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Paul Simon, 83, undergoes back surgery after canceling 2 shows
Paul Simon, 83, undergoes back surgery after canceling 2 shows

New York Post

time04-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Post

Paul Simon, 83, undergoes back surgery after canceling 2 shows

Hello darkness. Paul Simon underwent successful back surgery after 'severe' pain forced the legendary musician to cancel two shows. The 'Sounds of Silence' singer, 83, was forced to cancel Philadelphia shows on June 27 and June 28. 'As previously reported, Paul Simon underwent a surgical procedure this week to alleviate severe back pain that he has been experiencing for some time. Thanks to a great team of doctors, the surgery went well, as expected,' his official Instagram account read on July 3. 8 Paul Simon onstage at the premiere of 'In Restless Dreams: The Music of Paul Simon' at the 2023 Toronto International Film Festival. Getty Images 8 Paul Simon performs at the White House on April 10, 2024. AFP via Getty Images 8 The initial statement on Paul Simon's instagram. Paul Simon/Instagram His surgery also caused him to postpone his scheduled show on July 7 at The Terrace Theater in Long Beach, Calif. The Instagram statement continued, 'However, it has become clear he will need one additional day of rest and recuperation to ensure he is able to perform at the top of his ability in Long Beach.' Out of an 'abundance of caution,' his team decided to delay his July 7 concert by one day, the statement explained. The Simon & Garfunkel icon is on his A Quiet Celebration Tour, which he announced in February, shortly after performing 'Homeward Bound' alongside Sabrina Carpenter during the 'Saturday Night Live 50th Anniversary Special.' It's scheduled to wrap in August. 8 New York Yankees pitcher Gerrit Cole with Paul Simon on the field before the game on June 21, 2024. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post 8 Art Garfunkel (left) and Paul Simon on tour at the Arena in Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania, October 16, 2003. REUTERS 8 Paul Simon performs onstage during the 2024 PEN America Spring Literary Gala at American Museum of Natural History on May 16, 2024 in New York City. Getty Images for PEN America Previously, the 'Bridge over Troubled Water' singer retired from touring in 2018, due to hearing loss. That year, he ended his farewell concert tour at Flushing Meadows Park, where his career began: the borough of Queens. 'Hello, my friends,' he greeted his cheering crowd at the time. 'This is 2 miles from where I played high school baseball in Forest Hills.' While recording his 2023 album 'Seven Psalms,' the Rock & Roll Hall of Famer was suffering from hearing loss in his left ear that made the idea of extended live performances seem impossible. 8 Paul Simon performs on 'The Late Show with Stephen Colbert' on June 19, 2025. CBS via Getty Images 'It was incredibly frustrating. I was very angry at first that this had happened,' Simon told 'CBS Mornings.' But after working with the Stanford Initiative to Cure Hearing Loss and his own production team, Simon revamped his entire stage setup to make performing viable again. His current tour is at intimate venues, to provide a better setting acoustically for Simon's hearing challenges. 8 Paul Simon plays 'The Sound of Silence' alongside a student protester during the March for Our Lives rally on March 24, 2018 in Stamford, Connecticut. Getty Images Simon released his most recent solo album, 'Seven Psalms,' in 2023. It was his first album since 2018 – and his first new material since 2016. Prior to his surgery, Simon's team posted another statement on Instagram explaining the canceled shows. 'Paul has been struggling with chronic and intense back pain,' a statement posted to his Instagram read on June 28. 'Today it became unmanageable and demands immediate attention. Unfortunately, we have to cancel these shows at this time, as we don't have the ability to reschedule them.' The statement didn't specify what surgery the 'Mrs. Robinson' singer had, but simply called it a 'minor surgical procedure.'

For these documentary directors, HBO is the anti-'Predictable Content Channel'
For these documentary directors, HBO is the anti-'Predictable Content Channel'

Los Angeles Times

time04-06-2025

  • Business
  • Los Angeles Times

For these documentary directors, HBO is the anti-'Predictable Content Channel'

