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Today in Entertainment: CNN fires Kathy Griffin over gory Trump photo; Lebanon officially bans ‘Wonder Woman’

Here’s what’s new and interesting in entertainment and the arts:

A Star Is Born: Morgan Freeman turns 80 today

(Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times)

I like to play characters who are the absolute opposite of me. I think the farther you get from yourself, the more fun you have because the real you is hidden away. Those are the kind of parts where you can become totally empty and let the character fill you up. That’s what I look for -- a role that gives me a chance to be someone completely different.

— Morgan Freeman, 1993

FROM THE ARCHIVES: No Sweat: Morgan Freeman Slides Into the Director’s Chair

Chloë Grace Moretz addresses body-shaming controversy over Snow White movie

(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)

Actress Chloë Grace Moretz has long been known as a strong voice when it comes to issues of feminism, whether it’s over-sexualization of female characters or equal pay for women. Now she’s speaking out against the marketing campaign behind one of her own projects.

Moretz went on social media Wednesday to address criticism that marketing for the animated film “Red Shoes and the 7 Dwarfs” — an updated tweak on the Snow White story, with Moretz as the voice of the classic fairy-tale character — engages in body-shaming.

“I have now fully reviewed the [marketing] for Red Shoes, I am just as appalled and angry as everyone else, this wasn’t approved by me or my team,” the actress wrote.

According to the website of the South Korean animation studio behind the film, its story centers on “a Princess who doesn’t fit into the celebrity world of Princesses — or their dress size.” When she puts on a pair of magical red shoes, she instantly becomes skinnier.

The film’s synopsis promises an empowering message in which Snow White “learns not only to accept herself, but to celebrate who she is, inside and out.” But the film’s trailer and other marketing materials have been blasted as fat-shaming.

Plus-size model Tess Holliday took to Twitter to criticize a billboard for the film that appeared at the Cannes Film Festival, where “Red Shoes” was seeking distribution, that suggested that the less svelte Snow White was “no longer beautiful.”

Hearing the complaints about the film’s tone-deaf marketing, Moretz agreed – and told her more than 3 million followers so in a pair of tweets.

Even as she apologized, she promised that the marketing doesn’t represent the complete picture and the film’s ultimate message is a far more positive one than initial impressions may suggest.

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Singing tween ventriloquist from ‘America’s Got Talent’ is the cure for what ails you

Had enough outrage? Here’s the cure for what ails you, courtesy of “America’s Got Talent.”

Take a deep breath, exhale slowly and witness one Darci Lynne Farmer, a 12-year-old singing ventriloquist from Oklahoma City, who on Tuesday night got the Golden Buzzer from “AGT” judge Mel B for a performance that exuded unadulterated joy.

Armed with bunny-puppet pal Petunia on lead vocals, Darci Lynne delivered a surprising version of “Summertime” for her audition. She ended up earning a ticket straight to the competition’s live shows.

“You made my heart melt,” said Mel B, who Darci Lynne later dubbed “the best Spice Girl.”

“I believe that that rabbit is a real separate person,” judge Howie Mandel said. “I love you. I believe you’re gonna go far. You just changed your life tonight, young lady.”

John Legend makes case to take canceled drama ‘Underground’ elsewhere

(Katie Falkenberg / Los Angeles Times)

John Legend is making a case for the recently canceled TV drama “Underground” to be picked up by other content providers.

The Oscar-winning musician, who is an executive producer and played abolitionist Frederick Douglass on the Underground Railroad-centered show, rallied fans to give it a second life when cable broadcaster WGN America announced Tuesday it would be canceling the series after two seasons.

The network has been scaling down its investment in original programming as part of a deal that its parent company, Tribune Media, made with conservative-leaning Sinclair Broadcast Group Inc. Sinclair’s purchase of Tribune gives it control of more than 200 local TV stations and WGN America.

The shift was not lost on Legend, who fired off a series of tweets to promote the content brought forth by “Underground” and its creators, Misha Green and Joe Pokaski.

“WGN America has been bought and is going a different direction strategically. We will find a new home for Underground!” he tweeted, adding, “Content wins. We’re not reliant on a particular network to make great content. We’re so proud of our show and the audience that supported!”

Legend, who has made no secret about his liberal politics, cautioned fans to “be wary of Sinclair” and claimed that “they’re trying to make local stations mini Fox Newses” that lean even further to the right.

He completed his plea by asking followers to “feel free to drop some hints to the network/streaming services you want to pick up #Underground. Show them who will be watching!”

“Despite ‘Underground’ being a terrific and important series, it no longer fits with our new direction and we have reached the difficult decision not to renew it for a third season,” Peter Kern, president and CEO of Tribune Media, said in a statement. “It is our hope that this remarkable show finds another home and continues its stories of courage, determination and freedom.”

Sony Pictures Television, the studio that produces “Underground,” is said to be trying to find it a new home.

See The Times’ roster of new, returning and canceled series here.

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Coachella 2018 dates and ticket sales announced

We already knew one thing about Coachella in 2018: Beyoncé’s headlining. And now we know when the world-famous California music festival will be held and when tickets are on sale.

Organizers announced Wednesday that the festival will again return to the expanded Empire Polo Club in Indio for two weekends, April 13-15 and April 20-22.

Tickets go on sale Friday at 11 a.m. PDT. Ticket prices start at $429 for general admission and $999 for VIP, and usually sell out within hours and well before a full lineup is announced.

Given that next year will see Beyoncé’s much-awaited, post-twins makeup set at Coachella, it’s fair to say they’ll go fast.

Lady Gaga performed at the 2017 edition of Coachella.
((Patrick T. Fallon / For The Los Angeles Times)

Liam Gallagher plays new music at Manchester benefit show

In the wake of the terrorist attack outside an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester, scores of artists joined forces to raise money for the victims. Among them was Liam Gallagher, the former singer and frontman for the city’s most beloved rock band, Oasis.

Gallagher played a benefit show for the bombing victims on Tuesday at the O2 Ritz Manchester. At the show, his first as a solo artist, he played several new songs, including the single “Wall of Glass,” which you can watch above. It was a preview of his forthcoming solo LP, “As You Were.” (Previously, Gallagher fronted the post-Oasis rock band Beady Eye.)

For Oasis fans, he played several classic tracks, including “Be Here Now” with Oasis guitarist Paul “Bonehead” Arthurs and an a cappella take on “Live Forever.”

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CNN fires Kathy Griffin from New Year’s Eve show over controversial Trump picture

(Lawrence K. Ho / Los Angeles Times)

Kathy Griffin is out of a job at CNN.

The cable network on Wednesday terminated its agreement with the comic, who for years has co-hosted its New Year’s Eve program with Anderson Cooper, after a photo of Griffin holding a bloody, severed head in the likeness of President Trump went viral on social media.

The image, taken by photographer Tyler Shields, elicited strong criticism from liberals and conservatives alike.

Griffin apologized for the gory image in a 30-second video posted online Tuesday night.

“I beg for your forgiveness,” Griffin said in the video. “I went too far.”

Trump denounced the image Wednesday, calling it “Sick!” and saying Griffin should be ashamed.

Lebanon officially bans ‘Wonder Woman’ from theaters

If you live in Lebanon, “Wonder Woman” won’t be coming to a theater near you anytime soon.

On Wednesday, the country officially banned the superhero film just hours before it was set to arrive in theaters. The ban followed an effort by a group called Campaign to Boycott Supporters of Israel, which urged the Lebanese government’s Ministry of Economy and Trade to block the film because its star, Gal Gadot, is Israeli.

News of the ban, which had been the subject of speculation since Monday, was announced on social media by Lebanon’s Grand Cinemas and Campaign to Boycott Supporters of Israel.

Lebanon has had a contentious relationship with the state of Israel for decades and has an official law on the books that encourages boycotts of products from its neighbor to the south. Israeli citizens and anyone whose passport shows they’ve traveled to Israel are prohibited from entering Lebanon.

Earlier films featuring Gadot, including “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice” and “Furious 7,” have successfully screened in theaters in Lebanon, however. “Batman v Superman,” which introduced Gadot’s Wonder Woman, was the third biggest hit at the box office in Lebanon last year.

And, as has been pointed out, “Wonder Woman” was, in fact, made by three companies based in America and two based in China, so calling it an Israeli product is debatable.

But, on its Facebook page, the Campaign to Boycott Supporters of Israel complained that Gadot had served two years in the Israeli Defense Forces (national military service is mandatory for Israeli citizens over 18) and “boasted about the army training her for Hollywood.”

“Wonder Woman” lands in American theaters on Friday and, fueled by overwhelmingly positive reviews, is expected to perform strongly. Read our recent profile of director Patty Jenkins, in which she explains why the world needs Wonder Woman, right here.

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If President Trump’s got the whole world in his hands, Trevor Noah says we’re in trouble

Having caught fire too late Tuesday for late-night TV, and with several hosts extending their Memorial Day weekend, the #covfefe hashtag would have to wait at least until Wednesday for its monologue moment.

There were, however, some late-night-related tweets reacting to Twitter addict @realdonaldtrump’s since-deleted mistyping of what is assumed to be the word “covering” or “coverage.”

“What makes me saddest,” wrote Jimmy Kimmel, “is that I know I’ll never write anything funnier than #covfefe.”

The account for CBS’ “Late Late Show” poked some fun at Trump’s gaffe, too.

Meanwhile, Trevor Noah and Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show” were back after a week off, above, catching up with President Trump’s whole first trip abroad. “International Hand Stuff” was the name of the segment, which framed the excursion in terms of the president’s mitts.

There were references to Trump touching the “glowing white orb” and Jerusalem’s Western Wall (“they build one wall 2,000 years ago,” Noah said in his Trump voice, “zero Mexicans in their whole country”); the question of whether First Lady Melania Trump swatted away her husband’s hand on the tarmac in Tel Aviv (“leave it to Fox News not to recognize what rejection from a woman looks like”); and Trump’s power handshake from new French President Emmanuel Macron (“the first time that President Trump was on the receiving end of an unwelcome hand grab”).

The last manual metaphor was given to the German chancellor, who, after her visit with the American president, said, “We Europeans must take our fate into our own hands.”

“Yeah,” said Noah, “clearly Angela Merkel got one look at Trump and was like, ‘All right, our fate is in our own hands, because his clearly ruin everything they touch.’”

Jimmy Kimmel also looked at Trump’s trip abroad, which he described, with probable irony, as “spreading joy and optimism all over the world.” Titled “Drunk Donald Trump: Sicily,” the segment replayed a portion of Trump’s speech at half-speed. The effect is uncanny.

Later, sitting outside on some steps -- urine-stained steps, apparently -- Kimmel asked a series of kids, who really do say the darnedest things, about the state of the union.

If we measure a late-night host solely by an ability to engage with children in a way that’s friendly, direct, deadpan and mostly honest, Kimmel is in a league with David Letterman, nearly.

How did he think Donald Trump was doing, Kimmel asked one boy.

“Not really well,” the child replied. “My sister told me that Donald Trump is against another state.”

“Which state? Is it … Nebraska?”

“Yeah, Nebraska.”

“A lot of people are happy that he is bombing Nebraska,” said Kimmel. (I did say “mostly” honest.) “Do you think it was a good idea?”

“No,” replied the boy, “‘cause they have, like, better bombs.”

“I think they’re going to be OK, though, I really do,” the host said. “Once football season starts, they’re usually pretty solid.”

Kathy Griffin apologized for that bloody severed-head stunt. But few are forgiving her

(Lawrence K. Ho / Los Angeles Times)

First Lady Melania Trump is the latest detractor of Kathy Griffin’s bloody depiction of the president’s decapitation.

“As a mother, a wife, and a human being, that photo is very disturbing,” FLOTUS said in a statement to NBC News. “When you consider some of the atrocities happening in the world today, a photo opportunity like this is simply wrong and makes you wonder about the mental health of the person who did it.”

Griffin’s photographs and video by photographer Tyler Shields showed the comic straight-faced, holding up a blood-splattered severed head that appeared to be Trump’s. The president denounced Griffin’s stunt, saying that she “should be ashamed of herself” and that the piece greatly disturbed his 11-year-old son, Barron.

Griffin’s apology wasn’t accepted by some on Twitter either, which spewed a variety of reactions, including several right-wing jabs that Griffin had been radicalized by Islamic State, the terror group that frequently beheads its victims. Several also sympathized with the president’s family, citing TMZ’s story about Barron believing that something horrible had happened to his father when he saw the images on the news.

CNN subsequently fired Griffin from her co-hosting duties for its New Year’s Eve broadcast, and she has also been dropped as a spokesperson for Squatty Potty.

Trump’s eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., was delighted by the bathroom footstool maker’s response but criticized CNN for not immediately doing the same.

“So Squatty Potty pulls the plug on Kathy Griffin, but CNN still ‘evaluating’ and weighing their options,” the president’s eldest son tweeted. “Insane what’s going on there!!!” He then added, “Apologies for my last tweet. I didn’t mean to group Squatty Potty with CNN. Obviously one of them has moral/ethical standards.”

Griffin’s CNN compatriot, Anderson Cooper, who co-hosts the giggle-filled New Year’s Eve show for the cable news channel, did not come to his pal’s defense.

“For the record, I am appalled by the photo shoot Kathy Griffin took part in. It is clearly disgusting and completely inappropriate,” Cooper tweeted.

CNN host Jake Tapper also said on the air that he “thought the beheading imagery by Griffin about the president was disgusting and inappropriate.”

Meanwhile, others believed that Griffin’s apology was a step in the right direction.

“I think she did the right thing asking for forgiveness and acknowledging that this was a horrible mistake, so I think she can,” Minnesota Democrat and former “Saturday Night Live” writer Sen. Al Franken told CNN on Wednesday.

“Kathy’s a friend and she’s a terrific comedian, but this had no business being in our public discourse...,” Franken said. “And I talked to her. She has apologized — a real, fulsome apology. She’s actually begged for forgiveness, and I believe in forgiveness.”

Still, there was more snark to be had.

Update, 10:55 a.m.: Story added news that CNN has fired Griffin from its New Year’s Eve broadcast.

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Melania Trump questions Kathy Griffin’s mental health after inflammatory photo shoot

President Trump and Melania Trump
(Brendan Smialowski / AFP/Getty Images)

As a mother, a wife, and a human being, that photo is very disturbing. When you consider some of the atrocities happening in the world today, a photo opportunity like this is simply wrong and makes you wonder about the mental health of the person who did it.

— Melania Trump, responding to Kathy Griffin’s controversial stunt involving a “severed head” in the likeness of President Trump

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President Trump denounces Kathy Griffin’s decapitation stunt: ‘Sick!’

Kathy Griffin’s controversial presidential commentary didn’t go unnoticed by the president himself.

In the wake of the comedienne’s gory display photographed by Tyler Shields, which featured the “New Year’s Eve Live” co-host holding a severed likeness of Donald Trump’s head, the president took to Twitter early Wednesday morning to denounce her stunt.

UPDATE: CNN fires Kathy Griffin from New Year’s Eve show

“Kathy Griffin should be ashamed of herself. My children, especially my 11 year old son, Barron, are having a hard time with this. Sick!” he wrote.

Griffin has already apologized for the polarizing turn of events, which was publicized online on Tuesday. In a video statement on social media, she said she had asked Shields to take down the photos.

“I beg for your forgiveness,” Griffin said in the 30-second clip. “I went too far.”

It seems the controversy is far from blowing over, though. TMZ reports that the Secret Service is investigating the matter, and the site also posted stories about how Trump’s son Barron was indeed traumatized by the images.

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A Star Is Born: Clint Eastwood turns 87 today

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

If you want to be in for the long haul, you just have to trust your judgment about the material. ... If you go whoring for the money, the audiences will figure you out. They know when you’re being a jerk, when you’re just trying to get them in a room and show them a movie you don’t even care about.

— Clint Eastwood, 1993

FROM THE ARCHIVES: Clint, closing in on El Dorado

Kathy Griffin posts apology for graphic Trump photo shoot, and CNN responds

After widespread condemnation, comedian Kathy Griffin issued an apology on social media Tuesday for a photo of herself holding a severed head in the likeness of President Trump.

“I beg for your forgiveness,” Griffin says in a 30-second video posted on social media. “I went too far.”

That didn’t smooth things over with Trump, though, who responded to the stunt on Twitter Wednesday morning, calling it “sick!”

UPDATE: CNN fires Kathy Griffin from New Year’s Eve show

Griffin’s “New Year’s Eve Live” co-host Anderson Cooper tweeted that he found the display “disgusting,” and CNN released a statement as well, saying: “We found what she did disgusting and offensive. We are pleased to see she has apologized and asked that the photos be taken down. We are evaluating New Year’s Eve and have made no decisions at this point.”

Update, May 31, 8:10 a.m.: Story added information about Trump’s reaction Wednesday morning.

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‘This Is Us’ not moving to Thursdays, after all

Consider it a flash-forward flashback: Poised to help NBC reclaim its “Must See TV” glory on Thursday nights, “This Is Us” is now staying put in its Tuesday time slot before the switch even happened.

