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Terry Melcher

News

Terry Melcher

‘Chaos: The Manson Murders’ Recap: Did The CIA Order A Hit On Sharon Tate?
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Directed by Errol Morris and based on the book by Tom O’Neill, Chaos: The Manson Murders makes us privy to the possible reasons behind the murder of actress Sharon Tate and six others in what infamously came to be known as the Tate-labianca murder. Tom has believed since the very beginning that the motive behind the murders, as stated in the court by the prosecutor, was not accurate. In this documentary, Tom provides an alternate theory, though he was never able to substantiate his claims. So, I believe it is up to us to figure out what could have happened and if what Tom claims could be the truth or not.

What was the CIA’s MKUltra program?

The CIA’s MKUltra program began around 1953, and Tom O’Neill, the writer whose book this documentary is based on, believed that it had a crucial role to play in the Charles Manson murders.
See full article at DMT
  • 3/8/2025
  • by Sushrut Gopesh
  • DMT
Chaos: The Manson Murders Review: Errol Morris Succinctly Investigates a Complex Conspiracy
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Over half a century later, what new information can be gleaned from the nights of August 9 and 10, 1969? Tom O’Neill and Dan Piepenbring’s riveting (if convoluted) book Chaos: Charles Manson, the CIA, and the Secret History of the Sixties––released in June 2019, between the Cannes premiere and theatrical release of Quentin Tarantino’s cathartic rewrite of that history––argues that while all the evidence of the murders has been gleaned, there’s a complex and knotty web of conspiracies for the motivations, some more plausible than others. To pare down the 528-page book to its most overarching theory, it postulates Manson may have been allowed (and perhaps even directed) by the CIA to concoct a reign of terror in accordance with secret government programs created to squash left-wing movements demanding progress for the country. Culling the most vital elements of the book into an easily digestible 96-minute Netflix documentary,...
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 3/7/2025
  • by Jordan Raup
  • The Film Stage
Making Manson Review: A Chilling Dive Into a Cult Leader’s Mind
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Making Manson, a three-part docuseries on Peacock, examines Charles Manson’s life and legacy as America’s symbol of cultic control and countercultural disorder.

Director Billie Mintz and Paramount Films present audio recordings spanning 20 years of Manson’s phone calls with autograph collector John Michael Jones. These tapes reveal Manson’s mindset through his own voice, while talks with ex-“Family” members and others show different views of his story.

The series spans three episodes showing different periods of Manson’s path. Each part moves from his early years through his control of “The Family” to the 1969 Tate-labianca murders and what followed. Old footage mixed with new interviews creates a less simplified view of someone often seen as a one-dimensional monster.

Cults, Counterculture, and Cultural Collapse: The Historical Weight of Charles Manson

Charles Manson’s story reflects the contrasts of mid-20th century America—a person shaped by social disorder...
See full article at Gazettely
  • 1/18/2025
  • by Ayishah Ayat Toma
  • Gazettely
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Billy Burnette On His Brief, ‘Magical’ Stint in Fleetwood Mac: ‘No Regrets’
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Rolling Stone‘s interview series King for a Day features long-form conversations between senior writer Andy Greene and singers who had the difficult job of fronting major rock bands after the departure of an iconic vocalist. Some of them stayed in their bands for years, while others lasted just a few months. In the end, however, they all found out that replacement singers can themselves be replaced. This edition features former Fleetwood Mac singer Billy Burnette.

Billy Burnette has been creating music on a professional level for so long that...
See full article at Rollingstone.com
  • 12/6/2022
  • by Andy Greene
  • Rollingstone.com
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On TikTok, Charles Manson Is a Cozy Fall Vibe
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Pumpkin spice is in the air and on TikTok, the hygge aesthetic is building to a fever pitch. Videos of spooky still lifes and boots crunching through leaves have been circulating since July, and lately home-decor videos have a distinctly fall aesthetic to them. Candles burn in the twilight, and mugs of coffee beckon beside artfully positioned throw blankets. Accompanying a growing number of these interior-design videos is a scratchy demo of an acoustic folk song that goes, “Home is where you’re happy, it’s not where you’re not free.
See full article at Rollingstone.com
  • 10/19/2022
  • by Andrea Marks
  • Rollingstone.com
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Recommended New Filmmaking Books: Tarantino’s Return to Hollywood, Shyamalan’s Old Inspiration, Making Fargo & More
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If you’re a film nerd putting together a late summer reading list, look no further. There are a number of books here that could qualify as “beach reads,” chief among them a new novel from Quentin Tarantino. Others might be a tad heavy to lug to the beach, but they will be just as enticing at home. So let’s go swimming in a deep roundup of new books on filmmaking.

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood by Quentin Tarantino (Harper Perennial)

Only Quentin Tarantino could return to a film just two years later and radically change the order of things, remove numerous noteworthy scenes while expanding others, devote a shocking number of pages to Lancer plot summaries, embark on a headline-grabbing press tour, and still emerge with a book as successful as Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. As with any creation from Tarantino, there are moments of real reader discomfort here,...
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 7/28/2021
  • by Christopher Schobert
  • The Film Stage
Tarantino Tells Critics of Bruce Lee Scene to ‘Suck a D*ck’: He ‘Had No Respect for American Stuntmen’
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It’s been almost two years since Quentin Tarantino’s “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” opened in theaters and ignited a global controversy around his depiction of Bruce Lee. Bruce’s daughter, Shannon Lee, condemned Tarantino for his “irresponsible” portrayal of the martial arts icon and said the film created lasting negative views about her father. The scene, in which actor Mike Moh stars as Bruce Lee, is reportedly the reason China refused to release “Hollywood” in theaters unless it was removed. Tarantino refused. The director also defended his portrayal, saying Lee was “an arrogant guy” in real life.

