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Ellen Foley

News

Ellen Foley

Classic Rewind Counts Down the Top 10 Women Voices in Classic Rock
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During Women’s History Month in March, Classic Rewind recognizes the Girl Power that makes the genre rock. But who are the top women voices in classic rock?

Top 10 Women Voices in Classic RockStream the full countdown nowListen on the App

Listen on the App

We listed a bunch of possibilities, you cast your votes, and we tallied them up. Now it’s time to listen to the “Top 10 Women Voices in Classic Rock” countdown, premiering on-air March 6 just before International Women’s Day and available to stream on the SiriusXM app.

Top 10 Women Voices in Classic Rock

Here are the possible artists you voted on for the countdown:

Ann Wilson

Annie Lennox

Bonnie Raitt

Carly Simon

Carole King

Chrissie Hynde

Christine McVie

Courtney Love

Debbie Harry

Ellen Foley

Grace Slick

Gwen Stefani

Janis Joplin

Joan Jett

Joni Mitchell

Kate Pierson

Linda Ronstadt

Lita Ford

Melissa Etheridge

Merry Clayton

Nancy Wilson...
See full article at SiriusXM
  • 3/4/2025
  • by Jackie Kolgraf
  • SiriusXM
Night Court Season 3's Cast Exits Continue A 40-Year-Old Trend From The Original Show
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Night Court has already lost multiple main cast members after only two seasons, which mirrors the original Night Court's rotating cast. In the early days of Night Court, it was common for at least one series regular to leave after just one season. The original Night Court's nine-season run suggests the reboot can survive despite continuous character departures.

By losing another main cast member ahead of season 3, Night Court is repeating a trend from the original NBC sitcom of the same name. Created by Reinhold Weege, Night Court originally aired from 1984-1992 and followed Judge Harry Stone (Harry Anderson) and the rest of the night shift crew at Manhattan Criminal Court. In 2023, a revival was developed by Dan Rubin and Melissa Rauch about Harry Stone's daughter, Abby (Rauch), following in her late father's footsteps. John Larroquette, who played Ada Dan Fielding in the original series, returned as a public defender at Abby's court.
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 5/25/2024
  • by Lynn Sharpe
  • ScreenRant
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‘Night Court’: THR’s 1984 Review
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On Jan. 4, 1984, NBC unveiled Night Court, which went on to air for nine seasons and get a recent revival. The Hollywood Reporter weighed in with a full review, headlined “Night Court convicted of being consistently amusing TV sitcom,” as it entered its sophomore run:

Night Court is a consistently funny sitcom created by Reinhold Weege, a writer-producer for the old Barney Miller series. Its venue, weekly parade of various weirdos, and quirky regulars are reminiscent of Miller. And, like Miller, Night Court has more laughs per episode than most sitcoms.

Anchoring the series is Harry Anderson, as unorthodox Manhattan arraignment court judge, Harry Stone. Judge Stone is sharp and fair, but he seizes every available opportunity to turn due process of law into an excuse for levity. Anderson manages to wring just the right amount of irony out of lines like, “Being a judge means never having to say you’re sorry.
See full article at The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
  • 1/3/2024
  • by Gail Williams
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Every Classic Night Court Character That Can Still Return In The Revival
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There are several characters from the original Night Court who could return to appear in the revival series. The new Night Court proved popular with audiences and critics alike and earned a swift renewal for season 2. Despite this, the fact that John Larroquette was the only actor from the original Night Court to return for the reboot raised questions regarding whether other characters from the classic courtroom comedy might return for a cameo.

The question was posed to Night Court reboot executive producer Dan Rubin, who confirmed that there was no intentional snubbing of characters from the original series, like Marsha Warfield's Roz Russell. However, Rubin believed it was important the new Night Court first prove that it had more going for it than simple nostalgia, adding that the wonderful thing about the Night Court premise is "anyone can walk through those doors at any moment." This makes it...
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 2/9/2023
  • by Matt Morrison
  • ScreenRant
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Married to the Mob
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Many gangland parodies fall flat, but not Jonathan Demme’s marvelous combo of high spirits and murder. Mafia spouse Angela de Marco’s story is goofy comedy with an edge of economic reality: how does one newly-impoverished New Yawk dame make a living for her orphaned son, while avoiding the adulterous attentions of the Big Boss who had her husband iced? Michelle Pfeiffer came into her own, Dean Stockwell has his best adult role and Matthew Modine is uniquely charming as an amorous FBI agent. The tonal balance is abetted by a supporting performances that go every which way: Mercedes Ruehl, Alec Baldwin, Oliver Platt and a slew of Demme regulars. Plus a music score by David Byrne. The disc features three new video interviews.

