New York Daily News

When Chisholm stood up to Panthers and Huey Newton

- RICHARD JOHNSON

Shirley Chisholm, the first Black woman elected to Congress, turned down the endorsemen­t of the Black Panthers when she ran for president in 1972. In “Shirley” premiering on Netflix on March 22, the congresswo­man from Bedford-Stuyvesant, played by Regina King, meets with Huey Newton, founder of the Black Panthers, played by Brad James.

James, a former U.S. Marine, said, Chisholm (right) “sat down and went toeto-toe with a person a lot of people couldn’t go toe-to-toe with. It ended up being a monumental moment.”

The scene was shot at the Beverly Hills home of Diahann Carroll, where the protagonis­ts actually met in 1972.

The leathernec­k has been busy with his wife Keshia Knight Pulliam co-hosting “Married at First Sight” on Lifetime.

The couple met on the set of “Pride and Prejudice: Atlanta” in 2019, and welcomed a son last spring.

James also was in Disney’s “Dancing Through the Snow.” “The kids were very upset when I beat up Santa,” he said.

As Chisholm once said, “You don’t make progress by standing on the sidelines, whimpering and complainin­g.”

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Profession­al gambler R.J. Cipriani rejected Mark Wahlberg’s company when he was asked to be in “California Kid,” a documentar­y about the rise and fall of USC football player Owen Hanson.

“I refused to be in the docuseries without an executive producer credit or fee,” Cipriani told me.

Next thing he knew, producers were searching for photos or videos of Cipriani.

Cipriani was copied on an email the “archival producer” for Piece of Work Production­s sent out that read, “There is a subplot in this story that involves RJ Cipriani. We are interested in viewing your photos of RJ for possible use in our documentar­y.”

Cipriani, hired by Hanson to launder millions of dollars at casino games, turned the drug dealer over to the feds.

Hanson, originally sentenced to 21 years in prison, is now set for release next year, after shaving nine years off his sentence.

“I personally reached out to Mark Wahlberg and his agent Ari Emanuel,” Cipriani said. “I let them both know I am the ‘secret sauce’ for this project and without me, this docuseries will be just a nothing-Wahlburger.”

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Rupert Murdoch is a conservati­ve, but he has a weakness for women from communist countries.

The Australian-born media mogul’s third wife is Wendi Deng, who was translatin­g for him in Hong Kong.

Now, after a marriage with Mick Jagger’s ex Jerry Hall, he is engaged to a Russian, Elena Zhukova, the mother of Dasha Zhukova, who was married to one of Russia’s most famous oligarchs, Roman Abramovich.

Abramovich lives in various countries, but never for too long. His huge yachts are in Turkey where they avoid EU sanctions. With the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the timing for this union could be problemati­c.

Savannah Jaine Radcliffe nearly didn’t make it to her performanc­e at Berlin on E. 2nd St. on Tuesday.

A fire had broken out in her apartment building in Marble Hill at 3 a.m.

“I was asleep. There was no fire alarm. The smoke came in so quickly. It was the scariest thing I’ve ever experience­d,” Radcliffe said.

Everyone escaped unharmed, and Radcliffe got her cat out too.

After the sun came up, she was helped by eight firefighte­rs, who climbed up and retrieved her guitar.

“The show went really, really well,” she said. “I didn’t want to call it off.”

You probably have never heard of Nancy Haberman, who has been working for 45 years at Rubenstein, the public relations powerhouse.

Though she helped lead the fight against AIDS, launched George magazine, and publicized the New Years Eve ball drop in Times Square, she stayed behind the scenes.

At her retirement party at the Chelsea Hotel, her former husband Clyde Haberman and offspring Maggie Haberman and Zach Haberman, gathered with dozens of reporters to raise a glass.

“I was very lucky,” Nancy said. “[company founder] Howard [Rubenstein] hired me. He shouldn’t have. Everybody here helped me.” Nancy had one golden rule — broken so often — never lie to a reporter. She never did.

R&B singer and producer Babyface — who has won 13 Grammys working with everyone from Usher and Janet Jackson to Ariana Grande and Whitney Houston — has discovered a new star.

Babyface has snapped up early work by 16-year-old painter Henri Reed, who was dubbed “Baby Basquiat” because of the influence the iconic artist has had on Reed.

Henri is painting a car-themed piece for the New York Internatio­nal Auto Show at the Javits Center opening March 29. The wunderkind will paint the piece live for ABC’s program “In the Fast Lane” that will air on March 30.

The show will exhibit celebrity rides including Elvis Presley’s 1971 Stutz

Blackhawk, NBA legend Kareem Abdul-Jabbar’s 1948 Packard and Princess Grace’s 1958 Mercedes-Benz.

LA-based Reed will have his first solo show April 18 at Emanuel Friedman’s Lux Contempora­ry, a gallery adjacent to Rolls Royce NY in Chelsea.

Out & About … Dionne Warwick and Tommy Hilfiger’s wife Dee Hilfiger were honored at an AmfAR benefit. Tom Ford, Kris Jenner, Peter Thomas Roth, and Leonard and Aerin Lauder led the applause … Jean-George’s vegan restaurant abcV, whose regulars include John Legend and Chrissy Teigen, got a surprise order from celebrity hairdresse­r Chaz Dean, who literally took home a doggie bag to his four yellow retrievers Bella, Riley, Ryver and Rayne. The restaurant will open a new outpost in the Emory Hotel on April 4 … Suzanne Somers’ husband Alan Hamel was disappoint­ed the Oscar telecast did not include Somers in the “In Memoriam” segment. The actress started her career as “the blonde in the Thunderbir­d” in “American Graffiti” along with Harrison Ford and Richard Dreyfuss.

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