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How the 'Pickwick' patter performance was a pleasing payoff for Pasek and Paul

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How the 'Pickwick' patter performance was a pleasing payoff for Pasek and Paul

Steve Martin had just one edit. He was completely game to sing this absurd, tongue-twisting, joke-packed patter song about three infants who are all suspects in the murder of their mother — but he hesitated on the line: “Should a baby get fried for matricide?”

“Guys,” he said from the recording booth, “I don’t know that we should be talking about sending babies to the electric chair. Maybe we could just do ‘Should a baby get tried for matricide?’”

The “guys” were the award-winning Benj Pasek and Justin Paul, who co-wrote the song “Which of the Pickwick Triplets Did It?” for the third season of “Only Murders in the Building.”

“We were like, ‘Wait, not only did you solve something with an exact perfect rhyme, but it means we don’t have to electrocute babies and we can make it into a murder trial?’” Pasek says. “‘This is why you’re Steve Martin.’”

Pasek and Paul didn’t know it, but among his many other talents — comedian, actor, banjo player — it turns out that Martin is a huge fan of “The Music Man.” At one of Martin Short’s legendary Hollywood Christmas parties some years ago, Martin did that show’s rapid-fire patter song “(Ya Got) Trouble” and did it “word perfect,” says Marc Shaiman, the multi-Oscar- and Emmy-nominated composer, who was there. “So we kind of knew: Oh yeah, he’s gonna nail this.”

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The latest season of the murder mystery comedy series gave Short’s character, Oliver Putnam, a chance to turn his murder mystery stage play into an outrageous Broadway musical called “Death Rattle Dazzle!” Martin’s character, veteran TV actor Charles-Haden Savage, plays a constable investigating the murder of the triplets’ mother — and one story thread in the season is whether he can get through the intricate song without going into a wild fugue state onstage.

“And the harder that it was to actually perform,” says Paul, “and the more alliterative or the more plosives that there were, the more twists and turns or the pace of the song, the more of a payoff for you as an audience. You’re wondering: ‘Can he actually do it?’”

Charles (Steve Martin) and Loretta (Meryl Streep) perform in the outrageous Broadway musical called “Death Rattle Dazzle!” in the Season 3 finale of “Only Murders in the Building.”

(Patrick Harbron / Hulu)

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Showrunner John Hoffman brought Pasek and Paul, the songwriting team behind “Dear Evan Hansen” and “La La Land,” into the “Only Murders” writers’ room to create this faux musical. They wrote a lullaby for Meryl Streep’s character and several other theatrical numbers, working with handpicked collaborators including Sara Bareilles and Michael R. Jackson.

For the “Pickwick” patter song, they reached out to Shaiman and Scott Wittman, the theater veterans who musicalized “Hairspray” and “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” — and who actually gave Pasek and Paul their big break on Season 2 of TV series “Smash” in 2013. This was their first time all working together, and it was like having “second-time-around marriages with younger people,” says Shaiman, 64. “They’re really like…”

“…trophy wives,” Wittman jumps in.

The two duos instantly hit it off and gathered in a room with laptops to play in the sandbox of a shared Google doc.

“Who would have ever known that four people writing lyrics could even work?” Shaiman says. “But it flows.”

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“It was like we were playing a board game,” says Wittman, the goal being “how fast you could type to make the other person laugh.”

Benj Pasek looks to the side as Justin Paul faces the camera for a portrait.

“The harder that it was to actually perform,” says Justin Paul, at right, … the more of a payoff for you as an audience.”

(Annie Noelker / For The Times)

It became a comedy writers’ room for songwriters, and they were all on the lookout for the best rhymes that matched words about babies with words about murder.

“Somebody would come up with ‘cradle / fatal,’” Paul says, “and then Scott would jump in and shout, ‘NEONATAL!’”

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“And we would all just howl,” Pasek says.

When Charles first attempts the manic word salad, it sends him into the “white room” — a panicked void where stage performers go when they forget their lines. He discovers that making omelets, his soothing practice, helps him get through the song — but it’s an untenable crutch. Oliver brings in Matthew Broderick, playing himself with exaggerated smarm, who effortlessly breezes through the patter song.

“What can I say?” Broderick says. “I’m a vessel.”

Finally, during the sitzprobe (orchestra rehearsal) for the musical, Charles has to perform the entire song for an extra reason — to create a distraction and help his sleuthing partners, Oliver and Mabel (Selena Gomez), in their investigation into the murder of Paul Rudd’s character. So it’s a true nail-biter to see if he can get through this incredibly dense and complex tightrope that has been tripping him up all season long.