The breakout drama from last season will keep hold of the 9 p.m. hour on Tuesdays where it performed mightily in its debut season, the network announced Tuesday. It’ll retain its lead-in, “The Voice.”

The move means some rejiggering for Thursdays. The revival of “Will & Grace,” which was slated to open the night, will now kick off the 9 p.m. hour. It will be surrounded by comedies “Superstore,” “The Good Place” and “Great News” to create a two-hour comedy block.

“Chicago Fire” will take up the 10 p.m. hour instead of “Law & Order True Crime: The Menendez Murders.” That drama will keep its “This Is Us” lead-in by moving to Tuesdays.

Here’s NBC’s revised schedule:

Tuesdays

8 p.m. – “The Voice”

9 p.m. – “This Is Us”

10 p.m. – “Law & Order True Crime: The Menendez Murders”

Thursdays

8 p.m. – “Superstore”

8:30 p.m. – “The Good Place”

9 p.m. – “Will & Grace”

9:30 p.m. – “Great News”

10 p.m. – “Chicago Fire”

Kathy Griffin shocks in gory photo shoot with Donald Trump’s (fake) head

(Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)

Comedian Kathy Griffin and photographer Tyler Shields may have pulled off the impossible with the creation of a gory photo that’s spurring outrage on both sides of the political aisle.

The picture, featuring Griffin wearing a navy pussy-bow blouse and holding aloft a bloodied imitation of President Trump’s decapitated head, was first published Tuesday morning by TMZ.

RELATED: Kathy Griffin posts apology for gory Trump photo shoot

Griffin herself shared the video from the shoot on her Twitter feed, while referencing Trump’s comments toward Megyn Kelly during the Republican presidential debates.

“I caption this ‘there was blood coming out of his eyes, blood coming out of his ... wherever,’” Griffin wrote, quickly following it with a tweet that clarified that she didn’t condone violence toward the president and was only mocking him.

Internet reaction to the vivid photo was immediate, with many condemning Shields and Griffin for exacerbating an atmosphere of violence some believe has already been established by Trump.

Both Shields and Griffin seem unfazed by the reaction, as the latter retweeted many critical comments.

In a tweet from last week, Shields pondered if it were possible to be jailed for an artistic statement, then went on to joke with BuzzFeed News on Tuesday that he hoped he’d be allowed to visit Griffin “in Guantanamo.”

Griffin reiterated the idea of the photo being an artistic expression in an interview with Yashar Ali on Tuesday afternoon.

Implications of violence are generally considered a step beyond in modern political discourse; outrage was the response Ted Nugent when he called for then-President Obama and Hillary Clinton to be tried and hanged, and when then-candidate Trump made reference on the campaign trail to “2nd Amendment people” stopping Clinton.

Though Nugent and Trump have both ended up in the White House at one point or another, it’s unclear if Griffin will escape this furor unscathed.

Griffin serves as co-host for CNN’s New Year’s Eve special alongside Anderson Cooper and pressure is rising for the cable news provider to drop Griffin from the festivities.

Representatives for Griffin and CNN did not immediately respond to a request to comment.

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Erin Moran died of cancer, autopsy report confirms

Erin Moran is shown in 1992.
(Wally Fong / Associated Press )

The coroner reportedly says “Happy Days” actress Erin Moran died of complications from cancer and cancer alone. That’s in line with what her husband said in an open letter written shortly after her death on April 22 at age 56.

Tests showed “no illegal narcotics were involved in her death,” according to an autopsy report obtained by TMZ on Tuesday from the coroner’s office in Harrison County, Ind.

Moran struggled with substance abuse earlier in her life, and media assumptions about her cause of death were amplified by a comment from Scott Baio during an early morning radio interview April 24.

When Baio learned his former costar had been battling cancer, he fell all over himself trying to set the record straight.

“I was asked ONLY about Erin’s troubled past due to drug & alcohol abuse. I was still upset and said I felt that living that kind of a lifestyle will catch up with you and nothing good would come of it,” he said on Facebook. “THIS WAS BEFORE THE CAUSE OF DEATH WAS ANNOUNCED STATING STAGE 4 CANCER.”

One of the former child star’s brothers, Tony Moran, told the Sun on May 30: “My first thoughts were she must have had a heart attack caused by years of substance abuse. She has always battled demons and in recent years things have gone from bad to worse.”

In reality, as described by her husband, Moran had discovered last December that she had squamous cell carcinoma of the throat. After undergoing chemotherapy and radiation, by April she could no longer speak, eat or drink. She had a feeding tube.

Baio posted the open letter from Steve Fleischmann, Moran’s husband of nearly 24 years, on his own Facebook page April 25. “It got so bad so fast,” Fleischmann said.

“The coroner told me it was really really bad. It had spread to her spleen, she had alot of fluid in her lungs and part of her brain was infected,” Fleischmann wrote. “The coroner said even if she was in the hospital being pumped full of antibiotics she still would not of made it. He said it was the best that she was with me and went in her sleep.”

WGN America cancels ‘Underground,’ but will it really be the end?

A chat with Aisha Hinds and Jurnee Smollett-Bell, the “badass women” from “Underground.”

WGN America has canceled slavery-era-set drama “Underground.”

The fate of the series, which centered around the Underground Railroad, seemed doomed given how the network has been scaling back its investment in original programming. Until now, the drama, from creators Misha Green and Joe Pokaski, had stood as the lone original scripted series on the network following the recent cancellation of “Outsiders.”

The shift away from original programming comes after Sinclair Broadcast Group Inc., the conservative-leaning Baltimore-based company, announced it had agreed to buy Tribune Media in a deal that would give it control of more than 200 local TV stations and WGN America.

“As WGN America evolves and broadens the scope and scale of its portfolio of series, we recently announced that resources will be reallocated to a new strategy to increase our relevance within the rapidly changing television landscape,” Peter Kern, president and CEO of Tribune Media, said in a statement. “Despite ‘Underground’ being a terrific and important series, it no longer fits with our new direction and we have reached the difficult decision not to renew it for a third season.”

Kern added: “It is our hope that this remarkable show finds another home and continues its stories of courage, determination and freedom.”

Sony Pictures Television, the studio that produces “Underground,” is said to be trying to find it a new home.

When “Underground” stars Jurnee Smollett-Bell and Aisha Hinds stopped by the Los Angeles Times’ video studio last week, both seemed hopeful that “Underground’s” story wasn’t over.

“We haven’t heard anything yet on the status of Season 3,” said Hinds, who joined Season 2 portraying Underground Railroad icon Harriet Tubman. “But I do know there is quite a bit more of this story to tell. And I know that we have engaged viewers waiting to see the story. If WGN is not our home, we’ll find a home.”

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Lebanon might ban new ‘Wonder Woman’ because of star’s Israeli heritage

A new foe has arisen to oppose Wonder Woman at the box office: Lebanon.

The Associated Press reported Tuesday that Lebanon is seeking to ban Warner Bros.’s new “Wonder Woman” movie because lead actress Gal Gadot is an Israeli.

On Monday, Lebanon’s National News Agency reported that the Ministry of Economy and Trade was adopting measures necessary to ban the film from screening.

Relations between Israel and Lebanon have been strained since Israel’s independence in 1948, with Lebanon still abiding by the Arab League boycott of Israel adopted in 1945.

Lebanon does not recognize the State of Israel and does not accept Israeli passports or passports indicating a person has entered Israel.

But is “Wonder Woman” an Israeli product?

The film is produced by five production companies —DC Films, Atlas Entertainment, Cruel and Unusual Films, Tencent Pictures and Wanda Pictures — three companies based in the United States and two in China.

Gadot, however, is proud of her heritage. She served two years in the Israel Defense Force as required by the country’s conscription requirements and has posted in the past in support of IDF during the 2014 Israel-Gaza conflict.

The ban of the film would have to move quickly, as screenings are scheduled to begin in Beirut on Wednesday.

But such action would require approval from a six-member committee from the Ministry of Economy, a process that had yet to begin, according to the Associated Press.

“Wonder Woman” debuts in U.S. theaters Friday.

4:10 p.m.: This article was updated with information from Lebanon’s National News Agency.

Olivia Newton-John has a new cancer diagnosis; her June shows are postponed

(Esteban Felix / Associated Press)

Olivia-Newton John has “reluctantly” postponed her June concert dates after learning that the back pain she’s been waylaid by recently is caused by breast cancer that has metastasized to her sacrum.

“I decided on my direction of therapies after consultation with my doctors and natural therapists and the medical team at my Olivia Newton-John Cancer Wellness and Research Centre in Melbourne, Australia,” the 68-year-old singer said Tuesday in a statement on social media.

Those therapies include a short course of photon radiation therapy in addition to “natural wellness therapies,” the statement said.

Newton-John was diagnosed with breast cancer in 1992, at which time she underwent chemotherapy after a modified radical mastectomy with reconstruction. Her treatment also included acupuncture, which she said helped her with nausea, as well as yoga, meditation and massage.

Three weeks ago, Newton-John postponed her May shows, with her team citing “a bad issue with Olivia’s sciatica.” Now, her June shows in the U.S. and Canada have been put off. Ticket-holders are being directed to venues for refunds, and any rescheduled dates will be posted on Newton-John’s official website.

“Olivia ... is confident she will be back later in the year, better than ever, to celebrate her shows,” the Tuesday statement said.

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After Cannes delay, ‘Victoria & Abdul’ trailer debuts

One week after Focus Features scrapped plans to unveil the trailer for “Victoria & Abdul” during the Cannes Film Festival, a preview of the upcoming British drama has debuted online.

Set in 1887, the film stars Judi Dench as Queen Victoria and follows the monarch as she strikes up an unlikely friendship with a Muslim Indian (Ali Fazal) who has traveled to the U.K. to deliver a ceremonial coin to her majesty.

Focus, which is owned by Universal Pictures, was set to debut the trailer last Wednesday but postponed the release after the bombing at an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester, England, on May 22. A source told The Times the decision was made in part because “a big piece of marketing right after the attack could seem insensitive.”

Directed by Stephen Frears, “Victoria & Abdul” is set for release at the start of awards season in September. The trailer centers on the real-life relationship that blossomed between the two, with Abdul going from servant to teacher while informing the queen about everything from the Koran to the joys of Indian mangoes.

Ready for Alanis Morissette’s ‘Jagged Little Pill’ as a musical? It’s happening

(Kirk McKoy / Los Angeles Times)

Alanis Morissette’s angsty, groundbreaking 1995 album, “Jagged Little Pill,” always seemed like it had enough melodrama to make it into a theatrical production. Now it’s coming to a stage in Massachusetts.

The new production of “Jagged Little Pill,” helmed by “Juno” writer Diablo Cody and director Diane Paulus, will debut at the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge next May. The musical will feature songs from the LP — famed for its unsparing look at relationships — along with other music from Morissette’s catalog and “Pill” producer Glen Ballard.

“This team that has come together for this ‘Jagged Little Pill’ musical is my musical theater dream come true,” Morissette said in a statement. “The chemistry between all of us is crackling and I feel honored to be diving into these songs again, surrounded by all of this searing talent.”

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Ariana Grande sets Manchester benefit concert; Katy Perry, Justin Bieber, Coldplay and more in the lineup

Ariana Grande left Manchester quickly after the deadly bombing that followed her concert there a week ago, and now she’s returning in similar haste for a show this Sunday to benefit victims and their families.

The “One Love Manchester” show will feature Coldplay, Justin Bieber, Katy Perry, Miley Cyrus, Niall Horan and Pharrell Williams in addition to Grande, and will be held at the city’s Old Trafford cricket ground, publicists told the Associated Press on Tuesday.

Take That, which had to cancel a number of its Manchester Arena shows the week after the bombing, also will perform.

People who attended the ill-fated May 22 concert can request free tickets to see the show; regular tickets go on sale to the general public at 10 a.m. Manchester time Thursday. The Old Trafford cricket ground seats 50,000 when configured for a music event, compared with Manchester Arena’s 22,000-person capacity.

Proceeds will go to an emergency fund set up by the city of Manchester and the British Red Cross.

In a statement issued Friday, Grande promised a speedy return to Manchester to spend time with fans and put on a benefit concert, but at the time didn’t give additional details.

Grande left Manchester and flew home to Florida almost immediately after the May 22 bombing, arriving at the Boca Raton airport Tuesday. On Wednesday, she suspended her tour through June 5, with seven shows affected.

Her next scheduled Dangerous Woman tour stop, after the benefit, is a June 7 gig in Paris.

Perry responded with thoughts and prayers for all the people at Grande’s concert, after the suicide attack that left 22 people dead and scores more injured. Perry said she was “broken hearted” for the families of the victims, for 23-year-old Grande and for “the state of this world.”

Bieber, who like Grande is managed by Scooter Braun, also chimed in last week, and British rockers Coldplay did the same.

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FOR THE RECORD

11:37 a.m.: An earlier version of this post indicated the seating capacity for the Old Trafford soccer stadium was more than 76,000. The stadium seats 76,000. When set up for a musical event, the cricket ground seats 50,000.

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ALSO

Ariana Grande’s mom has a message for Manchester bombing victims

Ariana Grande suspends tour through June 5

Ariana Grande returns home to Florida after Manchester attack

Reunited ‘Brady Bunch’ kids fondly remember Florence Henderson on ‘Today’

It was a very Brady reunion on Tuesday.

“The Brady Bunch” kids Barry Williams (Greg), Christopher Knight (Peter), Mike Lookinland (Bobby) and Susan Olsen (Cindy) came together on NBC’s “Today” show to reflect on the iconic family sitcom and pay tribute to its late matriarch, Florence Henderson, nearly 50 years after the show debuted in 1969.

The syndicated series about a blended family of six children and their housekeeper has permeated the pop culture zeitgeist with its unmistakable style and earworm theme song. With numerous parodies and attempted reboots in its wake, the comedy has endured because of its wholesome values, the cast members said.

“What you have on ‘The Brady Bunch’ is something you’re not going to see these days, which is a family where the parents and the kids respect each other… today the formula is get the parents out of the show for the kids shows,” said Olsen, a.ka. “the youngest one in curls.”

“You know how you don’t grow old for yourself until you see yourself in a photo? Somehow you just don’t see it,” Knight explained. “It’s as though the show keeps us young in everyone’s mind, but we’re really this old.”

Added Williams: “Everyone always refers to us as kids. No matter how we mature, we’re still the kids.”

After acknowledging that they would always be best known for “The Brady Bunch,” the actors said, they realized early on that they would never be able to walk away from the series at different stages of their careers. For Williams it was when a teenage girl asked him to sign an autograph for her mother and for Lookinland it was when he realized that his fans now had grandchildren.

Knight said the show “was always going to be in the room before me and it was always going to be in the room after me.”

Olsen, who claimed that she had written some off-color lyrics attached to the theme song, added that “you spend a little while trying to run away from it, but you can’t. It’s like having a hunchback. You can’t disguise it, so you might as well dress it up.”

As for their TV mom, Henderson, who died in 2016, the kids remembered her fondly.

“Everyone she met felt better about themselves and about the world around them after having spent a moment with Florence,” Knight said.

“She was a mentor, a friend. We learned from her,” added Williams. “We learned how to interact with the public. She was so gracious with her fans, and we all learned how to do that graciously. Mostly she loved to make people laugh. You probably know that if you’ve been in her space.”

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Prince William talks about ‘taboo’ of mental illness and death of Diana in new interview

As the 20th anniversary of the death of Diana, Princess of Wales approaches, her son Prince William has opened up to British GQ about the loss.

“I would like to have had her advice,” William told the magazine. “I would love her to have met Catherine and to have seen the children grow up. It makes me sad that she won’t, that they will never know her.”

The prince was just 15 when his mother was killed in a high-speed car crash on Aug. 31, 1997, and he and younger brother Harry were left to deal with their grief under great public scrutiny.

While Prince William has of late found the words to speak publicly about his mother, the journey to that place has not always been easy.

“It has taken me almost 20 years to get to that stage,” William said. “I still find it difficult now because at the time it was so raw. And also it is not like most people’s grief, because everyone else knows about it, everyone knows the story, everyone knows her.”

It may have taken years, but William and Harry have found a way to honor their mother in a fashion that she would likely greatly appreciate: charitable work.

Known as the “People’s Princess,” Diana was a tireless advocate for those in need and worked to destigmatize AIDS in the 1980s, to fight the use of landmines and to better the lives of the underprivileged.

In the last year, William and his brother, alongside William’s wife, Kate, have expanded their involvement in Heads Together, a mental health campaign led by the Royal Foundation, which aims to start a productive conversation about the reality of mental illness.

“Smashing the taboo is our biggest aim. We cannot go anywhere much until that is done. People can’t access services till they feel less ashamed, so we must tackle the taboo, the stigma,” William said.

The Heads Together campaign has sparked several headlines for the royal family in recent months.

In April, Prince Harry admitted that the death of his mother left him “very close to a complete breakdown” for which he finally sought professional help three years ago.

“The experience that I’ve had is once you start talking about [mental health], you suddenly realized, actually, you’re part of a big club ... and everybody’s gagging to talk about it,” Harry said during the “Mad World” podcast with Bryony Gordon.

