TEXT OF THIS ARTICLE WAS PUBLISHED IN NEW YORK
POST ON MAY 12, 2026. WRITER IS NICOLE ROSENTHAL.
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This article is important article to be in archive. This has interview
comments by Joey Ramone's brother Mickey Leigh, by Johnny Ramone's wife
Linda Cummings-Ramone and by longtime Ramones manager Dave
Frey.
HEADLINE: HOW BITTER RAMONES LEGAL FEUD DERAILED PETE DAVIDSON NETFLIX
MOVIE WAS FINALLY SETTLED - AND WHY BATTLE MAY RAGE ON
Article is from New
York Post by Nicole Rosenthal on May 12,
2026.
Gabba Gabba hold on!
A years-long battle over the legal rights to the legacy of punk rock
pioneers The Ramones has finally been settled after the feud boiled over
because of a shelved Pete Davidson-led Netflix biopic about the band's
singer.
But the bitter and personal battle may rage on between the family
members of the founders - who are all now dead - with a former manager
still in the crosshairs now saying he's unfairly facing the prospect of
having to pay millions in legal fees or judgments.
Guitarist Johnny Ramone's widow, Linda Cummings-Ramone, was transferred
the remaining half of the estate company Ramones Productions Inc. from
singer Joey Ramone's brother, Mickey Leigh, as part of the deal
finalized Wednesday.
The Ramones were formed in Forest Hills in 1974 and played until 1996
with various lineups. Although they all adopted the surname Ramone, none
of the members were related.
The transfer means Cummings-Ramone - who was Joey's ex-girlfriend before
marrying his former bandmate - now has 'free rein to fully control" the
estate, according to court filings. The settlement was struck as Leigh
faced a protracted legal fight where he could've been on the hook for
millions.
The deal also allows Leigh to keep his brother's song copyrights and
other intellectual property rights, rendering him "finally free to
promote his brother's legacy without corporate obstruction," Leigh's
friend and longtime Ramones manager Dave Frey said.
But the highly anticipated movie based on Leigh's memoir that was
intended to preserve the singer's legacy seems all but dead in the water
after the rock'n'roll brouhaha and still has Frey caught in the
middle.
Frey remains a defendant in a $15 million lawsuit alleging he breached
his financial duties to the RPI for floating the Netflix plans.
The ex-manager, however, argued the still-unproduced film project was
"secured with STX Films solely by Mickey's attorney, not by me."
Frey said the movie's producers have been sent notification of the
settlement, and is now awaiting a decision regarding whether it will be
optioned. The film was to be based on Leigh's memoir of his brother, "I
Slept With Joey Ramone"
"It would've been good for everybody, it would've been good for the
Ramones as well. But now we can share with people what they're walking
into, and start to do a lot more work for Joey, said Mickey Leigh.
Frey, a former board member for RPI, was first accused in 2023 of
violating the estate's agreement by reportedly developing the biopic
without the full permission of Cummings-Ramone, he said. Leigh had
argued the film was not a Ramones biopic, but a memoir about his
relationship with his beloved brother.
An arbitrator decided the next year that Frey had acted in "disruptive
and negative conduct" in relation to his board position for pursuing the
film project, and he was dropped from the board in 2024.
But the ex-manager contends that, "by contract, the film was based
exclusively on both Mickey Leig's personal memoir .... and the
individual life rights" of Mickey and his brother. Therefore, the
project was not and could never be a "Ramones film", he told The
Post.
"It's not a Ramones story," Leigh previously told The Post of the book,
which profiles the iconic singer who battled debilitating OCD before his
2000 death.
"It's a story about growing up with a guy who defeated the odds and
became an inspiration to millions. That's what it's about."
Though the flick - announced in April 2021 - has since been put on an
apparent indefinite hold, Frey remains in court with Cummings-Ramone -
and both sides must hand over "evidence" in the case by the end of the
month. An appeal is pending, Frey said.
"The likely outcome is that I am going to probably run out of money -
there'll be a default judgment against me," Frey told The Post.
"Then I'll bankrupt, and that'll be bad: but that's just when I see the
real problem."
The manager argues the case, if decided in favor of Cummings-Ramone,
could set a difficult precedent for musicians' intellectual property in
the future.
"Anything [done] on their own in a solo capacity [would] need to get the
approval of their band entity or band company," he said, "because
anything they do as a solo artist could detract from the band
obligations.
"Mickey walked away with Michael Jackson," he added, "and she walked
away with the Jackson 5."
"I had hoped that would be the end of this war, and I am disappointed,
but unfortunately not surprised that Mr. Frey decided to exacerbate the
harm he has caused by making these statements to the Post",
Linda Cummings-Ramone said in an email to a Post reporter.
"To be clear, RPI and I are still in litigation with Mr. Frey, and we
will let his misstatements and ongoing harm to the company be handled
through that process.", Cummings-Ramone did continue.
Leigh agreed the fight is "not really over" noting one recent instance
in which the official Joey Ramone profile tied to the band's social
media accounts was replaced with a "disturbing" new one created just
before the settlement was inked.
"I still have to oversee things, there are still things that can come up
that are going to cause conflict. I'm still apprehensive about my
freedom. I'm still apprehensive about my freedom. I'm not sure if I'm
free quite yet.", Mickey Leigh said.
So this is from New York Post by Nicole Rosenthal on May 12,
2026.
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