When Oscar winner Alex Gibney sent HBO Documentary Films executives an early cut of his new movie, 'Wise Guy: David Chase and the Sopranos,' he was blindsided by the feedback he received. 'God bless HBO, they said, 'This is so good — make it longer.' I rarely get that note.' In the streaming world, documentaries have exploded, with newcomers like Netflix and Hulu chasing the next binge-worthy sensation. But HBO Documentary Films, which started in a nascent form in the late 1970s, remains a distinguished player, regarded as an especially prestigious and director-driven home for nonfiction fare. To understand why, it helps to talk to filmmakers who have recently worked with HBO — including Gibney, whose two-part documentary chronicles both Chase and his groundbreaking series across a sweeping canvas. 'I have a hard time making short docs,' jokes Gibney, whose 2023 MGM+ documentary 'In Restless Dreams: The Music of Paul Simon' stretched 3½ hours. ('Wise Guy,' initially two hours, is now roughly that length.) 'But [HBO] said, 'You've got all this great stuff. You should lean into this and that.'' Many directors echo this appreciation for the freedom HBO affords them to do what they want in a commercial space often dictated by algorithms and house styles. For Matt Wolf, the man behind 'Pee-wee as Himself,' about Paul Reubens and his alter ego Pee-wee Herman, it was important to craft a nuanced portrait. 'We had a lot of autonomy and made the film very independently,' Wolf says, 'until we were at the postproduction stage, when HBO became vital partners,' alluding to Reubens' shocking 2023 death, which revealed that the performer had privately been battling cancer. 'Some partners might've said, 'Paul's passed away, this is newsworthy — we need a film in a few months,'' Wolf says. 'But HBO was amazing in seeing that this is an evergreen story and that it wasn't a rush. It was more about doing something with gravitas that could be profound and emotional. That takes time, and they gave me that time.' Still, HBO offers its filmmakers plenty of notes — and has from the start. In 1979, Sheila Nevins was hired to run the channel's burgeoning documentary programming, eventually becoming president of HBO Documentary Films. 'Back then, HBO was a haven to make these really cool films,' recalls Oscar-nominated director Nanette Burstein, who first worked with Nevins as a co-writer and editor on 1995's 'Before You Go: A Daughter's Diary.' 'Sheila was the queen, and she was great at it. She gave pointed notes: 'This is what I think should happen.'' In 2019, Nevins left HBO for MTV Documentary Films, but Burstein, whose HBO documentary 'Elizabeth Taylor: The Lost Tapes' recontextualizes the Hollywood legend through a never-before-heard interview, credits current heads Nancy Abraham and Lisa Heller, along with Senior Vice President Sara Rodriguez, with continuing Nevins' championing of the director's voice. That said, Burstein adds, the present regime is 'very much respectful of a filmmaker and less — what's the diplomatic term?' She chuckles. 'Sheila had a very strong opinion. [Now] it's more of a discussion.' 'Sheila Nevins deserves enormous credit, not only for documentaries at HBO but documentaries, period,' agrees Gibney. 'She showed that they can be wildly entertaining, even when they're not about celebrities. She had a sense that they have to be viscerally powerful — they can't be like spinach.' But like Burstein, he acknowledges Nevins' firm point of view: 'I had some difficult conversations with her [about my films]. I would argue with her. Sometimes I accepted [her notes], sometimes I didn't.' Lance Oppenheim, director of 'Ren Faire,' a juicy soap opera about a battle for control of the Texas Renaissance Festival, was grateful HBO doesn't impose a mandate for how its movies look and feel. 'That's really admirable in this day and age when other buyers and streamers algorithmically make stuff,' he says. 'You can see it in some of the things that feel like they're being spoon-fed to us. They were always so open to the stylization [of 'Ren Faire'] that maybe other places would be a little bit intimidated by — or would've asked me to tell the story a little straighter.' No one expects a straightforward documentary from Eric Goode, director of Netflix's 2020 hit 'Tiger King.' His follow-up, 'Chimp Crazy,' is similarly outlandish, following a former nurse, Tonia Haddix, who's obsessed with collecting chimpanzees — even as PETA wisely tries to stop her. Goode's unconventional techniques, including hiring a proxy director to get close to Haddix so she was unaware of Goode's involvement, provoked criticism from documentary purists. But he argues that it's all in the name of promoting animal rights. 'If you want to make a difference, you can't just preach to the converted,' says Goode. 'You have to make a big bang. So many [advocacy] films feel like you're in school. You want to preach to people that don't know the issues. And the only way to do that is to do things that are entertainment, that are going to make people scratch their head and say, 'Wait a minute, I just watched this whole thing and there's something disturbing about this.'' When asked if HBO had qualms about his methods, Goode replies, 'It may have come up but not with me directly.' Executives' hands-off approach worked: 'Chimp Crazy' was the most popular HBO documentary in years. These five projects — a combination of celebrity portraits, true-crime thrillers and oddball sagas — suggest the breadth of HBO Documentary Films' strategy for an art form that has blossomed on the small screen. Balancing compulsive watchability with a touch of class, the company is still trying to break the mold while simultaneously catering to the masses. 'It feels very fresh,' Gibney says of the company's broad slate. 'It feels like a film festival — as opposed to 'Here comes the Predictable Content Channel.''

