Sunday, March 28, 2021

52nd NAACP Image Awards Honors Eddie Murphy, D-Nice, LeBron James and Stacey Abrams

By Darlene Donloe

The NAACP Image Awards were televised on March 27, capping a week of awards ceremonies that handed out awards in more than 70 categories honoring the accomplishments of people of color this past year across the fields of film, TV, music, literature, and social justice in voting by the public.

The primetime, two-hour show opened with remarks from President Joe Biden and VP Kamala Harris before the host, Anthony Anderson took over. Special tributes were given out to Eddie Murphy (the Hall of Fame Award, presented by Arsenio Hall) and NBA star LeBron James (Presidents Award) among others.

Here are the 2021 winners from March 27:

Entertainer of the Year

D-Nice


Outstanding Motion Picture

Bad Boys For Life


Outstanding Actor in a Motion Picture

Chadwick Boseman – “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom”


Social Justice Impact

Stacey Abrams


Outstanding Actress in a Motion Picture

Viola Davis – “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom”


Outstanding Actress in a Comedy Series

Issa Rae – “Insecure”


Outstanding Actress in a Drama Series

Viola Davis – “How To Get Away With Murder”


Outstanding Actor in a Drama Series

Regé-Jean Page – “Bridgerton”


Presidents Award

LeBron James


Hall of Fame Award

Eddie Murphy


Friday, March 26, 2021

The NAACP Image Awards Announce Non-Televised Award Winners

By Darlene Donloe

The NAACP Image Awards will air on March 27 with a live simulcast across ViacomCBS Networks which will include BET, CBS, MTV, VH1, MTV2, BET HER, and LOGO. Each day in between, the Image Awards has revealed winners from the non-televised award categories. Previous winners are below.

The NAACP Image Awards honors the accomplishments of people of color in the fields of television, music, literature, and film and also recognizes individuals or groups who promote social justice through creative endeavors.

March 25 Winner

Outstanding New Artist

Doja Cat – “Say So”

Outstanding Male Artist
Drake – “Laugh Now, Cry Later”

Outstanding Female Artist
Beyoncé – “Black Parade”

Outstanding Soul/R&B Song
“Do It” – Chloe x Halle

Outstanding Hip Hop/Rap Song
“Savage Remix” – Megan Thee Stallion feat. Beyoncé

Outstanding Duo, Group or Collaboration (Traditional)

Chloe x Halle – “Wonder What She Thinks Of Me”

Outstanding Duo, Group or Collaboration (Contemporary)
Megan Thee Stallion feat. Beyoncé – “Savage Remix”

Outstanding Album
“Chilombo” – Jhené Aiko

Outstanding Producer of the Year
Hit-Boy

Outstanding Music Video/Visual Album
“Brown Skin Girl” – Beyonce’ feat WizKid, SAINt JHN, Blu Ivy Carter

Outstanding Jazz Album – Instrumental

“Music From and Inspired By Soul” – Jon Batiste

Outstanding Jazz Album – Vocal
“Holy Room – Live at Alte Oper” – Somi

Outstanding International Song

“Lockdown” – Original Koffee

Outstanding Soundtrack/Compilation Album
“Soul” Original Motion Picture Soundtrack – Trent Reznor, Atticus Ross, Jon Batiste and Tom MacDougall

OutstandingGospel/Christian Song

“Touch from you” – Tamela Mann

Outstanding Gospel/Christian Album
“The Return” – The Clark Sisters

Special Award – Sports Award II
WNBA Player’s Association (Nneka Ogqumike accepting on behalf of WNBA)

March 24 WinnerOutstanding Talk Series

Red Table Talk

Outstanding Reality Program/Reality Competition or Game Show
Celebrity Family Feud

Outstanding Variety Show (Series or Special)
VERZUZ

Outstanding News/Information (Series or Special)

The New York Times Presents “The Killing of Breonna Taylor”

Outstanding Children’s Program
Family Reunion

Outstanding Performance by a Youth (Series, Special, Television Movie or Limited-Series)
Marsai Martin – “Black-ish”

Outstanding Animated Series
Doc McStuffins

Outstanding Animated Motion Picture

SoulOutstanding Character Voice-Over Performance (Television)

Laya DeLeon Hayes – “Doc McStuffins”

Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance – Motion Picture
Jamie Foxx – “Soul”

