Tumgik
#brooklyn sudano
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Donna Summer and daughter Brooklyn Sudano
27 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media
7 notes · View notes
cinematopeia2 · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media
Love to Love You, Donna Summer 2023 Brooklyn Sudano and Roger Ross Williams
0 notes
thecurvycritic · 1 year
Text
Love to Love You, Donna Summer is Nostalgic Peek into an Artist and Era
#DonnaSummer was the undisputed #QueenofDisco beloved by millions, but how much of a price did she pay personally and professionally ? @hbomax #lovetoloveyoudonnasummer #documentaries
Radio stations all over the country were inundated with disco hits in the 70’s ranging from Gloria Gaynor’s “I Will Survive” to K.C. and the Sunshine Band’s “Shake Your Booty,” but none of those artists can touch the ginormous impact made by Donna Summer when “Love to Love You, Baby” hit the airwaves. Currently streaming on HBO MAX, Love To Love You, Donna Summer  is an in-depth look at the…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
LOVE TO LOVE YOU, DONNA SUMMER (2023) dir. Roger Ross Williams and Brooklyn Sudano
Shaped by Summer’s own reflections, the memories of close family, friends and colleagues, and filled with the sounds of Summer’s songs, Love to Love You, Donna Summer is an in-depth look at the iconic artist as she creates music that takes her from the avant-garde music scene in Germany, to the glitter and bright lights of dance clubs in New York, to worldwide acclaim, her voice and artistry becoming the defining soundtrack of an era.
A deeply personal portrait of Summer on and off the stage, the film features a wealth of photographs and never-before-seen home video footage – often shot by Summer herself – and provides a rich window into the surprising range of her artistry, from songwriting to painting, while exploring the highs and lows of a life lived on the global stage.
123 notes · View notes
itszonez · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Love to Love You, Donna Summer (2023) dir. Brooklyn Sudano & Roger Ross Williams
386 notes · View notes
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Love to Love You, Donna Summer (2023) dir. Brooklyn Sudano & Roger Ross Williams
127 notes · View notes
alanisgirl2023 · 1 year
Text
Donna Summer’s daughter said that Kelly Rowland should play her in a biopic movie.
4 notes · View notes
mondomoda · 1 year
Text
Sobre o documentário de Donna Summer na HBO Max
No documentário lançado pela HBO na sexta-feira, 19 de maio, Love To Love You Donna Summer, a vida da cantora estadunidense Donna Summer é revista pela ótica de sua filha do meio Brooklyn Sudano em parceria com o diretor Roger Ross Williams. Com direito muitas cenas de vídeos caseiros, entrevistas, bastidores e variadas gravações. Primeira informação sobre este artigo: na minha infância, eu era…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
2 notes · View notes
lboogie1906 · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
Brooklyn Sudano (born January 5, 1981) is an actress. She played the role of Vanessa Scott on My Wife and Kids and acted in Taken (playing Asha Flynn). She was born in Los Angeles to singer Donna Summer and songwriter Bruce Sudano. Her younger sister (by 19 months) is singer and songwriter Amanda Sudano of Johnnyswim. She has an older sister, Mimi Sommer. She spent her childhood between Thousand Oaks, California, Connecticut, and Nashville. She attended high school at Christ Presbyterian Academy where she appeared in all the theater productions. A distinguished student, she was valedictorian at her graduation. She attended Vanderbilt University and transferred to Lee Strasberg Theatre and Film Institute. While studying acting in New York, she was signed to the Ford Modeling Agency. She appeared in numerous advertising campaigns in print and television, including Clairol, Clean & Clear, and K-Mart. She starred in Rain and played Mikaela Turn the Beat Around. She appeared in $#*! My Dad Says. She played the role of Christy Epping 11.22.63 and appeared on Ballers. She starred in 10 episodes of Taken's season 1. She plays Angela Prescott on Cruel Summer. She married her longtime boyfriend, Mike McGlaflin and they have a daughter. #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence https://www.instagram.com/p/CnEtlVGLMKt/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
4 notes · View notes
americanahighways · 3 months
Text
REVIEW: Bruce Sudano “Talkin’ Ugly Truth, Tellin’ Pretty Lies”
REVIEW: Bruce Sudano “Talkin’ Ugly Truth, Tellin’ Pretty Lies” @brucesudano @americanahighways #johnapice #americanahighways #americanamusic #newmusic2024
Bruce Sudano – Talkin’ Ugly Truth, Tellin’ Pretty Lies This is Brooklyn-born Bruce Sudano’s 9th CD with 8-cuts bestowed upon Talkin’ Ugly Truth, Tellin’ Pretty Lies (Purple Heart/Drops March 1). Produced with Ken Lewis (drum, synth & bass programming/bass) except for one lone track (“Under the Gun”) recorded in L.A. & produced by Randy Ray Mitchell (guitar). Sudano started his career in 1968…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
Donna Summer, la regina della disco brilla nel docu-film per Sky
