening weekend. The Rebel Wilson led rom-com rounds out the top five with an estimated $7.5 million total, bringing its overall haul to $33.8 million. The film has earned middling reviews and a passable B CinemaScore from audiences.

Overall box office is down 24.8 percent year-to-date, according to Comscore, with cinemas lacking a sizable hit like last year’s record-breaking Black Panther. Though it is Oscars weekend, none of the Best Picture nominees, which were all released over the end of 2018, remain in the box office top ten. Check out the Feb. 22-24 numbers below.

1. How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World— $55.5 million
2. Alita: Battle Angel — $12 million
3. Lego Movie 2: The Second Part— $10 million
4. Fighting With My Family— $8 million
5. Isn’t It Romantic— $7.5 million
6. What Men Want— $5.2 million
7. Happy Death Day 2U— $5 million
8. Cold Pursuit— $3.3 million
9. The Upside— $3.2 million
10. Run the Race — $2.3 million

Categories
Movies

Once again this year, February is where the studios dump their garbage, like ALITA. That movie looks soooooo bad!!

Alita: Battle Angel tops Presidents’ Day box office with $33 million

Robert Rodriguez’s Alita: Battle Angel may be winning the box office battle, but it’s likely losing the war.

The sci-fi epic is on track to win the weekend with an estimated $27.8 million in ticket sales at 3,790 theaters in the U.S. and Canada from Friday through Sunday ($33 million through Monday). The film opened on Thursday bringing its total debut to $36.5 million through Sunday. While the cyberpunk film easily takes the box office crown for the weekend, it’s a dismaying opening for a film that reportedly cost around $200 million to make. The weekend falls far below last year’s Presidents’ Day take where the record-breaking Black Panther scored a $242 million domestic opening in its debut.

Lego Movie 2: The Second Part held strong in its second week at the box office, taking second place with an estimated $27 million across 4,303 theaters for the four-day weekend. It continues to lag far behind the 2014 original, which scored an impressive $130 million in its first two weekends. Its $62.7 cumulative total across two weekends falls short of The Lego Movie’s original opening take of $69 million in its first weekend.

Other buzzy new release meta rom-com Isn’t it Romantic took third place with an estimated $16 million across 3,444 theaters for the long weekend.

Produced by sci-fi icon James Cameron, Alita: Battle Angel follows the story of a compassionate doctor (Christoph Waltz) who realizes that the cyborg shell he is nurturing also harbors the heart and soul of a young woman (Rosa Salazar) with a mysterious past. Jennifer Connelly, Jackie Earle Haley, and Mahershala Ali also star. The film has taken a pounding from critics, which could contribute to its lower overall total.

Isn’t It Romantic sought to capitalize on the Valentine’s Day tie-in, even opening on Wednesday to get couples in for the Thursday holiday, bringing its cumulative debut total to an estimated $20.5 million through Sunday for its third-place opening.

The film is a meta-riff on rom-coms, sending up many tropes of the genre in its story about Natalie (Rebel Wilson), a young architect disenchanted with love who suddenly wakes up to find herself trapped in a romantic comedy. Directed by Todd Strauss-Schulson, the film also stars Liam Hemsworth, Adam DeVine, and Priyanka Chopra.

This weekend’s other new release, Universal’s horror sequel Happy Death Day 2U, is poised to take the fifth place spot with an estimated total $11.5 million total across 3,207 theaters for Friday through Monday. This comedic horror film is a follow up to 2017 hit Happy Death Day, returning to heroine Tree Gelbman (Jessica Rothe) as she encounters new dangers after her dying over and over again in Groundhog Day fashion in the first film. Laura Clifton, Steve Zissis, and Suraj Sharma also star in the Christopher Landon helmed film. The sequel can’t repeat its former glory, taking in less than half of the original film’s $26 million opening.

Comedy gender-bent remake What Men Want rounds out the top five with its fourth place take of an estimated $12.6 million across 2,912 theaters for the long weekend. It’s down approximately 40 percent from its opening weekend.

