As Jon Bon Jovi celebrates his 61st birthday, he continues to move forward in his career, working on music and other projects that highlight his talents in the entertainment industry. However, he is not beyond looking back as well. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame musician says, “I’ve earned this grey hair,” as he reflects on a historic career and claims he’s “Ok” with growing older.
Jon Bon Jovi | Max Mumby/Getty Images Jon Bon Jovi continues to challenge himself as an artist
In an interview with Entertainment Tonight Canada, Bon Jovi shared, “I was never one to rest on our [Bon Jovi’s] previous successes. Maybe I’m not as success-driven as I was when I was a kid. However, I don’t think I need to sit around and say, ‘did I ever tell you about the time…'”
Therefore, he continues to challenge himself as an artist...
Jon Bon Jovi | Max Mumby/Getty Images Jon Bon Jovi continues to challenge himself as an artist
In an interview with Entertainment Tonight Canada, Bon Jovi shared, “I was never one to rest on our [Bon Jovi’s] previous successes. Maybe I’m not as success-driven as I was when I was a kid. However, I don’t think I need to sit around and say, ‘did I ever tell you about the time…'”
Therefore, he continues to challenge himself as an artist...
- 3/2/2023
- by Lucille Barilla
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
Jon Bon Jovi went home Sunday night (Oct. 27) for the 11th annual New Jersey Hall of Fame induction ceremony. The rocker helped induct Southside Johnny Lyon with the honor at the Paramount Theatre in Asbury Park. Bon Jovi was reverential, telling the audience that without Southside Johnny, there wouldn’t be a Jon Bon Jovi. “I grew up on the sounds of Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band, but I always wanted to be an Asbury Juke,“ Bon Jovi said.
A clearly moved Lyon, who noted how he never understood why “Tonight Show” host Johnny Carson always made cracks about New Jersey, said he always felt a need to defend the state with an “axe to grind.” Said Lyon: “I wanted to prove that New Jersey was just as good as any other state.”
Backed by the house band The Kings of Suburbia, Bon Jovi and Lyon then teamed...
A clearly moved Lyon, who noted how he never understood why “Tonight Show” host Johnny Carson always made cracks about New Jersey, said he always felt a need to defend the state with an “axe to grind.” Said Lyon: “I wanted to prove that New Jersey was just as good as any other state.”
Backed by the house band The Kings of Suburbia, Bon Jovi and Lyon then teamed...
- 10/28/2019
- by Michele Amabile Angermiller
- Variety Film + TV
“Asbury Park: Riot, Redemption, Rock n’ Roll,” a new documentary exploring the roots of the New Jersey sound, is hitting theaters worldwide for an engagement on May 22 and 29.
The film chronicles the town’s founding, its Jersey Shore heyday and dark periods like the race riots of the 1960s. Helping to dig deep into Asbury Park’s history are local luminaries Bruce Springsteen, Stevie Van Zandt (aka Little Steven) and Southside Johnny Lyon. The theater run was facilitated through a partnership with Jersey Mike’s Subs and Halo X Media. The two companies are teaming up to donate a portion of the profits to promoting and creating music education programs for children, according to a release.
“Jersey Mike’s is also an iconic part of the Jersey Shore and a great supporter of the community,” said the film’s Director Tom Jones. “Their heartfelt desire to make a difference makes...
The film chronicles the town’s founding, its Jersey Shore heyday and dark periods like the race riots of the 1960s. Helping to dig deep into Asbury Park’s history are local luminaries Bruce Springsteen, Stevie Van Zandt (aka Little Steven) and Southside Johnny Lyon. The theater run was facilitated through a partnership with Jersey Mike’s Subs and Halo X Media. The two companies are teaming up to donate a portion of the profits to promoting and creating music education programs for children, according to a release.
“Jersey Mike’s is also an iconic part of the Jersey Shore and a great supporter of the community,” said the film’s Director Tom Jones. “Their heartfelt desire to make a difference makes...
- 5/6/2019
- by Michele Amabile Angermiller
- Variety Film + TV
Tony Sokol Apr 12, 2019
It's hard to be a saint in the city, so the Asbury Park: Riot, Redemption, Rock n Roll trailer crosses the tracks.
