Exclusive: Moonlight’s André Holland is the latest A-list figure to turn to the world of scripted podcasting.
Holland, who starred as Kevin in the Oscar-winning film, will feature in mordant comedy The Ms Phoenix Rising alongside Anthony Arkin (Succession), Susan Blommaert (The Blacklist), Estelle Parsons (The Conners) and Jeremy O. Harris (Slave Play).
Created by Trish Harnetiaux, the playwright behind Tin Cat Shoes and How to Get into Buildings, the six-part series comes from Playwrights Horizons Soundstage.
The show follows cruise ship The Ms Phoenix Rising, which sets sail in six weeks, marking the relaunch of the cruise ship industry after a prolonged shutdown. Urgent, budget-driven planning makes for a tense front office at Dane Cruising while they race to secure their place in history with fast marketing ideas and a reckless social campaign. Whose idea was it again to hype the “Christopher Columbus Route” through the Bahamas? Whatever.
Holland, who starred as Kevin in the Oscar-winning film, will feature in mordant comedy The Ms Phoenix Rising alongside Anthony Arkin (Succession), Susan Blommaert (The Blacklist), Estelle Parsons (The Conners) and Jeremy O. Harris (Slave Play).
Created by Trish Harnetiaux, the playwright behind Tin Cat Shoes and How to Get into Buildings, the six-part series comes from Playwrights Horizons Soundstage.
The show follows cruise ship The Ms Phoenix Rising, which sets sail in six weeks, marking the relaunch of the cruise ship industry after a prolonged shutdown. Urgent, budget-driven planning makes for a tense front office at Dane Cruising while they race to secure their place in history with fast marketing ideas and a reckless social campaign. Whose idea was it again to hype the “Christopher Columbus Route” through the Bahamas? Whatever.
- 3/16/2021
- by Peter White
- Deadline Film + TV
A bright, sunny day. A peaceful green field shaded at the edges by mature trees. It's the perfect spot for a picnic, a place you might want to return to over and over again. Unless...
Trish Harnetiaux's simply but punchy little film combines the remembered bliss of perfect summer days with the awkwardness of unexpected confrontation, and just a little bit of science fiction. Anthony Arkin is perfectly cast in the lead as a relaxed, self-contained man who seems to want nothing more out of life than to relax with a book and some sandwiches and fruit. He's impeccably costumed, showing us both his comfortable background and his casual attitude, whilst Arkin's gives him a gentle nature and vague sense of befuddlement that's instantly endearing. When, following some strange goings-on behind a bush, a stranger approaches him from across the field, we are instantly concerned for his well-being, Harnetiaux's direction and.
Trish Harnetiaux's simply but punchy little film combines the remembered bliss of perfect summer days with the awkwardness of unexpected confrontation, and just a little bit of science fiction. Anthony Arkin is perfectly cast in the lead as a relaxed, self-contained man who seems to want nothing more out of life than to relax with a book and some sandwiches and fruit. He's impeccably costumed, showing us both his comfortable background and his casual attitude, whilst Arkin's gives him a gentle nature and vague sense of befuddlement that's instantly endearing. When, following some strange goings-on behind a bush, a stranger approaches him from across the field, we are instantly concerned for his well-being, Harnetiaux's direction and.
- 8/22/2020
- by Jennie Kermode
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
Trish Harnetiaux's short film You Wouldn't Understand will have it's world premiere at Fantasia Film Festival, which begins today, online across Canada. Screen Anarchy is pleased to have the exclusive on the trailer for the sci-fi short film which you will find below. Like it's format it's short. And like the write-up states below, the less we know the better. Hey, we're just happy to be asked to share things. But you start throwing around words like 'Monty Python' and 'Primer'? Well now. You most definitely have our attention. Have a look. Every once in a while, a short film comes along that heralds a truly new voice in science fiction storytelling. Trish Harnetiaux's You Wouldn't Understand is one of those special...
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- 8/20/2020
- Screen Anarchy
How to Get into Buildings Written by Trish Harnetiaux Directed by Katherine Brook New Georges at The Brick, Brooklyn, NY December 4-December 19, 2015
It may be reductive to say that Trish Harnetiaux's new postmodern comedy is about love and relationships, but it's the easiest way to begin. How to Get into Buildings is in some ways a play about itself, thick with meta-theatrical moments. In other ways, it is as if Samuel Beckett directed Magnolia. Harnetiaux cites her structural inspiration as exploded-view diagrams and their arrangement of parts in relationship but not in contact with each other, perhaps echoed in one character's predilection for bento boxes.
The main components of this particular diagram are two couples, one of which represents the discrete parts coming together, and the other those parts moving apart: Lucy Maserati (Kristine Haruna Lee) and Roger Sauvignon (Jacob A. Ware), and Daphne Pierre-Pont (Stephanie Weeks) and Nick...
It may be reductive to say that Trish Harnetiaux's new postmodern comedy is about love and relationships, but it's the easiest way to begin. How to Get into Buildings is in some ways a play about itself, thick with meta-theatrical moments. In other ways, it is as if Samuel Beckett directed Magnolia. Harnetiaux cites her structural inspiration as exploded-view diagrams and their arrangement of parts in relationship but not in contact with each other, perhaps echoed in one character's predilection for bento boxes.
The main components of this particular diagram are two couples, one of which represents the discrete parts coming together, and the other those parts moving apart: Lucy Maserati (Kristine Haruna Lee) and Roger Sauvignon (Jacob A. Ware), and Daphne Pierre-Pont (Stephanie Weeks) and Nick...
- 12/14/2015
- by Leah Richards
- www.culturecatch.com
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