Overall box office is down 19.7 percent year-to-date, according to Comscore, a number which sinks increasingly lower due to the lack of a major hit on the scale of last year’s Black Panther. Check out the Feb. 15-17 numbers below.

1. Alita: Battle Angel — $27.8 million
2. Lego Movie 2: The Second Part — $21.2 million
3. Isn’t It Romantic— $14.2 million
4. What Men Want— $10.9 million
5. Happy Death Day 2U— $9.8 million
6. Cold Pursuit — $6 million
7. The Upside— $5.8 million
8. Glass— $3.9 million
9. The Prodigy— $3.2 million
10. Green Book — $2.8 million

Categories
Awards

Sadly Weezer lost, sadly, but Weird Al” Yankovic won!!! YAY!!!

Grammy Awards 2019: Here’s the full list of winners:

61st annual Grammy Awards

Album of the Year: Golden Hour, Kacey Musgraves

Record of the Year: “This is America,” Childish Gambino

Song of the Year: “This is America,” Childish Gambino

Best New Artist: Dua Lipa

Best Rap Album: Invasion Of Privacy, Cardi B

Best R&B Album: H.E.R., H.E.R.

Best Country Album: Golden Hour, Kacey Musgraves

Best Rap Song: “God’s Plan,” Drake

Best Pop Duo/Group Performance: “Shallow,” Lady Gaga & Bradley Cooper

Best Pop Vocal Album: Sweetener, Ariana Grande

Best Pop Solo Performance: “Joanne (Where Do You Think You’re Goin’?),” Lady Gaga and Mark Ronson

Producer of the Year, Non-Classical: Pharrell Williams

Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album: My Way, Willie Nelson

COUNTRY

Best Country Solo Performance: “Butterflies,” Kacey Musgraves

Best Country Duo/Group Performance: “Tequila,” Dan & Shay

Best Country Song: “Space Cowboy,” Kacey Musgraves

HIP-HOP/R&B

Best R&B Performance: “Best Part,” H.E.R. featuring Daniel Caesar

Best Traditional R&B Performance (Tie): “Bet Ain’t Worth The Hand,” Leon Bridges and “How Deep Is Your Love,” PJ Morton featuring Yebba

Best R&B Song: “Boo’d Up,” Ella Mai

Best Urban Contemporary Album: Everything Is Love, The Carters

Best Rap Performance (Tie): “King’s Dead,” Kendrick Lamar, Jay Rock, Future and James Blake, and “Bubblin,” Anderson Paak

Best Rap/Sung Performance: “This Is America,” Childish Gambino

ROCK

Best Rock Performance: “When Bad Does Good,” Chris Cornell

Best Metal Performance: “Electric Messiah,” High on Fire

Best Rock Song: “Masseduction,” St Vincent,

Best Rock Album: From The Fires, Greta Van Fleet

Best Alternative Music Album: Colors, Beck

AMERICAN ROOTS

Best American Roots Performance: “The Joke,” Brandi Carlile

Best American Roots Song: “The Joke,” Brandi Carlile

Best Americana Album: By The Way, I Forgive You, Brandi Carlile

Best Bluegrass Album: The Travelin’ McCourys, The Travelin’ McCourys

Best Traditional Blues Album: The Blues Is Alive And Well, Buddy Guy

Best Contemporary Blues Album: Please Don’t Be Dead, Fantastic Negrito

Best Folk Album: All Ashore, Punch Brothers

GOSPEL/CONTEMPORARY CHRISTIAN MUSIC

Best Gospel Performance/Song: “Never Alone,” Kirk Franklin and Tori Kelly

Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song: “You Say,” Lauren Daigle and Paul Mabury

Best Gospel Album: Hiding Place, Tori Kelly

Best Contemporary Christian Music Album: Look Up Child, Lauren Daigle

Best Roots Gospel Album: Unexpected, Jason Crabb

JAZZ

Best Improvised Jazz Solo: “Don’t Fence Me In,” John DaVersa

Best Jazz Vocal Album: The Window, Cécile McLorin Salvant

Best Jazz Instrumental Album: Emanon, The Wayner Shorter Quartet

Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album: American Dreamers: Voices of Hope, Music of Freedom, John DaVersa Big Band Featuring DACA Artists