The GQ interview is not the only conversation that Prince William has had recently about mental health, either. He participated in a highly publicized FaceTime chat with Lady Gaga on the matter.

In the interview, Prince William acknowledged that his public persona might suggest otherwise, but privately, he is impassioned about the issue.

“I cannot understand how families, even behind closed doors, still find it so hard to talk about it. I am shocked we are so worried about saying anything about the true feelings we have,” the prince said.

Prince William’s full interview with British GQ is available in its July issue, on newsstands June 1.

Ariana Grande’s mom has a message for Manchester bombing victims

Joan Grande, left, and Ariana Grande in September 2015.
Joan Grande, left, and Ariana Grande in September 2015.
(Kevin Mazur / Getty Images)

Days after daughter Ariana Grande issued a statement about last week’s post-concert bombing in Manchester, England, mom Joan Grande posted her own thoughts about the incident that left 22 dead and scores more injured.

“I join my daughter in extending my help & services to all those affected by the diabolical act of terror which occurred in Manchester!” she wrote on Twitter as a Memorial Day message that also thanked U.S. servicemen and women. “My heart goes out to all the victims: those who lost their lives, those injured, those recovering & all survivors of that night, along with the families and friends whose grief knows no bounds.”

The elder Grande was still in her front-row seat at the show, about to go see her daughter backstage, when the suicide bomb went off, TMZ reported. Mama Grande took about 10 kids who were seated around her to safety backstage, the website said.

Ariana Grande similarly offered her assistance to those in need on Friday in a statement declaring her intention to return to “the incredibly brave city of Manchester” for a benefit concert.

“We will never be able to understand why events like this take place because it is not in our nature, which is why we shouldn’t recoil,” the “Bang Bang” singer said. “We will not quit or operate in fear. We won’t let this divide us. We won’t let hate win.”

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A Star Is Born: Wynonna Judd turns 53 today

(Peter Nash / For The Times)

Three years ago, I didn’t dig my mother at all. We were always fighting. We’d yell at each other, throw things at each other. There were times I’d think she was crazy. I still think that at times. I know she thinks I’m crazy too. But that’s normal.

— Wynonna Judd, 1989

FROM THE ARCHIVES: Here come the Judds: Loving and fighting and singing . . .

A Star Is Born: Annette Bening turns 59 today

(Kirk McKoy / Los Angeles Times)

“[W]hen they teach you to act, they teach you about objectives. You have a need -- a kind of emotional imbalance -- it’s not neurotic, but you want something. I try to consciously beef up that motivation in order to intensify what I’m doing. You get an image in your head of what you want and then you find a way of expressing that.

— Annette Bening, 1991

FROM THE ARCHIVES: Regarding Annette

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Sweden’s ‘The Square’ wins Palme d’Or and Sofia Coppola wins best director at Cannes

Swedish director Ruben Ostlund reacts on stage after he was awarded with the Palme d'Or for the film 'The Square' during the closing ceremony of the 70th edition of the Cannes Film Festival.
Swedish director Ruben Ostlund reacts on stage after he was awarded with the Palme d’Or for the film ‘The Square’ during the closing ceremony of the 70th edition of the Cannes Film Festival.
(Alberto Pizzoli / AFP / Getty Images)

Ruben Ostlund’s “The Square,” “a ferocious drama of conscience,” according to Times critic Justin Chang, about how “a single lapse in judgment can cause a man’s entire life to unravel,” won the Cannes’ top prize, the Palme d’Or on Sunday.

The Grand Prix award went to Robin Campillo’s “120 Beats per Minute.”

Sofia Coppola won best director for her film “The Beguiled,” which stars Nicole Kidman and Colin Farrell. Kidman also won the festival’s 70th anniversary prize.

Joaquin Phoenix won best actor for Lynne Ramsay’s “You Were Never Really Here” and Diane Kruger won best actress award for Faith Akin’s “In the Fade.”

More coverage to come. Meanwhile...

Here is what Justin Chang wrote about Ostlund’s “The Square,” and Steven Zeitchik’s interview with the director, who talked about the element of surprise in his movies: “I really like scenes that when they end where you don’t know 100% where to put them. It starts funny or it starts sad and then it becomes something else. When you get that shift, you know you’ve succeeded.”

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A Star Is Born: Kylie Minogue turns 49 today

(Axel Koester / For The Times)

I have this following — mainly young girls. This album had to appeal to those fans. If the singing was too R&B, they wouldn’t like it, I guess. These producers think pop music is candy music. They’re saying: ‘Here, kids, have a piece of candy.’

— Kylie Minogue, 1988

FROM THE ARCHIVES: Fame, fortune, but no respect

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Cher, Cameron Crowe, Peter Frampton and others react to Gregg Allman’s death

Southern rocker Gregg Allman, the lead singer of the Allman Brothers Band known for his trailblazing sound and his equally blazing life, died Saturday at age 69 at his home in Savannah, Ga.

Those who knew the musician — who once said he hoped to die while “writing a new song” — immediately took to social media to express their grief.

Cher, to whom Allman was married for four tumultuous years in the 1970s, used pet names and a broken heart emoji to pay tribute.

Director Cameron Crowe, who used the Allman Brothers’ famously louche lifestyle as source material for his 2000 rock film “Almost Famous,” expressed his gratitude to the performer.

Ringo Starr and Allman’s fellow Southern rock crooner, Charlie Daniels of the Charlie Daniels Band, expressed their thoughts as well.

British rocker Peter Frampton described him as “a gentle soul with so much soul.”

And Melissa Etheridge posted a picture in which she admires Allman’s tattoos.

Read The Times obituary here.

Gregg Allman, pioneer of Southern rock, dies at 69

Gregg Allman performs with the Allman Brothers Band in 1979.
(George Rose / Los Angeles Times)

Gregg Allman, the gravel-voiced singer who helped lift the Allman Brothers Band to prominence with a hard-churning brand of soulful rock that became part of the soundtrack of the 1960s and ’70s and set the coordinates for a musical genre known as Southern rock, died Saturday at the age of 69.

According to a statement posted on his official website, Allman, who had canceled concerts and entire tours in recent years as he battled a variety of health issues, “passed away peacefully at his home in Savannah, Ga.”

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70 years of Cannes in 17 seconds: The art of the yacht deal, from Steven Spielberg to Steve Bannon

Steven Zeitchik, Justin Chang and Kenneth Turan are bringing us Cannes moments from the 70 years of the international film festival -- in 17-second increments (or thereabouts). Here, Zeitchik, with Chang behind the camera, recalls the time he wound

Steven Zeitchik, Justin Chang and Kenneth Turan are bringing us Cannes moments from the 70 years of the international film festival -- in 17-second increments (or thereabouts). Here, Zeitchik, with Chang behind the camera, recalls the time he wound up on a yacht with a future member of the Trump administration.

70 years of Cannes in 17 seconds: The time Sofia Coppola’s ‘Marie Antoinette’ was booed

Steven Zeitchik, Justin Chang and Kenneth Turan are bringing us Cannes moments from the 70 years of the international film festival -- in 17-second increments (or thereabouts). Here, Chang, with Zeitchik behind the camera, recalls the year Sofia Coppola’s “Marie Antoinette” played in competition and was booed by certain members of the media audience.

Steven Zeitchik, Justin Chang and Kenneth Turan are bringing us Cannes moments from the 70 years of the international film festival -- in 17-second increments (or thereabouts). Here, Chang, with Zeitchik behind the camera, recalls the year Sofia Cop

That same year, when the film debuted in theaters, Times critic Kenneth Turan looked back on the boos at Cannes and concluded the reaction wasn’t just about the filmmaking. Here is the essay he wrote on Oct. 13, 2006:

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WHO OWNS HISTORY? And, more to the point, who owns Marie Antoinette?

Though they’re not usually phrased that way, those questions have swirled around Sofia Coppola’s quietly exuberant new film about the doomed young French queen (only 18 when she ascended the throne, 37 when she was executed) since it premiered at the Cannes Film Festival earlier this year to some scattered — and widely misunderstood — boos.

For the displeasure came not, as might be expected, from the French critics -- who’d already seen the film and whose generally positive notices were already on record in Le Film Francais, the French trade paper -- but from political types who had an ax to grind about the film’s portrait of the woman in question.

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A Star Is Born: Paul Bettany turns 46 today

(Kirk McKoy / Los Angeles Times)

If you get yourself to a point in your career where you can make a bunch of money really quickly and then you just keep on working and in 20 years’ time you realize, somebody else raised my kids, you lost.

— Paul Bettany, 2011

FROM THE ARCHIVES: ‘Priest’ star Paul Bettany: Don’t expect ‘vampires you want to bring home to your mum’

Ben Stiller and Christine Taylor split after 17 years of marriage

(Al Seib / Los Angeles Times)

Ben Stiller and Christine Taylor have split up after 18 years together, 17 of them as husband and wife.

“With tremendous love and respect for each other, and the 18 years we spent together as a couple, we have made the decision to separate,” they said Friday in a joint statement. “Our priority will continue to be raising our children as devoted parents and the closest of friends. We kindly ask that the media respect our privacy at this time.”

The “Zoolander” director and the “Brady Bunch Movie” actress met in L.A. in 1999, while he was developing a pilot in which she was going to star. They started dating that April and by November were engaged. They got married in May 2000.

Stiller, 51, who proposed to Taylor while he was doing “Meet the Parents,” told Parade in 2013 that art imitated life when he was about to pop the question.

“I asked her father for permission before I did it…,” he said. “It was like ‘Meet the Parents’ in real life, because Christine’s father is an intimidating guy who owns a security company; we’re good friends now, but at the time I was in the basement rec room saying, ‘I really would like to marry your daughter...’”

Why the basement? “ “He was trying to find a place to sort of secretly ask my dad if it was OK to ask my hand in marriage,” Taylor told New York magazine in 2008.

The “Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story” costars have two kids together, daughter Emma, 15, and son Quinlan, 11.

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70 years of Cannes in 17 seconds: The ‘home away from home’ for luminaries

Kenneth Turan, Justin Chang and Steven Zeitchik are bringing us Cannes moments from the 70 years of the international film festival -- in 17-second increments (or thereabouts). Here, Turan, with Chang behind the camera, brings us to the historic Hot

Kenneth Turan, Justin Chang and Steven Zeitchik are bringing us Cannes moments from the 70 years of the international film festival -- in 17-second increments (or thereabouts). Here, Turan, with Chang behind the camera, brings us to the historic Hotel Splendid, which over the last 146 years has been “a home away from home” for luminaries ranging from the French composer Jacques Offenbach to the late critic Roger Ebert.

L.A. music fixture Rodney Bingenheimer will leave KROQ next month

Rodney Bingenheimer, the veteran radio DJ and rock-scene insider familiar to several generations of Los Angeles music fans, is ending his long-running show on L.A.’s KROQ-FM (106.7) after more than 40 years.

“Rodney on the ROQ” will air for the final time on June 4 at midnight, Bingenheimer, 69, wrote on Facebook Thursday.

“It has been an amazing run, and I will be thanking all of you when I say goodbye to KROQ next week,” he said in the post. “I am planning on some special callers and special music as I say a proper goodbye.”

In a statement to The Times, KROQ program director Kevin Weatherly called Bingenheimer “one of the most influential voices on the radio” and said he and his staff “will forever be grateful for the indelible mark that ‘Rodney on the ROQ’ has left on this station, our listeners and the alt-rock music scene.”

Bingenheimer launched his show on the influential modern-rock station in 1976, four years after he opened Rodney’s English Disco, a nightclub on Sunset Boulevard popular among the decade’s glam acts.

On the radio, Bingenheimer quickly became known for championing new artists including the Sex Pistols and Blondie; he continued playing music by up-and-coming talent over the years, throwing his considerable enthusiasm behind the likes of Oasis and Coldplay.

In his Facebook post, Bingenheimer — the subject of a 2003 documentary called “Mayor of the Sunset Strip” — didn’t say why he was leaving KROQ. But he noted that he’s not retiring from music.

“As this chapter closes,” he wrote, “I will be opening another chapter of my rock life soon.”

Here’s his full statement on Facebook:

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Ariana Grande to hold benefit concert in ‘incredibly brave city of Manchester’

(Valerie Macon / AFP/Getty Images)

Ariana Grande on Friday announced her intention to return to the “incredibly brave city of Manchester” to spend time with fans and play a benefit concert to assist victims of the suicide bomb attack launched after her show in the British city earlier this week.

“I have been thinking of my fans, and of you all, non stop over the past week. The way you have handled all of this has been more inspiring and made me more proud than you’ll ever know,” the 23-year-old singer said in a statement on social media.

“The compassion, kindness, love, strength and oneness that you’ve shown one another this past week is the exact opposite of the heinous intentions it must take to pull off something as evil as what happened Monday. YOU are the opposite.”

Grande gave no details about when she would return other than to say they’d be coming as soon as things were confirmed.

The statement was her first since a brief tweet after the bombing saying she was “broken” and “so so sorry.” That day, Grande and her mother left Britain for Florida.

She acknowledged her own reaction to the incident in saying she was “sorry for the pain and fear you must be feeling and the trauma that you, too, must be feeling.” She also talked about not wanting to “go the rest of the year” without being out there for her fans; at this point, her tour has been suspended only until June 5.

There is nothing I or anyone can do to take away the pain you are feeling or to make this better,” she said to the victims of the attack and their loved ones. “However, I extend my hand and heart and everything I can possibly give to you and yours, should you want or need my help in any way.”

Those who were most tragically affected, Grande said, “will be on my mind and in my heart everyday and I will think of them with everything I do for the rest of my life.”

Equality, not feminism, is the watchword at ‘Wonder Woman’ premiere

Victoria Ikerd from San Diego, left, and Sylvia Vale from Culver City strike their best Wonder Woman pose.
(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

The stars of Warner Bros.’ “Wonder Woman” took to the red carpet outside Hollywood’s Pantages Theatre Thursday night to celebrate the film’s premiere with a unified message.

It just wasn’t the message some people might expect.

“I think the world needs all types of superheroes,” director Patty Jenkins said when asked why we need Wonder Woman. “What a beautiful message right now because we’re in a dark place, and that’s the only way we’re going to get to the other side, if everyone becomes a hero.”

(Warner Bros. canceled the film’s London premiere after Monday’s attack in Manchester.)

Despite the obvious girl power on display, many of the film’s stars and creators shied away from identifying it as a feminist film, hoping not to isolate the male fans in attendance.

SEE PHOTOS FROM THE “WONDER WOMAN” PREMIERE »

“I think that the film just takes a great character and tells a great story about how that character came to be,” Charles Roven, the film’s producer, told the Los Angeles Times.

“Obviously the character wouldn’t be who she is if she wasn’t a woman, but she’s a very specific woman,” Roven added. “There’s no other superhero character in the DC Universe who embraced their legacy and knew what they wanted to be and became [it]. And that’s completely inspirational to everyone, not just women.”

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Bella Thorne and Scott Disick together in Cannes? ‘Legit nothing’

(Joshua Blanchard / Getty Images, left; Lars Niki / Getty Images)

In what’s been called a battle of strategic hookups between exes Kourtney Kardashian and Scott Disick, Bella Thorne has put up a white flag and flown away.

Disick, 34, and Thorne, 19, were seen Monday at LAX on their way to the Cannes Film Festival, where — surprise! — Kardashian, 38, was already hanging out and getting handsy with Younes Bendjima, a 24-year-old boxer-turned-model. According to E! News, the latter twosome is for real but keeping it light. The Kardashian ex and the actress from “The DUFF”? Perhaps not so much.

Thorne and Disick raised eyebrows Wednesday with a high-profile cuddle-fest by a pool in Cannes.

Alas, by Thursday, word has it via TMZ, Thorne wasn’t comfortable with her party-boy travel partner when he got his drink on: After tweeting Thursday that “Yo this #cannes fancy life isn’t for me,” she told one person that she had been doing “Legit nothing trolololo” with Scott and another, “Hahahah I’m not talking to scott or anyone else.”

“Scott is partially using Bella and a few other girls as a crutch to make Kourtney upset and feel jealous,” a “Keeping Up With the Kardashians”-related source told People on Thursday, sounding like a description of an upcoming episode of the show. “They are both playing this ‘game’ with each other and at the moment neither one of them are backing down.”

Around 3 a.m. Friday, Cannes time, Disick was paying attention to another lady, putting this pic of his and Kardashian’s 4-year-old daughter, Penelope, up on Facebook:

Um, hashtag #supersad?

“Bye Cannes you were boring” Thorne said Friday on Snapchat, posting video from the seat of what appeared to be a private plane.

Kardashian, Bendjima and half-sis Kendall Jenner left Cannes on Friday as well.

Netflix cancels London premieres of ‘Orange Is the New Black’ and ‘GLOW’

The fatal terrorist incident at an Ariana Grande concert Monday in Manchester, England, continues to resonate throughout the entertainment industry.

Netflix canceled its plans for a London premiere for Season 5 of “Orange Is the New Black” and the pilot for “GLOW,” the latest series from “Orange” creator Jenji Kohan.

