Exclusive: Glitter & Doom, an Lgbtqia+ jukebox feature musical told with the iconic tunes of Grammy winning folk duo Indigo Girls, is in production already in Mexico City starring The Mandalorian‘s Ming-Na Wen, Y: The Last Man‘s Missi Pyle, and directed by Tom Gustafson off a screenplay by Cory Krueckeberg.
Billed as a fantastical summer romance, the pic follows a musician who wears charisma as camouflage and a carefree kid about to run away with the circus as they fall in love at first sight. But will 29 days be enough time to fall in love forever? International discoveries Alex Diaz stars as Glitter and Alan Cammish as Doom with Orange Is The New Black‘s Lea DeLaria also starring, and cameos by Tig Notaro and Indigo Girls Amy Ray and Emily Saliers. Wen will play the role of Ivy in the film.
The film is produced by Speak productions...
Billed as a fantastical summer romance, the pic follows a musician who wears charisma as camouflage and a carefree kid about to run away with the circus as they fall in love at first sight. But will 29 days be enough time to fall in love forever? International discoveries Alex Diaz stars as Glitter and Alan Cammish as Doom with Orange Is The New Black‘s Lea DeLaria also starring, and cameos by Tig Notaro and Indigo Girls Amy Ray and Emily Saliers. Wen will play the role of Ivy in the film.
The film is produced by Speak productions...
- 9/30/2021
- by Anthony D'Alessandro
- Deadline Film + TV
Before there was Must-See TV, there was Mad About You.
Twenty-five years ago this fall, NBC assembled the foundation of what would be one of the best and most popular programming blocs in TV history. Seinfeld was already entrenched at 9 P.M., while Mad About You — a sitcom starring Paul Reiser and Helen Hunt as the happily married Paul and Jamie Buchman — was entering its second season leading off what had long been TV’s most profitable night (and its third season overall). To that duo, NBC added powerhouse hospital...
Twenty-five years ago this fall, NBC assembled the foundation of what would be one of the best and most popular programming blocs in TV history. Seinfeld was already entrenched at 9 P.M., while Mad About You — a sitcom starring Paul Reiser and Helen Hunt as the happily married Paul and Jamie Buchman — was entering its second season leading off what had long been TV’s most profitable night (and its third season overall). To that duo, NBC added powerhouse hospital...
- 11/18/2019
- by Alan Sepinwall
- Rollingstone.com
Salvation star Jennifer Finnigan and her actor/director husband Jonathan Silverman are going to be parents!
The couple are preparing to welcome their first child, People can reveal exclusively.
“After 13 years together, we are beyond excited to start this new chapter of our lives. We can’t wait to be parents!” the couple tell People.
Finnigan, 37, and Silverman, 50, were introduced by Friends star Matthew Perry at a barbecue in 2004 and they wed in 2007.
Finnigan stars in the CBS’ summer series Salvation, which debuts Wednesday, July 12, at 9 p.m. Et. She previously starred on the FX series Tyrant.
From Pen: Katherine Heigl...
The couple are preparing to welcome their first child, People can reveal exclusively.
“After 13 years together, we are beyond excited to start this new chapter of our lives. We can’t wait to be parents!” the couple tell People.
Finnigan, 37, and Silverman, 50, were introduced by Friends star Matthew Perry at a barbecue in 2004 and they wed in 2007.
Finnigan stars in the CBS’ summer series Salvation, which debuts Wednesday, July 12, at 9 p.m. Et. She previously starred on the FX series Tyrant.
From Pen: Katherine Heigl...
- 6/7/2017
- by Patrick Gomez
- PEOPLE.com
If you were a TV critic from 1956 to 1976, you would have witnessed some big changes in the business: the rise and fall of the Western as the dominant primetime genre, or the color TV boom, or CBS' shift from silly rural comedies to socially conscious ones like All in the Family and M*A*S*H. If you covered the beat from 1976 to 1996, you would have written about Hill Street Blues and its many imitators, the classic years of SNL, and the early days of original cable programming. Almost any 20-year span would give you a front row seat to enormous artistic and technological change. As of this week, I've been professionally writing about television for exactly 20 years(*), and it's safe to say that the only two-decade period that featured a more radical transformation in how television was made and consumed would be back when the medium was first introduced into America's living rooms.
