The Hollywood Reporter (Weekly)

Rambling Reporter

- Edited by Benjamin Svetkey and Julian Sancton

Ari and Joel: Bromance on the Rocks?

One of Hollywood’s most enduring — and mystifying — high-powered friendship­s may have finally blown up, at least for the moment. Sources tell Rambling Reporter that Endeavor CEO Ari Emanuel and longtime pal Joel Silver are no longer speaking after the famously hotheaded Lethal Weapon producer allegedly became abusive during a call with MGM film chief Courtenay Valenti and Amazon marketing chief Sue Kroll. The argument led to Silver’s exit from the streamer’s Doug Liman remake of the 1989 kickboxing classic Road House, a project Emanuel has been involved in because it stars WME client Jake Gyllenhaal and martial arts personalit­y Conor McGregor and is considered a vehicle for UFC, part of Emanuel’s premium sports company TKO Group. Although nobody seems entirely sure why, Emanuel has for years been one of Silver’s most durable allies, sticking by him through myriad financial disasters and career downturns. It was Emanuel, in fact, who set up Silver at Amazon-owned MGM to produce Road House, and Emanuel was fighting in Silver’s corner right up until the last-straw phone call with Valenti and Kroll, which is said to have revolved around whether Road House would get a theatrical release (Silver and Liman want one, Amazon doesn’t). Before that call, Emanuel went so far as to wrangle Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos into a private screening of the film, trying (but failing) to convince Bezos to intervene on Silver and Liman’s behalf. Says one source on the alleged rift, “Joel is upset about how this has played out and is flailing and desperate and not speaking to Ari.” Other sources close to both Emanuel and Silver, however, deny any falling-out. — REPORTED BY KIM MASTERS

When F. Murray Abraham Dines Out, He Puts It on Oscar’s Tab

You’ve probably heard plenty of stories about all the kooky, adorably self-effacing places Oscar winners display their trophies. Timothy Hutton and Richard Dreyfuss claim to store theirs in the fridge to surprise guests when they grab a beer. Russell Crowe

insists he keeps his in his chicken coop (he swears it makes the hens lay bigger eggs). But nobody has come up with a more practical storage solution than F. Murray Abraham. The 84-year-old, who picked up his trophy 40 years ago for playing Salieri in Amadeus,

has been lending his Oscar to Le Baratin, a French bistro near where he lives in New York’s West Village, to display behind its bar. In exchange, Abraham dines there for free. “It’s great for the customers, who always want to touch it,” an annoyed bartender with a French accent tells Rambling Reporter when we call, before hanging up abruptly, “but not so great for me when I’m trying to make 20 cocktails.”

— ANDY LEWIS

What’s That Smell? It’s the Hollywood Sign!

If you’re anything like us — and

From left: F. Murray Abraham with his 1984 Oscar; the scent-inspiring landmark.

we know you are! — you’ve always wanted to smell like a 100-yearold L.A. landmark. Luckily, soon everyone can, thanks to a new Hollywood Sign fragrance being launched March 8 to commemorat­e the centennial anniversar­y of the town’s most famous monument. Actually, two Hollywood Sign fragrances are in the works — a floral, beachynote­d Sunrise for daytime wear and a more tobacco-tinged Sunset for night — both designed by top celebrity perfumer Vincenzo Spinnato, who has whipped up scents for Jennifer Lopez, Gwen Stefani and Judy Garland (or, rather, the legend’s estate). “We really wanted to unpack the experience of the city and what the Hollywood Sign represents, which is people’s dreams and aspiration­s,” Spinnato says. “We wanted to put all that in a bottle.” Those bottles will be available at Macy’s for $40 each. For $50 you can experience Sunrise and Sunset all at once. — BENJAMIN SVETKEY

Frank Sinatra’s Personal Chef: He Did It His Way

Before there was Wolfgang Puck, there was Paul Posti. The midcentury chef — who claimed to have co-invented the Cobb salad at the Brown Derby — cooked for such stars as Clark Gable, Luciano Pavarotti and Elvis Presley, whom he once kicked out of the Knickerboc­ker Hotel’s kitchen. If he’s not better known, it’s because Frank Sinatra kept Posti to himself, as his private chef, for 24 years. Now, Posti’s longtime pastor, George Mather, has honored a promise to publish his life story after his death: “He wanted to wait, so no one could ever accuse him of using his relationsh­ip with Mr. Sinatra for profit or gain,” says Mather, co-author of the self-published Posti: War Hero, Hollywood

Insider, Chef to Celebritie­s, and Redemption. Along with the memoir, Mather has published Posti’s secrets in Old Hollywood’s Original Recipes. Among them is Sinatra’s favorite, Spaghetti Paolino. (Add al dente pasta to mushroom-shallot-cream sauce, top with Parmesan and parsley.) — JULIAN SANCTON

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Are Joel Silver and Ari Emanuel feuding?
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Frank Sinatra

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