The Bruce Lee discussion as it relates to “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” resurfaced this week during Tarantino’s appearance on “The Joe Rogan Experience” to promote the just-released “Hollywood” novelization. While the filmmaker can sympathize with Shannon Lee for being upset with the “Hollywood” version of Bruce Lee,...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 6/30/2021
  • by Zack Sharf
  • Indiewire
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Flashback: Beach Boys ‘Make It Big’ in ‘Troop Beverly Hills’
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Late last week, Variety broke the news that a sequel to the 1989 cult classic Troop Beverly Hills was in the works with Israeli director Oran Zegman. For those not familiar with the original, it’s about a wealthy Beverly Hills mother (Shelley Long) who leads her daughter’s Wilderness Girl troop after her husband leaves her for another woman. The cast is packed with future stars like Jenny Lewis, Tori Spelling, Carla Gugino, and Kellie Martin.

The film begins with an animated sequence set to “Make It Big” by the Beach Boys,...
See full article at Rollingstone.com
  • 9/10/2020
  • by Andy Greene
  • Rollingstone.com
Mel Gibson and Danny Glover in Lethal Weapon 2 (1989)
Flashback: ‘Lethal Weapon 2’ Helps the Beach Boys ‘Cruise’ to Their Last Hit
Mel Gibson and Danny Glover in Lethal Weapon 2 (1989)
Midway through Lethal Weapon 2, there’s a scene where Detective Martin Riggs (Mel Gibson) brings Rika van den Haas (Patsy Kensit) to his beachside trailer for a date, even though she’s the secretary of an evil apartheid-era South African government official that’s determined to kill him along with much of the Lapd. Before long, he’ll be fishing her lifeless body out of the ocean and vowing to avenge her death, but prior to that unpleasantness they enjoy a few beers and listen to the new Beach...
See full article at Rollingstone.com
  • 4/16/2020
  • by Andy Greene
  • Rollingstone.com
Charles Manson
'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood' Deleted Scene Shows Manson Freak Out on Cliff Booth
Charles Manson
There were more Charles Manson moments shot for Once Upon a Time in...Hollywood — and now they are coming to light thanks to Tuesday's Blu-ray release, which includes a number of deleted scenes from the Quentin Tarantino film.

One of those scenes is an elongated introduction to Charles Manson, played by Damon Herriman in the Sony film.

In the theatrical release, Manson goes to the Hollywood Hills home where Sharon Tate and husband Roman Polanski live, looking for the former resident, music producer Terry Melcher, and his friend, Beach Boys member Dennis Wilson. He is told by Jay ...
See full article at The Hollywood Reporter - Film + TV
  • 12/10/2019
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Film + TV
Charles Manson
'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood' Deleted Scene Shows Manson Freak Out on Cliff Booth
Charles Manson
There were more Charles Manson moments shot for Once Upon a Time in...Hollywood — and now they are coming to light thanks to Tuesday's Blu-ray release, which includes a number of deleted scenes from the Quentin Tarantino film.

One of those scenes is an elongated introduction to Charles Manson, played by Damon Herriman in the Sony film.

In the theatrical release, Manson goes to the Hollywood Hills home where Sharon Tate and husband Roman Polanski live, looking for the former resident, music producer Terry Melcher, and his friend, Beach Boys member Dennis Wilson. He is told by Jay ...
See full article at The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
  • 12/10/2019
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Quentin Tarantino at an event for The Oscars (2013)
Quentin Tarantino tells Grammy voters about ‘Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’ soundtrack and its real Charles Manson connection
Quentin Tarantino at an event for The Oscars (2013)
While on the Oscar campaign trail for “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood,” Quentin Tarantino found time to woo Grammy voters at a special event for the soundtrack of his new film. The Q&a, moderated by music writer David Wild, took place recently at the Grammy Museum in downtown La, and featured a special performance by Paul Revere and the Raiders lead vocalist Mark Lindsay, who sang three of his own classic songs featured in the movie.

Though he’s won Oscars for writing “Pulp Fiction” and “Django Unchained,” Tarantino has yet to win a Grammy, despite receiving nominations for both “Kill Bill” films, “Inglourious Basterds” and “Django” in the Best Visual Media Compilation category. But unfortunately, he lamented, “that category didn’t exist the year of ‘Pulp Fiction,'” which featured one of the most iconic soundtracks in recent movie history. “So every time I get nominated, there...
See full article at Gold Derby
  • 10/15/2019
  • by Zach Laws
  • Gold Derby
‘Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’ Soundtrack: 4 Things Quentin Tarantino Wants You to Know
From the stark contrast “Stuck In The Middle With You” provided for Mr. Blonde torturing a cop in “Reservior Dogs” to Mia Wallace and Vincent Vega’s iconic dance to Chuck Berry’s “You Never Can Tell” in “Pulp Fiction,” Quentin Tarantino is a proven master in choosing just the right song, and the extensive track list in “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” is no exception.

Tarantino discussed the music of his latest film during a 90-minute event at the Grammy Museum in Los Angeles this week alongside guests who included Mark Lindsay of Paul Revere & the Raiders, a band that contributed three pieces of sonic ’60s history to the movie.

Here are five things we learned from the event.