La straordinaria carriera della Queen of Disco, la leggendaria Donna Summer, torna a rivivere nel racconto diretto dal regista, premio Oscar per i corti-documentario e premio Emmy Award Roger Ross Williams e Brooklyn Sudano, figlia della cantante. Arriva domenica 15 ottobre Love to Love You, Donna Summer, il documentario Sky Exclusive firmato da Hbo, che traccia il ritratto intimo e personale…
View On WordPress
0 notes
delta7of96 · 11 months
Text
Donna Summer's Daughter, Brooklyn Sudano, Agrees With Idea That Kelly Rowland Should Play Singer In A Biopic - SHADOW & ACT
0 notes
reasoningdaily · 1 year
Text
AOL: ‘Everybody wanted to put her in a box’: Love to Love You tells the intimate, harrowing story of disco queen Donna Summer
‘Everybody wanted to put her in a box’: Love to Love You tells the intimate, harrowing story of disco queen Donna Summer
AOL Staff
11–14 minutes
Tumblr media
An uncommonly frank new documentary about Donna Summer begins with a series of intimate moans the whole world knows. They’re the sighs and groans that famously undulate through “Love to Love You Baby”, the 1975 worldwide smash that both made Summer a star and altered the course of dance music history. As the song plays in the background, the camera focuses on a tight close-up of Summer’s eyes; wide and innocent, searching and lost. The contrast between the worldly sound in the recording and the child-like image of the actual Summer mirrors the deep contradictions in her life, epitomising the knot of ideas and emotions this film works hard to unspool.
The relationship between the filmmakers and their subject, who died of lung cancer in 2012, helped immeasurably on that score. The co-director of the film, titled Love to Love You, is her daughter, Brooklyn Sudano, who coaxed several generations of her family to open up on camera. They include the singer’s siblings, her husband – the songwriter Bruce Sudano – as well as the co-director’s sisters.
Vintage interviews with the singer’s parents, along with many that had been taped over the years with Summer herself, coalesce into a nearly two-hour film that is less a conventional music documentary than a forensic dive into a family’s inner workings. The result surprised even the director at times. “When you think your family is one thing and you’re getting this new information that the dynamic was completely different, it shakes you,” Sudano tells me ahead of the film’s release on Sky later this month. “In this film, you’re watching a family have a conversation for the first time about things that are difficult to talk about,” says her co-director, Roger Ross Williams.
Although the film covers in detail the most creative, historic and glamorous aspects of Summer’s life, it also dives into the multiple generations of sexual abuse Summer and her family suffered and the cascading traumas she faced as a result. There’s also discussion of physical assaults, a fractious lawsuit and, at one point, contemplation of suicide by the singer.
Much of the drama in Summer’s life can be traced to a foundational experience in which her faith was tainted by a deep betrayal. Growing up in a working-class neighbourhood in Boston, Summer spent much of her early life in church, where she first began to sing. Crucially, it was also the place where she was abused at age 15, something Summer kept secret for decades.
“The church was where she found her voice,” Williams says. “But then, to be sexually abused by the pastor of that church while still trying to hold on to faith, that’s a huge struggle.” That Summer would later find fame through a song centred wholly on carnality, cementing her image as an erotic goddess to many forever, only compounded that struggle. “That was going against her natural personality,” Sudano says. “She was never the pretty one. She was the class clown.” She was also the theatrical one, an interest that led to her first breakthrough.
Immediately moving to New York City after having graduated high school in 1967, Summer auditioned for the musical Hair and won a part in the self-labelled “tribal love-rock” production in Munich. Her attention to detail helped her master the German language quickly, and there she thrived both professionally and personally, cutting solo singles while marrying a fellow member of the Hair cast and having her first child.
In 1975, Summer began working with local producer Giorgio Moroder, with whom she wrote and recorded a demo titled “Love to Love You Baby”, an erotic ode that Summer felt would be better suited to another singer. For that reason, she approached her performance in the song as an actor rather than a singer. Once Moroder heard her very convincing moans in the demo, however, he persuaded her to let it be released as a single.
At the same time, American entrepreneur Neil Bogart, who had just started a new label called Casablanca, was on the hunt for recordings that would shock and excite. (He also signed Kiss). Summer’s provocative song more than fit the bill. Testing its appeal to his associates, Bogart discovered that “Love to Love You Baby” had such a hypnotic effect on listeners that no one wanted it to end. As a result, he extended the song to nearly 17 minutes, a groundbreaking length for a dance single at the time.
