I've never seen Madonna, I've never met her or something. A new book says they did. They should have made fun of me. The name Starkweather strikes terror in the heart of a nation. $5,000 didn't seem like a whole lot of money to me. And I thought, golly. Not if you've just won 10 million. Entertainment Night cleans up and shares the secrets. On this Monday, May 3rd, 1993. MUSIC Hi everyone, welcome to Entertainment Night. I'm John Tesch. And I'm Mary Hart. Mick Jagger and the Rolling Stones set the world ablaze with songs about sex, drugs and rock and roll. Now a new book says the wild lyrics could serve as Jagger's life story. MUSIC Mick Jagger's on-stage erotics have of course been legendary for decades. While the music may have been inspired by Chuck Berry and Little Richard, author Chris Anderson and his new book Jagger Unauthorized makes the extraordinary claim that Mick got his unique moves from studying Tina Turner and Marilyn Monroe. He copied Marilyn Monroe. He studied her films. He felt that she was a seductress. And he felt that they were going to have kindred spirits. And in fact that's what he saw himself as on the stage. He saw Tina Turner for the first time. He was fascinated, mesmerized by her animal moves on stage. He stood in front of the mirror and for hours and hours practiced her moves over and over again. MUSIC Of course Jagger's raspy voice has also been a trademark. That sound, Anderson claims, actually resulted from a high school basketball accident when Mick bit off the tip of his tongue. All of his friends wondered if he would ever sing again. And when he did sing again, they were shocked. By the early 70s Jagger was an international superstar, having several affairs, claims Anderson, while married to Bianca Jagger. One supposed former lover, Carly Simon, wrote a hit song, You're So Vain, that Anderson says was about Mick. However, Ross Benson of the London Daily Express says that song was actually about more than one man in Carly's life. That particular song is actually an amalgamation of a couple of guys. I think Warren Beatty is another serious contender. Anderson also says that Jagger had a one-night stand with Madonna long before she was famous. But in a 1985 interview backstage at a live-aid concert, Jagger told ET that he had never even met the material girl. I've never seen Madonna, I've never met her, so see you later. So what else do Mick Jagger, Carly Simon and Madonna have in common? A terse no comment to entertainment tonight about the story and the book. In 1958, a teenager and his girlfriend went on a murderous rampage across Nebraska that terrorized the entire nation and left 11 people dead. Now Charles Starkweather's gruesome crime wave has been made into a chilling TV mini-series. Should have made fun of me. In Murder in the Heartland, Tim Roth stars as Charles Starkweather, the notorious killer whose murderous rampage over nine days in 1958 claimed 11 lives and terrorized the nation. Keep all your doors and windows locked. The movie draws on actual courtroom testimony in recreating the crimes. Roth says playing the killer was no easy task. One of his victims was a baby and when we did that, that was early on in filming and when I had to kill the baby, that's when I found it really came home to me, how shocking it was. You mean nobody's told you that you're going to stand trial for exactly the same crimes as Charles Starkweather? Nobody's told me anything. Starkweather's 14-year-old girlfriend, Carol Ann Fugate, was also put on trial for the killings. In the movie she's played by Farrouza Balk and she says there are serious questions as to whether Fugate was a willing accomplice or simply a naive hostage. For someone of her age and what she was being put through at the time, she was just trying to stay alive. Ninette Beaver is a reporter who was working out of Lincoln, Nebraska while covering the case. At the time she obtained this rare interview with the teenager. Have you found that if you were convicted that you might go to prison or you might even go to the electric chair? Have you thought much about that? Yes I have and I don't really believe that I have anything to worry about that. The Lord knows that I'm innocent and I know it. The people who are involved in it know it. However, a jury did find Carol Ann guilty and she became the youngest person in the U.S. ever sentenced to life in prison. Beaver says no one knew what to do with such a young convict. She wasn't even old enough to go into the population when she got to the prison. So they kept her in solitary confinement from October to the first of August and said that was the law. So she had a tough time out there. Fugate ended up serving 18 years. Starkweather died in the electric chair. But even three decades later the movie still calls up strong memories from those who were there like retired policeman Robert Sautin who witnessed Starkweather's execution. I think justice was done to a limited degree. I kind of thought that maybe Carol Fugate should be sitting on his lap in that electric chair. Murder in the Heartland airs tonight and tomorrow night on ABC. There are a lot of country songs about being down and out, but singing them seems to pay rather well. Here's the lowdown. Nothing is better than nothing you gain. Sometimes you've got to go against the grain. Kenneth Brooks is proving just how