For the opening credits, the song made the sequence

The director said he had two songs in mind for the opening-credit sequence, which involves scenes of Sharon Tate (Margot Robbie...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 10/6/2019
  • by Chris Lindahl
  • Indiewire
This Week In Music: Lady Gaga Faces Lawsuit On ‘Shallow’ As Big Biz Changes Are Afoot
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It’s the dog days of summer, but there are changes in the wind. The first festival to allow legal cannabis sales takes places this weekend; the biggest music company in the world is contemplating selling off a piece; the two biggest performing rights societies are trying to get the rules under which they are governed changed; and music on FM radio may soon go away, at least according to one prominent analysis.

All that and the biggest song of the last 12 months, Lady Gaga’s Shallow, is being accused in a lawsuit of being derived from another tune.

This week in music:

House Of The Rising Star: Audius, a blockchain music streaming service, is offering up a Laurel Canyon pad for free to select artists and collectives who need space to create, put on a show, podcast or whatever. Forrest Browning, co-founder and Cpo of Audius, said Laurel Canyon...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 8/10/2019
  • by Bruce Haring
  • Deadline Film + TV
Sharon Tate
The Details of Sharon Tate's Gruesome Murder Will Stick With You in the Worst Possible Way
Sharon Tate
Actress Sharon Tate was only 26 years old when her life and career were tragically cut short in one of the most brutal murders in Hollywood history. On Aug. 8, 1969, the stunning Valley of the Dolls star - who was married to film director Roman Polanski and eight and a half months pregnant with their son - was spending time with friends at 10050 Cielo Drive, the secluded home she and Roman shared in La's Benedict Canyon. Roman was off in London filming The Day of the Dolphin, so he asked their close pals Wojciech Frykowski and Folger's Coffee heiress Abigail Folger to stay at the house with his pregnant wife until he flew back to La on Aug. 12. The trio had dinner at Sharon's favorite restaurant, El Coyote, along with celebrity hairstylist Jay Sebring. They returned to the house around 10:30 p.m.

Shortly after midnight on Aug. 9, the house was broken...
See full article at Popsugar.com
  • 8/9/2019
  • by Britt Stephens
  • Popsugar.com
Roman Polanski at an event for To Each His Own Cinema (2007)
9 Best Books About the Charles Manson and the Family Murders
Roman Polanski at an event for To Each His Own Cinema (2007)
It’s been 50 years since that terrifying night in August 1969, when four members of the Manson Family broke into the house at 10050 Cielo Drive and killed five people: 18-year-old Steven Parent, who wast there to try to sell a clock radio to an acquaintance in the property’s guesthouse; Wojiciech Frykowski, an aspiring screenwriter and friend of director Roman Polanski; Abigail Folger, Frykowski’s girlfriend and the heiress to the Folger coffee fortune; celebrity hairstylist Jay Sebring; and actress Sharon Tate, Polanski’s wife, who was eight months pregnant at...
See full article at Rollingstone.com
  • 8/1/2019
  • by EJ Dickson
  • Rollingstone.com
Quentin Tarantino at an event for The Oscars (2013)
‘Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood’ Fact Check: Did Charles Manson Scope Out the Tate-Polanski House Before the Murders?
Quentin Tarantino at an event for The Oscars (2013)
(Spoiler alert: Do not read on if you haven’t seen Quentin Tarantino’s “Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood.”)

Quentin Tarantino’s “Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood,” which takes place around the time of the Manson Family murders of Sharon Tate and her friends, shows Charles Manson himself dropping by her house on Cielo Drive before the killings.

Did it really happen? Or is another example of Tarantino taking artistic license? The answer is, there’s truth to this part of “Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood,” even if it isn’t exactly true.

The film shows Manson (Damon Herriman) getting out of a small ice-cream truck and walking up to the gate of 10050 Cielo Drive, the house Tate and Roman Polanski shared. Tate is home with friend Jay Sebring, who was among those murdered on that infamous night. They see a man walking up to the door,...
See full article at The Wrap
  • 7/31/2019
  • by Beatrice Verhoeven
  • The Wrap
Dania Ramirez in Once Upon a Time (2011)
‘Once Upon a Time…in Hollywood’: Let’s Talk About…That Ending (Column)
Dania Ramirez in Once Upon a Time (2011)
(Warning: This column contains major spoilers about the ending of “Once Upon a Time…in Hollywood.” Read at your own risk.)

I want to talk about the ending of “Once Upon a Time…in Hollywood,” starting around the moment the Manson family shows up on Cielo Drive, and…well, okay, we’ll get into it in a bit. So if you don’t want to know what happens during the last half hour of Quentin Tarantino’s new movie, stop reading now or forever hold your troll. This column hinges on some major spoilers, but my desire isn’t to tread on anyone’s pleasure of discovery. It’s to look at a sequence that needs to be looked at, because it’s one of the defining movie sequences of the year.