Asbury Park is where you go when you don't want to go home. Waitresses may lose their desire but the aurora is always rising. There was a certain place in time where something was happening in the seaside resort that "wasn't happening any place else," the city pimp's main prophet Bruce Spingsteen explains in the new Asbury Park: Riot, Redemption and Rock N' Roll trailer. The music scene was so buoyant it "lifted you off the ground, remembers disciple of soul Steven Van Zandt.
Directed by Tom Jones, the film explans how an unemployment crisis led to riots that scorched the Jersey shore's jazz and blues scene. Asbury Park: Riot, Redemption, Rock n Roll will premiere In Theaters at The Asbury Park Music & Film Festival...
It's hard to be a saint in the city, so the Asbury Park: Riot, Redemption, Rock n Roll trailer crosses the tracks.
Asbury Park is where you go when you don't want to go home. Waitresses may lose their desire but the aurora is always rising. There was a certain place in time where something was happening in the seaside resort that "wasn't happening any place else," the city pimp's main prophet Bruce Spingsteen explains in the new Asbury Park: Riot, Redemption and Rock N' Roll trailer. The music scene was so buoyant it "lifted you off the ground, remembers disciple of soul Steven Van Zandt.
Directed by Tom Jones, the film explans how an unemployment crisis led to riots that scorched the Jersey shore's jazz and blues scene. Asbury Park: Riot, Redemption, Rock n Roll will premiere In Theaters at The Asbury Park Music & Film Festival...
- 4/12/2019
- Den of Geek
In today’s film news roundup, Janelle Monae will star in a Lionsgate movie, Bill Nighy joins “Emma,” and documentaries on surfer Bethany Hamilton and Asbury Park are dated.
Castings
Janelle Monae will star in an untitled Lionsgate movie directed by the duo Gerard Bush and Christopher Renz.
The film will be produced by QC Entertainment’s Ray Mansfield and Sean McKittrick, along with Zev Foreman and Lezlie Wills. QC Entertainment produced “Get Out” and “BlacKkKlansman.” McKittrick also recently produced Jordan Peele’s “Us.”
Monae is a Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter who starred in “Hidden Figures” and “Moonlight.” Bush and Renz have worked on campaigns for the Mlk Memorial Foundation and Amnesty International, in addition to directing Jay-z’s music video “Kill Jay Z” and the police brutality PSA “Against the Wall,” starring Michael B. Jordan, Danny Glover, and Michael K. Williams. The news was first reported by Deadline Hollywood.
****
Bill Nighy...
Castings
Janelle Monae will star in an untitled Lionsgate movie directed by the duo Gerard Bush and Christopher Renz.
The film will be produced by QC Entertainment’s Ray Mansfield and Sean McKittrick, along with Zev Foreman and Lezlie Wills. QC Entertainment produced “Get Out” and “BlacKkKlansman.” McKittrick also recently produced Jordan Peele’s “Us.”
Monae is a Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter who starred in “Hidden Figures” and “Moonlight.” Bush and Renz have worked on campaigns for the Mlk Memorial Foundation and Amnesty International, in addition to directing Jay-z’s music video “Kill Jay Z” and the police brutality PSA “Against the Wall,” starring Michael B. Jordan, Danny Glover, and Michael K. Williams. The news was first reported by Deadline Hollywood.
****
Bill Nighy...
- 3/22/2019
- by Dave McNary
- Variety Film + TV
Bruce Springsteen, Steve Van Zandt and more recount their Jersey Shore roots in a new documentary, Asbury Park: Riot, Redemption, Rock ‘n’ Roll. The film will premiere April 28th at the Paramount Theatre in Asbury Park as part of the 2019 Asbury Park Music and Film Festival. It will then screen in movie theaters globally May 22nd.
Directed by Tom Jones, Asbury Park examines the history of the seaside resort and how an unemployment crisis led to riots that decimated the town’s predominately black westside, including its fabled jazz and blues scene.
Directed by Tom Jones, Asbury Park examines the history of the seaside resort and how an unemployment crisis led to riots that decimated the town’s predominately black westside, including its fabled jazz and blues scene.
- 3/21/2019
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
Front and Center is enlisting the help of Grammy Award winner Jennifer Nettles to continue the momentum behind a star-studded seventh season.