The song caused a commotion, inspiring a ban by the BBC, whose censors somehow calculated that the track contained 23 orgasms. Regardless, it broke the Top 5 in both the US and the UK, aided by Casablanca Records’ decision to aggressively market its singer as “the first lady of love”. Not only was Summer uncomfortable with the image, but it also played into a long-standing and troubling hyper-sexualisation of Black women.
Sudano says her mother was “100 per cent” aware of that stereotype and upset by it. “Everybody wanted to put her in a box,” she says. “She was very specific and determined to push back against that. She was also saying, ‘You don’t need to put any of us Black women in a box’.”
Tumblr media
Towards that end, Summer began to quickly expand the kind of material she performed, adding a medley of songs from the 1940s to her live shows and cutting pop standards such as “MacArthur Park” in 1978. Even the way Summer used her voice broke stereotypes. Though she was schooled in gospel music from her church years, Summer didn’t decorate notes with the elaborate melismas common to the genre. Instead, she sang the melodies straight on, trusting the essential character of her voice, and the raw passion in her delivery, to individuate the performance.
“That was something we actually spoke about,” Sudano says. “A lot of artists would do lots of licks and leaps, but I remember her saying, ‘If you do too many acrobatic leaps, you’re taking away from the core moment. I want to hit the note in a way so people will feel it’.”
Summer was equally purposeful with the compositions she sang. The documentary makes clear just how deeply involved she was in the songwriting process, including devising key hooks for some of her most iconic hits. She was the one who brainstormed that spiralling pulse of a motif that Moroder used to historic effect in “I Feel Love” (1976), in the process creating a blueprint for the future of electro-dance music. But if her creativity paid off commercially, it also drained Summer’s energy and left her zero time to raise her first daughter, Mimi, whom Summer eventually entrusted to her parents to care for instead.
“That led to an abandonment issue,” Sudano says of her older sister. Summer later wrote “Mimi’s Song” about the situation. “I bet you ask yourself/ Why I’m never there,” croons the singer on the track. “She was trying to reckon with that guilt,” Sudano adds.
I know I’m the bad guy in this story
Peter Muhldorfer, an ex of Summer’s who was abusive towards her
The singer’s romantic life was equally fraught. Having divorced her first husband shortly after Mimi was born, Summer found herself drawn to men who were extraordinarily creative but abusive. Several of them beat her. “When you have trauma very early on in life you have certain insecurity and self-worth issues,” Sudano says. “Sometimes you choose people who mirror that back to you.”
In a coup, the film features an interview with the man who was most violent towards Summer, Peter Muhldorfer, who expresses deep regret in his segment. (Muhldorfer died shortly after the interview). “I know I’m the bad guy in this story,” he told Sudano, who said that their conversation had provided “closure for him.”
Summer’s emotional and physical exhaustion culminated in suicidal thoughts. One night, she considered jumping from a hotel window in New York. Only the surprise intrusion of housekeeping caused her to pull back. The singer battled with her record company, as well. Though she was grateful for their unwavering support of her career, which resulted in six smash albums in five years, Summer believed that she was poorly compensated for her work. In a vintage interview from that time featured in the film, she compares working in the music industry to being “raped over and over”.
Tumblr media
As a result, she sued Casablanca and won, thereby becoming one of the first artists to regain ownership of their master recordings. It was hardly the first time she would make history. In 1978, Summer became one of the first Black women to land on the cover of Rolling Stone (the few earlier ones included Tina Turner in 1967 and the group Labelle in 1975). She was the very first Black woman to have a music video aired on MTV with her ode to working women, “She Works Hard for the Money”.
That hit did a lot to help Summer put her sex queen image behind her. Moreover, she finally found good love with her songwriting partner, Bruce Sudano. Around that time, she also began to reaffirm her religious belief and became increasingly vocal about it, a stance that contrasted so sharply with her earlier image that it caused increasing discomfort in the secular world of pop. That disconnect exploded into genuine controversy after an infamous incident in which Summer said from the stage one night, “God made Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve”, a line that had been popularised by the most prominent anti-gay activist of the day, Anita Bryant. Given the fact that her fanbase began, in large part, within the gay community, the line wounded many.
Tumblr media
The film covers that statement, which Summer did deliver, as well as an interview in which she allegedly said that Aids was God’s punishment. Summer vigorously denied saying anything like the latter in a subsequent press conference. Regarding the former quote, however – about Adam and Steve – Sudano says: “I think she intended it to be something flippant. She wasn’t giving some diatribe. But she realised very quickly that’s not something you should say.”
While the incident proved a major setback to Summer’s career, she suffered an even deeper hurt on the home front when she was informed that Mimi had been abused by a relative of the family’s housekeeper. “She herself had been abused, so it was a huge trigger,” Williams says. “As a mother you feel like you failed,” Sudano adds. “She was so protective of us. To have this happen felt like a huge blow.”