Outstanding Host in a Talk or News/Information (Series or Special) – Individual or Ensemble
Trevor Noah – “The Daily Show with Trevor Noah”

Outstanding Host in a Reality/Reality Competition, Game Show or Variety (Series or Special) – Individual or Ensemble
Steve Harvey – “Celebrity Family Feud”

Outstanding Guest Performance – Comedy or Drama Series

Loretta Devine- “P-Valley”Outstanding Breakthrough Creative (Television)

Raynelle Swilling – “Cherish the Day”

Special Award – Founder’s Award
Toni Vaz

March 23 Winners

Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series
Michaela Coel – “I May Destroy You” – Ep. 112 “Ego Death”

Outstanding Writing in a Drama Series
Attica Locke – “Little Fires Everywhere” – Ep. 104 “The Spider Web”

Outstanding Writing in a Television Movie or Special
Geri Cole – “The Power of We: A Sesame Street Special”

Outstanding Writing in a Motion PictureRadha Blank – “The Forty-Year-Old Version”

Outstanding Directing in a Comedy Series
Anya Adams – “black-ish” – Ep. 611 “Hair Day”

Outstanding Directing in a Drama Series
Hanelle Culpepper – “Star Trek: Picard” – Ep. 101 “Remembrance”

Outstanding Directing in a Television Movie or Special
Eugene Ashe – “Sylvie’s Love”

Outstanding Directing in a Motion Picture
Gina Prince-Bythewood – “The Old Guard”

Outstanding Short Form Series – Comedy or Drama

“#FreeRayshawn“

Outstanding Performance in a Short Form
Laurence Fishburne – “#FreeRayshawn”

Outstanding Short Form Series – Reality/Nonfiction
“Between The Scenes” – The Daily Show with Trevor Noah

Outstanding Short-Film (Live Action)
“Black Boy Joy”

Outstanding Short-Film (Animated)
“Canvas”

Special Award – Spingarn Medal

Misty CopelandMarch 22 Winners

Outstanding Literary Work – Fiction
“The Awkward Black Man” – Walter Mosley

Outstanding Literary Work – Nonfiction
“A Promised Land” – Barack Obama

Outstanding Literary Work – Debut Author
“We’re Better Than This” – Elijah Cummings

 Outstanding Literary Work – Biography/Autobiography
“The Dead Are Arising” – Les Payne, Tamara Payne

Outstanding Literary Work – Instructional

“Vegetable Kingdom” – Bryant Terry

Outstanding Literary Work – Poetry
“The Age of Phillis” – Honorée Jeffers

Outstanding Literary Work – Children
“She Was the First!: The Trailblazing Life of Shirley Chisholm” – Katheryn Russell-Brown, Eric Velasquez

Outstanding Literary Work – Youth/Teens
“Before the Ever After” – Jacqueline Woodson

Outstanding Directing in a Documentary (Television or Motion Picture)
Keith McQuirter – “By Whatever Means Necessary: The Times of Godfather of Harlem”

Outstanding Writing in a Documentary (Television or Motion Picture)
Melissa Haizlip – “Mr. SOUL!”

Outstanding Documentary (Film)
“John Lewis: Good Trouble”

Outstanding Documentary (Television – Series or Special)

“The Last Dance” Special Award – Youth Activist of the Year

Madison Potts


Special Award – Activist of the Year

Reverend Dr. Wendell Anthony

Wednesday, March 24, 2021

Guitarist Richard Smith Says 'Let's Roll'

   


LOS ANGELES (24 March 2021): Last March, guitarist Richard Smith was in a battle for his life. Before the doctors and nurses administered the experimental infusions that he hoped would strangle the stage 3 cancer gripping his throat, his daily response to their inquiries asking if he was ready for the four-hour process that he went through for 45 consecutive days became an affirmation: “Let’s roll.” A year later and now cancer-free, Smith is set to drop his first US single in five years, “Let’s Roll,” which he wrote with Billboard chart-topping guitarist Adam Hawley, who produced the uplifting track featuring saxophonist-flutist Jeff Kashiwa.

Shortly before Smith’s diagnosis, the former chair of the contemporary guitar department at the Thornton School of Music at USC’s former student, Hawley, sent a demo track of the single that goes for playlist adds on March 29 from Chillharmonic Media. “Let’s Roll” was to become Smith’s daily mantra before infusions.