Before I deal with the ending, though, I want to talk about the first two hours of “Once Upon a Time…...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 7/28/2019
  • by Owen Gleiberman
  • Variety Film + TV
Mary Ramos
Inside Tarantino’s ‘Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’ Soundtrack
Mary Ramos
According to Mary Ramos, Quentin Tarantino’s longtime music supervisor, the process for selecting songs for one of his films starts in a record store—which happens to be in his Hollywood home. What Ramos describes as Tarantino’s “record room” looks like a vinyl boutique, with LPs separated into bins labeled by genres like soul and soundtracks. “In the past, when we’ve started preparation,” she says, “he invites me over and I madly scribble as he’s talking a mile a minute and pausing to put the needle down on records.
See full article at Rollingstone.com
  • 7/27/2019
  • by David Browne
  • Rollingstone.com
Quentin Tarantino at an event for The Oscars (2013)
Judging from his Twitter feed, no one is more giddy about ‘Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’ than Paul Revere & the Raiders’ singer Mark Lindsay
Quentin Tarantino at an event for The Oscars (2013)
Anyone who has followed Quentin Tarantino‘s film career as a writer-director know that he is as much about music selection as he is about searing profanity-laced monologues. Can anyone hear “Stuck in the Middle With You” by Stealers Wheel without thinking of Michael Madsen‘s Mr. Blonde as he cuts the ear off of a cop who’s tied up in a chair in “Resevoir Dogs”? Or who among us can’t help but to flashback to the sight of John Travolta‘s Vincent Vega and Uma Thurman‘s Mia Wallace dancing if they hear Chuck Berry’s “You Never Can Tell.”

As usual, Tarantino’s latest opus, the just-opened “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood,” has several memorable music-related scenes. Leonardo DiCaprio and Brad Pitt, together for the first time ever on the big screen while acting as a kind of middle-age male dynamite, is an event to celebrate in and of itself.
See full article at Gold Derby
  • 7/27/2019
  • by Susan Wloszczyna
  • Gold Derby
Quentin Tarantino at an event for The Oscars (2013)
The Significant Role Charles Manson Plays in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
Quentin Tarantino at an event for The Oscars (2013)
Quentin Tarantino doesn't need an introduction - he's the auteur who brought us gratuitously gory films such as Pulp Fiction, Kill Bill, and Django Unchained. Now, he's onto his ninth film with Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, a $100 million project that convinced even Leonardo DiCaprio to take a hefty pay cut. Since Tarantino only plans to make 10 movies, this is certainly going to be a treat, boasting a cast of the fine actors to prove it. In the movie, the writer-director crafts a narrative that touches upon one of the most disturbing murders in Hollywood history - that of celebrity Sharon Tate under the orders of Charles Manson.

Fictional Elements

The Manson murders won't be the main focus of the plot, which is still being kept under wraps. But we'll certainly see everyone involved in the case, including Tate (Margot Robbie), Manson (Damon Herriman), Manson's followers, and a handful of '60s celebrities.
See full article at Popsugar.com
  • 7/26/2019
  • by Stacey Nguyen
  • Popsugar.com
Once Upon a Time in Hollywood Ending Explained
David Crow Jul 25, 2019

We examine the shocking ending of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood and what it means for the film's era and Quentin Tarantino.

This article contains major Once Upon a Time in Hollywood spoilers.

Joan Didion famously wrote in her 1979 collection of essays, The White Album, about the night Sharon Tate died.

“Many people I know in Los Angeles believe the Sixties ended abruptly on August 9, 1969,” wrote Didion. “Ended at the exact moment when word of the murders on Cielo Drive traveled like brushfire through the community, and in a sense this is true. The tension broke that day. The paranoia was fulfilled.”

This is often the conventional wisdom about the era: Charles Manson’s so called Family brought an end to the Summer of Love, which also just happened to occur around the same time that the old Hollywood studio system finally collapsed, buried by its massive flops like Hello,...
See full article at Den of Geek
  • 7/25/2019
  • Den of Geek
Rs Recommends: ‘Chaos: Charles Manson, the CIA and the Secret History of the Sixties’
It’s hard to explain Tom O’Neill’s new book Chaos: Charles Manson, the CIA and the Secret History of the Sixties without sounding like a conspiracy theorist down a rabbit hole — you try telling your friends that a reporter spent two decades researching the links between one of America’s most notorious criminals and the government’s super-secretive mind-control program Mkultra without getting a few snickers.

Of course, imagine being the journalist writing it, and you find yourself in an even more uncomfortable position; that’s exactly why...
See full article at Rollingstone.com
  • 7/9/2019
  • by Elisabeth Garber-Paul
  • Rollingstone.com
Hollywood Legend Doris Day Dies at 97
Tony Sokol May 14, 2019

Hollywood's iconic girl next door was TV's first single mom and an animal rights pioneer.

"Que será, sera," Doris Day sang her iconic, underplayed ode to fortune, "whatever will be, will be." The Hollywood icon died of pneumonia on Monday, May 14, at the age of 97, according to The Doris Day Animal Foundation, via Variety. The singer and actress who defined the girl next door died early at her home in Carmel Valley, California.

Day made over thirty films, including Tea for Two, On Moonlight Bay, By the Light of the Silvery Moon, David Butler’s 1953 film Calamity Jane and The Pajama Game, and over 600 recordings. Alfred Hitchcock used Day's recognizable voice to send a distress signal to her kidnapped son in The Man Who Knew Too Much. The song which held the message, “Que Sera Sera,” won the 1956 Academy Award for Best Original Song with the alternative title "Whatever Will Be,...
See full article at Den of Geek
  • 5/14/2019
  • Den of Geek
Doris Day "The Doris Day Show" 1968 CBS
Doris Day appreciation: One of the sunniest stars in Hollywood’s golden era and devoted animal rights activist, dead at age 97
Doris Day "The Doris Day Show" 1968 CBS
Yes, Doris Day, who died on May 13 at age 97 after a bout with pneumonia, was the all-American girl next door — but she was so much more. The funny, sunny blonde with the perky disposition, a sprinkle of freckles and a dazzling smile started off as a big band singer whose first hit was 1945’s “Sentimental Journey” with Les Brown & his Band of Renown. She would record more than 650 songs from 1947 to 1967, making her one of the biggest-selling recording artists of the 20th century, and was honored with a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 20008.

