In today’s film news roundup, Jennifer Hudson’s “Respect” is moved back two months; another film festival is postponed; and “Lupin the Third: the First” and “Raising Buchanan” find distribution; and Prominent Productions launches.
Release Date
MGM has moved the release date of Jennifer Hudson’s Aretha Franklin biopic “Respect” from Oct. 9 to late in the awards seasons with a limited Christmas Day debut.
“Respect,” titled after Franklin’s 1967 hit, will expand Jan. 8 and go into wide release Jan. 15 at the start of the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday weekend. Hudson, who won a supporting actress Oscar for “Dreamgirls,” was personally selected for the role by Franklin before Franklin died in 2018 at the age of 76.
Franklin won 17 Grammys, starting with “Respect” in 1968 and “Chain of Fools” in 1969. The film, directed by Liesl Tommy, also stars Forest Whitaker as C.L. Franklin, Marlon Wayans as Ted White, Mary J. Blige as...
Release Date
MGM has moved the release date of Jennifer Hudson’s Aretha Franklin biopic “Respect” from Oct. 9 to late in the awards seasons with a limited Christmas Day debut.
“Respect,” titled after Franklin’s 1967 hit, will expand Jan. 8 and go into wide release Jan. 15 at the start of the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday weekend. Hudson, who won a supporting actress Oscar for “Dreamgirls,” was personally selected for the role by Franklin before Franklin died in 2018 at the age of 76.
Franklin won 17 Grammys, starting with “Respect” in 1968 and “Chain of Fools” in 1969. The film, directed by Liesl Tommy, also stars Forest Whitaker as C.L. Franklin, Marlon Wayans as Ted White, Mary J. Blige as...
- 3/27/2020
- by Dave McNary
- Variety Film + TV
Three years ago, actors Dan Butler and Richard Waterhouse purchased a mostly wooded 55-acre tract in rural Vermont -- a former chicken farm, complete with a farmhouse built in 1832. They gradually cut their ties to Los Angeles and, about a year and a half ago, began living permanently in their new home. "We were both in the mood for change and adventure," says Butler. "And when this came up, it was so illogical to me that it drew me to it. We came here and sort of let go of the struggle of how it was all going to work. And it worked out."Had the couple moved to such a remote location with the intention of retiring from show business, it might have been idyllic. But neither planned to give up his career. Butler is best known for playing Bob "Bulldog" Briscoe on TV's Frasier, and Waterhouse is an accomplished actor,...
- 2/26/2009
- by Mark Dundas Wood
- backstage.com
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