Best Latin Jazz Album: Back to the Sunset, Dafnis Prieto Big Band

CLASSICAL

Best Engineered Album, Classical: Shostakovich: Symphonies Nos. 4 & 11, Shawn Murphy and Nick Squire, engineers, Tim Martyn, masteering engineer

Producer Of The Year, Classical: Blanton Alspaugh

Best Orchestral Performance: Shostakovich: Symphonies Nos. 4 & 11, Andris Nelsons, conductor

Best Opera Recording: “Bates: The (R)evolution Of Steve Jobs”

Best Choral Performance: “McLoskey: Zealot Canticles,” Donald Nally, conductor

Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance: “Landfall,” Laurie Anderson and the Kronos Quartet

Best Classical Instrumental Solo: “Kernis: Violin Concerto,” James Ehnes

Best Classical Solo Vocal Album: “Songs Of Orpheus–Monteverdi, Caccini, D’India & Landi,” Karim Sulayman; Jeanette Sorrell, conductor, Apollo’s Fire, ensembles

Best Classical Compendium: “Fuchs: Piano Concerto ‘Spiritualist’; Poems Of Life; Glacier; Rush,” JoAnn Falletta, conductor; Tim Handley, producer

Best Contemporary Classical Composition: “Kernis: Violin Concerto,” James Ehnes, Ludovic Morlot & Seattle Symphony

LATIN

Best Latin Pop Album: Sincera, Claudia Brant

Best Latin Rock, Urban or Alternative Album: Aztlan, Zoé

Best Regional Mexican Music Album: ¡Mexico Por Siempre!, Luis Miguel

Best Tropical Latin Album: Anniversary, Spanish Harlem Orchestra

DANCE

Best Dance Recording: “Electricity,” Silk City & Dua Lipa Featuring Diplo & Mark Ronson

Best Dance/Electronic Album: Woman Worldwide, Justice

Best Regional Roots Music Album: No ‘Ane’i, Kalani Pe’a

Best Comedy Album: Equanimity & The Bird Revelation, Dave Chapelle

Best Musical Theater Album: The Band’s Visit

Best Instrumental Composition: Blut Und Boden (Blood and Soil), Terence Blanchard

Best Arrangement, Instrumental or A Cappella: Stars and Stripes Forever, John Daversa

Best Arrangement, Instruments and Vocals: Spiderman Theme, Randy Waldman

Best Recording Package: Masseduction, Willo Perron, art directors (St. Vincent)

Best Recording Package: The Complete Works Of “Weird Al” Yankovic, Meghan Foley, Annie Stoll & “Weird Al” Yankovic art directors (“Weird Al” Yankovic)

Best Album Notes: Voices Of Mississippi: Artists and Musicians Documented By William Ferris, David Evans, album notes writer (Various Artists)

Best Historical Album: Voices Of Mississippi: Artists And Musicians Documented By William Ferris, William Ferris, April Ledbetter & Steven Lance Ledbetter, compilation producers; Michael Graves, mastering engineer (Various Artists)

Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical: Colors, Beck

Best Remixed Recording: Walking Away (Mura Masa Remix), Mura Masa, Remixer (HAIM)

Best Immersive Audio Album: Eye in the Sky (35th Anniversary Edition), Alan Parsons, surround mix engineer; Dave Donnelly, PJ Olsson, & Alan Parsons, surround mastering engineers; Alan Parsons, surround producer (The Alan Parsons Project

Categories
Awards

Congratulations to all of the nominees!!

‘Schitt’s Creek,’ ‘Anne with an E’ lead Canadian Screen Awards nominees

TORONTO — Anne with an E tied Schitt’s Creek with a leading 15 Canadian Screen Award nominations Thursday for a season that focused on inclusivity and diversity — a theme producers say they plan to continue to expand upon.