Paul Simon is abandoning his retirement plans to embark on the Quiet Celebration Tour
Paul Simon is abandoning his retirement plans to embark on the Quiet Celebration Tour

CNN

time21-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • CNN

Paul Simon is abandoning his retirement plans to embark on the Quiet Celebration Tour

Those who were excited to see Paul Simon singing a duet on stage with Sabrina Carpenter on 'SNL50' will be pleased to know his performing days are not behind him after all. On Tuesday, Simon announced via his social media that he is heading out on the Quiet Celebration Tour. Tickets go on sale Friday on his website. The tour will kick off April 4 in New Orleans and end August 3 in Seattle. Simon, who has lost most of his hearing in his left ear, was set to retire in 2018 after what he said at the time was his farewell tour. In 2023, he addressed the challenge of his hearing loss during a post-screening Q&A for the documentary 'In Restless Dreams: The Music of Paul Simon' at the Toronto International Film Festival, according to The Hollywood Reporter. 'I haven't accepted it entirely, but I'm beginning to,' he said. Last year, in an interview with The Guardian Simon somewhat changed his tune, saying he was 'optimistic' about returning to the stage. 'Six months ago, I was pessimistic,' he said then. Simon and Carpenter kicked off last Sunday's 'Saturday Night Live' special with a duet of 'Homeward Bound.' Simon first rose to musical acclaim in the 1960s as one half of the duo Simon & Garfunkel, before he went on to have an award-winning solo career.

Paul Simon is abandoning his retirement plans to embark on the Quiet Celebration Tour
Paul Simon is abandoning his retirement plans to embark on the Quiet Celebration Tour

CNN

time18-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • CNN

Paul Simon is abandoning his retirement plans to embark on the Quiet Celebration Tour

Those who were excited to see Paul Simon singing a duet on stage with Sabrina Carpenter on 'SNL50' will be pleased to know his performing days are not behind him after all. On Tuesday, Simon announced via his social media that he is heading out on the Quiet Celebration Tour. Tickets go on sale Friday on his website. The tour will kick off April 4 in New Orleans and end August 3 in Seattle. Simon, who has lost most of his hearing in his left ear, was set to retire in 2018 after what he said at the time was his farewell tour. In 2023, he addressed the challenge of his hearing loss during a post-screening Q&A for the documentary 'In Restless Dreams: The Music of Paul Simon' at the Toronto International Film Festival, according to The Hollywood Reporter. 'I haven't accepted it entirely, but I'm beginning to,' he said. Last year, in an interview with The Guardian Simon somewhat changed his tune, saying he was 'optimistic' about returning to the stage. 'Six months ago, I was pessimistic,' he said then. Simon and Carpenter kicked off last Sunday's 'Saturday Night Live' special with a duet of 'Homeward Bound.' Simon first rose to musical acclaim in the 1960s as one half of the duo Simon & Garfunkel, before he went on to have an award-winning solo career.

Paul Simon is abandoning his retirement plans to embark on the Quiet Celebration Tour
Paul Simon is abandoning his retirement plans to embark on the Quiet Celebration Tour

CNN

time18-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • CNN

Paul Simon is abandoning his retirement plans to embark on the Quiet Celebration Tour

Those who were excited to see Paul Simon singing a duet on stage with Sabrina Carpenter on 'SNL50' will be pleased to know his performing days are not behind him after all. On Tuesday, Simon announced via his social media that he is heading out on the Quiet Celebration Tour. Tickets go on sale Friday on his website. The tour will kick off April 4 in New Orleans and end August 3 in Seattle. Simon, who has lost most of his hearing in his left ear, was set to retire in 2018 after what he said at the time was his farewell tour. In 2023, he addressed the challenge of his hearing loss during a post-screening Q&A for the documentary 'In Restless Dreams: The Music of Paul Simon' at the Toronto International Film Festival, according to The Hollywood Reporter. 'I haven't accepted it entirely, but I'm beginning to,' he said. Last year, in an interview with The Guardian Simon somewhat changed his tune, saying he was 'optimistic' about returning to the stage. 'Six months ago, I was pessimistic,' he said then. Simon and Carpenter kicked off last Sunday's 'Saturday Night Live' special with a duet of 'Homeward Bound.' Simon first rose to musical acclaim in the 1960s as one half of the duo Simon & Garfunkel, before he went on to have an award-winning solo career.

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