In an exclusive debut clip of the episode, which was filmed at New York’s Iridium, Nettles is joined by Cma Award-winning singer/songwriter Brandy Clark to perform her hit song, “Love Can Go to Hell.” She also gets a little help from friend Amos Lee, later in the episode, to perform two additional songs including Sugarland’s beloved “Very Last Country Song.”
Best known for her role as the lead singer of the duo Sugarland, Nettles, 42, recently...
In an exclusive debut clip of the episode, which was filmed at New York’s Iridium, Nettles is joined by Cma Award-winning singer/songwriter Brandy Clark to perform her hit song, “Love Can Go to Hell.” She also gets a little help from friend Amos Lee, later in the episode, to perform two additional songs including Sugarland’s beloved “Very Last Country Song.”
Best known for her role as the lead singer of the duo Sugarland, Nettles, 42, recently...
- 3/9/2017
- by Kelsey Hendrix
- PEOPLE.com
While Shawn Mendes knows each of his fans will interpret his lyrics differently, the teen pop sensation’s intended message with hit single “Mercy” might not be what they’d expect.
“‘Mercy,’ I love conceptually, because I feel like you can either think about it as if it were a girl – which it sounds like it could be about a girl – but I like to picture it as pleading for mercy for my career, type of thing,” Mendes explains in a new Front and Center interview from the Melrose Ballroom in Queens, New York.
Mendes, 18, says that the tiring lifestyle...
“‘Mercy,’ I love conceptually, because I feel like you can either think about it as if it were a girl – which it sounds like it could be about a girl – but I like to picture it as pleading for mercy for my career, type of thing,” Mendes explains in a new Front and Center interview from the Melrose Ballroom in Queens, New York.
Mendes, 18, says that the tiring lifestyle...
- 1/12/2017
- by Lindsay Kimble
- PEOPLE.com
I bought it for myself, but this was my Christmas present, arriving in the mail from England on Christmas Eve: a fifteen-cd set containing five epic Springsteen concerts from the legendary Darkness on the Edge of Town tour. When the Cleveland deejay who emceed the show for Wmms-fm introduced the band by saying, "Round for round, pound for pound, there ain’t no finer band around," he wasn't just rhyming, he was telling the truth.
Why, you ask, did this set come from England? Well, it's an unauthorized collection of bootlegs, but in Europe, radio recordings are public domain, so this is actually a legal release.
The word went out through the fan network I ordered it on Amazon U.K. before the release date. Perhaps Bruce doesn't get a penny out of this, but I've seen it suggested that writers' royalties would still have to be paid. Either way,...
Why, you ask, did this set come from England? Well, it's an unauthorized collection of bootlegs, but in Europe, radio recordings are public domain, so this is actually a legal release.
The word went out through the fan network I ordered it on Amazon U.K. before the release date. Perhaps Bruce doesn't get a penny out of this, but I've seen it suggested that writers' royalties would still have to be paid. Either way,...
- 1/16/2016
- by SteveHoltje
- www.culturecatch.com
Elga Wimmer Pcc Art Gallery, NYC Resonance and Memory: The Essence of Landscape December 3 thru January 24, 2015
The exhibition at Elga Wimmer Pcc, Resonance and Memory: the Essence of Landscape, curated by Robert Curcio, displays eight distinctive artists whose fresh perspective on landscape reinvigorates the genre by infusing it with issues that span time, real space, digital intervention, and altered observed reality. This diverse show includes paintings, sculpture, digital drawings, photography, and glass works by Kathleen Elliot, Sandra Gottlieb, J.J. L'Heureux, John Lyon Paul, Rebeca Calderón Pittman, Gerry Tuten, Gail Watkins, and Martin Weinstein.
Martin Weinstein's seriously ambitious yet supremely playful acrylic images painted on layered Plexiglas explore the elements of time, space, land, and light. Each sheet contributes a divergent view of familiar places, seasonal changes, and light effects recurring through time. Together they imbue his innovative, soaring vision with a cosmic dimension. Weinstein's tendency to juxtapose or repeat...
The exhibition at Elga Wimmer Pcc, Resonance and Memory: the Essence of Landscape, curated by Robert Curcio, displays eight distinctive artists whose fresh perspective on landscape reinvigorates the genre by infusing it with issues that span time, real space, digital intervention, and altered observed reality. This diverse show includes paintings, sculpture, digital drawings, photography, and glass works by Kathleen Elliot, Sandra Gottlieb, J.J. L'Heureux, John Lyon Paul, Rebeca Calderón Pittman, Gerry Tuten, Gail Watkins, and Martin Weinstein.