The CBC show inspired by Lucy Maud Montgomery’s classic novel is up for trophies including best drama series and best actress for Amybeth McNulty, who stars as the plucky young Prince Edward Island heroine.

The nominations were for Season 2, which included an LGBTQ storyline and the show’s first black character, a Trinidadian sailor played by Dalmar Abuzeid, who is nominated for best guest performance.

Next season, which starts shooting March 11, will see an Indigenous storyline, executive producer Miranda de Pencier revealed Thursday in an interview.

“There’s no sense in reinventing a classic novel if you’re not going to make it relevant for today’s audience,” said de Pencier, who also directed the film The Grizzlies, which got three nominations Thursday.

“So it was really important for us to find themes that matter for Canadians.”

The Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television administers the awards, which honour Canadian talent in film, television and digital media.

The other best drama series contenders are City’s Bad Blood, OMNI’s Blood and Water, CBC’s Frankie Drake Mysteries and History’s Vikings.

Schitt’s Creek’s nominations include best comedy and acting nods for the CBC show’s main stars, who play a riches-to-rags family — Eugene Levy, Daniel Levy, Catherine O’Hara and Annie Murphy.

The best comedy series category is rounded out by Crave’s Letterkenny, CBC’s Mr. D and Workin’ Moms, and OMNI’s Second Jen.

“I think it’s safe to say that Canadian comedy is really having a moment right now and our nominations reflect that,” said academy CEO Beth Janson, referring to the international acclaim raining down on many of the best-comedy nominees lately.

On the film side, the leading contenders are from Quebec: Maxime Giroux’s allegorical drama The Great Darkened Days and Daniel Roby’s disaster thriller Just a Breath Away with eight nominations apiece.

Both are competing in categories including best picture and best director.

Giroux’s film is about a draft dodger from Quebec who takes refuge in the American West.

Just a Breath Away follows a couple trying to save their daughter from a toxic gas cloud in Paris.

Also in the running for best picture are the post-apocalyptic Genesis directed by Freddie Hutton-Mills, the coming-of-age drama A Colony from Genevieve Dulude-De Celles, and Sophie Dupuis’ Montreal crime story Family First.

All of the best-picture nominees are French-language films. Nominees in that category are chosen by a jury of industry workers, the majority of whom hail from the academy’s existing membership of between 4,500 and 5000 people across the country.

The jury chooses the nominees based on artistic excellence.

“There are those who say it’s impossible to judge artistic excellence or that it’s unfair to judge artistic excellence, but we don’t put any rules on how we do that and so every once in a while you’re going to end up with a result that is unique,” said academy chair Martin Katz.

The Canadian Screen Awards, which will air from Toronto on CBC and the CBC Gem streaming service on March 31, have a total of 135 categories.

The CBC said its popular show Kim’s Convenience, which won best comedy series at last year’s awards, was not eligible to be nominated this year as its broadcast slot moved from fall to winter.

Other major nominees this year include Season 2 of CTV’s crime drama Cardinal, titled Blackfly Season, which has 14 nods including best limited series or program.

CBC News: The National has 13 nominations, while Global’s end-of-life drama Mary Kills People and CBC’s parenting comedy Workin’ Moms have nine nods each.

This year’s Canadian Screen Awards won’t have a host and will hand out special honours to stars including the Kids in the Hall comedy troupe, who will get the Academy Icon Award.

Meanwhile, comedy great Mary Walsh will receive the Earle Grey Award for her body of work and filmmaker Deepa Mehta will get the Lifetime Achievement Award.

Toronto actor Stephan James — who has skyrocketed to fame with starring roles in the Oscar-nominated film If Beale Street Could Talk and the Amazon Prime Video series Homecoming — will get the inaugural Radius Award, which goes to a Canadian making waves globally.

Overall, women received 50% of the nominations across all writing categories, and dominate nominations in film direction, feature film and web performance categories.

“I think that’s reflective of a conscious investment that a lot of our institutions and broadcasters have made, to invest more in female creators and in women behind the camera,” said Janson.

“So I’m really excited to see that showing fruit in the Canadian Screen Award nominations.”