profitable country music has become. Since rolling onto the scene four years ago he has sold more than $400 million in albums. Factor in overseas sales, touring and merchandise, and Brooks has become a half-billion dollar industry. If you have millions to spare on real estate, here's a hot new property. It's reported that Kennedy Family Estate in Palm Beach is up for sale. It was of course at the Florida compound that a woman claimed William Kennedy Smith raped her. Smith was ultimately acquitted. The lowdown is if you want to move into the mansion, expect to pay close to its estimated value of $3.6 million. It's nothing but straight talk for fans of Dolly Parton. According to columnist Liz Smith, Dolly is penning her memoirs. The lowdown is the book won't hit the stores until next year, and to help push it, Dolly's already planning a major tour. And tired of working for a living, the Publishers Clearinghouse really does create instant millionaires. And like the entry form says, you don't have to order magazines to win. I think it is skewed more towards the non-orders. We'll take you inside the Publishers Clearinghouse $10 million giveaway later on Entertainment Night. Next on ET, Sigourney Weaver tells us why she's acting like a cross between Jackie Kennedy and Pat Nixon. It's been a month and still no movie has knocked indecent proposal off the top of the box office hill. Sidekicks came in second over the weekend with Indian Summer, Benny in June, and The Sandlot finishing out the top five. Now Sigourney Weaver's new movie, Dave, finds a circus behind the pomp and circumstance of the White House. She's the First Lady, but who is the guy in the Oval Office? Why can't you die from a stroke like everybody else? She hates me. Yes. First Lady Sigourney Weaver doesn't realize that a lookalike played by Kevin Klein has stepped into the President's shoes after he's suffered a massive stroke. Ready to get back to work? You bet. You bet. I'm outta here. The movie gives a kind of backstage look at the White House, but Sigourney doubts if in real life First Ladies do much bickering with their husbands. You can never sort of get angry at your husband. You can't say, darling, I wish you wouldn't do that because he'd say, my goodness, I'm thinking about the Middle East, I'm thinking about this, and I don't have time to worry about this thing that's driving you crazy. So I always thought that the marriage would be a very sort of off-balance one. In one scene, Sigourney catches her co-star off-balance in the presidential shower. I'm talking to you. Will you please turn around? You know, if you want to be the same old selfish... Klein says he was impressed with her cool and thinks she was perfectly cast. She is witty, she's intelligent, she's regal. There's something very First Ladish about her. Sigourney says she used Jackie Kennedy and Pat Nixon as two of her role models. The First Lady has to be almost like a doll. She has to look perfect and act perfect and be the perfect hostess and always smooth things over. But Dave examines the not-so-smooth parts of politics while looking behind Washington's very closed doors. I think we still get a few strong points in, but I think the main thing is to invite people to Washington, to invite them backstage to the White House and see what's really going on there. A lot of famous political faces couldn't resist a chance to do a walk-on in Dave. Among them, former House Speaker Tip O'Neill, Senator Paul Simon, and CNN's Larry King. Dave opens around the country on Friday. My M.B. Alex life as the star of Blossom would be a fantasy for any teenager. But in the newest episode, one dream is not enough, and I got a chance to play a part in this comedy within a comedy. It's a Hollywood fantasy when Blossom's best friend, played by Jenna Bonnoy, becomes the spoiled star of a sitcom. The producers thought no Hollywood fantasy would be complete without a television interview. My first question was obvious. How do I look? You look great, Mary. Oh, thank you. And even though I interview celebrities all the time, it was a little strange to play myself in this parody. This is my husband, Vinny Bonatardi. Vinny, this is Mary Hart. Hey. Hey, yourself. But it was also a lot of fun, and I couldn't have asked for a more professional bunch of people, especially my M.B. Alex. You know, I sit down here and I'm worried about my few little lines that I have, and they have the whole half hour to worry about, and you're spilling sugar and coffee and doing everything, and the timing is perfect. And I have to ignore her being funny. That's with odd. We were really excited when we got her because this is exactly the kind of thing that we wanted. We wanted to do like a real interview, but the audience knows that it's funny, so we're really thrilled. Well, I am a big fan of the show, and who knows? Maybe someday Mayim and I can trade places all through the magic of television. That would be fun, actually. I'd love to be Blossom. Can I borrow a hat? Sure. I want to see you with that hat on. Well, you know, she actually sent it to me, and I'll be wearing it on the show tomorrow. Oh, good. I can't wait. Blossom airs tonight on NBC. Good Morning America has launched a two-week-long trip down under looking for stories, scenery, and higher ratings, and we have a postcard in tonight's coming attractions. And Good