Divine Madness
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Michael Ritchie
Bette Midler
Jocelyn Brown
Ula Hedwig
Diva Gray
Rich Cooper
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Bette Midler is seen in performance in a concert filmed in 1970 at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium. Midler dons outrageous costumes, performs her comedy routines, and sings sixteen songs.
Director
Michael Ritchie
Cast
Bette Midler
Jocelyn Brown
Ula Hedwig
Diva Gray
Rich Cooper
Tony Berg
David Shank
Jon Bonine
Joey Carbone
Randy Kerber
Irving Sudrow
Crew
Michael T Amundsen
Eric D Andersen
Jeff Angell
Paul Anka
David Baca
Dorothy Baca
Abel Baer
Ron Baker
Alan Balsam
Jeff Barry
Toni Basil
Ray Bauduc
Tony Berg
Tony Berg
Tony Berg
Janet Beroza
Marla Blakey
Jerry Blatt
William Bohny
Jon Bonine
Jon Bonine
Perry Botkin Jr.
Bob Brandzel
Albert Brenner
Bonnie Bruckheimer
Edwin Butterworth
Bobby Byrne
Lucy Coldsnow-smith
Bob Crosby
Sandra Culotta
Bill Darlington
Ray De La Motte
Robert De Mora
John Donnally
Bob Dylan
Glenn Farr
William Fraker
Claude Francois
Bobby Freeman
Garfield
L. Wolfe Gilbert
Don Glenn
Don Glenn
Bobby Goldsboro
Garrett Graham
Ellie Greenwich
Lynda Gurasich
Bob Haggart
Don Hall Jr.
Mike Hatchett
John Hawn
Aubry L Head
Bill Hunt
Mick Jagger
Howard Jeffrey
Horace Jordan
Rick Kelly
Randy Kerber
Randy Kerber
Dennis Kirk
Patrice Klinger
Hillary Jane Kranze
John Kretchmer
Lester Lee
Jerry Leiber
Robert J Litt
David Luell
David Luell
Robert Maxwell
Robert Mcbride
Amanda Mcbroom
Tommy Mcloughlin
Carol Meikle
Bette Midler
Bette Midler
Margaret Ann Miller
Chip Monck
Morton
Victor Nikaido
Harry Nilsson
Barry Oiffer
Bill Ownby
Don Packer
Lisa Palattella
Ken Peach
Steve Peterson
John Pierce
Bob Porcello
Hughie Prince
Jerry Ragavoy
Steve Raslow
Kimberly Ray
Don Raye
Jacques Revaux
Arnold Rich
Keith Richard
Michael Ritchie
Gil Rodin
Bob Roe
Jack Roe
Jack Roe
Don Rush
John Salcedo
Chas Sandford
Arthur C Schaefer
Robert Seaman
Marc Shaiman
Marc Shaiman
Glenn Shimada
Carl Sigman
Phil Spector
Bruce Springsteen
Michael St Hilaire
Mike Stoller
Ted T Sugiura
Lucien Thibault
Mike Tiano
Julia Tucker
Richard Turne
Elliot Tyson
Joe Valentine
Luther Vandross
Luther Vandross
Fran Frank Vanzella
Ron Vargas
Bruce Vilanch
Tom Waits
Ken Wannberg
Ned Washington
George David Weiss
Jacqueline Weiss
Byron White
Art Wood
Carol Wright
David Wright
Billy Youdelman
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Divine Madness
Michael Ritchie was best known for films like The Candidate (1972) and The Bad News Bears (1976) before taking on "The Divine Miss M." Ritchie prepped for weeks at the Auditorium before the performers arrived. Leaving nothing to chance, they rehearsed the show for a week to make sure that the cameras would catch the choreography. While the film appears to be an entire evening's performance, it was actually made up of the best segments from four nights of Midler's engagement at the Civic Auditorium from February 13 - February 16, 1980, captured by ten cameras shooting more than 1.5 million feet of film, and edited together seamlessly over seven months.
It was not Midler's first filmed performance - she had previously had a 1976 HBO special, but wanted to improve on it in every way. That included the cast. According to her original backup singers, "The Harlettes", Midler had promised them that they would appear in the film and be paid $14,000 a week for their performance. However, right after the stage show ended, the three women were fired - by telegram, which resulted in a $3.5 million dollar lawsuit filmed in LA Superior Court, but was later dismissed. The original Harlettes were replaced with Jocelyn Brown, Diva Gray, and Ula Hedwig, who had worked with Midler before. Midler and Ritchie also improved on the show itself. As Ritchie would later tell Cincinnati Magazine , "We redesigned all the scenery, the costumes, and added new songs. We treated it like a movie."