“Following the terrible events in Manchester on Monday night, we have decided to cancel our special screening of ‘Orange Is the New Black’ and ‘GLOW’ on Tuesday [May 30],” a Netflix spokesperson told The Times on Friday. “Our thoughts are with all of those affected by this tragedy.”

According to those knowledgeable about the decision, the streaming service’s choice to forgo its screenings comes from internal discussions only, not from any pressure from local authorities.

This is just the latest cancellation in the wake of Monday’s tragedy, which took the lives of 22 individuals, including victims as young as 8 years old.

On Wednesday, Warner Bros. scuttled plans for a London “Wonder Woman” premiere, originally scheduled for May 31. Similarly, Universal Pictures announced Thursday that it had canceled its London premiere for “The Mummy” originally slated for June 1.

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Oasis’ Liam Gallagher schedules Manchester benefit show

(Ken Hively / Los Angeles Times)

Former Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher will play a hometown concert next week in Manchester, England, to benefit the families of Monday’s bombing at the Manchester Arena.

“It’s outrageous,” the singer told the Manchester Evening News regarding the terrorist attack that killed 22 people following a concert by Ariana Grande. “There are kids and people dying all over the world. And for what?”

He went on to say, “I want to try and help pick people up. People like me, doing what we do, it’s our duty to give people a good time.”

The show, scheduled for Tuesday night at the O2 Ritz, will serve as Gallagher’s first solo gig and comes ahead of the release of his debut solo single, “Wall of Glass,” from an album expected in October.

Body-slamming? Late-night hosts remind us that Donald Trump once did that on TV

Lest America forget the nation’s history of political candidates with body-slamming tendencies, the late-night circuit offered a refresher course Thursday night.

Playing catchup to Wednesday’s news that Greg Gianforte, the billionaire Republican candidate in Montana’s special congressional election, had allegedly body-slammed a Guardian reporter after the journalist asked him about the Republican healthcare bill, TV hosts weighed in on the matter.

“Think about that,” “Late Night” host Seth Meyers said. “The GOP healthcare plan is so bad, Republicans would rather body-slam reporters than answer a question about it.

“His response to the question,” Meyers continued, “was to give the reporter a preexisting condition.”

“Late Show” host Stephen Colbert expressed faux skepticism about Gianforte’s ability to move past the incident and win the election.

“That happened the night before the election,” Colbert said. “I just don’t know how anyone could vote for a candidate who body-slams people.”

Cue a clip of Donald Trump performing such a move in 2007 when he appeared on “WrestleMania 23” and tackled WWE Chairman Vince McMahon to the ground before shaving his head.

“I forgot,” Colbert said after playing the clip. “Nothing matters.”

During his “A Closer Look” segment, Meyers also played the Trump clip.

“That was a thing, a real thing that happened. and we still said ‘Yeah, he should be president.’”

For the record: Gianforte won Montana’s special election Thursday.

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A Star Is Born: Stevie Nicks turns 69 today

(Lori Shepler / Los Angeles Times)

I think if people like to dress like a gypsy and they get a little inspiration from me to do it, then it’s great. It’s definitely something everyone should try at least once in their lives. Dress like a gypsy!

— Stevie Nicks, 1997

FROM THE ARCHIVES: Airy Godmother

For the 40th anniversary of ‘Star Wars,’ see how fans packed L.A. theaters in 1977

When the original “Star Wars” opened on May 25, 1977, only about 40 theaters across the country initially screened the movie. In Los Angeles, fans packed showings in ways theater managers and moviegoers had never seen. For the 40th anniversary of “Star Wars,” we revisit this story examining the earliest stages of the “Star Wars” phenomenon. The Times originally published this story on June 4, 1977.

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George Lucas predicted ‘Star Wars’ Disney future in 1977 interview with The Times

Happy 40th anniversary, “Star Wars”!

Before the first-ever “Star Wars” premiered on screens across America on May 25, 1977, Los Angeles Times writer Paul Rosenfield sat down with the creator of a galaxy far, far away.

Then 33, George Lucas was just a few days shy from the release of his “space opera,” prophetically claiming that “Star Wars” was the movie he thinks “Disney would have made when Walt Disney was alive.” Who knew decades later that the droids and the mouse would reside in the same castle?

This story was originally published on June 5, 1977, and titled, “Lucas: Film-Maker With the Force.”

(Also from our archives, read The Times’ original “Star Wars” review here.)

I think of this as a movie Disney would have made when Walt Disney was alive ... I call it ‘space opera.’ That’s a genre that’s been around a long time, in the books of Burroughs and Heinlein, but never really done on film.

— George Lucas in 1977

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Sarah Hyland of ‘Modern Family’ talks bluntly about her weight — it ain’t anorexia, haters

(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)

Sarah Hyland isn’t setting her self-esteem based on what online critics have to say about her looks and her weight, but she is setting the record straight with some fierce back story.

The “Modern Family” actress, who broke out of the half-hour sitcom box Wednesday as Lisa Houseman in ABC’s “Dirty Dancing” reboot, took advantage of the spotlight on the TV movie to air her thoughts via social media Wednesday.

What people see is not an eating disorder, the petite 26-year-old said — it’s a down period in a lifelong health battle.

“I write this because I’ve been accused of promoting anorexia. ... And I want young girls to know that’s NOT my intention,” she wrote in a message that was split into Part 1 , Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5 , Part 6, Part 7 and Part 8.

Hyland, 26, was referring to a host of comments made on an Instagram post Tuesday where she promoted a T-shirt, from her boyfriend Dominic Sherwood’s apparel line, that gives part of the proceeds to an anti-bullying campaign. (Yes, she noted the irony.)

“My circumstances have put me in a place where I’m not in control of what my body looks like,” she wrote Wednesday. “Oh and no that’s not photoshop. Those are my legs. Those are my arms.”

Here’s the thing: Hyland was born with a host of health issues, including kidney dysplasia, as she previously described to Seventeen; her dad donated one of his kidneys to her for a transplant in 2012.

She’s “basically been on bed rest for the past few months” and is trying to keep her weight up despite the fact that the medications she is taking have, in part, played havoc with her tastebuds (prednisone has a way of doing that). She’s been told she can’t work out, and she’s lost a lot of muscle mass.

“I don’t mind when you say that I look pregnant. Or fat. Because I know that my face is swollen from medication that is saving my life. For those on prednisone I know what you’re going through and I commend you sticking it out as I have,” Hyland said.

“My self confidence is not rendered from your comments. Because I will always be too fat. I will always be too skinny. I will never have enough curves to be called a woman. And I will always be a slut for wearing a push up bra,” Hyland said.

“Love the you you set out to be. Be the best version of yourself. Be healthy. I’m a 26 year old woman who goes through more than you could even imagine on a daily basis. But I work hard. I love hard. And I got to where I am because I am STRONG and didn’t give up.”

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Guns N’ Roses is playing Los Angeles again

Guns N’ Roses will play two hometown concerts this fall, the reunited Los Angeles hard-rock band announced Thursday, one Nov. 24 at Staples Center and another Nov. 25 at the Forum.

The dates are part of a new extension of GNR’s Not in This Lifetime Tour, which launched in April 2016 with a show at the Troubadour that marked the first time in decades that frontman Axl Rose had performed in public with guitarist Slash and bassist Duff McKagan. The tour went on to hit Coachella and Dodger Stadium.

Opening acts for the L.A. shows weren’t announced, but GNR revealed that country singer-songwriter Sturgill Simpson will warm up crowds at stadium shows in August in Denver; Little Rock, Ark.; and Miami. Other acts with opening slots on the tour include ZZ Top, Deftones and Royal Blood.

Tickets for the newly scheduled concerts go on sale June 3.

Claire Foy shoots down Lisbeth Salander rumors: ‘I don’t know about any of this’

Claire Foy
Claire Foy
(Jennifer S. Altman / For The Times)

Claire Foy’s sister called her last week, none too pleased that her sibling hadn’t told her that she’d be playing Lisbeth Salander in “The Girl in the Spider’s Web,” the long-delayed follow-up to the 2011 David Fincher film “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo.”

“My sister’s like, ‘Oh, what are you doing?’ and I was like, ‘I’m not doing anything! I don’t t know about any of this!’” Foy told The Times Wednesday in an interview before an Emmy season promotional event for the actress’ Netflix series, “The Crown.”

“It’s really weird,” Foy added. “I’ve never experienced that before where there’s a rumor about a possible job like this. It’s very surreal.”

News broke last week that Foy was either “in talks,” “eyeing” or had been all but cast to play Lisbeth in the reboot of the Stieg Larsson book series.

So is Foy, who plays Queen Elizabeth on “The Crown,” even in the running?

“No. I’m not even in the same arena,” Foy said. “I can’t even contemplate doing anything at all, to be honest, at this present time.”

The 33-year-old British actress just finished shooting Season 2 of “The Crown” last week. The ambitious series requires a nine-month commitment, meaning that Foy hasn’t had much down time the last two years. She also has a 2-year-old daughter with her husband, actor Stephen Campbell Moore.

So you can understand why, when asked about her immediate future, she emphatically states: “Good God, no. I have got no plans to do anything.”

Those sentiments would seem to preclude her from “The Girl in the Spider’s Web,” which is scheduled to begin filming in September to make an Oct. 15, 2018, release date.

Then again, when asked what kind of role she’d like to do after playing the reserved Elizabeth, a woman nicknamed “Shirley Temple,” Foy replied: “I think I need to play somebody who expresses themselves and is able to communicate on a more open level, something really different.”

Like the avenging anti-heroine Lisbeth?

“Well ...” Foy answered, with a hint of a smile. “We’ll just have to wait and see.”

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Sony taps Gina Prince-Bythewood to direct ‘Spider-Man’ spinoff ‘Silver & Black’

(Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times)

Sony continues to get its superhero ducks in a row, with Deadline reporting Thursday that the studio had tapped Gina Prince-Bythewood to direct “Silver & Black,” a film centered around comic book characters Silver Sable and Black Cat.

Prince-Bythewood also will rewrite the script for the film, originally written by Christopher Yost, screenwriter of “Thor: The Dark World.”

Silver Sable and Black Cat are characters that originated in correlation to Spider-Man and have served as both allies and antagonists to the web-slinging superhero over the years.

“Silver & Black” is the latest Spidey-related endeavor for Sony, with “Spider-Man: Homecoming,” starring Tom Holland, premiering July 7, and “Venom,” starring Tom Hardy as the sometimes villain, sometimes anti-hero, hitting theaters Oct. 5, 2018.

The film will not be Prince-Bythewood’s first dalliance with superheroes. She directed the pilot for Freeform’s upcoming series “Marvel’s Cloak & Dagger,” about two teenagers learning to deal with both superpowers and love.

Prince-Bythewood is an experienced director of critically acclaimed films including “Love & Basketball” and “Beyond the Lights,” and she is well-versed in the world of television, where Fox’s “Shots Fired,” the show she created and produced with husband Reggie Rock Bythewood, just concluded its first season.

The director becomes the latest woman tapped to helm a superhero film, with Patty Jenkins’ “Wonder Woman” debuting in theaters June 2.

‘Happy puking’: ‘Baywatch’ is the summer blockbuster critics love to hate

Dwayne Johnson, Zac Efron and Priyanka Chopra star in “Baywatch.”

What’s more fun than seeing the new “Baywatch” movie? Having movie reviewers see it for you!

Los Angeles Times critic Jen Yamato was in the Enjoy It for What It Is camp, describing the film thusly: “[I]t not only owns its dumbness but hurtles itself all the way back around through a flurry of genitalia jokes and F-bombs to splash unapologetically in an R-rated surf of winking postmodernism, led by the charismatic Dwayne Johnson, Hollywood’s most unsinkable movie star.”

But although not everyone hates it — 64% of audiences dug it, according to Rotten Tomatoes — a lot of reviewers put the bouncing-beach-bodies flick firmly in its place, damning it, and then damning it with faint praise.

That said, here are a few snacks, both bad and (relatively) good, from the “Baywatch” snark buffet.

Over at the Chicago Tribune, they took the “Yeah, and ...?” approach to the review.

The Bad: “The movie’s comic instincts... are consistently coarse and frequently scrotal.”

The Good: “The bodies on screen are pretty, which I seem to remember was a selling point of the 1989-2001 TV series.”

As we said, yeah, and ...?

The Roger Ebert website perhaps cut closest to the bone, pulling few punches.

The Bad: “[T]his is another one of those raunchy comedies that’s barely a movie, that looks like it was edited by dumping a bunch of footage into whatever movie-cutting software they’re using and hitting ‘randomize.’”

The Good: “[T]he movie has a pervading air of crass amiability about it — it’s almost like a two-hour end-credits gag reel. (Nevertheless, it contains an end credits gag reel.)

Now could you tell us what you really think?:

Rolling Stone painted a vivid picture of the “Baywatch” experience.

The Bad: “Think of yourself sitting down for a big two-hour wallow in instant stupid with a vat of popcorn, slathered in fake butter and possibly a mound of melted M&Ms on top. It feels great chugging it down, then your stomach hurts, your head aches and you puke the whole thing up so you can forget about it in the morning. That’s ‘Baywatch’ in a nutshell. Happy puking.”

The Good: “Of the recent spate of moldy TV material morphing into movies, with ’21 Jump Street’ on top and ‘CHIPs’ bringing up the rear, ‘Baywatch’ barely escapes the basement. One reason it does: The Rock.”

Helpful! Turns out if you liked “21 Jump Street” and “CHiPs,” this flick is for you!

The New York Times loosened up its necktie for this one.

The Bad: “The digital effects — fire and water, mostly — are lackluster, and the whole thing has a crummy, overcast, second-rate-theme-park look to it.”

The Good: “Like its source material, “Baywatch” is sleazy and wholesome, silly and earnest, dumb as a box of sand and slyly self-aware. It’s soft-serve ice cream. Crinkle-cut fries. A hot car and a skin rash. Tacky and phony and nasty and also kind of fun.”

Tacky? Phony? Nasty? We didn’t know it was a date movie.

The Washington Post, of course, just couldn’t leave politics out of it.

The Bad: “It’s no shock that the women in ‘Baywatch’ don’t have much to do beyond look good. ... Maybe dodging bad lines was a relief for the actresses. It’s not like the screenplay, by Damian Shannon and Mark Swift, gives performers a lot to work with.”

The Good: “If, indeed, Dwayne ‘the Rock’ Johnson ditches Hollywood to become our next commander in chief, ‘Baywatch’ may be singled out as the low point of his pre-political career.”

Well, at least Johnson has that out of the way.

The Tampa Bay Times went deadpan.

The Bad: “Imagining Johnson and genetically gifted co-stars in swimsuits is all it took to pitch Baywatch. Director Seth Gordon and six writers didn’t come up with much beyond that.”

The Good: “What Baywatch has in its favor is Dwayne Johnson fireman-carrying a dead weight comedy to safety.”

We think that’s a compliment. Maybe.

Variety noted the film’s nods to current market and societal trends.

The Bad: “‘Baywatch’ ... is a stupidly entertaining trash folly, the kind that could only be made today: an obscenity-and-insult-laced, aggressively ‘competent’ adaptation of a 25-year-old TV show that manages to repackage every aspect of the series except, perhaps, the reason it was popular in the first place.

The Good: “They wear their butt-hugging red bathing suits with dignity and pride, which makes this a highly sexually responsible ‘Baywatch.’”

The reviewer at the New York Post appeared to be familiar with the TV series’ global success.

The Bad: “Even the action scenes need CPR, often undermined by effects so chintzy, you wonder if the money intended for them was instead eaten up by the production’s seven-figure waxing budget.”

The Good: “On the bright side, it’ll probably do killer business in Germany.”

Wait, were they just dissing the Hoff?

Finally, one need go no further than the AV Club to understand Rotten Tomatoes’ 19% positive critics’ rating.

The Bad: “[N]obody —not even the filmmakers —cares about ‘Baywatch’ all that much. Yet the joke’s on them: In spoofing something so forgettable, they’ve made something even less memorable.”

The Good: “Nobody cares about ‘Baywatch.’”

‘Nuff said.

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Seth Meyers says Trump’s ‘cruel’ budget cuts would harm the president’s supporters most

After a number of weeks filled with late-breaking developments on the Trump administration’s apparent ties to Russia, Wednesday night was a chance for late-night hosts to sort of catch their breath and essentially choose their own adventure.

Jimmy Kimmel focused on the seemingly less-than-happy photos of the pope with President Trump that circulated on Wednesday, while Stephen Colbert took a brief swipe at the $2-trillion double-counting error in Trump’s budget.

Seth Meyers, however, took advantage of his show’s “A Closer Look” segment to make time for all of the above.

After addressing the photo of the stone-faced pope with Trump, Meyers recapped the latest developments in the investigations into whether, among other things, the president engaged in obstruction of justice by firing FBI Director James Comey. But then Meyers took on the administration’s proposed federal budget, which could cause harm to many.

While noting the budget amounts to a wish list that Congress will battle over, Meyers said the proposal’s harshness was not to be discounted.

“What someone wishes for tells you a lot about that person,” Meyers said before recounting the many cuts the budget proposes to Social Security and Medicaid. The show then rolled a number of clips in which Trump the candidate promised not to do just that.