Morning America, I'm Charles Gibson, or as they say here, Kia Ora. And I'm so London is Monday, May 3rd, and this is our first stop. The Fortnight will cover a wide variety of scenery from this New Zealand lake to much of Australia, and the show's hosts won't have a lot of time to rest. We're going to be kind of hopscotching all over the place. In all honesty, it's a little bit scary this trip because we're pushing the envelope a little bit. We actually broadcast from 20 different sites in 10 days. Good Morning America Down Under airs this week and next on ABC. PBS begins a four-part series on dance. It's intended as an introduction to styles around the world, a universal human activity from ballet in St. Petersburg, Russia to New York's National Dance Institute. Series creator Rhoda Grauer says that dancing has power. The power is being used for religious purposes, it's been used for self-expression, it's used for entertainment, and to have a good time. Dancing premieres tonight on most PBS stations. I'm retired, Commissioner. Raymond Burr returns as Ironside, the detective in a wheelchair from the hit 70s series. Former sidekick Don Galloway is back, now a deputy police chief, and three other cast members are reunited as well. Barbara Anderson, Elizabeth Bauer, and Don Mitchell. It's been 20 years, but every year I'd hope that somebody would come along with the idea of doing a special on Ironside. The Return of Ironside airs tomorrow on NBC. And Games Magazine has an issue about the special effect called morphing. The cover features Arnold Schwarzenegger and Roseanne Arnold, computer blended into one face. Also morphed, James Dean and Dean Martin, Babe Ruth and Dr. Ruth, Ron Howard and Howard Cosell, and one editor's personal favorite. Diana Ross Perot, because the resulting picture is so funny, it's so bizarre, it's someone that you would run away from if you saw them on the street. Games Magazine is on newsstands right now. Well, and the folks at Games Magazine couldn't pass up the opportunity to morph you and me too, John. Oh, man, ooh boy, I think you got the bad end of that deal. That is really weird. It looks like a little Michael Jackson thing happening. We're not talking Miss America for either one of those. Oh, okay, we'll leave that one alone. When the Publishers Clearinghouse makes another instant millionaire, somebody has to give them the news and the check. Last year we were out in a cornfield in the middle of Wisconsin until about midnight. Meet the prize patrol and go behind the scenes of a big bucks giveaway. The inside story is next. With the words you may have already won in big print, the letter from the Publishers Clearinghouse sweepstakes is the offer millions of Americans can't refuse. It's the stuff dreams are made of. So while you're doing the dreaming, we're going to let you in on the secrets of the $10 million giveaway in today's inside story. Oh, my gosh. For starters, the Publishers Clearinghouse does give away millions. In fact, during its 26-year history, the sweepstakes has awarded over $65 million in prizes. And to show what it takes to become an instant millionaire, the Clearinghouse reenacted the steps. Twice a year, the Clearinghouse sends out millions of entries. Look for the next one in June. Each of the envelopes gets its own 10-digit number. And even before their shift, the corporate accountants generate a list of possible winning numbers without any names. That's why the envelope says you may have already won. Now, in the old days, we used to use a bingo cage to select any numbers. But now, in the age of the 90s, we use computers. This top-secret list of 999 potential winning numbers is locked in a vault 30 miles from the Clearinghouse. As the sweepstakes ends, the accountants pick the one number from that list, which could change a person's life. If the person with the winning number did not return their entry before the deadline, they pick another number. And if you think you have to order magazines to win, think again. $10 million winner Pam Barton didn't order any. Neither did Bob Castleberry. In fact, the accountants say the majority of winners order no magazines. There are many non-order winners as well as people who order magazines. But I think it is skewed more towards the non-orders. Once the lucky number is picked, the Clearinghouse Prize Patrol flies to the winners' home. But the entire process is so secret, they don't know where they're going until the morning they leave. I came to work with my bags packed and I didn't even know where I was going to. We always wear bathing suits, however, just in case we go to a nice sunny location. Now give me money. Once the Prize Patrol lands, they buy some flowers, rent a van, and stake out the winners' house. They don't even know if they're home. We had to wait three days for our latest $10 million winner and it's no fun hanging out in hotels with these guys. Last year we were out in a cornfield in the middle of Wisconsin until about midnight. The most recent drawing had the Prize Patrol touching down in Dickinson, Texas, where Family Counselor Pam Barton almost blacked out from the excitement. A friend told her the chances of winning were real slim. He knows a lot of disaster kind of statistics and he told me I had a better chance of being hit by lightning. Pam figures half of her $10 million will go to taxes and