It was like that on set too.

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“Everyone had wrapped, and everyone stayed,” says Wittman, who was in the Washington Heights theater where the scene was being shot. “The day had gotten away from them and they only had two hours to film the actual number.

“But Steve — not one bead of sweat. He nailed it every time. It was sort of thrilling.”

Movie Reviews

‘Greenland 2: Migration’ movie review: Gerard Butler does all the heavy lifting in limp sequel

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‘Greenland 2: Migration’ movie review: Gerard Butler does all the heavy lifting in limp sequel

A still from ‘Greenland 2: Migration’.
| Photo Credit: Lionsgate Movies/YouTube

Watching Greenland 2: Migration, one almost feels as though one is in a time capsule watching all those big disaster movies from the ‘90s, in single-screen theatres that looked like palaces with velvet curtains and chandeliers.

It was the time of slides saying “chatterboxes keep quiet,” and where popcorn, cheese sandwiches or curry puffs came hot in aluminium trays at the interval.

Greenland 2: Migration (English)

Director: Ric Roman Waugh

Starring: Gerard Butler, Morena Baccarin, Roman Griffin Davis

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Runtime: 98 minutes

Storyline: Five years after the comet strikes Earth, the bunker is no longer safe, and the Garritys strike out for the crater, where life has apparently hit the reset button

It was the time of radioactive lizards with eyes as big as Gol Gumbaz, hurtling comets, rising seas and an alien susceptible to a cold. But once you realise it is 30 years on in a world that has lost its innocence to a rapacious virus, you are less willing to grant as much leeway to a lazily made sequel.

Greenland in 2020 was a critical and commercial success with Gerard Butler playing the world-weary action hero‑family man‑tech expert, John Garrity. A comet named Clarke (after the science fiction writer Arthur C Clarke) was scheduled to hit the Earth and end life as we know it.

At the end of the movie, after many trials, John, with his wife, Allison (Morena Baccarin) and insulin-dependent son Nathan (Roman Griffin Davis takes over from Roger Dale Floyd) reach a bunker in Greenland just as a large chunk of the comet hits the earth.

Five years later, the earth is still not a particularly safe space with earthquakes, radiation, tsunamis and other jolly things blighting existence. John is now a scout, while also attending to repairs in the bunkers, owing to his training as a structural engineer. At a meeting, there is discussion of food supplies running low and a decision to be taken on whether to respond to a call for help.

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While the mean army man reasonably says they cannot feed anyone more, Dr. Amina (Amber Rose Revah) asks for the matter to be put to vote and when the snowcat is sent out to get the refugees, an earthquake destroys the bunker.

Garrity and others head to the coast, fight over lifeboats, drift without food, water or fuel to England and then go on to France where the Clarke crater is a new Eden where the air is fresh and land is fertile.

ALSO READ: ‘People We Meet on Vacation’ film review: Tom Blyth and Emily Bader’s sweet rom com checks all the right boxes

Greenland 2: Migration suffers from a woeful lack of logic, even of the film kind. How is it that everyone looks well fed and groomed even as we are repeatedly told they are running out of food? How are there still bullets given the way people are shooting at each other? How are vehicles still running on fuel?

Why are robbers or insurgents fighting in an area controlled by the army? And of course, the bridge across the English channel, which is now a dry wasteland, has to collapse exactly at the moment when our heroic gang is creeping across.

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Every time there is a crisis, it is as if the makers got bored and decided to move on. So despite running out of fuel, the lifeboat drifts to Liverpool, and Nate’s diabetes is reduced to “pack all the insulin.” Still it is fun to see the ever-dependable Butler do his melancholic routine and that is about all one can say for the haphazardly conceived sequel.

Greenland 2: Migration is currently running in theatres

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Review: Patrick Page finds Shakespeare’s villains disturbingly human in ‘All the Devils Are Here’

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Review: Patrick Page finds Shakespeare’s villains disturbingly human in ‘All the Devils Are Here’

There’s something refreshingly 19th century about Patrick Page’s traveling Shakespeare seminar, “All the Devils Are Here,” which opened Thursday at BroadStage in Santa Monica.

The show, a touring tutorial he created and performs solo, allows Page the opportunity to animate with barnstorming crackle a rogue’s gallery of Shakespearean scoundrels. Villains come quite naturally to this stage veteran, who might not smack his lips when impersonating evil, but he certainly doesn’t stint on the flamboyant color. An American Shakespearean who can hold his own with the Brits, he combines mellifluous diction with muscular imagination.