Married to the Mob

Blu-ray

Fun City Editions

1988 / Color / 1:85 widescreen / 104 min. / Street Date September 27, 2022 / Available from Vinegar Syndrome / 39.98

Starring: Michelle Pfeiffer, Matthew Modine, Dean Stockwell,...
See full article at Trailers from Hell
  • 9/27/2022
  • by Glenn Erickson
  • Trailers from Hell
Meat Loaf’s Greatest Songs: A Dozen of His Best-Remembered or Most Unfairly Overlooked Tracks
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When powerhouse vocalist-actor Meat Loaf eulogized composer-producer Jim Steinman last April in Rolling Stone, the singer – who died Thursday at age 74 – said of his “Bat Out of Hell” partner, “We belonged heart and soul to each other. We didn’t know each other. We were each other.”

Meat Loaf (born Marvin Lee Aday) could not have stated the obvious better, as each man’s operatic, oversized talents were only matched by their level of grand theatricality, with thundering melodicism and melodramatic lyricism at the top of the list of their skill sets.

The best Meat Loaf songs – even those without Steinman’s tower-toppling compositions – come on in an epic, adrenalized rush. Even when singing a power ballad, Meat Loaf was loud and brazenly and heartbrokenly emotive. Here are some of the most dramatic and impactful of Meal Loaf’s musical moments:

Stoney & Meatloaf, “What You See is What You Get...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 1/21/2022
  • by A.D. Amorosi
  • Variety Film + TV
Meat Loaf Dies: ‘Bat Out Of Hell’ Singer & ‘Rocky Horror Picture Show’ Actor Was 74
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Meat Loaf, the hardworking singer and actor whose theatrical Bat Out of Hell is one of the best-selling albums ever and who played Eddie in The Rocky Horror Picture Show, has died. He was 74.

The Grammy winner born Marvin Lee Aday died Thursday night surrounded by his wife Deborah, daughters Pearl and Amanda and close friends, Meat Loaf’s longtime agent Michael Greene told Deadline on behalf of the family. A cause of death is not being released. According to TMZ, the singer died of Covid-related complications.

“We know how much he meant to so many of you and we truly appreciate all of the love and support as we move through this time of grief in losing such an inspiring artist and beautiful man,” Meat Loaf’s family said in a statement. “From his heart to your souls…don’t ever stop rocking!”

Written by Jim Steinman, Meat Loaf...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 1/21/2022
  • by Erik Pedersen
  • Deadline Film + TV
Harry Anderson in Night Court (1984)
‘Night Court’ Sequel Starring Melissa Rauch and John Larroquette Ordered to Pilot at NBC
Harry Anderson in Night Court (1984)
“Big Bang Theory” alum stars as the daughter of Harry Anderson’s character from the original series

NBC has given a pilot order to the “Night Court” sequel series starring Melissa Rauch and John Larroquette, the network said Monday.

Put into development last year, the project from Rauch’s After January production company centers on Judge Abby Stone, an “unapologetic optimist” who follows in her father’s footsteps as she presides over the night shift of a Manhattan arraignment court.

Larroquette will reprise his role as former night court prosecutor Dan Fielding, with “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt” writer Dan Rubin serving as writer and executive producer.

“My intention was purely to be behind the camera on this project, but my plans quickly changed after falling in love with the incredible script from the brilliant mind of Dan Rubin,” Rauch said in a statement. “I couldn’t be more thrilled to join forces with Dan,...
See full article at The Wrap
  • 5/4/2021
  • by Reid Nakamura
  • The Wrap
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Meat Loaf Remembers Jim Steinman: ‘He Was the Centerpiece of My Life’
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Jim Steinman was such a titanic figure in Meat Loaf’s life, that sharing their saga in a single phone call to Rolling Stone after Steinman’s death simply was not possible. It took two long calls across two days to get it across, and at the end of the first one, Meat Loaf broke down and sobbed uncontrollably over the loss of his friend. “Oh my God!” he moaned. “I haven’t cried until now. It just hit me. Oh my God! It’s horrible!”

But he stayed remarkably...
See full article at Rollingstone.com
  • 4/23/2021
  • by Andy Greene
  • Rollingstone.com
Singer Bonnie Tyler Remembers ‘Total Eclipse of the Heart’ Composer Jim Steinman: He Wrote “Some Of The Most Iconic Rock Songs Of All Time” – Update
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Update, with Bonnie Tyler tribute Jim Steinman, the composer and lyricist whose roster of hit records included the huge Bonnie Tyler hit “Total Eclipse of the Heart,” was remembered by the singer as the “true genius” behind “some of the most iconic rock songs of all time.”