Martin Weinstein's seriously ambitious yet supremely playful acrylic images painted on layered Plexiglas explore the elements of time, space, land, and light. Each sheet contributes a divergent view of familiar places, seasonal changes, and light effects recurring through time. Together they imbue his innovative, soaring vision with a cosmic dimension. Weinstein's tendency to juxtapose or repeat...
- 1/7/2015
- by MaryHrbacek
- www.culturecatch.com
I’ve been asked to critique the Super Bowl halftime. The first half of the game was dull. Peyton Manning played like brother Eli did in this stadium so often this year, which is the reason we missed the playoffs. Would the half time show lend some thrills, particularly after Red Hot Chili Peppers bass player Flea sent out an early day Tweet threatening to pull a Janet Jackson and show his naughty bits And if so, would he prove to have been appropriately named? First up, Bruno Mars. I know they had Bruce Springsteen play halftime several years ago, but c’mon. Met Life, built to replace Giants Stadium in the swamps of New Jersey, is the home stadium of not only The Boss, but also Bon Jovi. The Boss just released an album. And we get Bruno Mars, whose most memorable song is that one heard in snippets on promos,...
- 2/3/2014
- by MIKE FLEMING JR
- Deadline TV
I’ve been asked to critique the Super Bowl halftime. The first half of the game was dull. Peyton Manning played like brother Eli did in this stadium so often this year, which is the reason we missed the playoffs. Would the half time show lend some thrills, particularly after Red Hot Chili Peppers bass player Flea sent out an early day Tweet threatening to pull a Janet Jackson and show his naughty bits And if so, would he prove to have been appropriately named? First up, Bruno Mars. I know they had Bruce Springsteen play halftime several years ago, but c’mon. Met Life, built to replace Giants Stadium in the swamps of New Jersey, is the home stadium of not only The Boss, but also Bon Jovi. The Boss just released an album. And we get Bruno Mars, whose most memorable song is that one heard in snippets on Pepsi ads,...
- 2/3/2014
- by MIKE FLEMING JR
- Deadline
New York -- The night busted open in New York City as Bruce Springsteen and other Rock and Roll Hall of Famers helped Steven Van Zandt celebrate his Big Man of the Year award.
Darlene Love, Elvis Costello and Dion were among the performers Tuesday night at a rollicking benefit for Little Kids Rock, an initiative that rescues music education amid public school budget cuts.
Springsteen had some fun while presenting the award – gleefully detailing their roommate days and Van Zandt's lack of housekeeping skills.
"What a liar," Van Zandt retorted with a grin.
Amid the musical blowout, Van Zandt and the other stars discussed the arts' role in fueling young minds and shaping character – tasks accomplished through the thousands of musical instruments and the lessons made possible by Little Kids Rock.
Costello, before going onstage, waxed eloquently on the "mundane and magical" aspects of music, and its transformative effects.
Darlene Love, Elvis Costello and Dion were among the performers Tuesday night at a rollicking benefit for Little Kids Rock, an initiative that rescues music education amid public school budget cuts.
Springsteen had some fun while presenting the award – gleefully detailing their roommate days and Van Zandt's lack of housekeeping skills.
"What a liar," Van Zandt retorted with a grin.
Amid the musical blowout, Van Zandt and the other stars discussed the arts' role in fueling young minds and shaping character – tasks accomplished through the thousands of musical instruments and the lessons made possible by Little Kids Rock.
Costello, before going onstage, waxed eloquently on the "mundane and magical" aspects of music, and its transformative effects.
- 10/18/2012
- by AP
- Huffington Post
Victoria’s Transport Accident Commission has just celebrated its 25th birthday. Robin Hicks looks back at the most powerful ads in its history, and wonders what makes effective road safety advertising.
When the Tac was created in 1987, it declared a mission to ‘upset, outrage and appal’ Victorians to reduce the number of road deaths in the state.
For an ad agency, that is quite a brief.
The Tac began advertising in December 1989, appointing Grey Melbourne, an agency that it has worked with ever since. Twenty-three years later, the state boasts the safest roads in Australia.