“This budget lays bare just how much of a fraud Trump’s campaign was,” Meyers added, noting how hard many of these cuts to the social safety net would hit Trump supporters.

He then squared off the pointed words of Trump the candidate versus his actions as president to underscore his point.

“Maybe it’s better those two never meet,” Meyers said. “I think they would hate each other.”

Watch the clip above.

Universal Pictures cancels London premiere of ‘The Mummy’ in wake of Manchester bombing

Tom Cruise, Russell Crowe, Annabelle Wallis and Sofia Boutella star in “The Mummy.”

The specter of Monday’s terrorist attack in Manchester, England, continues to loom large. Universal Pictures announced Thursday morning the cancellation of next week’s London premiere of “The Mummy,” the second such development this week.

“All of us at Universal have been devastated by the terror attack in Manchester and continue to stand with the community and country as it recovers,” the statement from the studio read. “Out of respect to those affected by this tragedy we have decided not to move forward with the London premiere for ‘The Mummy’ scheduled to take place next week.”

The film, starring Tom Cruise and Russell Crowe, serves as the launch of Universal Pictures’ ”Dark Universe,” an extended universe that will see the reboot of several classic monsters from the Universal vault, including the Invisible Man and Frankenstein’s Monster.

Cancellation of the June 1 London premiere for “The Mummy” comes just a day after Warner Bros. nixed its May 31 “Wonder Woman” London premiere.

Ariana Grande, whose concert was targeted in the Manchester attack that killed 22 people, similarly suspended her tour through June 5 on Wednesday.

A statement from the artist’s representatives said the suspension comes “until we can further assess the situation and pay our proper respects to those lost.”

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A Star Is Born: Octavia Spencer turns 47 today

(Kirk McKoy / Los Angeles Times)

When I pick up a script, I have to find the character. I can’t play it if I don’t believe it, don’t understand the journey, don’t want to go on the journey. And if I don’t, how can I bring a truth that you can believe, or feel?

— Octavia Spencer, 2014

FROM THE ARCHIVES: Octavia Spencer can weather ‘Black and White’ clouds, shine elsewhere

Al Gore on the French Riviera: Why he was reluctant to make ‘An Inconvenient Sequel’

Former Vice President Al Gore arrives on the red carpet for the screening of "The Killing of a Sacred Deer" at the Cannes Film Festival.
(Alberto Pizzoli / AFP / Getty Images)

It has not been a very good year for those concerned with climate change. The U.S. is considering leaving the landmark Paris climate pact, a hostile appointee leads the Environmental Protection Agency, and right-wing websites chortle, “Trump’s Latest Move Will Make Al Gore Fry.”

But is Al Gore himself despondent or depressed about it all? Not in the slightest.

“I’ve been inoculated in the year 2000,” he says, combining a burst of genial good humor with a reference to his presidential election loss to George W. Bush. “I now have a resistance to being disheartened, the antibodies are still thriving in my bloodstream.

“As we all learn, one of the hidden secrets of the human condition is we learn the most from our most painful experiences.”

Former Vice President Al Gore at the Carlton hotel for the Cannes Film Festival, which is screening his documentary "An Inconvenient Sequel."
(Stephanie Cornfield / For The Times)

To spend time with Al Gore is to meet a man enough at ease with himself to dress as if for a Senate hearing in white shirt, suit and tie even though he’s in the south of France; a warm, engaged, surprisingly funny individual whose innate courtesy has him personally hang a reporter’s sports coat on a nearby hotel room hanger.

Yes, he does tend to stay on message when he talks (how could he not) and he likes to draw graphs in the air with his hands (“I’m going to get a little geeky for a moment,” he apologizes with a smile, “I’m sorry, it’s a failing”).

But he combines this with good-humored self-awareness and a fiercely committed intelligence.

“If you think I’m earnest now, you should have seen me earlier,” he says. “You can’t change who you are. At times I’ve tried, but I’m old enough to stop worrying.”

Gore is in Cannes to promote the worldwide release of an impassioned and involving new documentary, “An Inconvenient Sequel.” Due in U.S. theaters on July 28, it brings us up to speed on where the battle against climate change stands more than a decade after the Oscar-winning documentary “An Inconvenient Truth.”

“I’m here for a lot of to-ing and fro-ing” is how Gore puts it. “I think I’ve done 75 seven-minute interviews — Japan, Russia, Brazil, everywhere.

“The day before yesterday I was live on [the French cable channel] Canal Plus when the interpreter talking in my earpiece was evacuated from his building because of a bomb scare. The questioner was going a mile a minute in French, but because of those 75 seven-minute interviews, I picked up enough key words to fight my way through it.”

Gore has been concerned with climate change since he took a class with pioneering global warming theorist Roger Revelle as a college student in the 1960s. Not only did Gore “never imagine when I was a young man that this would become an all-consuming body of work for me,” he also never anticipated that the work would involve the movies.

More than that, he was frankly dubious about both of his films.

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Ellen DeGeneres says she’s ‘in’ for a Netflix stand-up comedy special

Ellen DeGeneres is working on a new comedy special — for the first time in a very long time — and this time she’s working with Netflix.

“Looks like it’s been 15 years since you did a stand-up special. ... How about one for Netflix?” the streaming service asked her Wednesday on Twitter. Minutes later, DeGeneres replied, “Let me think about it. Ok I’m in.”

Here’s how “in” she is: “I’m writing it now, I can’t wait,” DeGeneres said in a statement confirming the upcoming gig. “I’ll keep you posted when and where I’m gonna shoot my Netflix special. I’m excited to do it; I’m excited for you to see it.”

Previously, HBO was home for DeGeneres’ comedy specials: her “One Night Stand” in 1992, “Ellen DeGeneres: The Beginning” in 2000 and “Ellen DeGeneres: Here and Now.” The second and third shows notched two Emmy nominations each.

In March, the former sitcom star announced she’d be returning to prime time with “Ellen’s Game of Games,” which she’s hosting for six episodes on NBC. No air dates have been set.

“It’s going to be like a combination of ‘American Ninja Warrior,’ ‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’ and a water park,” DeGeneres said in a statement. “OK, it’s nothing like that, but you should still watch.”

UPDATES

2:30 p.m.: This article was updated with confirmation from Netflix and a statement from DeGeneres.

It’s been 31 years. Where is the ‘Top Gun’ cast now?

Fresh off of Tuesday’s announcement that, yes, Tom Cruise has a “Top Gun” sequel in the works, it seemed natural to wonder what ever happened to the rest of the cast of that 1986 classic.

It’s been 31 years since the film’s release, and although none of his former co-stars is likely to be as well-preserved as Cruise — who appears to be in full “Benjamin Button” mode these days — it’s also likely that few have had as tumultuous a career as Cruise has.

Here’s what the cast and crew of “Top Gun” have been up to recently.

Tom Cruise

(Rick Rycroft / Associated Press)

Character: Maverick

Cruise has had a pretty eventful three decades since “Top Gun” launched him to superstar status. Between 1990 and 2000, Cruise won three Golden Globe awards and earned three Academy Award nominations for his performances in “Born on the Fourth of July,” “Jerry Maguire” and “Magnolia.”

But Cruise soon ran amok of the tabloids after a high-profile marriage and divorce from Nicole Kidman, another high-profile marriage and divorce from Katie Holmes, an angry screed about the evil of psychiatry and that whole Scientology thing.

It took a few years, but Cruise is finally getting his career back on track, by embracing the action movies that made him a star with franchises including “Jack Reacher,” “Mission: Impossible” and this summer’s “The Mummy.”

Kelly McGillis

(Victoria Will / Associated Press)

Character: Charlie

Cruise’s love interest in the film, an astrophysicist and civilian Topgun instructor, was played by McGillis, who had risen to prominence the year before in “Witness” with Harrison Ford, for which she received a Golden Globe nomination.

Though McGillis would go on to star in “The Accused” with Jodie Foster, a harrowing drama about the aftermath of a brutal gang rape, her career quickly dwindled into roles in TV movies.

McGillis was going through her own struggles in her personal life; after two failed marriages, she revealed that she was a lesbian in 2009. She has since settled in North Carolina, where she teaches acting and suffered a violent home invasion last year.

Val Kilmer

(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

Character: Iceman

Like Cruise, “Top Gun” made Kilmer a pretty big deal. After playing Iceman, Kilmer moved on to projects such as “Willow,” “The Doors” and “Tombstone” before being tapped to play the caped crusader in Joel Schumacher’s “Batman Forever.”

Portraying the third-best modern Batman on film (ranked: Christian Bale, Michael Keaton, Kilmer, George Clooney, Ben Affleck) seemed to stall Kilmer’s career somewhat. He nonetheless pulled out great performances in “Heat” and “Kiss, Kiss, Bang, Bang.”

And then there was some weirdness last year when Michael Douglas claimed Kilmer had oral cancer, which Kilmer denied, until several weeks ago when Kilmer claimed to have had “a healing of cancer.”

No word yet on what, precisely, that means.

Anthony Edwards

Character: Goose

Since 1986: Edwards was perfect as affable wingman Goose in “Top Gun,” but it wasn’t until his transition to television that his career really took off.

The heart of early seasons of NBC’s “ER,” Edwards played Dr. Mark Greene, who meets an intensely tear-jerking end that rivals even Goose’s demise.

What has Edwards been up to since he departed “ER” in 2002? Nothing too notable beyond guest spots and an ill-advised series about clocks.

Tom Skerritt

Character: Viper

Since 1986: Listen, Tom Skerritt has had a very long and illustrious career. The man is 83. Leave him out of this.

ALSO

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Chris Cornell’s body has been cremated, report says; funeral set for Friday

Chris Cornell in 1991.
(Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)

The body of Soundgarden frontman Chris Cornell, who died last week in Detroit, was reportedly cremated Tuesday in Hollywood, and a funeral is planned for later this week.

Widow Vicky Cornell, brother Peter Boyle and friends Linda Ramone and singer J.D. King were at Hollywood Forever Cemetery for the cremation, sources familiar with the service told TMZ.

Cornell’s body was flown to Los Angeles from Detroit on Sunday, family attorney Kirk Pasich told Rolling Stone on Monday, and a private funeral will be held Friday. Pasich told Variety on Sunday that public memorials will be held “when it’s decided.”

The short time between the end of Soundgarden’s May 17 show and 52-year-old Cornell’s death was chronicled in a police report obtained by the Detroit News.

He and the band walked offstage around 11:15 p.m. May 17. Fifteen minutes later Cornell was in his hotel room, the report said, where bodyguard Martin Kirsten (who used to work for and date Heidi Klum) helped him fix his computer and gave him two Ativan.

At 11:35 p.m. Cornell was talking to his wife, Vicky, who said Friday through her attorney that she had been concerned because her husband was slurring his words and told her he might have taken a few too many anxiety pills. She called Kirsten at 12:15 a.m. Thursday and asked him to check on the singer, the report said; the bodyguard kicked in the hotel room door, then the locked bathroom door, and found Cornell.

At his final show, Cornell seemed “high” and “was out of character from note 1,” lead sound engineer Ted Keedick told TMZ in an interview published Wednesday. He said the Soundgarden frontman did not appear depressed.

However, Keedick said: “I’d never heard his voice that way before. He was having serious control problems.”

One concert-goer told the Detroit News last week that as far as she could tell, Cornell’s final show “was honestly great. Nothing seemed off.”

Tuesday at Detroit’s Fox Theatre, the site of that last performance, Norah Jones played a tribute to Cornell: an acoustic version of “Black Hole Sun.”

Ariana Grande suspends tour through June 5

Ariana Grande’s tour has been suspended through June 5, her management team said Wednesday. That includes the cancellation of concerts planned for Thursday and Friday at London’s O2 Arena.

Twenty-two people died and at least 59 were injured in a suicide attack Monday night outside Manchester Arena, where Grande had just concluded a stop on her Dangerous Woman Tour.

“We ask at this time that we all continue to support the city of Manchester and all those families affected by this cowardice and senseless act of violence,” the singer’s reps said in a statement. “Our way of life has once again been threatened but we will overcome this together.”

The dates that have been put on hold “until we can further assess the situation and pay our proper respects to those lost,” the statement said, are:

  • London, May 25-26
  • Antwerp, Belgium, May 28
  • Lodz, Poland, May 31-June 1
  • Frankfurt, Germany, June 3
  • Zurich, Switzerland, June 5

The next tour stop after that is a June 7 concert in Paris.

Speculation that the tour would be put on hold has been rife since the day after the bomb went off — actually, immediately afterward and before the number of casualties was known, many on social media were already worried that shows would be axed — but the situation had been in limbo until now.

An “exhausted”-looking Grande returned home Tuesday to Florida, where she and her mother were met at the airport by Mac Miller, who hugged and kissed his girlfriend in an “emotional reunion.”

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Warner Bros. cancels London ‘Wonder Woman’ premiere following Manchester attack

In the wake of Monday’s deadly terrorist attack at an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester, England, Warner Bros. has announced it is canceling a planned premiere in London next week for its superhero film “Wonder Woman.”

“Our thoughts are with those affected by the recent tragedy in the UK,” the studio said in a statement. “In light of the current situation, we will not be proceeding with our plans for the premiere and junket activities in London.”

Starring Gal Gadot and directed by Patty Jenkins, the highly anticipated film – which is set in Europe during World War I – will hold its U.S. premiere on Thursday in Los Angeles. It arrives in theaters June 2.

The studio faced a similar situation last year when its European premiere of “Batman v. Superman” was scheduled to be held in London just hours after terrorist attacks struck Brussels, killing 32 people and injuring many others. In that case, the studio said in a statement that it had decided to go ahead with the event “rather than yield to terror.”

But as Britain mourns the 22 people killed in the Manchester bombing, with scores more wounded, and with the country’s security threat level raised to its highest, signaling the possibility of another imminent attack, Warner Bros. clearly determined that the circumstances called for a different course of action.

New ‘Spider-Man: Homecoming’ trailer shows off Spidey’s tricked-out, Iron Man-style super-suit

Spider-Man has a few new tricks up his spandex sleeve, with the latest trailer for Sony’s upcoming franchise reboot “Spider-Man: Homecoming” offering a deeper look at Spidey’s newfangled, tech-enhanced super-suit.

Courtesy of billionaire inventor/playboy Tony Stark, the suit is embedded with Iron Man-style technology. A Jarvis-like computer assistant informs Peter Parker (Tom Holland) of the “576 possible web shooter combinations” he has at his command. A parachute can also be deployed out of the back of the suit when needed, and the chest piece can detach and turn into a drone.

For those who prefer their Spidey old-school, though, the trailer also promises a return to Parker’s teenage roots — though with a decidedly cockier spin than the shy, alienated high school nerd we’ve often seen depicted in the comics and onscreen.

Holland’s Parker is clearly feeling his superhero oats, boasting to Stark of taking down a petty bike thief and raring for bigger challenges, Spanish quiz or no Spanish quiz. (Cue Michael Keaton’s villainous Vulture.)

Informed by his best friend Ned that Stark has installed a “training-wheels protocol” on his super-suit to disable some of its abilities, Parker gripes, “I’m sick of Mr. Stark treating me like a kid.”

“But you are a kid,” Ned reminds him.

“Yeah,” Parker says, “a kid who can stop a bus with his bare hands!”

“Spider-Man: Homecoming” hits theaters July 7.

Watch the trailer below.

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Performers move U.K. concerts after Manchester bombing, but for some, the show goes on

Floral tributes in Manchester's St. Ann's Square on May 24, 2017.
(Jeff J. Mitchell / Getty Images)

Manchester Arena has postponed concerts by Take That, an English pop group from the city that was to play there Thursday, Friday and Saturday. But it’s working to see that a KISS show proceeds next week.

“Unfortunately, due to the tragic events that unfolded on Monday night, it is not possible for the concerts to take place,” the arena said in a statement. “These have now been postponed and more information will follow.” In another statement, the arena cited the ongoing police investigation.

Take That had previously postponed a show at another location, saying Tuesday on its website, “Out of respect to all of the people and their families that were affected by the horrific incident last night at the Manchester Arena, we have decided to postpone our show tonight in Liverpool. Our thoughts and prayers are with you all.”

KISS is scheduled to play Manchester Arena on Tuesday, and the venue said it is working on that show with promoters and police.

As far as the Ariana Grande concerts set for London’s O2 arena on Thursday and Friday, as of Wednesday morning no decision had been made.

“We’re still in contact with the tour promoters regarding a final decision,” the O2 team said on Twitter Wednesday morning. “As yet the tour is not officially postponed or canceled, despite media reports.”

Katy Perry, Lorde, Lana Del Rey, Imagine Dragons, Shawn Mendes and the Chainsmokers will all go ahead with performances this Saturday and Sunday in Hull, England, at BBC Radio 1’s Big Weekend, according to TMZ. Hull is about two hours from Manchester.

Blondie postponed a Tuesday-night show at the Round Chapel in London, saying in a series of tweets the day of the show that the move was “out of respect for the victims of the terrible attack at the Manchester Arena,” and noting that plans to reschedule the show were in the works.