- 6/2/2016
- by Alan Sepinwall
- Hitfix
General Hospital vet Maurice Benard will guest-star with Jonathan Silverman (The Single Guy) in an upcoming, murder-less (?) episode of ABC’s Castle.
RelatedAsk Ausiello: Spoilers on a Castle Vanishing and More
TVLine has learned that in the 19th episode of Season 8, Silverman plays Alan Masters, the miraculous survivor of an attempted murder who subsequently helps Castle and Beckett solve the case.
Daytime Emmy winner Benard guest-stars in the same episode, as revealed by a photo he shared via Instagram, though details on his role are thus far unknown. Unless ABC’s Monday-night drama did not cast him against type, Imma...
RelatedAsk Ausiello: Spoilers on a Castle Vanishing and More
TVLine has learned that in the 19th episode of Season 8, Silverman plays Alan Masters, the miraculous survivor of an attempted murder who subsequently helps Castle and Beckett solve the case.
Daytime Emmy winner Benard guest-stars in the same episode, as revealed by a photo he shared via Instagram, though details on his role are thus far unknown. Unless ABC’s Monday-night drama did not cast him against type, Imma...
- 3/5/2016
- TVLine.com
The "Friday the 13th" franchise's crop of Final Girls are known for their keen survival instincts onscreen, but the careers of the actresses who played them? Not quite as impressive. When was the last time you heard the name "Amy Steel"? Dana Kimmell? Melanie Kinnaman? In celebration of Friday the 13th, here's our brief rundown of the post-"F13" careers of every Final Girl in the (original) franchise, from Adrienne King to Lexa Doig. "Friday the 13th" (1980) Adrienne King (Alice Hardy) After briefly reprising her role in the film's 1981 sequel, King became the victim of a stalker (the man ultimately pulled a gun on her). Shaken by the experience, she didn't return to acting until the 2010 low-budget horror/sci-fi film "Psychic Experiment." "Friday the 13th Part 2" (1981) Amy Steel (Ginny) Steel actually has two claims to fame in the horror genre, as she also starred in the 1986 pseudo-slasher "April Fool's Day.
- 3/13/2015
- by Chris Eggertsen
- Hitfix
(Cbr) It’s all "Groundhog Day’s" fault. The 1993 comedy hit, which stars Bill Murray as a snarky weatherman forced to re-live the same day over and over again until he becomes a better person, made the idea of a time loop a very popular narrative device for movies and television — and for good reason. There isn’t one person who hasn’t had a day they wish they could take a mulligan on. It’s a very relatable idea, and it’s easy to see why Hollywood keeps going back to the time-loop well. With "Edge of Tomorrow" becoming the latest member of the “Groundhog Day-ing It Club,” Spinoff looks back at some of the most memorable TV and movie do-overs. “Cause and Effect” ("Star Trek: The Next Generation") Actually, maybe we should blame this fifth season episode of Tng, which aired in 1992 — a year before "Groundhog Day.
- 7/19/2014
- by Phil Pirrello, Comic Book Resources
- Hitfix
It’s 2013, so I assume you’ve already acquainted yourself with the bad news: Internet commentary about TV is almost always better, or at least funnier, than TV itself. This was especially true in the case of last night’s Emmys, an unusually somber event given that it was supposed to be celebrating our current “golden age of television.” When weren’t we in a golden age of television again? 1997 or something? Please. Don’t tell me you didn’t love The Single Guy.
Fortunately, funny gay guys (and I) live-tweeted the Emmys. Here are ten of my favorite quips from that posse on Merritt Wever‘s big night.
1. Chris Schleicher thinks one Big Bang Theory star treated a comic legend like his dim brother Darryl (or his other dim brother Darryl).
I’m Jim Parsons and I have several Emmys. Here’s Bob Newhart. He has one.
— Chris Schleicher (@cschleichsrun) September 23, 2013
2. Meanwhile,...
Fortunately, funny gay guys (and I) live-tweeted the Emmys. Here are ten of my favorite quips from that posse on Merritt Wever‘s big night.
1. Chris Schleicher thinks one Big Bang Theory star treated a comic legend like his dim brother Darryl (or his other dim brother Darryl).