“The clinical trial drug that I volunteered for was a daily four hours of intravenous infusion, as well as radiation and chemotherapy that drained my mojo to zombie levels every day. Fortunately, the drug is now in production and is a game-changer,” said Smith, who lost 40 pounds during treatment and has an eight-inch scar on his neck from the surgery.

“Let’s Roll” previews Smith’s forthcoming 13th album, “Language of the Soul,” which he plans to drop in the Fall.

“The album title comes from a piece written by great South American poet Pablo Neruda, who I discovered while on tour in Argentina and have become a huge fan. The new album is a lively collection of pieces that I recorded over the last two years while living in Finland, Italy, Greece, London and while isolated here in LA. I wanted to get back in my ‘LA lane’ and working with Adam (Hawley) helped me get back in the musical headspace to produce music for an American audience,” said Smith who remains a full professor at USC.

Smith’s “SOuLIDIFIED” (2003) album spent 17 weeks in the top 10 in terms of airplay and his 2015 set, “Tangos,” spent more than five months in the top 10 of the indie and contemporary jazz charts. As a featured sideman and collaborator, Smith has recorded or shared the stage with contemporary jazz royalty, including Richard Elliot, Peter White, Kenny G, Dave Koz, Gerald Albright, Mindi Abair, Eric Marienthal, Brian Bromberg, Warren Hill, Everette Harp and Dan Siegel. Opportunities over the last ten years to perform, compose and record with international artists and at universities aboard afforded Smith the opportunity to combine his two loves.

“I can’t separate my passion for making music from my passion for teaching it. So, I committed to a musical life away from the States. I get summers off from USC, so I hop on a plane the day after classes and spend May to September abroad. My music has changed a lot, doing arrangements that suit European concert goers. However, when I met American actress Nancy Lee Grahn (General Hospital), I decided to return to full-time life in the United States and get back to my West Coast modern jazz roots.”

Although Smith describes the exuberant R&B instrumental groove on “Let’s Roll” as “very West Coast, very LA,” songs from the upcoming album tackle weightier subjects than just “palm trees, ocean breezes, and great vibes.”     

“A few songs from ‘Language of the Soul’ have political origins. A big part of songwriting history is songs of protest and struggle. We are in such turbulent times that as an artist, it is impossible to avoid the opportunity to share the inspiration and social commentary that such times provide,” said Smith.

It’s possible that Smith’s cancer experiences may inspire more music that will appear on “Language of the Soul.”   

“A typical thing that cancer survivors say is that no one understands except the people who have been through it. That is so true, but it helps those who haven’t been through it to share some of the details – whether it helps them personally or one of their loved ones as they go through it.”


                


For more information, please visit https://www.richardsmithguitar.com.

Friday, March 19, 2021

'Speed' For The First Time In 4K Ultra HD



Jan de Bont’s action thriller “Speed” races to 4K Ultra HD™ for the first time on May 4, including a limited-edition SteelBook® found only at Best Buy.




Hold on tight for a rush of pulse-pounding thrills, breathtaking stunts, and unexpected romance in a film you’ll want to see again and again. Keanu Reeves stars as an L.A.P.D. SWAT team specialist who is sent to defuse a bomb that a revenge-driven extortionist (Dennis Hopper) has planted on a city bus. But until he does, one of the passengers (Sandra Bullock) must keep the bus speeding through the streets of Los Angeles at more than 50 miles per hour – or the bomb will explode. A high-octane chase of suspense, nonstop action, and surprise twists, “Speed” is a joyride sure to keep you on the edge of your seat!

 

“Speed” Bonus Features*

  • Audio Commentary by Jan de Bont
  • Audio Commentary by Graham Yost and Mark Gordon
  • Action Sequences
    • Bus Jump
    • Metrorail Crash
  • Inside Speed
    • On Location
    • Stunts
    • Visual Effects
    • HBO First Look: The Making of Speed
  • Extended Scenes
    • Jack Shoots Payne in the Neck
    • Payne Lives/Cops Party
    • Annie’s Job
    • After Helen’s Death
    • Ray’s Crime
    • Cargo Jet Explosion: The Airline Version

Speed Music Video by Billy Idol

*bonus features vary by product and retailer

“Speed” Product Specifications

Street Date: May 4, 2021

Feature Run Time: 115 minutes

Rating: U.S. Rated R

Bonus material not rated       

Aspect Ratio:

Physical: 2.39:1

4K Ultra HD™ Digital: 2.39

U.S. Audio:

4K Ultra HD™ & Blu-ray™: English 5.1 DTS-HDMA, Spanish 5.1

Dolby Digital, French 5.1 Digital Surround, English DVS 2.0 Dolby Digital

4K Ultra HD™ Digital: English Dolby Atmos, English 5.1 & 2.0 Dolby Digital, Latin Spanish 5.1 & 2.0 Dolby Digital, French 5.1 & 2.0 Dolby Digital, English Descriptive Audio 2.0 Dolby Digital (some platforms)

U.S. Subtitles:

4K Ultra HD™ & Blu-ray™: English SDH, Spanish, French

4K Ultra HD™ Digital: English SDH, Spanish, French (some platforms)


 

Thursday, March 11, 2021

'Executive Order,' PAFF's Closing Night Film, A Highly-Charged Drama

 

By Darlene Donloe

The Pan African Film Festival’s (PAFF) closing night film is director Lázaro Ramos’s highly-charged drama, “Executive Order.” 

The film, set in a dystopian near-future in Rio de Janeiro, begins when a lawyer sues the Brazilian government for reparation of all descendants of African slaves in the country. 

In a surprising or maybe not so surprising turn of events, the authoritarian government responds by signing an executive order sending all Black citizens to Africa as an excuse to repay the debts of slavery. 

In the vein of the paper bag test of years gone by instituted to decide whether or not a Black person was too dark to be admitted in a particular place, citizens are measured by their skin color, hunted, and exiled to Africa against their will.

Brazilians of primarily European lineage impose a “solution” to racial inequality wherein Brazil finds a much cheaper way to deal with the issue of expensive reparations, instead of paying the descendants of enslaved people the “back wages” they are due because their ancestors, forced to work as free labor, are historically owed.

While the army and police enforce the law, a man (Alfred Enoch) enlists his uncle to find his wife, a doctor who has gone underground so she won’t be deported.  The man, however, is holed up in his apartment with his cousin, refusing to leave. 

This film brings back memories of Playwright Douglas Turner Ward’s play, Day of Absence, which premiered off-off-Broadway in 1965.   That play tells the story of a Southern town where all of its Black residents suddenly disappear, but on their own terms. The production stars Black actors in whiteface in a reverse minstrel show style. It explores themes of whiteness and discrimination against Black Americans through its insertion of Black actors into farcical situations inhabiting white bodies.

Ramos does a masterful turn in building the drama, as we suddenly see Black people being rounded up and forced to literally go back to Africa. Ramos is a renowned actor from Bahia, Brazil who found fame in soap operas and movies. This is his first work as a director. He obviously did his homework. He makes good use of light – keeping it dark and grayish to signify the angst and evilness of the moment.

In a bold and daring move, Ramos shows the government literally taking the words, “Go back to where you came from” to send their “melanin citizens” (saying “black” has been outlawed) to Africa.

The film is disturbing on several levels. It’s in your face and doesn’t back down. It forces the viewer to fully imagine the possibilities.

Ramos co-wrote the script with Lusa Silvestre. He is married to the film’s co-star Tais Araujo.

Alfred Enoch, best known for his turn on How To Get Away With Murder, gives a stirring performance.  The shock, anger, and disbelief of what’s happening to him in his country, and going through the drama not knowing whether his wife has been caught and sent back – is crucial to building the suspense.

Enoch’s character has no idea that his wife has made it to the underground where a group of revolutionaries is planning their next move. 

The scary part about Executive Order is that the movie doesn't feel so far-fetched. It is totally believable.

Ethnic cleansing is not a crazy idea in the least.

The film, directed by Lazaro Ramos, stars Alfred Enoch, Tais Araujo, Seu Jorge, Adirana Esteves, Renata Sorrah,

On the DONLOE SCALE, D (don’t bother), O (oh, no), N (needs work), L (likable), O (oh, yeah), and E (excellent), 'Executive Order' gets an L (likable).




Perry, Day and Daniels Talk About The Making of 'The United States vs. Billie Holiday' During PAFF

By Darlene Donloe

The buzz around Hollywood is circling around Lee Daniels’ latest drama, “The United States vs. Billie Holiday,” starring singer Andra Day as the legendary singer. 

The film, currently running on HULU, garnered Day her first Golden Globe nomination and first win as the jazz great. 