The Afghan Whigs have moved their Friday show to the O2 Ritz Manchester from Manchester Cathedral, which, as of Wednesday morning, was still cordoned off by police. The Ritz said Tuesday that it would stay silent on social media for two days “in sympathy with those who lost their lives or were injured, physically or mentally,” but that it would have news Thursday about any rescheduled shows.

Other acts that had been scheduled to perform in the Manchester area but not in the arena in coming days, including Colour of Noise, Damien Dempsey, Shriekback and the Cranberries, canceled their shows for reasons unrelated to the suicide attack. Most announced those plans well before Monday.

Tom Cruise confirms ‘Top Gun’ sequel -- 30 years too late

In what’s sure to have been the hottest news of 1987, Tom Cruise confirmed Tuesday that not only is a “Top Gun” sequel in the works, but that he aims to start filming it in the next year.

Cruise unceremoniously confirmed the news on the Australian morning show “Sunrise” to anchors who seemed somewhat dumbfounded by the revelation.

The original “Top Gun” came out in 1986 and Cruise played a cocky Navy aviator hungry to be the best of the best when he enters the competitive Topgun program based at the Naval Air Station in Miramar, Calif.

The film featured a lot of male posturing, a strangely erotic beach volleyball scene and, like, a lot of Kenny Loggins songs.

Given that literally nothing else is known about the film at this point, let’s enter into a bit of reality-based speculation.

There are a number of challenges to making a sequel to a film that was released more than 30 years ago. For starters, all of those actors playing beautiful, young fighter pilots are now, well, a lot older.

Then there are the facts.

Assuming that Cruise’s character, Maverick, stayed on the straight and narrow, he should have risen through the Navy ranks to a level that doesn’t see him regularly flying.

Further, if his rebel ways continued and he didn’t rise in command, then he likely would have been asked to leave after serving for 20 years or so.

At best, fans will be looking at Cruise to take on something like Tom Skerritt’s sage-advisor role from the original film. He’ll probably end up trying to shepherd a renegade pilot too much like himself, played by Ansel Elgort or Josh Hutcherson.

There’s also the matter that Miramar isn’t even a Naval Air Station anymore, transferring to the Marine Corps in 1999.

Not to worry, however, the Topgun program still exists; it’s just located in beautiful Fallon, Nev., now.

Fallon, Nev., in all its glory.
(Cathleen Allison / Associated Press)

Which is all to say that, despite Cruise being essentially ageless, this is probably not going to be the “Top Gun” sequel you were hoping for when you were 12.

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Heath Ledger’s sister says it took blessing from Michelle Williams to get new documentary made

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A Star Is Born: Bob Dylan turns 76 today

(Lori Shepler / Los Angeles Times)

When people think of me, they are not necessarily going to buy the latest record anyway. They may buy a record from years ago. Besides, I don’t think interviews sell records.

— Bob Dylan, 1985

FROM THE ARCHIVES: Bob Dylan -- Still A-Changin’

Late-night TV hosts, U2 plead for love after Manchester bombing

After the news, late-night talk shows are television’s most topical forum. We turn there for the satirical distance and perspective that might allow us to process the day and get to sleep – for laughs when laughter is appropriate, but also for a thoughtful response when events go beyond ordinary human folly to the terrible and unthinkable.

Monday’s suicide bombing after an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester, England, was on the minds of some late-night hosts Tuesday night.

“There’s really nothing you can say that can approach the shock and the grief of the victims and their families,” said Stephen Colbert on “Late Show,” asking his audience to go online to hear what his CBS colleague James Corden, who follows him on “The Late Late Show,” had to say the night before.

“All we can add here,” said Colbert, “is that following acts of senseless violence like this, it’s all the more important not to be controlled by fear, but instead to be reminded by the action of people of Manchester who rushed to the aid of their friends and strangers alike. It is just more proof that evil cannot succeed as long as good people are willing to love each other.”

On NBC’s “Late Night,” host Seth Meyers had similar thoughts.

“At its best, being at a concert is an incredible collective experience,” he said. “It’s a chance through a shared love of music to connect with, to sing with and to dance with people you don’t know.... And so this comes down to the way we treat strangers, and while some cowards chose to treat strangers with hate, from everything I read, Manchester was filled with people last night who provided aid and comfort to help victims who were total strangers to them.”

He ended with a “plea for all of us to not need a tragedy to remind us of the importance of treating those we do not know with love instead of hate.”

The Irish band U2, in Los Angeles to perform concerts of their own, were among Jimmy Kimmel’s guests on ABC’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live.” Kimmel brought up Manchester.

“I imagine that is something you guys have been thinking about,” he said.

“They hate music, they hate women, they even hate little girls – they hate everything that we love,” lead singer Bono replied. “The worst of humanity was on view in Manchester last night – but so was the best, as people took perfect strangers into their houses and queued up for blood banks. Manchester has an undefeatable spirit, I can assure you.”

Kimmel wondered how growing up in Northern Ireland in an era of political and sectarian violence had affected their music.

“It was so commonplace for a number of years,” answered the Edge, the band’s guitarist, “that it just became a constant background to life. And occasionally something particularly awful would happen and it would really affect you – but that was almost the worst of it. You got to the place where [it was] just ongoing every week, every month.”

Punk rock helped, added Bono. “It made us suspicious of partisanship, it made us up suspicious of sectarian ideas.”

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Elisabeth Moss and BBC America join forces for Typhoid Mary limited series

(Patrick T. Fallon / For The Times)

“The Handmaid’s Tale” star Elisabeth Moss is wasting no time in lining up new projects.

BBC America announced Tuesday its partnership with Moss and Annapurna Television in developing “Fever,” a limited series focused on the tale of “Typhoid Mary.”

The series will adapt the novel of the same name, written by Mary Beth Keane and set in early 20th century New York, where Mary Mallon is unknowingly transmitting typhus to those around her.

“She was an immigrant in turn-of-the-century New York, a time of huge change and progress in America,” Moss said of the character in a statement released by the network. “She was incredibly unique, stubborn, ambitious and in fierce denial of any wrongdoing until her death where she lived out her days imprisoned on an island just off of the Bronx in N.Y.

“She is incredibly complicated, something I seem to enjoy playing,” said Moss.

Moss will star in the series and serve as executive producer alongside director Phil Morrison (“Enlightened,” “Junebug”) and writer Robin Veith (“The Expanse,” “True Blood”). Annapurna’s Sue Naegle and Megan Ellison will also serve as executive producers.

Universal Music Group CEO on Manchester attack: ‘A level of evil beyond comprehension’

Lucian Grainge, CEO of Universal Music Group, in November 2016.
(Frazer Harrison / Getty Images)

Lucian Grainge of Universal Music Group sent a company-wide memo Tuesday, calling it “a day of remembrance” of victims of the suicide attack in Manchester, England, and acknowledging that emotions were raw.

“[W]e grieve for all of those lost there, offering our deepest condolences to their families and loved ones,” said the chief executive of UMG, parent company of Ariana Grande’s recording label Republic, in a note obtained by Variety.

Twenty-two people, one only 8 years old, were killed Monday night and at least 59 were hurt when a bomb exploded as Grande’s concert at the Manchester Arena was ending.

“This hits home for us as a music company,” Grainge said, “because so many of us, myself included, spend so much time out seeing our artists perform, let alone attending concerts as fans. That’s why we’ve chosen music as our career — or rather music has chosen us.”

No UMG employees, including Grande and her crew, were injured in the blast, he confirmed, and help from human resources and security was offered to those with questions or concerns.

“That said,” Grainge continued, “the fact that such an unspeakable act can be committed at a place where innocent people — including so many young people — come together peacefully to enjoy music reflects a level of evil beyond comprehension.”

READ MORE: Suspected Manchester suicide bomber identified as U.K. son of Libyan immigrants>>

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Ariana Grande returns home to Florida after Manchester attack

People attending a vigil for Monday's suicide-attack victims brought flowers to St. Ann Square in Manchester, England, on Tuesday.
(Jeff J. Mitchell / Getty Images)

Ariana Grande reportedly returned home to Florida on Tuesday after the bombing outside her Manchester, England, concert that left 22 dead and at least 59 injured.

As they exited a private plane, Grande, her mom and her dog were met on the tarmac in Boca Raton, E! News said, by family members and rapper Mac Miller, whom the 23-year-old has been dating since last summer. Miller gave Grande a long hug and a kiss, a source told E!

“It was a very emotional reunion and they stood talking for a minute before getting into the car,” the source said. “Ariana looked exhausted and like she didn’t get much sleep.”

A source described as close to the pop star told People that Grande “loves her fans and is absolutely crushed and devastated.... She can’t believe this happened. She just wants to be with her family and loved ones right now.”

Victims of the attack who have been identified so far include Saffie Rose Roussos, who at 8 years old is the youngest fatality so far, the Guardian reported. Many teens were also on the list of casualties.

Grande is scheduled to perform Thursday and Friday at the O2 Arena in London, but early Tuesday the status of those shows and the rest of the European leg of her Dangerous Woman tour was still in limbo.

Overnight, the “Side to Side” singer tweeted that she was “broken.” Meanwhile, support for her and for the victims came in from Grande’s peers.

“These are innocent vulnerable kids,” Rihanna tweeted. “This could have been any of us.”

Katy Perry confirms it: She and Taylor Swift indeed have bad blood

It’s only taken four years but pop culture gossip hounds finally have the confirmation of the rumor they’ve been salivating over: Yes, Katy Perry and Taylor Swift are beefing.

And, according to Perry, “She started it.”

Perry confirmed the rumors on James Corden’s “Carpool Karaoke” prime time special Monday night, explaining that the conflict began in a 2013 dispute over backup dancers.

According to Perry, three of her backing dancers wanted to tour with Swift on the Red tour in 2013, which Perry was in full support of because, in her words, “I’m not on a record cycle. Get the work. And she’s great.”

She did, however, caution her dancers that in a year, she would be back on a record cycle, so if they wanted to rejoin her, they needed to build in a 30-day contingency in their contract.

After the year passed, Perry contacted the dancers, whom she was “very close with,” and let them know she was readying a new tour. They replied that they’d contact management and were subsequently fired from Swift’s tour.

Perry’s story, up to this point, seems to jibe with what had previously been pieced together from various interviews.

A 2013 interview from Examiner featured one of the dancers in question, who confirmed that he and two other backup dancers who had previously worked on Perry’s “California Dreams” tour departed Swift’s tour to join Perry’s “Prism” tour.

This also vaguely aligns with a 2014 Rolling Stone interview wherein Swift confirmed that her hit single “Bad Blood” was about a fellow female artist she had a falling out with.

“She basically tried to sabotage an entire arena tour. She tried to hire a bunch of people out from under me. And I’m surprisingly nonconfrontational – you would not believe how much I hate conflict. So now I have to avoid her. It’s awkward, and I don’t like it,” Swift told the magazine.

This may or may not be where Swift and Perry’s narratives diverge.

After the dancers returned to her, Perry claims she reached out to Swift in an attempt to discuss the matter, and Swift refused.

“I do the right thing any time that it feels like a fumble,” Perry told Corden.

“So you did the phone call and it was a shutdown,” Corden clarified.

“It was a full shutdown and then she writes this song [‘Bad Blood’] about me,” Perry continued.

However, at Corden’s probing, Perry conceded that if Swift were to text her to say, in Corden’s words, “the beef is off the grill,” that she would, in return, take the beef off the grill.

“I think that women together and not divided and without any of this petty [stuff] — women together will heal the world,” Perry concluded.

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Vanity Fair’s ‘Star Wars’ covers are here — and one of them will tug at your heartstrings

“The Last Jedi” continues the episodic story of Rey (Daisy Ridley), Poe Dameron (Oscar Isaac), Finn (John Boyega) and a few original characters, including Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill).

There was a disturbance in the force Tuesday morning when Vanity Fair released its “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” covers photographed by Annie Leibovitz.

Tagged “The Force,” “The Dark Side,” “The Resistance” and “The Legacy,” the covers were broken down into four categories, each featuring the stars of the upcoming film.

“The Force” is made up of Rey (Daisy Ridley) and Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill) appearing to pick up where they left off at the conclusion of “The Force Awakens.”

“The Dark Side” features Captain Phasma (Gwendoline Christie), Kylo Ren (Adam Driver) and General Hux (Domhnall Gleeson) worse for wear after the events of the last film, but apparently readying themselves to clash anew with the rebel forces.

“The Resistance” offers an early peek at Rose Tico (Kelly Marie Tran), a new addition to the cast, alongside Poe Dameron (Oscar Isaac), Finn (John Boyega) and, of course, lovable rolling droid BB-8.

But it’s “The Legacy” cover that really packs a punch. General Leia Organa (Carrie Fisher) — who began the franchise as a tough-talking princess fully capable of saving herself and those around her and became the leader of freedom fighters — stands alone, cloaked in lush, unadorned robes.

It’s a fitting tribute to Fisher, whose unexpected death in December prompted questions about her continued presence in the franchise. The cover makes it crystal clear that, though Fisher is gone, she is not forgotten.

Roger Moore remembered as the ‘have a drink with me’ James Bond

Roger Moore in Germany in June 2013.
Roger Moore in Germany in June 2013.
(Rolf Vennenbernd / EPA)

Kind, warm, witty — “the have a drink with me & hash it out” 007. Roger Moore, who died at 89 after a short battle with cancer, was remembered Tuesday on social media by friends, fans and, of course, Aston Martin, whose cars have been a James Bond staple.

“Oh no. As if today wasn’t already sad enough,” Piers Morgan wrote on Twitter, presumably referring to the Monday night bombing at Manchester Arena in Britain. “RIP Sir Roger Moore, 89. A wonderful actor & lovely man.”

OBITUARY: Roger Moore, debonair British actor who played James Bond in 7 movies

“Roger was a beloved part of the MGM family for decades and leaves behind a legacy of iconic film and television performances that will be revered for generations to come,” Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer chairman and chief executive Gary Barber said in a statement.

“His suave sophistication in his defining role as James Bond was matched only by his generosity and kindness. ... Roger will be sorely missed but always remembered, and our thoughts are with his family.”

Patton Oswalt put labels on all seven men who have played Bond, with Moore emerging as the “have a drink with me” incarnation of 007. Mia Farrow recalled the actor’s work with UNICEF, and PETA posted an essay that referred to him as “The Man with the Golden Heart.”

UPDATED, 12:45 p.m.: This story was updated with a comment from MGM’s Gary Barber.

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At Cannes, trailer for England-set Muslim drama postponed in wake of Manchester attack

President of the Cannes Film Festival Pierre Lescure, left, and actress Isabelle Huppert applaud after they observed a minute of silence for victims of the Manchester bombing.
(Anne-Christine Poujoulat / AFP/Getty Images)

As Cannes Film Festival attendees carried on their work with a heavy heart Tuesday, the Manchester bombing has also had an effect on at least one studio’s marketing plans.

Focus Features has ‎decided to postpone the trailer launch of “Victoria and Abdul” -- a fact-based drama about a Muslim Indian immigrant to England who becomes‎ a close confidante to Queen Victoria -- in the wake of the attack.

The Universal subsidiary was set to release a tease to the poster ‎Tuesday and a video trailer Wednesday.

But when executives at Cannes heard the news about the bombing at the Ariana Grande concert, they decided to postpone the launch to next week, said a person close to the plans who asked not to be identified because they were not authorized to talk about them publicly.

The person cited a mix of reasons for the decision, primarily the fact that the film is an English-centric story and a big piece of marketing right after the attack could seem insensitive, as well as more secondarily the notion that the bombings had attracted the attention of a media-savvy adult demographic, also the intended audience for the film.

‎Starring Judi Dench and Ali Fazal, “Victoria and Abdul”‎ is set for release in the U.S. and U.K. in September. It tells a cross-cultural story of two people from vastly different classes and religions forging a close relationship.

Focus, which has a strong presence at Cannes ahead of the premiere of Sofia Coppola’s “The Beguiled” on Wednesday, has also been promoting “Victoria and Abdul” here. At an upfront-style event on the beach Friday, executives touted the movie as an upscale but accessible drama with mainstream appeal.

James Corden reaches out to the ‘strong, proud, caring people’ of Manchester

James Corden reached out to Manchester, England, lon Monday night after taping “The Late Late Show,” calling the city “a place full of comedies and curries and character.”

Nothing but serious, Corden said: “When I think of Manchester, the place that I know, I think of the spirit of the people there, and I’m telling you, a more tightknit group of people you will be hard-pressed to find. Strong, proud, caring people with community at its core.”

He predicted the people of Manchester would become even stronger after the bombing, which police say was carried out by a lone male bomber who died at the scene. ISIS has claimed responsibility.

“It shocks me every time we hear this sort of news, that attacks like this can happen,” Corden said, “but especially when there will be so many children at this concert tonight.”

The attack left 22 people confirmed dead and more than 59 injured. A vigil will be held in Albert Square, in the center of the city, at 6 p.m. local time Tuesday, Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham said.

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Amid tight security, Cannes pauses for a moment of silence to honor Manchester victims

At 3 p.m. on Tuesday, the 70th Festival de Cannes observed a moment of silence in solidarity with the victims of Monday night’s terrorist attack at Manchester Arena.