But the former Doris Mary Ann von Kappelhoff would make an even bigger splash as a star on the silver screen in a series of romantic comedies opposite Rock Hudson — who would become a lifelong friend — starting with 1959’s “Pillow Talk,” the source of her only Oscar nomination, along with 1961’s “Lover Come Back” and 1964’s “Send Me No Flowers.
See full article at Gold Derby
  • 5/14/2019
  • by Susan Wloszczyna
  • Gold Derby
Doris Day "The Doris Day Show" 1968 CBS
Doris Day 'Died Peacefully' Surrounded by Her 'Loved Ones,' Says Manager
Doris Day "The Doris Day Show" 1968 CBS
Doris Day was content in the last few months of her life before she died on Monday at the age of 97.

Her business manager and close friend Bob Bashara tells People Day “was fine at her birthday party” which she celebrated in April.

“For her birthday event, she was in good spirits,” says Bashara. Shortly after, Day “developed a cough and it turned into bronchitis and she was briefly hospitalized,” he says.

“When she came home, she began to decline and was given hospice care,” he says.

“[When she died] there were some very close friends and loved ones who were with her,...
See full article at PEOPLE.com
  • 5/13/2019
  • by Alexia Fernandez
  • PEOPLE.com
Doris Day "The Doris Day Show" 1968 CBS
Did Doris Day Save Her Son from Being Killed by Charles Manson?
Doris Day "The Doris Day Show" 1968 CBS
Doris Day may have singlehandedly saved her son from death at the hands of one of America’s most notorious serial killers, according to a bombshell book.

The Hollywood icon — who died on Monday at the age of 97 — made her only child, the late record producer Terry Melcher, vacate his rental home in Benedict Canyon, California, not long before Manson’s “family” committed the Tate murders there in 1969, Beach Boys frontman Mike Love wrote in his 2016 memoir.

Love detailed friend Melcher’s connection to Manson in Good Vibrations: My Life as a Beach Boy.

According to Love, bandmate Dennis Wilson...
See full article at PEOPLE.com
  • 5/13/2019
  • by By Lindsay Kimble, Johnny Dodd
  • PEOPLE.com
Doris Day "The Doris Day Show" 1968 CBS
Doris Day, Chanteuse: Five of Her Greatest Musical Performances
Doris Day "The Doris Day Show" 1968 CBS
Doris Day may have died with a reputation of being Hollywood’s most scrubbed-clean and wholesome girl-next-door type. But she made it to the big screen courtesy her warmly simmering and easily quavering vocal tones. Before films beckoned, she was a featured vocalist with big band-era kings such as Bob Crosby (Bing’s brother) and Les Brown and His Band of Renown, the latter of which recorded Day sunnily crooning “Sentimental Journey” and “My Dreams Are Getting Better All the Time.”

While both ballads made her the toast of radio fans and World War II vets coming home from the battlefront in 1945, Day had so much more to offer during her sadly abbreviated singing career — which included one album released in the 21st century, “My Heart,” and a host of previously unreleased songs she recorded with her composer-producer son, the late Terry Melcher.

Here are some signature smashes and cool surprises from Doris Day.
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 5/13/2019
  • by A.D. Amorosi
  • Variety Film + TV
Doris Day "The Doris Day Show" 1968 CBS
Doris Day, Hollywood Legend and Singer, Dies at 97
Doris Day "The Doris Day Show" 1968 CBS
It's a very sad day in Hollywood, as legendary singer, actress, and animal welfare activist Doris Day has reportedly passed away. On Monday, Day's death was announced by her charity, the Doris Day Animal Foundation. According to a statement, Day "had been in excellent physical health for her age, until recently contracting a serious case of pneumonia." Surrounded by close friends, Day died in her Carmel Valley, California at the age of 97. Day is survived by her grandson, Ryan Melcher; her only child Terry Melcher previously passed away in 2004.

Born in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1922, Day took an early interest in performing by forming a dance duo with Jerry Doherty in the '30s. Her dreams of becoming a professional dancer were hindered by a car accident in 1937, badly injuring her right leg. During her recovery, Day began to sing along to the radio, discovering she had plenty of vocal talent as well.
See full article at MovieWeb
  • 5/13/2019
  • by Jeremy Dick
  • MovieWeb
Doris Day Dies: Beloved Singer and Actress Was 97
Sad news out of Hollywood on this Monday morning. 

Doris Day, an esteemed singer and actress has died. 

She was 97. 

The Doris Day Animal Foundation revealed the sad news that Day died early Monday at her Carmel Valley, Calif., home. The foundation confirmed that she was surrounded by close friends.

"Day had been in excellent physical health for her age, until recently contracting a serious case of pneumonia, resulting in her death," the foundation said in a statement, via Los Angeles Times.

Doris was originally a singer, before transitioning into the world of acting, and becoming one of the biggest female stars of all time. 

She was born Mary Ann Von Kappelhoff in April 1992. By age 15, she was a singer, and her song "Sentimental Journey" became a huge hit. 

She recorded the song in 1945 as a vocalist for Les Brown and His Band of Renown. 