charity. But she did splurge on a jet ski. Bob Castleberry's $10 million let him retire early, buy a Rolls, two ranches, establish four scholarships, and become mayor of his hometown. He says money just doesn't seem the same. One day it dawned on me $5,000 didn't seem like a whole lot of money to me. And I thought, golly. That's what I want. Golly is right. The Publisher's Clearinghouse is giving away millions, but they're not giving away the store. The Sweet Steaks helps them sell $100 million worth of subscriptions a year. Johnny Mathis songs like Chances Are were the love songs for a generation. But Johnny says you can't live on oldies alone. With his new album, the style is the same, but the music is ever-changing. I know what it feels for you, it's a now or never. There are few voices as instantly recognizable as the one possessed by Johnny Mathis. And after more than three decades of churning out the hits, his patented style is as clear as ever with the songs on his latest album, How Do You Keep the Music Playing? And he still packs in the crowd to his live performances with his no-frills approach. And don't wander around too much. I like to just stand still and let them hear what the music is all about. Chances are you think that I'm in love with you. Mathis has come a long way from those clubs he played to in the 50s and 60s. Back then, audiences were not so polite. It seemed like the whole front row was drunk and there was spewing cigarette smoke in your face. And that's not a very, it wasn't very much fun. These days, Johnny takes life in stride. He's always been a good athlete, but his free time now is consumed with golf. You can tell a lot about the way people treat their dogs, their wives, their children from playing around the golf with them. It'll bring out every ugly emotion you've ever had in your life, yeah. At age 57, the ever-youthful singer stays healthy to preserve his voice. And golf is just the ticket. Besides, it keeps him out of the kitchen. If I sing well, then I go play golf the next day. If I don't, I hide and stay in the kitchen and cook all day and probably eat it all. Johnny says he still performs more than 200 concerts a year. This weekend, he's in Lake Tahoe. Johnny's newest album comes out tomorrow. For Natalie Cole, it's still an unforgettable time. In Los Angeles, she was honored again for bringing classic music to a new audience. Natalie Cole received the sixth annual George and Ira Gershwin Award for Outstanding Musical Achievement. Previous winners include Ray Charles and Ella Fitzgerald. And Natalie says she's happy her style of song is being noticed. This was my first love. And to think that not only is it being reintroduced, but they're embracing it is great. Bernadette Peters, Martin Shortz, Sally Jessie Raphael, Chevy Chase and Mercedes Ruel were just a few of the stars on hand in New York to honor the Friars Club Man of the Year Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Neil Simon. I was once roasted by them and this is better than being roasted by them, I think. And a celebrity softball game over the weekend saw Chad Lowe, Kelly Martin and Lou Diamond Phillips going to bat to raise money for the Los Angeles Youth Network, an organization that helps runaways. The shelter gives them a chance to get off the street, to get back and to know that somebody cares about them and their life is worth something. Thank you. Air travel furnished by and a promotional fee paid by Delta Airlines. Delta can now fly you to 62 cities and 33 foreign countries around the world. At Delta, we love to fly and it shows. Celebrating a birthday on this Monday, May 3rd, magician Doug Henning turns 46. Singer Frankie Valli is 56, singer James Brown turns 65 and singer Pete Seeger is 74. Happy birthday, James. Germany's world image in recent decades has been on the stuffy and somewhat conservative side, so you may be surprised to learn that the TV fare in Germany is steamy, sexy and kinky. Take one porn star turned producer, one satellite TV network and you end up with the steamiest television Germany has ever seen. Many people have sex 20 years with the same person and just like to look with something new. But not all Germans love sex on the airways. We'll find out why they're hot and bothered. Pornography is forbidden under European and German law. Also on tomorrow's show, he is male, balding and white, so why do people confuse this man with Whoopi Goldberg? He's a real Whoopi Goldberg. Without makeup and hair. What's the link between this woman, this toilet paper and Patrick Swayze? Happiness is buying the toilet paper. Find out when the personal assistants to some of the biggest stars around dish the dirt. That's tomorrow's Inside Story only on Entertainment Tonight. We're going right to the top of the country charts to say goodbye. Here is number one, Tracy Lawrence and Alibis. Take care everybody. Bye. Next on The French Prince of Valais, a scrapbook of memories fill the bank's household as they prepare for Vivian and Philip's 25th wedding anniversary. And then Nick and his buddy plan a sitcom that's based on the Russo family in Blossom. Next, Elizabeth Montgomery stars as a shady southern belle whose bows come down with mysterious illnesses in The Black Widow Murders, the Blanche Taylor Moore story on NBC Monday night of the movies. The action's here tonight on Wavy TV 10.