Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Danny DeVito and Rhea Perlman Split: The True Story




The DeVito family
The news came down like a ton of bricks, Hollywood power couple Danny DeVito and Rhea Perlman are separating after 30 years of marriage.  The megastars share three grown children and a production company, and apparently, no decision has been made as to how anything will operate after the split is official.

Jersey Films has produced 27 film and television shows:
 


 From imdb
  1. Manhunt (2014) ... Production Company
  2. A Walk Among the Tombstones (2013) ... Production Company
  3. St. Sebastian (2013) ... Production Company
  4. Reno 911!: Miami (2007) ... Production Company
  5. Freedom Writers (2007) ... Production Company
  6. Be Cool (2005) ... Production Company
  7. Garden State (2004) ... Production Company
  8. Along Came Polly (2004) ... Production Company
  9. "Reno 911!" (2003) ... Production Company
  10. Camp (2003) ... Production Company
  11. How High (2001) ... Production Company
  12. Erin Brockovich (2000) ... Production Company
  13. Man on the Moon (1999) ... Production Company
  14. Living Out Loud (1998) ... Production Company
  15. Out of Sight (1998) ... Production Company
  16. "The Sport Jerks" (1998) ... Production Company
  17. "The Sport Jerks: Pilot" (1998) ... Production Company
  18. Gattaca (1997) ... Production Company
  19. Fierce Creatures (1997) ... Production Company
  20. Feeling Minnesota (1996) ... Production Company
  21. Matilda (1996) ... Production Company
  22. Sunset Park (1996) ... Production Company
  23. Get Shorty (1995) ... Production Company
  24. Pulp Fiction (1994) ... Production Company
  25. 8 Seconds (1994) ... Production Company
  26. Reality Bites (1994) ... Production Company
  27. Hoffa(1992)....ProductionCompany          
Danny DeVito
You may recognize DeVito from his role as Frank, the loveable-hate-able bar owner/entrepreneur in It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia.  DeVito actually burst on to the scene co-starring with Jack Nicholson in, One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest in 1975 and then starred in the  ABC hit sitcom Taxi (1978), when he reprised the role of Louie De Palma, the gruff and obnoxious dispatcher of the Sunshine Cab Company set in New York City.  DeVito went on to make movies such as Terms of Endearment, Twins, Romancing the Stone, Ruthless People, Throw Momma From the Train, Other Peoples Money, Batman Returns, Hoffa, and many more.  To date, Danny DeVito has been credited 187 times in film and television.

Rhea Perlman
Rhea Perlman first met Danny DeVito, as a six episode guest on Taxi.  She would of' course go on to become the always pregnant, sarcastic, and hateful, Carla Tortelli in the super-mega hit Cheers on NBC where she had an eleven year run of success.  Many guest spots on television would follow, until she landed her own show Pearl on NBC, but that only lasted 22 pitiful episodes, despite featuring Lucy Liu and Malcolm McDowell in supporting roles for Perlman.

Chris Burke!
So the news of the split is noteworthy not only because these two have become major players in the Hollywood arena and mostly recognized as a team; but due to the fact that they were a beacon of hope for ugly people everywhere.  If these two people can find love then it is possible for anybody.  Even Chris Burke got some ass by claiming "At least I'm not Danny DeVito"

As you learn more about this monumental break-up, ignore it.

We, at Hollywood From The Hill have the whole story condensed into a 90 min. video.  If you are someone who is searching for the truth about the power couple's relationship, watch the tell all video below.





















































                                                                                                            

Saturday, October 6, 2012

The New Normal Falls Short Of It's Goal!

Click to watch
NBC has created a television program that is intended to bring down all biases that John Q Public has developed from the horrible years that the Cleavers and the Bradys spent trying to make us understand that life, can in fact, be rosey.

That program is called The New Normal and can be viewed on NBC, Tuesdays at 9:30/8:30c. (I never understood the whole eight thirty, nine thirty central thing. First of all, do people not know what time zone they are in?  One would think that after one goof where a favorite program was missed, the lesson would have been learned by people in central time.  And what about the people in pacific time?  Do they not get to watch any of these shows?  The West Coast is where the shows are made, so maybe they see them live. I dunno.)

The New Normal is a show about a woman; who is a single mom, who has a grandmother that raised her. The grandmother is crass and an extremely right wing opinionated bitch with very little room for acceptance in her heart. The woman flees to the West Coast and she meets a gay couple, who want to have a baby and there is a black woman with blond hair.  Got it?

This is not a new concept.  In my humble opinion, this nothing more than an updated version of Brian Cooke's ABC sitcom Too Close For Comfort, only Monroe has multiplied and the Ted Knight character is played by Ellen Barkin.

Ellen Barkin has tumbled back to earth after having a noteworthy career on the big screen. Barkin, who has starred with DeNiro, Pacino, DiCaprio, Bridges and Nicholson, now appears weekly on the little screen with NeNe Leakes, whose claim to fame is The Real House Wives of Atlanta.

click to watch Three's Company
The New Normal isn't even that dissimilar to Three's Company, another Cooke show which aired in the 1980's on ABC, only this time Barkin's role is modeled after the roles played by Norman Fell (Mr. Roper) and later by Don Knotts (Mr. Furley).  Even though Jack Tripper, played by John Ritter, isn't gay, they pretend that he is so that he can rent an apartment with two women. (You might not remember, but there was a time when it was better to be gay then to live with a member of the opposite sex without being married)

This was a transitional move used by ABC to acclimate the American viewers to alternate lifestyles.  Monroe, played by Jim J Bullock, from Too Close for Comfort, was openly gay both on the show and in real life which served as the intended natural progression for cultural assimilation. 

So, I guess the American viewer hasn't evolved fast enough for Hollywood to develop programming that can be subtle.  The message seems to be the same, that alternate lifestyles are not only okay, but that the consumer better get on board or get going.  The cable networks have lots of programming that subtly introduces different types of people (True Blood), and the networks have followed suit with shows like, Modern Family on ABC and Glee on FOX, both of which which show alternative lifestyle characters interacting in everyday situations with persons of more traditional lifestyles. (I hate that we have to define the different lifestyles)

Lydia at a Dodgers game in 2009
I am afraid that The New Normal takes it a little too far.  If the intention by the show's creators, Ryan Murphy and Ali Adler, is to educate America by shocking them into acceptance the way that Cooke did in the late 70's and 80's, I will caution them with one little fact.  (Ellen Barkin, if you are reading please pay special attention)  Acclimation comes with growing pains.

Too Close For Comfort was canceled when Ted Knight died. John Ritter died of an aortic dissection. Jim J Bullock lost his partner to HIV and learned that he, too, has the virus.  Suzanne Somers ( Chrissy, Three's Company) sells exercise equipment. Joyce DeWitt (Janet Three's Company) has had legal troubles due to substance abuse and cannot seem to resurrect her career.  Richard Kline (Larry from Three's Company) was last seen in 2007 as the 32nd credited actor in the smash hit, I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry.  Nancy Dussault (Muriel Rush, Too Close) was last seen on Broadway in 1989. Deborah Van Valkenburgh (Jackie Rush, Too Close for Comfort) is still acting but her films are debuting at Cinema and Draft houses in places like Alamo, TX.  Lydia Cornell (Sara Rush from Too Close) is writing and doing radio now, which is a shame because she looks great at 59 years old.  Norman Fell and Don Knotts have both passed away.

Is awreness important? Of course it is.  But remember, everything has a price.  Sometimes it's your career and sometimes it's your life.  For Lydia Cornell, it wasn't her boobs, that's for sure!

Enjoy!