When the campaign started, the road death toll in Victoria was 776 in a year. Last year, the total was down to 287.
Of course, the Tac’s progress in reducing road casualties is not just about effective advertising. Safer cars, better roads, government legislation, heavier police enforcement and heftier fines have helped. But these factors are...
When the Tac was created in 1987, it declared a mission to ‘upset, outrage and appal’ Victorians to reduce the number of road deaths in the state.
For an ad agency, that is quite a brief.
The Tac began advertising in December 1989, appointing Grey Melbourne, an agency that it has worked with ever since. Twenty-three years later, the state boasts the safest roads in Australia.
When the campaign started, the road death toll in Victoria was 776 in a year. Last year, the total was down to 287.
Of course, the Tac’s progress in reducing road casualties is not just about effective advertising. Safer cars, better roads, government legislation, heavier police enforcement and heftier fines have helped. But these factors are...
- 10/17/2012
- by Robin Hicks
- Encore Magazine
In this week's episode, Ben and Tyler are joined by Dan Mecca (from The Film Stage) to discuss Tim Burton's 1988 film, Beetlejuice.
Introduction
Character Name Game Intro - 1:55
Media Consumed
Tyler
Southside Johnny concert - 3:25
Boyz II Men concert - 4:45
The Comedians of Comedy: Live at the El Rey - 5:42
Dan
Puss in Boots - 8:23
Detour - 9:40
Wonderland - 10:57
The Phantom - 14:42
Ben
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade -19:10
Jason Reitman's Live Read of Reservoir Dogs - 27:05
Review
Beetlejuice -32:00
Wrap-Up
Next Time: The Shadow - 1:08:03
Listener E-mail/Voicemail/Twitter - 1:09:37
Character Name Game - 1:13:11
Where You Can Find Us - 1:17:05
[Articles Mentioned: Ben's review of Reitman's Reservoir Dogs, Tyler's review of Temple of Doom, Ben's review of The Last Crusade] ...
Introduction
Character Name Game Intro - 1:55
Media Consumed
Tyler
Southside Johnny concert - 3:25
Boyz II Men concert - 4:45
The Comedians of Comedy: Live at the El Rey - 5:42
Dan
Puss in Boots - 8:23
Detour - 9:40
Wonderland - 10:57
The Phantom - 14:42
Ben
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade -19:10
Jason Reitman's Live Read of Reservoir Dogs - 27:05
Review
Beetlejuice -32:00
Wrap-Up
Next Time: The Shadow - 1:08:03
Listener E-mail/Voicemail/Twitter - 1:09:37
Character Name Game - 1:13:11
Where You Can Find Us - 1:17:05
[Articles Mentioned: Ben's review of Reitman's Reservoir Dogs, Tyler's review of Temple of Doom, Ben's review of The Last Crusade] ...
- 2/21/2012
- by benp
- GeekTyrant
Hollywood, CA (October 15, 2010) – David Chase, the creator and producer of the multiple Emmy® and Golden Globe® winning critically acclaimed series The Sopranos, announced today that legendary musician, and Sopranos star, Steven Van Zandt will produce and supervise the music, as well as serving as an Executive Producer, for the director’s music-driven coming of age story set in 1960’s suburbia.
Chase, who is making his feature film directorial debut, simultaneously announced that actors John Magaro, Jack Huston and Will Brill will star in the movie, to be released by Paramount Vantage. Principal photography is set to begin this January in New York .
Chase, who wrote the original script, will produce alongside Oscar winning producer Mark Johnson (Rain Man, The Chronicles Of Narnia).
Said Chase, “It’s exciting to be working with Brad Grey again, doing my first feature. I look back with pleasure on our last outing. I am also...
Chase, who is making his feature film directorial debut, simultaneously announced that actors John Magaro, Jack Huston and Will Brill will star in the movie, to be released by Paramount Vantage. Principal photography is set to begin this January in New York .
Chase, who wrote the original script, will produce alongside Oscar winning producer Mark Johnson (Rain Man, The Chronicles Of Narnia).
Said Chase, “It’s exciting to be working with Brad Grey again, doing my first feature. I look back with pleasure on our last outing. I am also...
