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Entertainment

Jerome Hellman, Producer of ‘Midnight Cowboy,’ Dies at 92

Many critics found the film off-putting, and it did not do well at the box office. Pauline Kael of The New Yorker said it had “no emotional center.” Although Roger Ebert of The Chicago Sun-Times loved Mr. Sutherland’s performance, he found most of the characters too clearly doomed to care about.

But Mr. Canby wrote in The Times that the film was “in many ways remarkable,” declaring its subject a metaphor for the decline of Western civilization and “second-rateness as a way of life.”

Judith Crist, then the acclaimed founding movie critic for New York magazine, praised “The Day of the Locust” in a full-page review. “So brilliant is” this film, she began, “so dazzling and harrowing its impact, so impotent are the superlatives it evokes” that you almost want to avoid looking at it directly, like a solar eclipse. She concluded, “To call it the finest film of the past several years is to belittle it.”

The National Board of Review named it one of the year’s 10 best films.

Jerome Hellman was born on Sept. 4, 1928, in Manhattan, the second child of Abraham J. Hellman, a Romanian-born insurance broker, and Ethel (Greenstein) Hellman. After high school, he served two years in the Marine Corps, then began his working life as a messenger in the New York office of Ashley-Steiner, a talent agency.

He rose through the ranks and founded his own agency in 1957, before he was 30. But he sold that business in 1963 and became a full-time movie producer, beginning with George Roy Hill’s comedy “The World of Henry Orient” (1964). Peter Sellers played the title role, a New York concert pianist who is trying to initiate an affair with a married woman but is being stalked by two adoring adolescent girls. The film was both well reviewed and a hit.

His other films as producer were Irvin Kershner’s “A Fine Madness” (1966), starring Sean Connery as a poet with writer’s block, and “Promises in the Dark” (1979), starring Marsha Mason as a doctor treating a teenage cancer patient. It was the only film that Mr. Hellman ever directed, and only because Mr. Schlesinger, who was scheduled to do so, had dropped out.

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Business

Taylor Swift to launch ninth studio album ‘Evermore’ at midnight

Taylor Swift performs on stage during the 55th Academy of Country Music Awards at the Grand Ole Opry on September 16, 2020 in Nashville, Tennessee.

ACMA2020 | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

Taylor Swift was inspired and productive during the pandemic. The superstar singer announced on Twitter on Thursday that she was releasing a new album entitled “Evermore” at midnight. It’s a “sister record” to Swift’s “Folklore” album, which was released in July.

“To be clear, we just couldn’t stop writing songs,” wrote Swift. “To put it more poetically, it feels like we are standing on the edge of the folkloric forest with a choice: to turn around and go back or to travel further into the forest of this music. We decided to wander deeper into it.”

The album will contain 15 songs and will cost $ 9.99 for a digital copy of the record. “Evermore” is Swift’s ninth studio album and has two bonus tracks as part of its Deluxe Edition.

Additionally, a music video for a new track called “Willow” will be released at midnight. Like the music video for “Cardigan,” “Willow” was shot during the pandemic and “every precaution” was taken to ensure the safety of Swift and the crew who shot the video.

“I’ve never done this before,” said Swift, an artist with Universal Music Group. “In the past, I’ve always treated albums as one-time epochs and planned the next one after an album was released. Folklore was different. When I made it, I felt less like leaving and more like coming back.”

Like “Folklore”, “Evermore” was written and co-produced by Jack Antonoff and Aaron Dessner from National. Bon Iver returns for the title track “Evermore”, the National is on “Coney Island” and Haim appears in a song called “No Body, No Crime”.

“Folklore” was the first music album to sell a million copies in the US in 2020. It was also their ninth album that reached this milestone.