“I am absolutely devastated to learn of the passing of my long term friend and musical mentor Jim Steinman,” tweeted Tyler, whose other hits composed by Steinman included “Holding Out For A Hero.”

“Jim wrote and produced some of the most iconic rock songs of all time and I was massively privileged to have been given some of them by him. I made two albums with Jim, despite my record company initially thinking he wouldn’t want to work with me. Thankfully they were wrong…”

Read Tyler’s full statement below.

Deadline confirmed Steinman’s death with the Connecticut state medical examiner earlier today.
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 4/20/2021
  • by Greg Evans
  • Deadline Film + TV
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From Meat Loaf to Celine Dion: 10 Essential Jim Steinman Songs
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Jim Steinman is best known, with good reason, for the songs he wrote for Meat Loaf’s epic Bat Out of Hell. But his aural footprint on pop wasn’t limited to that singer and that 1977 album. As it turned out, Steinman’s songs were equally at home in the two decades that followed, when an astounding array of pop acts — from Air Supply to the Sisters of Mercy — performed his songs. The resulting discography amounts to an alternate-universe Wall of Sound, with Steinman as the Phil Spector of the Eighties and Nineties.
See full article at Rollingstone.com
  • 4/20/2021
  • by David Browne, Andy Greene, Joseph Hudak, Angie Martoccio, Rob Sheffield, Hank Shteamer and Brittany Spanos
  • Rollingstone.com
Harry Anderson, Selma Diamond, Ellen Foley, John Larroquette, Charles Robinson, and Richard Moll in Night Court (1984)
‘Night Court’ Sequel in the Works at NBC With John Larroquette Set to Return
Harry Anderson, Selma Diamond, Ellen Foley, John Larroquette, Charles Robinson, and Richard Moll in Night Court (1984)
A sequel to “Night Court” is in development at NBC from “Big Bang Theory” alum Melissa Rauch.

John Larroquette is set to return as Don Fielding. The project currently has a script development deal.

Here is the logline, per NBC: Unapologetic optimist judge Abby Stone (daughter of the late Harry Stone) follows in her father’s footsteps as she presides over the night shift of a Manhattan arraignment court and tries to bring order to its crew of oddballs and cynics, most notably former night court prosecutor Dan Fielding (Larroquette).

Rauch will produce with her husband, Winston Rauch, for After January Productions. Warner Bros. TV is the studio. Dan Rubin will write the series.

The original series, created by Reinhold Weege, aired for nine seasons on NBC from 1984-1992. It took place during the night shift at a Manhattan municipal court. Harry Anderson played the young, unorthodox judge Harry Stone.
See full article at The Wrap
  • 12/16/2020
  • by Tim Baysinger
  • The Wrap
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The 14 Craziest Musician Acting Cameos
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Looking back at some of the strangest cameos in film and TV history, we were struck by how many of them were by musicians. It makes sense. After all, musicians are already out of place among actors on a TV or film set. What they bring to the table is different from what actors bring, in terms of star quality, charisma, self-expression and established personae. If you’re familiar with both the musician’s work and the characters in a movie or TV show (and the actors who play them...
See full article at Rollingstone.com
  • 5/16/2020
  • by Gary Susman
  • Rollingstone.com
Til Death Do Us Part Series Explores Lethal Alternatives to Divorce
Tony Sokol Jun 25, 2019

New Investigation Discovery series 'Til Death Do Us Part finds deadly exits to wedding vows.

"Now I'm waiting til the end of time to hurry up and arrive," Meat Loaf sang on the seventies radio staple "Paradise by the Dashboard Light." His character had just promised eternal devotion to co-singer Ellen Foley. Investigation Discovery's upcoming all-new original series Til Death Do Us Part explores couples who didn't have the patience to wait out their wedding vows. From a suspicious carbon monoxide incident, to a parrot who became an eyewitness to murder, each hour-long episode tells a tragic tale of love turned lethal." The series unveils the breaking point in each of these relationships when love and murder collide.

'Til Death Do Us Part features all-new stories of love gone wrong, including "a loving wife turned wiccan, a spouse with a spiraling gambling addiction, and a...
See full article at Den of Geek
  • 6/25/2019
  • Den of Geek
Married To The Mob June 24th at Webster University ‘A Tribute to Jonathan Demme’
“I feel like a virgin at a eunuch convention.”