Earlier that morning, the festival had issued a news release expressing “its horror, anger and immense sadness,” and described the incident as “yet another attack on culture, youth and joyfulness, on our freedom, generosity and tolerance, all things that the Festival and those who make it possible — the artists, professionals and spectators — hold dear.”

With that statement came the implicit acknowledgment that such an attack could, of course, happen here in Cannes. Not that anyone needed reminding, in light of the heightened security measures up and down the Croisette: the constant presence of armed police officers, the large planters lining the streets to protect against a vehicular attack, and the metal detectors set up at every entrance to the Palais des Festivals.

The festival had already weathered one false alarm on Friday, when a “suspicious object” that had been left behind in one of the screening rooms triggered a bomb scare. The Palais was evacuated, delaying by 45 minutes the first press screening of “Redoubtable,” Michel Hazanavicius’ film about the filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard.

Less than a year ago, the driver of a 19-ton truck attacked members of the crowd celebrating Bastille Day on the Promenade des Anglais in Nice, about 20 miles from Cannes, leaving 86 dead and more than 430 injured.

Ariana Grande’s tour dates in limbo after Manchester tragedy

Ariana Grande at the 2016 MTV Video Music Awards.
(Chris Pizzello / Invision / Associated Press)

There is much confusion in the aftermath of the Manchester terrorist attack that left 22 dead and more than 50 injured at an Ariana Grande concert Monday night. And now there are doubts that Grande’s “Dangerous Woman” tour will proceed as scheduled.

TMZ reported Monday night that the European tour had been suspended indefinitely, citing anonymous sources connected to Grande who was reportedly “in hysterics” after the concert attack.

Tuesday morning, CNN also reported the tour’s suspension, citing a source with knowledge of the situation.

The European leg of Grande’s third concert tour began May 8 in Stockholm, Sweden, and has 13 scheduled dates remaining, as well as Latin American, Asian and Oceanic legs planned for later this year.

Grande’s next scheduled tour stops are Thursday and Friday at the O2 Arena in London. They have yet to be canceled or postponed, but the venue’s official website features a message addressing the Manchester incident.

“Along with everyone else, we are shocked and saddened by the terrible tragedy in Manchester. Our thoughts and prayers are with those affected and their families,” the statement reads.

“Ariana is due to perform at The O2 on Thursday and Friday and we will advise as soon as we can as to the status of those shows.”

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A Star Is Born: Joan Collins turns 84 today

(Al Seib / Los Angeles Times)

I realize that any actress over 40 has a hard time finding roles. As you get older, it doesn’t matter how you look -- people think of you as your age. And you know the way the business is -- it’s still sexist to the extent that you can have Michael Caine, Jack Nicholson or Robert Redford, all of whom are in their 50s, playing romantic leading men. But I don’t see too many women in their 50s -- not even Jane Fonda anymore.”

— Joan Collins, 1991

FROM THE ARCHIVES: Life After Alexis

After Manchester attack, support pours in for Ariana Grande: ‘This could have been any of us’

Ariana Grande performing at Wango Tango in 2016.
(Marcus Yam / Los Angeles Times)

In the hours after the Manchester bombing of an Ariana Grande concert, Twitter was flooded with messages of support for the the victims and their families and friends.

But not forgotten in the aftermath of the terrorist attack, which left 22 dead, including a victim as young as 8, is Grande herself.

“These are innocent vulnerable kids,” Rihanna tweeted early Tuesday morning. “This could have been any of us.”

The thought that it could have been any musician and any of his or her fans triggered empathy for Grande.

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Ariana Grande on Manchester bombing: ‘I don’t have words’

broken. from the bottom of my heart, i am so so sorry. i don’t have words.

— Ariana Grande, tweeting Monday night about the Manchester bombing

70 years of Cannes in 17 seconds: the year the Palme d’Or was a split decision

Palme split: from left, best actress winner Holly Hunter, actor Sam Neill for director Jane Campion and director Chen Kaige accepting the shared Palme d'Or for "The Piano" and "Farewell My Concubine."
(Gilbert Tourte / Associated Press)

Kenneth Turan, Justin Chang and Steven Zeitchik are bringing us Cannes moments from the 70 years of the international film festival -- in 17-second increments (or thereabouts). Here, Turan, with Chang behind the camera, recalls one of his favorite Cannes memories: the 1993 festival, when the jury split the Palme d’Or between Jane Campion’s “The Piano” and Chen Kaige’s “Farewell My Concubine.”

Both films went on to be nominated for Academy Awards, “The Piano” for best picture and “Farewell My Concubine for best foreign film, a split that caused some discussion ahead of the 1994 Academy Awards about what makes a film foreign.

More 70 years of Cannes in 17 seconds:

The time Lars von Trier talked about being a Nazi

70 years of Cannes in 17 seconds: Discovering ‘Secret Sunshine

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At least 19 dead after explosion at England concert; Ariana Grande is ‘OK’

Police stand by a cordoned-off street close to the Manchester Arena on May 22 in Manchester, England.
( (Dave Thompson / Getty Images))

Pop star Ariana Grande is said to be safe after an explosion at the U.K.’s Manchester Arena, where she had a concert Monday night. A police statement said that at least 19 people were killed and about 50 were hurt in the blast, which was still in the hands of first responders as the news spread.

FULL COVERAGE: This developing story is being updated here.

“Ariana is OK. We are further investigating what happened,” said Joseph Carozza, the artist’s publicist with Republic Records, a division of Universal Music Group.

The explosion happened just after Grande’s concert had ended, witnesses said.

“Emergency services responding to serious incident at Manchester Arena. Avoid the area. More details will follow as soon as available,” the Greater Manchester Police announced on Twitter.

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Zack Snyder to leave ‘Justice League’ following family tragedy; Joss Whedon to take over film

A rather stark reality hit the world of superhero fantasy on Monday, as the L.A. Times confirmed that Zack Snyder is stepping away from finishing the upcoming “Justice League” picture in the wake of the suicide of his daughter.

Originally reported at the Hollywood Reporter, 20-year-old Autumn Snyder died in March. “The demands of this job are pretty intense. It is all-consuming,” Snyder said to THR. “And in the last two months, I’ve come to the realization … I’ve decided to take a step back from the movie to be with my family, be with my kids, who really need me. They are all having a hard time. I’m having a hard time.”

Stepping in for Snyder to finish the high-profile movie starring Ben Affleck, Gal Gadot and Jason Momoa will be Joss Whedon. After making two films as part of the Disney/Marvel “Avengers” series, Whedon was recently announced as joining the Warners/DC universe for an upcoming “Batgirl” movie. “Justice League” is still expected to make its planned Nov. 17 release date.

Whedon will oversee the additional photography that had already been planned and carry the film through the end of its post-production. Snyder and Whedon are said to have a strong rapport and that Whedon is intent on seeing through Snyder’s vision for the film.

Snyder also said to THR that he planned to keep the matter of his daughter’s death private, but that once he decided to step away from “Justice League” he knew there would be a demand for answers.

“I knew there would be narratives created on the internet. They’ll do what they do,” Snyder said. “The truth is … I’m past caring about that kind of thing now.”

Snyder added, “In the end, it’s just a movie. It’s a great movie. But it’s just a movie.”

ALSO

Ariana Grande’s tour dates in limbo after Manchester tragedy

Heath Ledger’s sister says it took blessing from Michelle Williams to get new documentary made

Universal debuts its spooky new Dark Universe and its upcoming ‘Bride of Frankenstein’

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From Twitter meme to reality: Rihanna, Lupita Nyong’o, Ava DuVernay and Issa Rae to collaborate on buddy picture

The 2014 Paris Fashion Week photo that sparked the Twitter memes that led to a new movie deal. From left, Lea Seydoux, Margot Robbie, Rihanna, Lupita Nyong'o and Elizabeth Olsen at the Miu Miu show.
(Pascal Le Segretain / Getty Images)

The hive-mind of the Internet has moved into development.

Among the news coming out of the Cannes Film Festival, EW is reporting that Netflix will finance a buddy crime film starring Lupita Nyong’o and Rihanna to be directed by Ava DuVernay, with Issa Rae in talks to write the screenplay.

The twist is that this idea stems largely from an idea hatched on Twitter in response to a photo taken when Rihanna and Nyong’o were seated next to each other at a Miu Miu fashion show in Paris in 2014. When a suggestion was made that they looked like they should be in a movie together, enthusiasm quickly grew.

Via Twitter, Nyong’o and Rihanna both signaled they were in. Then Rae and DuVernay also both posted they were up for it too.

Scheduling for this foursome is presumably no easy feat.

DuVernay first has to finish her adaptation of “A Wrinkle in Time,” set for release in spring of 2018. Rihanna, besides her career as a pop music superstar, will also be in “Ocean’s Eight.” the all-women spinoff from the “Ocean’s” franchise due in summer 2018. Nyong’o will be in “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” later this year and Marvel’s “Black Panther” next year. Rae will see the second season of her HBO series “Insecure” premiere this July.

The Rihanna/Lupita/Issa/Ava axis has already exerted a powerful pull on Internet fandom. Whether this points the way to more fan-cast projects or is some sort of fantasy-league one-off will remain to be seen. But the power of the Internet is apparently quite real.

Sasheer Zamata leaves ‘Saturday Night Live,’ leaving three black cast members

(Jamie McCarthy / Getty Images)

Add Sasheer Zamata to the list of “Saturday Night Live” cast members who marked their final shows this past weekend, along with Bobby Moynihan and Vanessa Bayer.

“Wow. What a fantastic end to a fantastic season, thanks SNL” Zamata said Sunday on Instagram, where she posted a picture of herself getting a hero’s carry from Colin Jost and host Dwayne Johnson.

The 31-year-old’s characters included Michelle Obama, Omarosa Manigault and Lt. Uhura from “Star Trek.” She was a regular in the “Black Jeopardy” sketches and played Seasonique Boniva Williams in the “Drug Company Hearing” bit with Octavia Spencer and Leslie Jones in March.

Zamata joined the “SNL” cast as a featured player midway through its 40th season in the wake of criticism that the show hadn’t had a black woman in the cast since Maya Rudolph left in 2007.

That weakness was acknowledged publicly during the show Kerry Washington hosted in November 2013, and Zamata showed up as Rihanna in January after a December audition that saw Jones added to the show as a writer.

Zamata became a repertory cast member for Season 41, which premiered in fall 2014. Jones got a featured player spot that October and joined the repertory this past season.

Zamata’s departure leaves “SNL” with three black cast members — Jones, Kenan Thompson and Michael Che —pending the announcement of any possible newcomers for Season 43. Jay Pharoah, who played President Obama, was let go during the hiatus before Season 42.

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‘Spider-Man’ star Tom Holland tapped for Sony’s ‘Uncharted’ adaptation

Tom Holland has signed on to star in Sony Pictures' live-action 'Uncharted' movie.
(Rich Fury / Getty Images)

After charming comic book fans into forgetting Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield previously slung webs as Peter Parker, “Spider-Man: Homecoming” star Tom Holland has landed his second major franchise.

The 20-year-old Brit is attached to star as a young Nathan Drake in Sony Pictures’ long-developing live-action ‘Uncharted’ movie, based on the popular Naughty Dog and PlayStation action adventure video game, Deadline reported Monday.

Shawn Levy (“Night at the Museum”) is at the helm of the Sony project that’s been in development for almost a decade.

The story of Drake, a globetrotting, treasure-hunting adventurer, has been through a revolving door of filmmakers over the years, including directors David O. Russell (“American Hustle,” “The Fighter”), Neil Burger (“The Illusionist,” “Divergent”) and Seth Gordon (“Horrible Bosses,” “Pixels”).

In that time, the question of who would become the face of the live-action “Uncharted” franchise has also scrolled through a lineup of Hollywood’s hottest white male stars. Would it be Mark Wahlberg? Chris Pratt? Nathan Fillion, who sought the role so passionately he launched his own Twitter campaign to don Drake’s duds?

Sony is officially keeping mum on Holland’s casting, but Deadline reports that producers Charles Roven, Avi Arad, Alex Gartner and Ari Arad are bringing on a new writer to script the prequel based on the third “Uncharted” game, which focused on young Drake’s adventurous exploits with his mentor, Victor Sullivan.

Holland scored with fans and critics in his superhero debut as the high school-aged Peter Parker in Marvel’s “Captain America: Civil War.” He reprises the role next month in his own July 7 Marvel Cinematic Universe standalone, “Spider-Man: Homecoming.”

Missed the Billboard Music Awards? Cher is all you need to know

Cher performs at the 2017 Billboard Music Awards.
Cher performs at the 2017 Billboard Music Awards.
(Ethan Miller / Getty Images)

Missed the 2017 Billboard Music Awards on Sunday night? No worries — all you really needed to see was Cher.

The outspoken pop diva tore through hits “Believe” and “If I Could Turn Back Time,” the latter in classic Cher-style couture, spangles and high-heel boots included, before accepting the Icon award from Gwen Stefani.

PHOTOS: Billboard Music Awards 2017

“I’ve been doing it for 53 years. ... I’m 71 yesterday,” Cher told the Las Vegas audience. “Yes. And I can do a five-minute plank, just saying.”

She thanked her mom and Sonny Bono for telling her that she wouldn’t be the smartest, the prettiest or the most talented, but she would be special.

“And there was really nothing about me that led anyone to believe I was going to be special,” she said.

Looks like you got that, babe.

Backstage, even Celine Dion got in on the action, leading a sing-along and proclaiming: “Forget 71 years old, she’s the best. She’s amazing.”

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Universal debuts its spooky new Dark Universe and its upcoming ‘Bride of Frankenstein’

Universal Pictures doesn’t want to be the only Hollywood studio without a sexy film franchise that it can spin off forever and ever until there’s nothing left but action figures and ash.

Warner Bros. has its rapidly expanding DC Comics world, Disney has the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and now Universal has its newly remodeled monster-verse.

Spooky!

The studio is reviving the classic Universal monsters for a scary new world officially titled the Dark Universe. We know only a little about who (or what) Universal will be resurrecting from its vault (which includes a plethora of creepy crawlies from the Wolfman to Frankenstein).

However, the official press release confirms that this new world will officially kick off June 9 with the Tom Cruise action film “The Mummy.” Next in line is “Bride of Frankenstein,” which will be directed by “Beauty and the Beast’s” Bill Condon.

Previously announced actors attached to this new world, including Johnny Depp (the Invisible Man) and Javier Bardem (Frankenstein’s Monster), posed for the first Dark Universe family picture with Cruise (Nick Morton), Russell Crowe (Dr. Henry Jekyll) and Sofia Boutella (the Mummy).

Noticeably absent from the shot is actor Luke Evans, who starred in the 2014 “Dracula Untold” feature. Looks like his iteration of the famous vampire didn’t make the cut -- for this announcement, anyway.

“The Mummy” director Alex Kurtzman and producer Chris Morgan are the brains behind the new reimagining, along with Christopher McQuarrie and David Koepp.

Check out the new “Dark Universe” logo (above) backed by a brand-new ghostly theme from composer Danny Elfman. Because if you’re going to write a scary song, you call Elfman.

Netflix’s Ted Sarandos says Cannes film fest now ‘less attractive’ to streaming giant

Ted Sarandos
(Ethan Miller / Getty Images)

Grab the popcorn and the Champagne: Ted Sarandos has lobbed the latest volley in the budding war between streaming juggernaut Netflix and the Cannes Film Festival over how films get seen.

In tres Cannes fashion, the Netflix head — whose company’s first Cannes premiere, Bong Joon-Ho’s magical pig flick “Okja,” sparked an all-out culture war over theatrical vs. digital distribution models — dropped the grenade on his festival hosts Sunday night at his own swanky party.

Prompted by outraged French theater owners who voiced loud opposition this year after Netflix films “Okja” and Noah Baumbach’s “The Meyerowitz Stories” were granted competition berths, Cannes hastily announced that, effective in 2018, only films with French theatrical distribution may vie for the Palme d’Or.

Asked by Variety if Netflix would return to Cannes under the new restrictions, Sarandos “at first said ‘no,’” reported the trade publication. He then walked that hard line back: “Well, I shouldn’t say that. It would be less attractive, for sure, because it would affect [Netflix’s] festival strategy around the world.”

Sarandos even gave the growing flap a cheeky nickname: “L’Affaire de Netflix,” quite a scandal indeed in a year with a disappointing lack of l’enfants terribles making Nazi jokes, or movie stars sporting paper bags over their heads, or any real controversy, really, on the Croisette.

The conflict has divided the film world and dominated festival chatter this year at Cannes, forcing filmmakers and industry veterans to take sides in a philosophical and practical battle that cuts to the fundamental crisis of modern movie watching: traditional vs. digital distribution as battleground for the war over what really matters in the consumption, and business, of film.

On Team Netflix: “Okja” helmer Bong, naturally, who shrugged off the press-screening projection snafu, the audience boos at the sight of Netflix’s logo on the big screen, and the public shade from competition jury head Pedro Almodóvar, who last week slammed watching movies on screens “smaller than the chair on which you’re sitting.”