As part of the Pan African Film Festival’s programming, a Conversation with Tyler Perry, Andra Day & Lee Daniels was held virtually on Wednesday, March 10. 

Perry interviewed Day and Daniels about the making of the movie. 

‘The United States vs. Billie Holiday’ tells the story of one of the greatest jazz legends in history. 

Beginning in the 1940's in New York City, the federal government targeted Holiday in a growing effort to escalate and racialize the war on drugs, ultimately aiming to stop her from singing her controversial and heart-wrenching ballad, "Strange Fruit." Led by Oscar® nominated director Lee Daniels and introducing Grammy® nominated singer-songwriter Andra Day, The United States vs. Billie Holiday unapologetically presents the icon's complicated, irrepressible life. Screenplay writer Suzan-Lori Parks, the first African American woman to win a Pulitzer Prize for Drama, pens this intimate tale of a fierce trailblazer whose defiance through music helped usher in the civil rights movement. 

NAACP Image Award® Nominee Trevante Rhodes and Emmy® Nominee Natasha Lyonne co-star along with Garrett Hedlund, Miss Lawrence, Rob Morgan, Da'Vine Joy Randolph, Evan Ross, Tyler James Williams, Tone Bell, and Erik LaRay Harvey.

Below is the above-mentioned conversation led by Perry (TP), who questioned Daniels (LD) and Day (AD).

TP: No one Black men has been as instrumental in getting Black women some awards as you, Lee. You had Halle Berry in “Monsters Ball,” you have Monique in “Precious” and now Andra Day in ‘The United States vs. Billie Holiday”. 

LD: It feels good. It feels good to be able to understand Black women. They were really supportive of me as a kid. My mom and my aunts were very supportive. I understand the colors that Black women have. I try to dimensionalize Black women. I don’t think about it, I just do it. 

TP: Andra, you lose yourself in this film. To see you embody her. I thought, did they re-master her songs?  How did you do that?

AD: Doubling specific vision for Billie. Lee said, he didn't want an imitation, he wanted an interpretation.

LD: Tyler, this woman is spiritual. Tyler, she prays as much as you.  She snatches me and she jumps into prayer.

AD: It was the center of everything we did on set. I don’t drink. I don’t smoke, but I had to do all that. That gravel was part of her character. 

TP: I was four when “Lady Sings the Blues” came out. It was a big deal. She (Diana Ross) was up against Cicely Tyson for “Sounder.” You (Andra) were one-year-old when Whoopi won an award. Have you taken all this stuff in? 

AD: Not really. I don’t remember hearing my full name. But then the room went wild.

TP:  Someone this powerful and dominating. Lee, why Billie Holiday? Why tell this story?

LD: She (Billie) was a civil rights leader. I did not know that. We really need to know as Black people who our heroes are. You do not know she kicked up civil rights with that song. She stood up against the government. Before Martin Luther King, before Rosa Parks, she was there. (J. Edgar) Hoover couldn't penetrate Harlem, so they sent in someone Black. The song was the nail in the coffin. She was defiant and said, ‘No, I ain’t doing nothing.’

AD: With Billie, it’s in her gut and in her shoulders. I truly believe, in my experience and prayers, I asked for her. I do believe that she wanted her story told. That it was supposed to be told. 

LD: The studio wouldn't give me nickel over a nickel, Tyler. I knew that wasn’t the case for another movie.

TP: I’m going to give you $7 million or $9 million, but I’m going to give $30 million for another guy to tell the story of white people. It’s just flat out unfair. 

LD: You can't rely on the system. You have to be your own system.  

TP: How do you keep your motivation when you know it's just about being Black?

LD: It is prayer, Tyler.   It was my first film sober. Clear and sober.  When the timing is right, the timing is right. I was not – not going to win. I had to honor Billie. She didn't have a support team like I had. She had the opposite. The government was paying off her friends.

TP: The beautiful thing is you said, they didn’t win, but I’m going to win. 

AD: His openness of his own addiction and how transparent he was. We said we had to do this for him and for our family members who have been taken from us through addiction. 

LD: When you think about what Black people have gone through, I’m surprised we’re all not experiencing addiction. I  can't believe we are thriving as beautifully as we are. 

TP: It was so bold to take on so many subjects of her. The addiction, the music. I never knew about her being a queer woman. I did not know what she was dealing with, with the government. 

LD: I did not understand ‘Strange Fruit’ really until I read Suzan Lori Parks’s book. I realized the impact after that. 