Married To The Mob screens Friday, June 24th at Webster University’s Moore Auditorium (470 East Lockwood). This is the sixth film in their ‘Tribute to Jonathan Demme’ The movie starts at 8:00pm.

In director Jonathan Demme’s 1988 comedy Married To The Mob, Michelle Pfeiffer stars as Angela Demarco, the widow of a recently “iced” Mob hit-man who moves from her garishly tacky Long Island home to start a new life for herself and her son, while being pursued by Mob boss Dean Stockwell and FBI man Matthew Modine. Married To The Mob has lots going for it including a very amusing script; offbeat characters; sudden sharp turns to unexpected violence, and a hilarious yet menacing, Oscar-nominated performance by Stockwell and and also by Mercedes Ruehl, as his jealous wife from hell, But Ms Pfeiffer steals the show easily. She perfectly nails Angela’s under-educated,...
See full article at WeAreMovieGeeks.com
  • 6/19/2017
  • by Tom Stockman
  • WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Meat Loaf
Meat Loaf Loves His New Record Braver Than We Are So Much, He Listened to It 7 Times at 3 A.M.
Meat Loaf
Meat Loaf has a cold. That voice - superhuman, louder than a locomotive, able to leap tall octaves in a single bound - sounds hoarse and congested over the telephone today. He's convinced it's allergies. I offer my apologies, which he quickly dismisses. "You don't control the pollen. Or Do You!?" He's joking, but I'm momentarily terrified. To be on the receiving end of Meat Loaf's roar, even at half blast, can be intimidating. It'll take a hell of a lot more than a case of sniffles to enfeeble that larynx, an instrument that's unleashed rock arias for more than four decades.
See full article at PEOPLE.com
  • 9/16/2016
  • by Jordan Runtagh, @jordanruntagh
  • PEOPLE.com
Meat Loaf
Meat Loaf Loves His New Record Braver Than We Are So Much, He Listened to It 7 Times at 3 A.M.
Meat Loaf
Meat Loaf has a cold. That voice - superhuman, louder than a locomotive, able to leap tall octaves in a single bound - sounds hoarse and congested over the telephone today. He's convinced it's allergies. I offer my apologies, which he quickly dismisses. "You don't control the pollen. Or Do You!?" He's joking, but I'm momentarily terrified. To be on the receiving end of Meat Loaf's roar, even at half blast, can be intimidating. It'll take a hell of a lot more than a case of sniffles to enfeeble that larynx, an instrument that's unleashed rock arias for more than four decades.
See full article at PEOPLE.com
  • 9/16/2016
  • by Jordan Runtagh, @jordanruntagh
  • PEOPLE.com
Anna Paquin, Ryan Kwanten, Stephen Moyer, Sam Trammell, Nelsan Ellis, and Rutina Wesley in True Blood (2008)
'True Blood' Broadway Musical in the Works
Anna Paquin, Ryan Kwanten, Stephen Moyer, Sam Trammell, Nelsan Ellis, and Rutina Wesley in True Blood (2008)
A Broadway musical based on the hit HBO vampire series True Blood is in development, The New York Post reports.

The theatrical adaptation is being workshopped under director Pam MacKinnon, who won a Tony Award in 2013 for directing the revival of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Author Elizabeth Scott — best known for her 2008 young adult novel, Living Dead Girl — is writing the book and lyrics, while Nathan Barr, who scored True Blood the TV show, is handling the music. The Post also reported that True Blood creator Alan Ball is overseeing the project,...
See full article at Rollingstone.com
  • 7/5/2016
  • Rollingstone.com
Bww Interview: Love Cycle Creator Bill Burnett on Working with a Young Patti LuPone & More!
Earlier this month, BroadwayWorld uncovered a vintage video featuring Broadway legend Patti LuPone in 'Love Cycle A Soap Operetta', a 'mini-musical' made for PBS in 1984 which was never broadcast. The mini-musical also featured a full cast of up-and-coming stars of the 1980's, including Walter Bobbie, Lonny Price, Martin Vidnovic, Priscilla Lopez and Ellen Foley. If you missed it the first time, catch the full operetta below...
See full article at BroadwayWorld.com
  • 1/23/2014
  • by Nicole Rosky
  • BroadwayWorld.com
Watch: The Clash Cameo In 'The King Of Comedy' Plus Martin Scorsese Talks 'Lawrence Of Arabia'
Martin Scorsese turns 70 on Friday, and the man has never been busier. In the midst of a multitude of projects, he's currently shooting his next feature, "The Wolf Of Wall Street," but of course, he took some time out recently to talk about David Lean's masterpiece, "Lawrence Of Arabia," as it arrives in a brand new 4-disc set today (get that Christmas shopping done early, folks). But before we jump into that, let's rewind the clock slightly. It's hard to believe, but it's been thirty years since Scorsese dropped "The King Of Comedy," a movie that still remains a bit underrated in his canon. And we have to admit, either we missed it or just didn't know, but The Clash cameoed ever so briefly in the film. Look closely and you'll see Mick Jones, Joe Strummer and Paul Simonon (plus associates like manager Kosmo Vinyl, singers Ellen Foley and Pearl Harbour,...
See full article at The Playlist
  • 11/13/2012
  • by Kevin Jagernauth
  • The Playlist
Samuel Goldwyn circa 1950
What We Talk About When We Talk About Pizza
Samuel Goldwyn circa 1950
(c) Samuel Goldwyn/ Courtesy: Everett Collection. “Mystic Pizza,” starring Julia Roberts and Annabeth Gish, 1988.