Page received a Tony nomination for his performance in the musical “Hadestown,” in which he played Hades, ruler of the underworld, with a sexy, tyrannical malevolence and a voice so deep it resonated as darkly as Leonard Cohen’s. And he’s had prior success creating outlandish villains on Broadway with the Grinch and, from Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark,” Norman Osborn/Green Goblin.

But Shakespeare has long been a touchstone. He’s dedicated himself to the work, as was evident in his triumphant turn in the Shakespeare Theatre Company’s 2023 production of “King Lear” in Washington, D.C., directed by Simon Godwin. The producers of which had the good sense to stream worldwide for all of us outside the nation’s capital who wanted to experience the thunderclap of Page’s Lear.

Godwin, the artistic director of the Shakespeare Theatre Company and an associate director of the National Theatre in London, leaves little distance between Page and the audience in his staging of “All the Devils Are Here.” The direct-address simplicity of the production serves the fluidity of Page’s performance. The actor transitions from talking about the characters to becoming them with just a shift in his posture and vocal tone.

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Proximity is the point. Shakespeare’s bad guys, with a few notable exceptions, are quite like you and me, which is to say they are human. Their worst deeds are the product of desires and fears that aren’t foreign to any of us. We might not be capable of atrocities, but in our dreams we’re all occasionally raving lunatics, giving vent to feelings we keep buried away in the light of day.

Page makes the tendentious claim that Shakespeare invented the villain, then walks it back to explain exactly what he means. His thesis is that Shakespeare early in his playwriting career followed the prevailing models of villainy. These vicious and vindictive antagonists tended to be outsiders, Jews (in the case of Christopher Marlowe’s “The Jew of Malta”), Moors (such as Aaron the Moor in Shakespeare’s “Titus Andronicus”) or the physically deformed (most notably, Richard, Duke of Gloucester, who first appeared in Shakespeare’s “Henry VI” and proved to be such a hit that he was given his own play, “Richard III”).

We get a taste of these Machiavels, who have none of the misgivings about vengeance that will plague Hamlet. Page portrays them without much introspection. They tell you what they’re going to do and then they bloody well do it. They can be scathingly ironic, alert to every hypocrisy that corroborates their cynical worldview, and even seductive in a perverse, power-mad way.

For these reasons, they are, like the arch-villains of “Batman,” the most entertaining characters in their stories. This lawless crew shares dramaturgical DNA with the vice figures from medieval morality plays, personifications of sinfulness who would confide their schemes to the audience and make theatergoers their co-conspirators in a riveting game that obviously left its mark on a young Shakespeare.

Iago, one of Shakespeare’s greatest villains, is an updated version of this stock character. Page consults Martha Stout’s book “The Sociopath Next Door” to understand the character’s lack of empathy and remorse. But then he enacts the scene in which Iago subtly poisons Othello’s mind into believing that his wife is having an affair with a handsome lieutenant. Sociopaths like Iago may be an empty shell of evil, but they can also be ingenious manipulators. Shakespeare put all his understanding of human nature into Iago’s brainwashing master class.

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But before Page reaches Iago, he spends time with Shylock from the “The Merchant of Venice.” Shakespeare humanizes the Elizabethan stage stereotype of the villainous Jew by giving Shylock ample reason for wanting to get back at his Christian persecutors. Marlowe treats Barabas in “The Jew of Malta” as a farcical demon, but Shakespeare has Shylock ask, “Has a Jew not eyes? … If you prick us, do we not bleed?”

Yes, Shakespeare is having his cake and eating it too. But Page’s portrayal, perhaps the most complete in his gallery, makes a convincing case of the playwriting leap forward.

From “Hamlet,” Page gives us Claudius on his knees praying for pardon he knows he doesn’t deserve. (“May one be pardoned and retain the offense?” he asks himself, already knowing the answer.) Here we see that even the most sealed-off conscience can be invaded by second thoughts.

Lady Macbeth has no such qualms when she’s summoning evil spirits to unsex her in “Macbeth.” She knows conventional morality is a liability and begs these forces “to stop up the access and passage to remorse” so that nothing will impede the murderous plot that’s brewing within her.