AD: People asked me how I did the dying scene. I had to die. I had to die in my body. Singing ‘Strange Fruit.’ This is an ugly song. This is not a good song. Don’t clap. Don’t say how good it is. It’s not a good song. Don’t tell me how great I sing it. It’s not a good song. If you think it’s a good song, go out and do something. 


Wednesday, March 10, 2021

Los Angeles Women's Theatre Festival Announces Silent Auction, Opens March 20

 


 

          The Los Angeles Women’s Theatre Festival celebrates twenty-eight years of presenting and supporting and empowering female performing artists with a very special silent auction, featuring distinctive works of art and one-of-a-kind celebrity and Hollywood memorabilia. Proceeds of the auction will go to enable the continuing work of this 501c3 non-profit organization, providing platforms for the artistic output of female performing artists and educational outreach programming to develop new works.

          We are re-naming the event the Sound and Vision-28 Auction (“28” for twenty-eight years of the Los Angeles Women’s Theatre Festival).

          The Silent Auction will run from March 20 through March 30, 2021. Bids can be placed at the Festival website, http://lawtf.org . You can view most of the items in advance at this website. All of the items are worth your consideration.

A partial list of the items to be offered follows:

           SIGNED tee-shirt with matching mask and sheet music for “Io Si (Seen)” from the film The Life Ahead, from 2021 Golden Globe winner Diane Warren.

           Four dazzling paintings by L.A.-based artist MizzJArt:-), each SIGNED by the artist.

           A script from Grace and Frankie, season 6 episode 8, SIGNED by stars Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin.

           Diahann Carroll Commemorative and Rare Retrospective Program.

           25th Anniversary paperback edition of the play The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe SIGNED by star Lily Tomlin and playwright Jane Wagner., bundled with a DVD of the film version of The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe SIGNED by Lily Tomlin and Jane Wagner.

           Women in Media tote bag and tee-shirt combo.

           The Mother of Black Hollywood memoir SIGNED by Jenifer Lewis (Black-ish, Strong Medicine) bundled with a SIGNED poster for So Much Love – An Evening with Jenifer Lewis. 

          Best-selling book On My Own Terms: An Actor’s Journey SIGNED by author and Los Angeles Women’s Theatre Festival Co-Founder Adilah Barnes.

          It Takes a Village SIGNED by Hillary Rodham Clinton, This is the 2017 edition for young readers with illustrations by Maria Frazee, with a new introduction by Ms. Clinton.

          Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner screenplay by William Rose SIGNED by the film’s director and producer Stanley Kramer.

           It’s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World original screenplay by William and Tania Rose, directed and produced by Stanley Kramer.

           Turnover, DVD of award-winning comedy/drama SIGNED by co-star and co-producer Kat Kramer.

          Bless the Beasts and Children CD SIGNED by performer Kat Kramer. Includes a new version of the Oscar® nominated song from the film produced and directed by Ms. Kramer’s late father, Stanley Kramer.

           The Incredible Shrinking Woman. 40th Anniversary DVD SIGNED by Lily Tomlin and screenwriter Jane Wagner, bundled with An Apology to Elephants, DVD of documentary SIGNED by producer and narrator Lily Tomlin (Emmy® Award) and teleplay writer Jane Wagner.

           Grandma. DVD of comedy-drama starring Lily Tomlin, Julia Garner, Marcia Gay Harden, Laverne Cox and Sam Elliott. SIGNED by Lily Tomlin.

          The Totally Unscientific Study of the Search for Human Happiness. Hard copy of book SIGNED by author, comedian Paula Poundstone.

          Lily Tomlin On Stage- LP recorded during her 1977 Broadway appearance in Appearing Nitely. SIGNED by Lily Tomlin.

          Bundle of two CDs Body and Soul and In the Groove SIGNED by singer Lainie Kazan.

           Harriet Soundtrack CD. Features Cynthia Erivo. Score by Terence Blanchard. Donated by Ms. Erivo.

          Pearl Jam poster.

         The Young & the Restless script SIGNED by actor Fay Hauser-Price (“Detective Salena Wiley”).

          Roots: The Next Generation photo of Fay Hauser-Price, Henry Fonda, and Richard Thomas, SIGNED by Ms. Hauser-Price.

          Bids will conclude on March 30, 2021, and winners will be announced directly following this event.