If you hit adolescence when I did—or if you listen to classic-rock stations—you’ll know a catchy 1977 song called “Paradise by the Dashboard Light,” performed as a duet by Meat Loaf and Ellen Foley. It’s a clever take on the teenage make-out session.

The boy’s refrain in the song is “We’re gonna go all the way tonight.” The girl resists and...
See full article at Speakeasy/Wall Street Journal
  • 3/17/2012
  • by Al Vernacchio
  • Speakeasy/Wall Street Journal
'The Sing-Off' winner: Pentatonix tunes out Dartmouth Aires and Urban Method
On Monday (Nov. 28), the Season 3 winners of "The Sing-Off" were announced.

It wasn't much of a surprise -- Pentatonix have been the front-runner for several weeks now. Though both were "on the edge of glory" tonight, as Nick Lachey said, Pentatonix won! Members of the group dropped out of school in the hopes of winning the $200,000 Sony recording contract, so they were probably beyond relieved when Lachey called their names.

Though they took the stage first, it was a big night for all three finalists.

Pentatonix was featured first. They had chosen to dedicate some time this week to the Los Angeles based charity The Trevor Project, which combats teen bullying and gives bullied teens a place to turn when they're troubled. After their package, they took the stage, singing David Guetta's "Without You." Ben Folds commended them on their "butt-shaking bass" singers.

Later, Pentatonix had the distinguished honor...
See full article at Zap2It - From Inside the Box
  • 11/29/2011
  • by editorial@zap2it.com
  • Zap2It - From Inside the Box
Carolyne Mas: Her Animal Haus
If you saw those big liquid eyes and heard that perfect rock and roll voice in 1979 singing "Stillsane," you never forgot it. "Stillsane" was a rollicking, sax-driven, joyful tune about holding onto one's sanity in the face of adversity. Without the benefit of MTV (which started a few years later in 1981), Carolyne Mas came to the forefront during an era when a number of female rock artists seemed to be gaining purchase in the marketplace for the first time (Pat Benatar, Ellen Foley, and Ellen Shipley were some of the others). Though these artists' sounds were quite different, they were all lumped together by virtue of their sex and Mas' undeniable talent was given short shrift. No overnight success herself, by 1979 Mas had spent several years honing her chops on the Greenwich Village scene. Lauded as "the female...
See full article at Huffington Post
  • 9/9/2009
  • by Holly Cara Price
  • Huffington Post
30 Rock: Watch the Complete Video of the Night Court TV Show Reunion
This season, the cast and crew of 30 Rock really hit the ground running. Oprah Winfrey made a rare TV appearance (outside of her own show) last week. Last night, Steve Martin and Jennifer Aniston (Friends) were the big guests -- or were they? How about the mini-Night Court reunion?

Night Court follows the surreal courtroom of Judge Harry Stone who presides over a crazy NYC night court. Self-obsessed Assistant D.A. Dan Fielding (John Larroquette) represents the state while public defenders like Liz Williams (Paula Kelly), Billie Young (Ellen Foley), and, for most of the series, Christine Sullivan (Markie Post) take the side of the accused. "Mac" Robinson (Charles Robinson) is the long-suffering court clerk while bailiffs like "Bull" Shannon (Richard Moll), Selma Hacker (Selma Diamond), Florence Kleiner (Florence Halop), and Roz Russell (Marsha Warfield) try to keep courtroom visitors under control.

The TV show debuted as an NBC...
See full article at TVSeriesFinale.com
  • 11/14/2008
  • by TVSeriesFinale.com
  • TVSeriesFinale.com
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