It elevated Day to worldwide stardom.
See full article at TVfanatic
  • 5/13/2019
  • by Paul Dailly
  • TVfanatic
Doris Day "The Doris Day Show" 1968 CBS
Doris Day, Legendary Actress and Singer, Dies at 97
Doris Day "The Doris Day Show" 1968 CBS
Legendary film and TV actress, singer and animal welfare activist Doris Day died on Monday after contracting pneumonia. She was 97.

Famed for her wholesome onscreen persona, Day starred in popular 1950s and ’60s movies such as “Pillow Talk,” Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Man Who Knew Too Much” and “Move Over, Darling.”

The Doris Day Animal Foundation confirmed that its founder had died Monday at her Carmel Valley, California, home. The foundation said she was surrounded by close friends.

Also Read: Peggy Lipton of 'Mod Squad' and 'Twin Peaks' Dies at 72

According to the foundation press statement, nearly 300 fans gathered in Carmel last month to celebrate Day’s birthday on April 3. The actress had been in excellent physical health for her age, until recently contracting a serious case of pneumonia.

Born Mary Ann Von Kappelhoff in Cincinnati, Ohio, she began her singing career at age 15 and soon...
See full article at The Wrap
  • 5/13/2019
  • by Debbie Emery
  • The Wrap
Doris Day "The Doris Day Show" 1968 CBS
Hollywood Actress Doris Day Dead at 97
Doris Day "The Doris Day Show" 1968 CBS
Doris Day, one of the biggest movie stars in the '50s and '60s who became a fierce proponent of animal rights, is dead. The Doris Day Animal Foundation confirmed her death. She died at her home in Carmel Valley, CA, surrounded by close friends. The Foundation said Day "had been in excellent physical health for her age, until recently contracting a serious case of pneumonia." Doris became a star in 1956, when she appeared...
See full article at TMZ
  • 5/13/2019
  • by TMZ Staff
  • TMZ
Doris Day "The Doris Day Show" 1968 CBS
Doris Day Dies Nearly 2 Months After Celebrating 97th Birthday
Doris Day "The Doris Day Show" 1968 CBS
Doris Day, the beautiful blonde whose sunny screen presence and silken singing voice guaranteed box-office and record-chart hits in the ’40s, ’50s and ’60s, has died, her rep confirms to People. She was 97.

Day died at 1:00 A.M. on Monday at her home in California, the rep says.

The Associated Press was first to report the news, which comes nearly two months after the actress celebrated her birthday and shared a recent photo with People.

Although in 2012 she released a CD of songs she recorded years ago, since the early ’80s, the world’s favorite “girl next door” kept...
See full article at PEOPLE.com
  • 5/13/2019
  • by Stephen M. Silverman
  • PEOPLE.com
Review: Cryin' Time: Mary Harron's "Charlie Says"
"Everything was to teach me something." That's what Linda Kasabian told Joan Didion, a confidante during her first few years after being arrested for helping Susan Atkins, Charles "Tex" Watson, Leslie Van Houten, and Patricia Krenwinkel commit murder at the behest of Charles Manson. Didion, like any number of writers, was fascinated by the idea that something like the Manson Murders could just rip a hole in the fabric of time and space. California's crimes had been kept well-hidden from the rich and comfortable and suddenly Manson's snarling face was all over newspapers, and all because they didn't accept him as one of “them.” He wanted to be a singer so badly and no one would give him a record deal, so he sent his followers out to kill the producer Terry Melcher who refused to sign him. By that logic any one famous enough could be next if some...
See full article at MUBI
  • 5/9/2019
  • MUBI
Hilary Duff in The Haunting of Sharon Tate (2019)
Film Review: ‘The Haunting of Sharon Tate’
Hilary Duff in The Haunting of Sharon Tate (2019)
Over the years, I’ve consumed my share of movies — documentaries, dramatizations, deconstructive punk curios — that play off the Manson murders. The quality of this genre (and by now it is a genre) is hit-or-miss, yet I don’t think I’ve ever seen a Manson film that wasn’t on some level trying for something, for a new shade of insight into that uniquely horrific and resonant chapter of the American dream-turned-nightmare.

But now, I’m afraid, the track record is broken. “The Haunting of Sharon Tate” may be the first “serious” Manson drama that represents a case of pure, unadulterated cheeseball exploitation. The film has nothing of remote fascination to add to the Manson dialogue that some of us have been carrying on for decades. It doesn’t bring you closer to the events; if anything, it seals you outside of them. But the movie’s petty folly...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 4/4/2019
  • by Owen Gleiberman
  • Variety Film + TV
Rock Photographer Guy Webster Dead at 79
Rock photographer Guy Webster, whose images adorn dozens of classic album covers, has died at the age of 79.

Webster’s biographer Harvey Kubernik confirmed the photographer’s February 5th death to Rolling Stone, adding that Webster had been suffering from diabetes and liver cancer. Variety first reported Webster’s death.

“Guy Webster established his reputation as a photographer capable not only of capturing the emotional nuance of the era, but also of helping to define it, with shots of hundreds of personalities before they were legends—including Simon & Garfunkel, Jack Nicholson,...
See full article at Rollingstone.com
  • 2/9/2019
  • by Daniel Kreps
  • Rollingstone.com
New Manson Doc Goes Inside Spahn Ranch
It would be easy to believe that Fox’s new two-hour, Liev Schreiber-narrated special, Inside the Manson Cult: The Lost Tapes, would simply re-trod old territory. With so much already out there on the man, his followers and their infamous two-day murder spree in Los Angeles in August 1969, does this documentary show anything new, or is it the latest attempt to capitalize on our continued fascination with Manson and the true crime genre?

