For more than a decade, Soul Train creator Don
Cornelius labored to make a movie based on his influential popular tv
show. Those efforts failed, but his death from a self-inflicted gunshot
wound Feb. 1 in Los Angeles might jump-start interest in a Soul Train
movie and other ventures that would exploit the storied brand.
Soul Train, which Cornelius started in 1970, aired in syndication until
2006. Two years later, Cornelius sold the franchise to MadVision
Entertainment and private-equity firm InterMedia Partners, which named
the new venture Soul Train Holdings and retained Cornelius as a
consultant. (In 2011, Magic Johnson Enterprises and Ron Burkle’s Yucaipa
Cos. bought a stake in Vibe Holdings, the parent company of Soul Train
Holdings.) Terms of those purchases were not disclosed.
Cornelius shot himself at a house he had owned and resided in since
1978 — a 3,000-square-foot Mulholland Drive property. Cornelius’ son
Tony Cornelius says the Soul Train host, who was 75, had been upset over
health issues and a messy 2009 split from second wife Viktoria Chapman
Cornelius.
But he says his father had not appeared suicidal. “I can tell you,
due to health, things like divorce and relationships, there’s all kinds
of things that may trigger a reaction like that. But as his son, as one
who was really close, I can’t tell you [why],” says Tony, one of
Cornelius’ two sons.
On top of those personal issues, Tony says his father was dealing
with a radically changing industry. He was “really catching up and
trying to understand” how the franchise could move forward in the
Internet era. A film could have introduced Soul Train to new audiences.
Producer Darryl Porter (Dead Presidents), a longtime Cornelius friend
and business associate, says he and Don tried but failed to launch a
movie with Universal during the 1990s. As recently as 2009, Warner Bros.
showed interest in a project. “He wanted to do a buddy action comedy,
like Rush Hour set in the world of Soul Train,” says a Warners source.
But that project also stalled. Porter, who would have been a producer on
the film, says a second script, which turned the project into a
coming-of-age dance movie, “was not the kind of movie Warners was going
to make.”
Tony says his father felt that overall, the franchise’s current
owners have “done a great job,” though he adds that for the Soul Train
creator, it was “very difficult to part with something that you started
and be satisfied all the time.”
A private memorial for Cornelius is planned for Feb. 16 in Los Angeles.
We’ll keep our fingers crossed that this happens and its done right! Hate it didn’t happen while he was still alive
What do you think?
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