While the film captures Midler's undeniable energy and star power, the star herself was suffering from pneumonia during production, which might have been one of the reasons that some of the music was rerecorded (with Luther Vandross, then a backup singer, appearing on the film's soundtrack album) before the film premiered in Los Angeles on September 17th, 1980.
Critic Roger Ebert praised Ritchie's direction, writing that the director "opens as if Divine Madness is going to be a traditional concert film. Bette charges on stage, the audience cheers, there's an electric performance feel. But from that beginning, Ritchie subtly moves into the material until there are times when we almost forget we're watching an actual concert performance." Despite the good reviews and Midler's nomination for a Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture Actress - Musical/Comedy, Divine Madness did not make much of a stir at the box office and it disappeared from theaters quickly. Bette Midler did not disappear; by 1986, she would focus on her acting career with a string of successes like Down and Out in Beverly Hills (1986), and Beaches (1988).
SOURCES:
http://www.allmovie.com/movie/divine-madness%21-v14062/cast-crew
Bego, Mark, Coolidge, Rita Bette Midler: Still Divine
Fuller, Richard "Films: Ordinary People; A Direct Hit for Redford" Cincinnati Magazine Nov 1980
http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/divine-madness-1980
Divine Madness
TCM Remembers - Michael Ritchie
Director Michael Ritchie died April 16th at the age of 62. A Wisconsin native, Ritchie studied at Harvard before succumbing to the attractions of the theatre. He started working in television during the 1960s where he directed episodes of The Big Valley and The Man from UNCLE among others. He moved into feature films with Downhill Racer (1969) at star Robert Redford's invitation and later directed Redford again in The Candidate (1972). The latter is a classic look at American political life that hasn't lost any of its power or insights over the years. This was the start of Ritchie's most productive period when he made several films that were both popular and critically acclaimed. You can find his sly wit and sense of critical drama in Smile (1975), The Bad News Bears (1976) and Semi-Tough (1978). By the 1980s, though, Ritchie's films focused less on social criticism and more on stars. The Survivors (1983) with Robin Williams remains under-rated but Ritchie-directed vehicles for Eddie Murphy (1986's The Golden Child), Bette Midler (1980's Divine Madness) and Chevy Chase (two Fletch films) didn't quite achieve their potential. Some of the old Ritchie spark and intelligence appeared in the made-for-cable The Positively True Adventures of the Alleged Texas Cheerleader-Murdering Mom (1993) which earned him a Directors Guild Award. One of his final films was the long-awaited screen adaptation of The Fantasticks (1995) which partly brought Ritchie back to his theatrical roots.
ANN SOTHERN: 1909 - 2001
Actress Ann Sothern passed away on March 15th at the age of 89. Her film career spanned sixty years and included a Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination for The Whales of August (1987) and several Emmy nominations for her roles in the TV shows Private Secretary (1953) and The Ann Sothern Show (1958). Sothern was born as Harriette Lake in North Dakota. She made her first film appearance in 1927 in small roles (so small, in fact, that some sources omit any films before 1929) before deciding to work on Broadway instead. Shortly afterwards she signed with Columbia Pictures where studio head Harry Cohn insisted she change her name because there were already too many actors with the last name of Lake. So "Ann" came from her mother's name Annette and "Sothern" from Shakespearean actor E.H. Sothern. For most of the 1930s she appeared in light comedies working with Eddie Cantor, Maurice Chevalier, Mickey Rooney and Fredric March. However, it wasn't until she switched to MGM (after a brief period with RKO) and made the film Maisie (1939) that Sothern hit pay dirt. It proved enormously popular and led to a series of nine more films through 1947 when she moved into dramas and musicals. During the 50s, Sothern made a mark with her TV series but returned to mostly second tier movies in the 1960s and 1970s. Finally she earned an Oscar nomination for her work in 1987's The Whales of August (in which, incidentally, her daughter Tisha Sterling played her at an earlier age). Turner Classic Movies plans to host a retrospective film tribute to her in July. Check back for details in June.
TCM Remembers - Michael Ritchie
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Fall September 26, 1980
Released in USA on video.
Released in United States Fall September 26, 1980