Morning Report - News from Sept. 25, 2002

Morning Report - News from Sept. 25, 2002


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By Elaine Dutka Sept. 25, 2002 12 AM PT Share via Close extra sharing options Email Facebook X LinkedIn Threads Reddit WhatsApp Copy Link URL Copied! Print


POP/ROCK


Settlement Reached in ‘Silence’ Case


What price silence?


Six figures--as British musician Mike Batt found out when he included a minute devoid of sound on “Classical Graffiti,” the latest album by his rock group, the Planets.


Batt agreed Monday to pay an undisclosed sum to the John Cage Trust, after publishers of the late American composer sued him for compensation, claiming he had plagiarized Cage’s 1952


composition, “4’33”,” which was totally silent. Batt’s piece, “A One Minute Silence,” had been credited to Batt/Cage.


Batt has registered copyrights for 4 minutes and 32 seconds of silence and 4 minutes and 34 seconds of silence. (“If there’s ever a Cage performance where they come in a second shorter or


longer, then it’s mine,” he told the New Yorker.)

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Nicholas Riddle, managing director of Cage’s publishers, Peters Edition, who accepted the check, said they were prepared to defend the concept of a silent piece because it was a valuable


artistic concept with a copyright.


Guilty Plea in Death of Betty Blowtorch Singer


An Illinois man has pleaded guilty to vehicular homicide in the death of L.A. rocker Bianca Halstead, 36, the lead singer for the female punk band Betty Blowtorch.


Brian McAllister, 34, told a Louisiana court that he was driving about 100 mph when the incident occurred on Dec. 15. Sideswiping another car as he was changing lanes, he skidded across the


median and hit a vehicle driven by Colorado resident Robert Fenkel, who has been confined to a wheelchair ever since. McAllister’s car then hit a pole, cutting his Corvette in two. Halstead,


an acquaintance of his, was in the passenger seat.

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McAllister, whose blood alcohol count was measured as .12, wasn’t hurt in the crash. He could get up to 20 years for Halstead’s death and five for Fenkel’s injury. Sentencing is scheduled


for Dec. 13.


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TELEVISION


‘Sopranos’ Question: Was It Inappropriate?


A Miss America judge was wrong to ask Alicia Renee Luciano, Miss New Jersey, about her views on “The Sopranos” during the interview segment of Saturday night’s pageant in New York City, the


contestant and some Italian American groups said.


The HBO drama focuses on fictional mob boss Tony Soprano as he juggles organized crime and his family life in suburban New Jersey.

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Luciano, 19, answered that people shouldn’t take TV shows seriously, and that good parenting should offset violence on the tube. “It was a question that I don’t think they would ask of


anyone, other than someone with my background,” she told the Daily Record of Parsippany. N.J. “I wasn’t expecting that. Everyone else was getting questions about how they felt about


performance dance and the arts.”


Several Italian American groups agreed that the question was insensitive and insulting to Luciano. Miss America officials could not be reached for comment.


Meanwhile, there is turbulence on the Miss Universe front, too: For the first time in its 52-year history, the reigning title-holder has been given the boot. Russia’s Oxana Fedorova, the


first woman from that country to win the crown, was replaced by Panama’s Justine Pasek.


Pageant spokeswoman Mary Hillard McMIllan said Fedorova “was not able to fulfill her obligations and her responsibilities,” which included global travel to speak on AIDS awareness. “Being at


home was more important for her,” she explained.


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MOVIES


More Films to be Saved From Extinction


Fifty-eight films, languishing unseen and forgotten in archives nationwide, will be the beneficiaries of grants from the National Film Preservation Foundation.


Among them: Duane Kubo’s 1976 documentary on the cultural scene in Los Angeles’ Little Tokyo; home movies made by dance luminary Katherine Dunham in Haiti in 1936; a film clandestinely shot


by an American in 1920s Soviet Russia; a backstage view of opera baritone Richard Bonelli during the 1930s; a 1973 documentary about the construction of the World Trade Center; and a student


performance by Ben Vereen.

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QUICK TAKES


During its first week on the market, “Monsters, Inc.” has sold 11 million DVDs and videocassettes in the U.S. and Canada, Disney/Pixar reports, a sales pace second only to “The Lion


King”.... Former First Lady Nancy Reagan will discuss her husband Ronald Reagan’s battle with Alzheimer’s disease on the season premiere of CBS’ “60 Minutes II” at 8 tonight.... Ridley


Scott, who just won an Emmy for HBO’s “The Gathering Storm,” is embarking on a second TV movie about Winston Churchill, focusing on his years as prime minister, to be followed by another


dealing with the post-war years.... Paramount Pictures is developing an updated version of the 1958 Elvis Presley film “King Creole,” the story of a New Orleans dishwasher who gets the


chance to perform for a night. No star has been announced.... R&B; singer Usher will play Marvin Gaye in an episode of NBC’s new series “American Dreams”.... ABC is developing a pilot for an


hourlong drama based on John Grisham’s bestseller “The Street Lawyer,” the tale of an attorney who leaves a big corporate firm to work for a legal-aid clinic.... Country singer Merle


Haggard, 65, has called off 11 concerts this month because of four herniated discs in his back.


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