In some ways, yes, it falls into this pattern. Sure, it tells the usual Manson narrative:...
See full article at Rollingstone.com
  • 9/17/2018
  • by Elizabeth Yuko
  • Rollingstone.com
Joan Didion
Venice Film Review: ‘Charlie Says’
Joan Didion
“Many people I know in Los Angeles believe that the ’60s ended abruptly on Aug. 9, 1969.” This famous quote, from Joan Didion’s essay “The White Album,” refers to the date of the murders of Sharon Tate and four others by members of Charles Manson’s self-dubbed “Family.” And in coolly definitive white-text-on-black, it opens Mary Harron’s “Charlie Says,” which tells the story of the sluggish moral reawakening of three of Manson’s murderous acolytes, in the years after the killings, when they were incarcerated in the California Institution for Women.

As scintillating and influential as Didion’s work is, it is not without its detractors — those who find her memoirist’s approach to the journalistic essay form too colored with the personal to earn the sweeping certainty of her generalizations. But “Charlie Says” could use a little of that forceful, opinionated clarity — even at the potential risk of giving offense — because without it,...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 9/2/2018
  • by Jessica Kiang
  • Variety Film + TV
Doris Day "The Doris Day Show" 1968 CBS
Doris Day: See Rare, Unearthed Photos of Hollywood Star in the Prime of Her Career
Doris Day "The Doris Day Show" 1968 CBS
Doris Day may now be 96 (and still taking her annual birthday photo!), but for many, the singer and actress remains timeless.

In honor of the 70th anniversary of Day’s very first time onscreen — in the 1948 musical comedy Romance on the High Seas — Getty Images’ Foto has unearthed rare images of the actress earlier in her career and in her private life.

Day, who was born in Cincinnati and now resides in Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, has been retired since 1973. Currently single, she was married twice and raised one son, Terry Melcher, who was a successful music producer that was credited with...
See full article at PEOPLE.com
  • 6/27/2018
  • by Gillian Telling
  • PEOPLE.com
Quentin Tarantino at an event for The Oscars (2013)
Tarantino's Once Upon a Time in Hollywood Adds Damian Lewis, Dakota Fanning and More
Quentin Tarantino at an event for The Oscars (2013)
Director Quentin Tarantino has added seven new cast members for his highly-anticipated Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, bringing in Damian Lewis, Luke Perry, Emile Hirsch, Dakota Fanning, Clifton Collins Jr, Keith Jefferson and Nicholas Hammond. They join a cast that includes Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, Margot Robbie, Burt Reynolds, Timothy Olyphant, Kurt Russell, Michael Madsen and Tim Roth. With production expected to get started this summer, it remains to be seen how many more cast members will be added to the production in the coming weeks and months.

The story centers on an actor named Rick Dalton (Leonardo DiCaprio), who used to star on an incredibly popular Western TV series, and his longtime stunt double, Cliff Booth (Brad Pitt). They have both found themselves struggling in a new Hollywood they don't recognize anymore in the summer of 1969. The plot thickens when Dalton gets a new next door neighbor, rising...
See full article at MovieWeb
  • 6/7/2018
  • by MovieWeb
  • MovieWeb
Roman Polanski Is a Key Character in Tarantino's New Movie
Sony Pictures is moving ahead on Tarantino's New Movie, which will be set in the year 1969 and centers on several different aspects of that pivotal year, including the murder of actress Sharon Tate by the Manson Family. Early reports speculated that the entire movie was centered on this murder, but that was later denied. The release date is set for August 9, 2019, which also happens to be the 50th Anniversary of Sharon Tate's death. Today we have new details about the story from Variety reporter Justin Kroll, who revealed on Twitter that Sharon Tate's husband, iconic director Roman Polanski, will have a "key role" in the film. Here's what he had to say below.

"Some Qt-Manson updates: The role Pitt and Cruise have met on is for that of a stuntman not prosecutor, the Leo character is also Tate's neighbor in the pic and Roman Polanski will play key role in film,...
See full article at MovieWeb
  • 2/2/2018
  • by MovieWeb
  • MovieWeb
Beach Boys Singer Mike Love Says Music Could Have Saved Charles Manson's Victims
[[tmz:video id="0_qpaz0wis"]] The Beach Boys singer Mike Love has nothing but bad feelings about Charles Manson, but he says something about the deceased murderer that is truly shocking. We got Mike in NYC Monday signing autographs, and he told our photog if Manson had a music career maybe his victims would have been spared. In case you didin't know ... Manson actually wrote a song The Beach Boys recorded -- "Never Learn Not to Love" -- but when...
See full article at TMZ
  • 11/21/2017
  • by TMZ Staff
  • TMZ
House of Manson (2014)
Everything to Know About Sharon Tate, the Pregnant Actress Killed by Charles Manson’s Followers
House of Manson (2014)
Sharon Tate was 26 in 1969 and about to begin a new chapter of her life: The successful actress was married to director Roman Polanski and eight-and-a-half months pregnant with their first child.

But that was all cut short when Sharon was killed — along with Jay Sebring, Abigail Folger, Wojciech Frykowski and Steven Parent — in a horrific stabbing at her Los Angeles-area home by followers of cult leader Charles Manson.