But when Netflix’s deep pockets are increasingly financing and snapping up films that might otherwise land at traditional distributors, things get stickier. Working with Netflix was “a wonderful experience,” Bong enthused at his film’s presser.

“The expectation is always that your film will be seen on the big screen,” Baumbach said at Cannes days later. His “Meyerowitz Stories” was filmed independently on 16mm before Netflix picked it up for a streaming and limited theatrical debut.

“I believe in that; it is a unique, singular experience that is not going away,” he said.

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Beyoncé’s ‘push party’ proved she’s the queen of high-fashion pregnancy

Seen at a Clippers playoff game in April. Beyoncé hasn't let her pregnancy slow her down.
(Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press)

So it’s the middle of May and we still don’t know whether Beyoncé is carrying boys, girls or glorious beings made of pure light. But we do know that she continues to have an exquisitely designed pregnancy.

On Saturday Beyoncé’s mama, Tina Knowles Lawson, shared videos and photos from the Carter Push Party (though Beyoncé and husband Jay Z are best known by singular monikers, their last names are Knowles-Carter and Carter, respectively). And it was an event for the ages.

A bevy of glamorous guests -- including tennis icon Serena Williams, actress Lala Anthony and Vanessa Bryant, wife of Lakers legend Kobe -- gathered in a room decked out with warm orange decor and African-style prints.

Also present were former Destiny’s Children Michelle Williams and Kelly Rowland, Beyoncé’s cousin Angie Beyince and celebrity jeweler Lorraine Schwartz.

Plenty of guests shared their own snaps from the party, highlighting their own impeccable fashion.

But Queen Bey was not to be outdone at her own baby shower, posting three black-and-white pictures from the festivities, displaying her glorious henna-tattooed baby(s) bump and big smiles from both her and Jay.

All things considered, it’s been a very Instagram-friendly pregnancy for the Carters, with Beyoncé announcing their impending arrival with a post in February and sharing plenty of bumptastic fashion photos in the months since.

No official word yet on when the Carter babies are due to make their bow, but expect the first Instagram snap to be epic.

NEH Chairman William D. Adams resigns

William D. “Bro” Adams, chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities, announced his almost-immediate resignation on Monday.

Adams, who was appointed by President Obama in February 2014 and confirmed three months later, will be done as of Tuesday.

“Leading this important organization has been one of the most exciting and gratifying experiences of my life,” he said in a memo to staff. “I’m especially appreciative of the excellent and dedicated staff of the agency, who taught me so much about the importance of the humanities and the innovative and meaningful work that is going on at NEH and across the country.”

Before taking the reins at the NEH, Adams was president of Colby College in Waterville, Maine, for 14 years. A greeting from the beginning of his stint at the agency can be seen above.

The NEH awards grants to fund projects related to history, literature, philosophy and other areas of the humanities. Deputy Chair Margaret Plympton will lead the agency until a new chairperson is appointed.

In March, the NEH and its higher-profile cousin, the National Endowment for the Arts, were the subject of much discussion as the budget proposed by the Trump administration would cut funding for both. (Read the Los Angeles Times’ recent “L.A. Without the NEA” series here.)

Earlier this month, Adams praised the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2017, passed by Congress and signed by the president, which not only continued funding through fiscal 2017-18, but increased it by $2 million.

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John Oliver looks at Trump’s ‘absolutely insane’ week of scandal, a.k.a. ‘Stupid Watergate’

Instead of diving deep into a seemingly boring topic -- dialysis, anyone? -- as he usually does, on Sunday’s “Last Week Tonight,” John Oliver addressed the elephant in the room.

That would be the nonstop revelations related to President Trump, whose last week in office have yielded more “OMG, what now?” twists than a sweeps episode of “Scandal.”

Oliver spent a solid 24 minutes recapping the latest stream of developments in the crisis he called “Stupid Watergate,” in that it has “all the potential ramifications of Watergate” but “everyone involved is stupid and bad at everything.”

There was Trump’s sharing of classified intelligence with Russian diplomats and the possibility he fired FBI Director James Comey in order to kill the Russia investigation. There was the appointment of special counsel Robert Mueller to continue said investigation and the report that a senior White House advisor has been named a person of interest in the case.

And there was Trump’s claim he’d been treated worse than any other politician in history -- presumably including those killed by assassins, such as Abraham Lincoln and John F. Kennedy.

“The last seven days have been absolutely insane, so much so that they may have broken Anderson Cooper,” Oliver said, cueing a much-discussed clip of the CNN anchor suggesting that Trump supporter Jeffrey Lord would tolerate any sort of objectionable behavior from the president.

As Oliver noted, Fox News pundits such as Tucker Carlson have done their best to ignore the drip-drip of revelations, but some personalities on the network, such as Jesse Watters, haven’t been able to quell all their doubts.

“A Fox host not being able to hold his doubts at bay for 48 hours is pretty much a canary in a coal mine, but then at this point Donald Trump is basically waist deep in canaries,” Oliver said.

But Oliver was not exactly convinced that impeachment is imminent, particularly because Republicans control both houses of Congress. Then there’s the fact that Trump has escaped near-certain ruin many times before. (Two words: “Access Hollywood.”)

“It seems like with President Trump that he’s always approaching the end of the line, but it never seems to come, as if for him, and him alone, the end of the line is drawn by MC [bleeping] Escher.”

You can watch the clip here, but beware: It contains some profane language.

‘Twin Peaks’ fans have feelings about the revival: ‘a beautiful nocturnal animal no thinkpiece can capture’

It has been 26 years since David Lynch’s landmark ABC series “Twin Peaks” ended, but the wait for more cherry pie and damn fine cups of coffee is finally over.

Showtime debuted its “Twin Peaks” revival Sunday night, airing the first two (of 18!) hours of the Lynch-directed reboot.

The long-awaited premiere, which Los Angeles Times critic Robert Lloyd called “a splendid, focused and wholly assured resurrection,” elicited all the buzz a show could ask for. There was celebrity adulation, gifs and “Simpsons” references. So very many “Simpsons” references.

Of course, others embraced the power of the DVR and focused on what really mattered Sunday night. Never change, Billy Eichner.

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Billy Bush regrets that ‘Access Hollywood’ tape, especially his daughter’s reaction to it

It’s been more than seven months since the leaked release of a 2005 “Access Hollywood” tape featuring Donald Trump and Billy Bush crudely discussing women in an exchange that Trump later dismissed as “locker room talk.”

Since then, one of those men has become president and the other has been unemployed.

Bush broke his silence over the now-infamous conversation in an interview with the Hollywood Reporter published Sunday, wherein he spoke about how he has spent the intervening months, passing the hours with yoga and meditation.

Subsequently fired from his gig on the “Today” show, Bush bemoaned his lack of opportunity to tell his side of the story, hurt by being the butt of late-night jokes.

“Many of them were very hurtful. To be the butt of monologue jokes — that’s all hurtful,” Bush said. “Having been in the job as long as I have, I developed a fairly thick skin. My skin is definitely thicker now, and my heart is a little softer underneath it.”

But it wasn’t the reaction of late-night comedians that most horrified Bush. He recounted a frantic call from his then-15-year-old daughter, Mary, in which he tried to assure her that everything would be all right.

“Why were you laughing at the things that he was saying on that bus, Dad? They weren’t funny,” Bush’s daughter pressed him.

“I have no answer for that that’s any good. I am really sorry. That was Dad in a bad moment a long time ago,” Bush responded.

Bush recalled that in 2005, he was often with Trump, given that “The Apprentice” was a monster hit.

“I spent a lot of time with Trump. He was my main assignment,” Bush explained before explaining his ignoble behavior on the bus.

“In my job, there’s a lot of downtime, and there are off-camera moments where you have a short period of time to, in a chameleon-like way, connect with people,” Bush said. “If it’s Martha Stewart, I would tell her about the new organic garden that I just started growing in my backyard.”

Because it was Trump, Bush seemingly went along with the crass, dehumanizing discussion of women.

Since his dismissal from “Today,” Bush has processed the events the best way he knew how.

“When you have a big, traumatic event, you go through stages, and it led to acceptance and understanding,” mused Bush. “And then I found myself in a place of soul searching. And I developed a commitment to become a better, fuller man.”

Bush hopes to return to television in some form and, in the meantime, he’ll reach out to others who have also found themselves under intense public scrutiny.

“I will be picking up my pen and writing them and calling them on the phone, and I will pursue these interviews and these moments with these people,” said Bush. “And through what I’ve learned and where I’ve been, I will tell them, ‘You have empathetic ears in me.’”

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A Star Is Born: Maggie Q turns 38 today

(Shizuo Kambayashi / For the Times)

The lucky thing for me is I entered the entertainment industry in Asia, and I was there for 10 years: Weirdness and ups and downs and articles and partying -- and I’m done. It’s wonderful. I’m an adult. I wake up in the morning with my animals and enjoy life.

— Maggie Q, 2007

FROM THE ARCHIVES: The Sunday Conversation: ‘Just a ‘crazy dog lady’

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Why the twists in ‘The Lobster’ director’s newest film has Cannes calling it the next ‘Get Out’

Yorgos Lanthimos, foreground, and Nicole Kidman at a Cannes 2017 Film Festival press conference for "The Killing of a Sacred Deer."
(Antony Jones / EPA)

With provocations like “Dogtooth” and “The Lobster,” director Yorgos Lanthimos has been jolting audiences at the Cannes Film Festival and beyond for nearly a decade.

But even the most prepared Cannes filmgoers may not have been ready for “The Killing of a Sacred Deer,” the Greek-born filmmaker’s latest and possibly craziest work, which premiered to reporters Monday morning at the festival.

To describe the movie in too much detail is to spoil the fun. Basically, the English-language film centers on an upper-class family living a perfectly manicured, disturbingly sterile life in an unnamed American suburb — cardiologist dad and ophthalmologist mom (Colin Farrell and Nicole Kidman), well-behaved pre-adolescent son and even better-behaved teenage daughter — and what happens when a mysterious teenage boy enters their lives.

“What happens” isn’t easy to describe without unpacking the whole thing. Suffice it to say that in the cards are profound moral choices, themes of guilt and responsibility, and plot turns featuring illness and supernatural occurrences. But not, it should be said, in a baroque genre way — more in the chillingly slow-burn and unpredictable European vein.

That class is involved adds to the weight. And like that little February fad “Get Out,” “Deer” is an indictment of white privilege in the guise of a medical horror movie (and comes in this case with a Kubrickian influence and even more dark comedy).

Fest goers began debating the movie almost immediately after its debut screening — such are both its plot turns and layers of symbolic meaning. It’s a conversation that will no doubt continue and intensify when A24, the studio that put out “Moonlight,” releases the film in the fall.

Lanthimos, meanwhile, seemed to be enjoying the back-and-forth. “I don’t like explaining what we’re doing because I don’t really know either,” he said with a small smile when a reporter at a post-screening press conference asked him to interpret one of the events in the film. “These are questions to take with you, I guess.”

He did cop to the laughs as intentional. “Nicole likes to say I would tell her all the time we were shooting it [that] it was a comedy. And I believe that.”

Kidman offered her own take on the director’s dark vision. “The film has a hypnotic quality to it. A lot of times Yorgos’ direction is, ‘Please do nothing.’ And that’s very difficult to do as an actor,” she added. “After I saw the film I called him and said ‘I’ve never seen anything like it.’”

‘Alien: Covenant’ is No. 1, but it’s not the box office monster ‘Guardians’ feared

After almost 40 years, audiences are still interested in the “Alien” universe. Ridley Scott’s “Alien: Covenant,” from 20th Century Fox, dethroned Marvel’s “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2,” which had topped the box office for two straight weeks. Meanwhile, Warner Bros.’ “Everything, Everything” and Fox’s” “Diary of a Wimpy Kid” sequel battled for those not interested in R-rated scares.

“Alien” took in an estimated $36 million in the U.S. and Canada, coming in below analyst projections of $40 million to $50 million. Internationally, the picture pulled $30.3 million this weekend after already being open in territories across the globe. Its worldwide take rests at $117.8 million to date.

“It does endure the test of time,” said Chris Aronson, the studio’s head of distribution, “as does Sir Ridley Scott.”

Justin Chang reviews ‘Alien: Covenant,’ directed by Ridley Scott, starring Michael Fassbender, Katherine Waterston, Billy Crudup, Danny McBride, Demian Bichir, Carmen Ejogo, Amy Seimetz, and Jussie Smollett. Video by Jason H. Neubert.

The latest in the aging franchise is the eighth film, counting the two widely panned “Alien Vs. Predator” movies. It’s also a sequel to 2012’s “Prometheus,” a heady quasi-prequel to the original 1979 “Alien.” The studio was able to drum up interest in the flick among core “Alien” fans with gruesome marketing and generally positive reviews. It may also help that the the famous creatures designed by surrealist H.R. Giger -- the xenomorphs and facehuggers -- which “Prometheus” lacked because of its origin-of-man backstory, were reintroduced.

Audiences (62% male; 66% 25 and older; 51% white) gave the picture a B CinemaScore; critics gave it an average 73% positive rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

“Alien: Covenant” performed worse than its 2012 predecessor, which brought in $51 million in its debut. That film ended up collecting $400 million worldwide. But considering the studio saved more than 25% in production costs this go around, with a $97-million price tag, the future of “Covenant’s” profitability still looks promising.

Falling to second place in its third week was “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2” with a still-impressive $35.1 million this weekend. It has pulled in $301.8 million domestically to date for a global tally more than $732 million.

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Dwayne Johnson and Tom Hanks announce 2020 candidacy on ‘Saturday Night Live’ season finale

It was an eventful season finale for “Saturday Night Live.”

Not only did host Dwayne Johnson join the “Five-Timers Club” and announce his candidacy for president — with running mate Tom Hanks — “SNL” bid farewell to longtime cast members Bobby Moynihan and Vanessa Bayer.

Johnson and fellow Five-Timer Hanks — on hand to help Alec Baldwin welcome The Rock to the club — reasoned that their various film roles as men of action and integrity made them a lock for 2020.

The show opened with various cast members and previous guest hosts related to President Trump — including Baldwin and Scarlett Johansson returning as Donald and Ivanka, respectively, and Kate McKinnon as Kellyanne Conway-- convened around a piano.

The group sang a much more comic version of Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah” than the one performed by McKinnon as Hillary Clinton after the election. (No sign of Melissa McCarthy as Sean Spicer, alas.)

Departing cast members Bayer and Moynihan both got multiple spotlights in their final episode.

Among other sketch appearances, Bayer played a vacuous woman in a fake ad for a Cartier fidget spinner as well as appearing on “Weekend Update” as nerve-wracked meteorologist Dawn Lazarus and, later, a spectacularly flatulent old-time Hollywood movie star.

In addition to a winking appearance in a high school graduation talent show sketch — which also featured Bayer — Moynihan trotted out “Drunk Uncle” for a final rant on “Update” and played a bone-toting but sperm-deficient wrestler withering under Johnson’s escalatingly personal attacks in a “Wrestlemania” promo.

A Star Is Born: Al Franken turns 66 today

(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

To make things work in comedy, it helps both to understand how much work it takes and also to know when to let go.

— Al Franken, 1994

FROM THE ARCHIVES: Q&A with Al Franken: He’s Doing the 12-Step Comedy Rag

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70 years of Cannes in 17 seconds: Discovering ‘Secret Sunshine’

South Korean director Lee Chang-dong, center, with fellow Cannes jury members Isabelle Huppert, left, and Robin Wright at the opening ceremony of the 62nd Cannes Film Festival in 2009.
(Francois Mori / Associated Press)

Justin Chang, Steven Zeitchik and Kenneth Turan are bringing us Cannes moments from the 70 years of the international film festival -- in 17-second increments (or thereabouts).

Here, Chang, with Zeitchik behind the camera, recalls one of his all-time favorite Cannes experiences: encountering Lee Chang-dong’s masterful 2007 film, “Secret Sunshine,” for the first time in the Salle Debussy, the screening room where so many Cannes discoveries are made.

70 years of Cannes in 17 seconds: Justin Chang, with Steven Zeitchik behind the camera, recalls one of his all-time favorite Cannes experiences: encountering Lee Chang-dong’s masterful 2007 film, “Secret Sunshine,” for the first time in the Salle De

The year “Secret Sunshine” was in competition at Cannes, its star, Jeon Do-yeon, won the festival’s best actress award for her portrayal of a widow trying to start a new life. As the Korea JoongAng Daily noted, it was only the second time at that point that an Asian actress had won the award.

More 70 years of Cannes in 17 seconds:

The time Lars von Trier talked about being a Nazi

Vanessa Bayer joins Bobby Moynihan in ‘SNL’ exodus

Vanessa Bayer, the longest-tenured current female cast member on “Saturday Night Live,” has decided not to return to the NBC sketch series.

Bayer’s exit after seven seasons follows the announcement earlier this week that Bobby Moynihan, a nine-year “SNL” vet, will be leaving the show to headline the CBS sitcom “Me, Myself & I.

Bayer announced her departure on Instagram today, hours before taping tonight’s season finale.

“Thank youSNL’ for 7 years of laughs, love and incredible memories,” she wrote. “It has been a dream come true.”

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