- 10/16/2010
- by Movie Geeks
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
David Chase, the creator and producer of the multiple Emmy and Golden Globe winning critically-acclaimed series The Sopranos, announced today that legendary musician and Sopranos star, Steven Van Zandt, will produce and supervise the music. He well also serve as an Executive Producer for the director’s music-driven coming-of-age story set in 1960’s suburbia.
Chase, who is making his feature film directorial debut, simultaneously announced that actors John Magaro, Jack Huston and Will Brill will star in the movie, to be released by Paramount Vantage. Principal photography is set to begin this January in New York. Chase, who wrote the original script, will produce alongside Oscar winning producer Mark Johnson (“Rain Man,” “The Chronicles of Narnia”).
Said Chase, “It’s exciting to be working with Brad Grey again, doing my first feature. I look back with pleasure on our last outing. I am also thrilled to be working with Steven again,...
Chase, who is making his feature film directorial debut, simultaneously announced that actors John Magaro, Jack Huston and Will Brill will star in the movie, to be released by Paramount Vantage. Principal photography is set to begin this January in New York. Chase, who wrote the original script, will produce alongside Oscar winning producer Mark Johnson (“Rain Man,” “The Chronicles of Narnia”).
Said Chase, “It’s exciting to be working with Brad Grey again, doing my first feature. I look back with pleasure on our last outing. I am also thrilled to be working with Steven again,...
- 10/15/2010
- by Kevin Coll
- FusedFilm
David Chase has gotten the band together, and it's turned into a reunion tour.
The writer-director has been on a nationwide search for young, relative unknowns to star in his untitled rock 'n' roll coming-of-age film, and he's found them in John Magaro, Jack Huston and Will Brill. But he's also brought aboard his old "Sopranos" actor, guitarist Steven Van Zandt, to supervise the music for the film and executive produce.
The music-driven project, which will be Chase's feature directing debut, follows a group of suburban New Jersey guys making their way during the 1960s as a rock band called the Twilight Zones. Shooting is scheduled to begin in January in New York.
Paramount Vantage will release the film, which Chase is producing with Mark Johnson ("Rain Man").
"I am thrilled to be working with Steven again, especially on this particular subject," Chase said. "It's not just that we both...
The writer-director has been on a nationwide search for young, relative unknowns to star in his untitled rock 'n' roll coming-of-age film, and he's found them in John Magaro, Jack Huston and Will Brill. But he's also brought aboard his old "Sopranos" actor, guitarist Steven Van Zandt, to supervise the music for the film and executive produce.
The music-driven project, which will be Chase's feature directing debut, follows a group of suburban New Jersey guys making their way during the 1960s as a rock band called the Twilight Zones. Shooting is scheduled to begin in January in New York.
Paramount Vantage will release the film, which Chase is producing with Mark Johnson ("Rain Man").
"I am thrilled to be working with Steven again, especially on this particular subject," Chase said. "It's not just that we both...
- 10/14/2010
- by By Jay A. Fernandez and Borys Kit
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
HollywoodNews.com: So Steven Van Zandt aka Silvio Dante on HBO’s “The Sopranos” had to sing out the truth like a little canary.
Get ready to cry out loud fans — because apparently there isn’t a “Sopranos” movie in the works as previously announced a couple of years ago by Paramount and David Chase.
Van Zandt, who also plays guitar and mandolin for Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band, reveals “there’s no truth, unfortunately” to the rumor that there will be another “Sopranos” film.
What is moving forward, according to the Daily News, is a music feature, close to Van Zandt’s heart, that Chase will direct for Paramount. It’s a rock-driven story about a band growing up in New Jersey in the ‘60s. The E Street Band will serve as music supervisors on the film with Van Zandt as producer. The musician was a key force in shaping the Jersey sound,...
Get ready to cry out loud fans — because apparently there isn’t a “Sopranos” movie in the works as previously announced a couple of years ago by Paramount and David Chase.
Van Zandt, who also plays guitar and mandolin for Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band, reveals “there’s no truth, unfortunately” to the rumor that there will be another “Sopranos” film.
What is moving forward, according to the Daily News, is a music feature, close to Van Zandt’s heart, that Chase will direct for Paramount. It’s a rock-driven story about a band growing up in New Jersey in the ‘60s. The E Street Band will serve as music supervisors on the film with Van Zandt as producer. The musician was a key force in shaping the Jersey sound,...
- 6/19/2010
- by HollywoodNews.com
- Hollywoodnews.com
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