Manson, whose name became synonymous with evil after his arrest in connection with the 1969 murders of Tate and eight others, died of natural causes on Sunday night. He was 83 and serving a...
See full article at PEOPLE.com
  • 11/20/2017
  • by Stephanie Petit
  • PEOPLE.com
House of Manson (2014)
Charles Manson Is Dead at 83 - Here Are 9 Chilling Facts About the Infamous Cult Leader
House of Manson (2014)
Charles Manson died at the age of 83 on Nov. 19. According to authorities, the murderous cult leader passed away at a hospital in Kern County, CA from natural causes. He was one of the most infamous figures in criminal history, ordering one of the most horrifying murders in Hollywood: that of actress Sharon Tate. He was the leader of one of the world's most infamous cults. And he was recently factored into American Horror Story: Cult. With Charles Manson's recent resurgence as a person of interest in the public eye, it's entirely possible that a lot of people in the present day don't know his story. After all, he committed his most prolific crimes in the late 1960s. Here's a primer on who he is, what he did, and where he was before his death. He had a tumultuous early family life. Charles Manson was born on Nov. 12, 1934, in Cincinnati,...
See full article at Popsugar.com
  • 11/20/2017
  • by Ryan Roschke
  • Popsugar.com
House of Manson (2014)
The Celebrities Who Crossed Paths with Charles Manson and His Deadly Cult
House of Manson (2014)
Before Charles Manson — who died on Sunday at age 83 — and his murderous “family” of followers embarked on a plan to kill famous people in the ’60s, the group sought out celebrities as friends, roommates and professional connections.

Manson was drawn to the famous and glamorous, biographer Jeff Guinn explains to People: “Manson fully intended to become the most famous rock ’n’ roll star in history” — and he worked to connect with those who he believed could aid his career.

The time period is also important, Guinn says: From the mid- to late-‘60s, many celebrities embraced an egalitarian idea that...
See full article at PEOPLE.com
  • 11/20/2017
  • by Adam Carlson
  • PEOPLE.com
House of Manson (2014)
Cult Leader Charles Manson, Whose 1969 Murders Horrified the Nation, Dead at 83
House of Manson (2014)
Charles Manson, whose name became synonymous with evil after his arrest in connection with the 1969 murders of actress Sharon Tate and eight other people, has died of natural causes.

He was 83 and serving nine life sentences in California’s Corcoran State Prison at the time of his death, which was confirmed by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.

“I said a prayer for his soul,” Sharon Tate’s sister Debra tells People of the moment after she received a call from a prison official informing her Manson died on Sunday night.

Adds Anthony Dimaria, the nephew of Manson victim...
See full article at PEOPLE.com
  • 11/20/2017
  • by Johnny Dodd
  • PEOPLE.com
House of Manson (2014)
People Explains: Behind the Manson Murders That Terrorized the Nation — and the Killers Now
House of Manson (2014)
In the summer of 1969, a group of young people led by Charles Manson sent a wave of terror through the hills of the Los Angeles area, leaving a trail of bodies behind them.

Nearly 50 years later, here’s what you need to know about the cult’s violence, its victims and where the killers are now.

The ‘Family’ Forms

Manson began attracting followers after he was released from prison in March 1967. But before he and his murderous group embarked on a plan to kill famous people, they sought out celebrities as friends, roommates and professional connections.

As Dianne Lake, the...
See full article at PEOPLE.com
  • 10/20/2017
  • by Elaine Aradillas
  • PEOPLE.com
Doris Day "The Doris Day Show" 1968 CBS
Doris Day Looks Back on Her Legendary Life
Doris Day "The Doris Day Show" 1968 CBS
Doris Day is celebrating her 95th birthday on Monday — and not her 93rd birthday, as she had originally thought! The legendary songstress and film star is known for living a quiet life outside of the spotlight, but in 2011 in a rare interview, Doris sat down with People to discuss her love, friendship and career. Read the profile below:

Living out of the spotlight for more than 20 years in Carmel, Calif., Doris Day was quite surprised to get a certain call last January. It was Colin Firth, wanting to confess his schoolboy crush. “He told me when he was a kid,...
See full article at PEOPLE.com
  • 4/3/2017
  • by Liz McNeil
  • PEOPLE.com
How a Stolen Beach Boys Song Helped Lead to Charles Manson's Murderous Path
The Beach Boys' Dennis Wilson inadvertently puts Charles Manson on a path to Helter Skelter in this two-minute excerpt from the two-hour documentary Truth and Lies: The Family Manson, which airs Friday night on ABC.

The clip focuses on how Wilson, an associate of Manson's, took one of Manson's songs ("Cease to Exist") and turned it into the Beach Boys composition "Never Learn Not to Love," with Wilson giving himself full songwriting credit for the track.

"We actually recorded that song," the Beach Boys' Mike Love says in the excerpt.
See full article at Rollingstone.com
  • 3/17/2017
  • Rollingstone.com
Beach Boy Mike Love Reveals One of Manson's 'Girls' Was His Babysitter
Beach Boy Mike Love's new memoir, Good Vibrations, marries his recall of the group's rise to success with detours into the 1960s Southern California counterculture that thrived as the band emerged and climbed the musical charts. One of the darkest twists in that story is Love's brush with the "family" of Charles Manson, who is still serving time in prison along with his followers for a Los Angeles killing spree in August 1969. Among Love's connections to Manson: One of his "girls" babysat Love's kids, Love writes in Vibrations. Love, now 75, writes in an exclusive memoir excerpt in this week's issue of People,...
See full article at PEOPLE.com
  • 9/1/2016
  • by Jeff Truesdell, @jhtruesdell
  • PEOPLE.com
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