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...Long Goodbye. The Big Question these days among movie-people is who Altman is going to cast in Ragtime. Jagger, springsteen and Dylan all want to play the anarchist younger brother and The Village Voice ran a contest in the midst of last summer's doldrums asking readers to suggest casting. In the meantime, Altman's movies are showing everywhere. The Long Goodbye is his funniest and most coherent. Elliot Gould simply deteriorated after his performance here as Philip Marlowe--by California Split he was in love with himself, utterly enchanted by his own idiosyncracies. Such narcissism shall not pass...

Author: By Seth Kaplan, | Title: CELLULOID AND POPCORN | 2/12/1976 | See Source »

Wearing a black gabardine jacket, jeans and black ballet slippers, she gyrates around the stage like a Jagger in drag, hips pumping and fists punching the air. "We're gonna have a real good time together!" she cries. "We're gonna talk and shout and shoot together...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Say Yeah! | 1/5/1976 | See Source »

...very hard, hard work, nothing so glamorous as one would think," laments Bianco Jagger after a week's work in Rome on her first movie. Tentatively titled Trick or Treat, the film is a story about a romantic quadrangle (three women, one man), and Bianca plays a young sophisticate who happens to fall in love with an older woman - and married, at that. Despite the androgynous appeal of Husband Mick Jagger, rock star of the Rolling Stones, Bianca confesses to strictly traditional romantic tastes. "It's a very difficult role for me to portray; I have never fallen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Dec. 8, 1975 | 12/8/1975 | See Source »

During the show Springsteen was in almost perpetual motion. He danced a lot, doing a kind of loose-legged boogy (he called it the "Jersey Hustle") that was half funky and half funny, a far cry from the macho movements of Elvis Presley or the pretentious saunterings of Mick Jagger. When he wasn't dancing, he ran or shuffled around the stage, twitched spastically (like a less ferocious version of Joe Cocker), and clowned around with the other members of the group, especially saxophonist Clarence Clemmons and guitarist "Miami Steve" Van Zandt. Dressed in matching broad-lapelled white suits, black...

Author: By James B. Witkin, | Title: After The Hype | 12/6/1975 | See Source »

Jack's return to the White House left him with a case of the intellectual bends. As a friend of David Kennedy, the President's ubiquitous young photographer, Jack met Andy Warhol and Bianca Jagger, and made his way onto the New York City pop-celebrity circuit. On one Manhattan jaunt, Jack, Bianca and Kennerly dropped in at Le Jardin, a discotheque frequented by gays and in-crowd types. Jack later told friends: "I was dancing with Bianca and a fellow came up to me and tapped me on the shoulder and said, 'May I dance...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: Jack Ford: 'My Turn to Sacrifice' | 10/20/1975 | See Source »

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