While Summer continued to soldier on by touring, she pulled back from regular recording in the mid-Nineties. Twenty years later, while living in Nashville, she was diagnosed with the cancer that took her life at 63. Despite the sadder aspects of Summer’s story, the directors believe their film carries a positive message through the star’s fortitude and brilliance. They also believe Love to Love You could provide encouragement to others. “I hope that by being honest and by sharing our story that people will see that they may be able to do that in their own lives,” says Sudano.
‘Love to Love You’ will debut in the UK on 27 May on Sky Documentaries and Now. In the US, it will be avilable to watch on Max from 20 May.
If you’re worried about a child, even if you’re unsure, you can contact professional counsellors at the NSPCC for help, advice and support by emailing [email protected] or calling 0808 800 5000. For those aged 18 or under, Childline offers free, confidential advice and support whatever your concern and whenever you need help. Call 0800 1111 or Contact Childline.
If you or someone you know is experiencing domestic abuse, you can call the 24-hour National Domestic Abuse Helpline, run by Refuge, on 0808 2000 247, or visit their website here.
Originally published May 19, 2023
0 notes
abcnewspr · 1 year
Text
ABC NEWS’ ‘NIGHTLINE’ RANKS NO. 1 IN TOTAL VIEWERS AND ADULTS 25-54 FOR 3RD CONSECUTIVE WEEK
Season to Date ‘Nightline’ Grows in Total Viewers and Outdelivers CBS’ ‘The Late Late Show with James Corden’ in All Target Demos
Tumblr media
ABC News*
ABC News’ “Nightline” ranked No. 1 in Total Viewers (697,000)and Adults 25-54 (175,000) for the third consecutive week during the week of May 22, 2023, based on Live + Same Day Data from Nielsen Media Research.
Season to date, “Nightline” is growing compared to the same point last season in Total Viewers- (+3% - 899,000 vs. 871,000). In addition, “Nightline” leads CBS’ “The Late Late Show with James Corden” in all key target demos.
During this week, “Nightline” covered co-anchor Juju Chang’s exclusive sit-down interview with Michelle Yeoh for “The New Face of Hollywood – A Soul of a Nation Presentation”; the journey of Uvalde victim Tess Mata’s family a year after her death; America’s plastic bag recycling problem via ABC News Live’s “Trashed” special; Texas abortion plaintiffs speaking out about health dangers they say they experienced; Linsey Davis’ interview with Donna Summer’s daughter Brooklyn Sudano about co-directing a new documentary about her mother’s life and legacy; Julia Louis-Dreyfus’ and Tobias Menzies’ new romantic comedy “You Hurt My Feelings”; Def Leppard drummer Rick Allen’s brutal attack; the new wave of Hawaiian surfers looking to reclaim the sport’s cultural spirit; Tina Turner’s legacy; Daveed Diggs on taking on an iconic “crabby” Disney role; the latest episode of “Impact x Nightline,” which explored the anatomy of a “Scandoval”; Elizabeth Holmes reporting to prison and more.
NOTE: CBS’ “The Late Late Show with James Corden” was retitled to “The Late Late Show-JC-ENC” and NBC’s “Late Night with Seth Meyers” was retitled to “Seth Meyers-SM.” The retitled telecasts are excluded from the season averages.
ABC News’ “Nightline” is late-night television’s prestigious, award-winning news program featuring the most powerful, in-depth stories that shape our lives and the world around us. It is anchored by Juju Chang and Byron Pitts. Eman Varoqua is executive producer. The program airs weeknights from 12:35 p.m.-1:05 a.m. EDT on ABC. “Nightline” has also produced numerous original documentaries available on ABC News digital platforms and Hulu.
Week of May 22, 2023:
Tumblr media
Source: The Nielsen Company, NTI Total Viewers, Adults 25-54 and Adults 18-49 Live + SD Current Week (w/o 5/22/23), Previous Week (w/o 5/15/23) and Year-Ago Week (w/o 5/23/22). Most Current Data Stream: Season 2022-2023 (9/19/22-5/28/23) and Season 2021-2022 (9/20/21-5/29/22). Nielsen ratings for ABC, NBC and CBS include additional airings in select markets. Beginning 8/31/20, national ratings also include Out of Home (OOH) viewing. Averages based on regular telecasts.
*COPYRIGHT ©2023 American Broadcasting Companies, Inc. All photography is copyrighted material and is for editorial use only. Images are not to be archived, altered, duplicated, resold, retransmitted or used for any other purposes without written permission of ABC News. Images are distributed to the press to publicize current programming. Any other usage must be licensed.
-- ABC --
0 notes
deadlinecom · 1 year
Text
0 notes