To establish the right note of terror on a fog-strewn set by Arnulfo Maldonado that resembles the private chamber of a writer or madman, Page begins with Lady Macbeth’s chilling incantation. He returns to the tragedy later in his survey after guilt has alienated the Macbeths from each other and they find themselves trapped in a nightmare of their own making.

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King Lear mournfully wonders, “Is there any cause in nature that makes these hard hearts?” Shakespeare can’t explain evil, but he can look at it directly. And what he sees, Page argues, is our own reflection — humanity, in all its fractured and flailing self-destructive foolishness.

The case Page smoothly makes is a convincing one. He is a pliant enough actor to daub each portrait with just enough psychological color. It’s not easy to do justice to such complex roles in quick succession. The genius of these troubling characters is embedded in their full dramatic contexts, requiring more than rhetorical flourishes and vocal modulations to bring them to life.

But by collectively presenting them in such a vivid and intelligent manner, Page urges us to see these devils for what they are — an inextricable part of our collective story, as any perusal of the day’s political headlines will disturbingly attest.

‘All the Devils Are Here’

Where: BroadStage, 1310 11th Street, Santa Monica

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When: 7:30 p.m. Wednesday-Friday, 2 and 7:30 p.m. Saturdays, 2 and 7 p.m. Sundays. (Check website for exceptions.) Ends Jan 25.

Ticket: Start at $45

Contact: (310) 434-3200 or broadstage.org

Running time: 1 hour, 30 minutes

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Mickey Rourke wishes y’all would please take your money back. There’s $90,000 still sitting there

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Mickey Rourke wishes y’all would please take your money back. There’s ,000 still sitting there

Mickey Rourke is doubling down on his disgust over a fundraiser that quickly raised more than $100,000 on his behalf, calling it an embarrassing “scam” and a “vicious cruel lie” and promising “severe repercussions to [the] individual who did this very bad thing” to him.

At the same time, the fundraiser — aimed at keeping Rourke in his home when he faced eviction because of almost $60,000 in unpaid rent — has been taken down, with the actor’s name being used now by others to boost their more anonymous efforts.

(A Friday morning search for “Mickey Rourke” on GoFundMe yielded more than a dozen campaigns drafting off the search value of the actor’s high-profile situation but the campaign set up for the “9½ Weeks” actor was nowhere to be found.)

The GoFundMe had been placed on pause last week after more than $100,000 was raised in two days, with Rourke’s manager Kimberly Hines writing, “Thank you so much for your generosity and for standing with Mickey during this time. Your support truly means a great deal to us, and we are grateful for every donation. We remain committed to finding a resolution and are working with Mickey to determine the next steps.”

Rejecting the donations, Rourke called the fundraiser “humiliating” and “really f— embarrassing” in a video posted last week, saying he didn’t need the money.

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“I wouldn’t know what a GoFund foundation is in a million years,” said the actor, 73, who was a leading man in the 1980s with movies including “Barfly” and “Angel Heart” and was Oscar-nominated for his work in 2008’s “The Wrestler.” “My life is very simple and I don’t go to outside sources like that.”

He said later in the video that he “would never ask strangers or fans for a nickel. That’s not my style.”

Hines might disagree, as she said she’s the one who has been fronting the money to cover Rourke’s move out of the Beverly Grove house and into a hotel and subsequently into a Koreatown apartment.

Hines’ assistant’s name had been listed as the creator of the fundraiser, with Hines named as the beneficiary. The actor’s manager of nine years told the Hollywood Reporter on Jan. 6 that Rourke knew the origins of the effort, despite saying he did not: She and her assistant had run the idea past his assistant before it was launched, she said, and both teams were OK with it.

“Nobody’s trying to grift Mickey. I want him working. I don’t want him doing a GoFundMe,” Hines told THR. “The good thing about this is that he got four movie offers since yesterday. People are emailing him movie offers now, which is great because nobody’s been calling him for a long time.”

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But Rourke was still fretting over it Thursday on Instagram, where he said in a couple of posts that there was still more than $90,000 to be returned to his supporters and promised that his attorney was “doing everything in his power” to make sure people got their “hard earned money” back.

He also thanked some “great” friends who he said reached out after seeing the “scam” that he needed money, including UFC boss Dana White and fighter Bill “Superfoot” Wallace.

Rourke said in his Jan. 6 video, shot while he was staying at a hotel, “I’m grateful for what I have. I’ve got a roof over my head, I’ve got food to eat. … Everything’s OK. Just get your money back, please. I don’t need anybody’s money, and I wouldn’t do it this way. I’ve got too much pride. This ain’t my style.”

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