I’m Jim Parsons and I have several Emmys. Here’s Bob Newhart. He has one.
— Chris Schleicher (@cschleichsrun) September 23, 2013
2. Meanwhile,...
- 9/23/2013
- by Louis Virtel
- The Backlot
News
Showtime’s drama pilot The Affair has added Joshua Jackson to the cast. The drama focuses on two married couples and an affair that creates turmoil between them. Jackson will play a long island cowboy whose wife starts an affair with a character played by Dominic West.
Too bad Don’t Trust the B—- in Apartment 23 didn’t last long enough to get Joshua Jackson.
EW drops the terrible no-good news that Lynda Carter will appear as herself on an episode of Two and a Half Men. I’m telling myself that show probably won’t give Carter a scene to justify watching Two and a Half Men.
NBC lists 12 “Must See TV” Shows You Might Not Remember. I look at it as twelve reasons why NBC has been stuck at the bottom of the ratings.
I had so much hope for The Single Guy, at least until it debuted.
Showtime’s drama pilot The Affair has added Joshua Jackson to the cast. The drama focuses on two married couples and an affair that creates turmoil between them. Jackson will play a long island cowboy whose wife starts an affair with a character played by Dominic West.
Too bad Don’t Trust the B—- in Apartment 23 didn’t last long enough to get Joshua Jackson.
EW drops the terrible no-good news that Lynda Carter will appear as herself on an episode of Two and a Half Men. I’m telling myself that show probably won’t give Carter a scene to justify watching Two and a Half Men.
NBC lists 12 “Must See TV” Shows You Might Not Remember. I look at it as twelve reasons why NBC has been stuck at the bottom of the ratings.
I had so much hope for The Single Guy, at least until it debuted.
- 8/27/2013
- by Lyle Masaki
- The Backlot
Apart from being one of my favorite actors, Donal Logue is also coming up in three of my favorite shows. Unfortunately (maybe), once in a while you find yourself in an interview that turns out, somehow, not to actually be one. You have your questions set out. You know the shows and the talking points. Your subject is equally prepared to run through the routine of extolling the virtues of whatever they happen to be working on. But, it doesn’t end up going that way.
These are the interviews which ultimately find you running out of time, and scrambling for something, and spitting out, “Umm… tell me about the show.”
Or, to put it another way, these are the interviews that make you glad you don’t work for someone, who might not think it’s actually completely brilliant that you killed thirty minutes talking to Donal Logue as...
These are the interviews which ultimately find you running out of time, and scrambling for something, and spitting out, “Umm… tell me about the show.”
Or, to put it another way, these are the interviews that make you glad you don’t work for someone, who might not think it’s actually completely brilliant that you killed thirty minutes talking to Donal Logue as...
- 4/17/2013
- by Marc Eastman
- AreYouScreening.com
Revisiting 18 years of pop culture, from Britpop to the Spice Girls, via Father Ted
1994: Mad fer it!
Issue No 1 Previously a broadsheet section in the newspaper, The Guide was expanded into a magazine proper on 27 August 1994. Nobody bothered to archive a copy, though, so the best we can do is show you a Xeroxed reproduction of the cover. At the time we were concerned with the weird state of science shows on TV and had a wander around the Notting Hill Carnival.
Spotted! All Saints From a review of their single Silver Shadow: "Born in the same year and in the same area of London, what else could these girls do but form a swingbeat group? Their debut is a sickly Atlantic Starr cover with an idiotic number of mixes, encompassing every dance style bar Morris. Eternal may rest easy in their Timberlands." Note: swingbeat was a form of...
1994: Mad fer it!
Issue No 1 Previously a broadsheet section in the newspaper, The Guide was expanded into a magazine proper on 27 August 1994. Nobody bothered to archive a copy, though, so the best we can do is show you a Xeroxed reproduction of the cover. At the time we were concerned with the weird state of science shows on TV and had a wander around the Notting Hill Carnival.
Spotted! All Saints From a review of their single Silver Shadow: "Born in the same year and in the same area of London, what else could these girls do but form a swingbeat group? Their debut is a sickly Atlantic Starr cover with an idiotic number of mixes, encompassing every dance style bar Morris. Eternal may rest easy in their Timberlands." Note: swingbeat was a form of...
- 1/5/2013
- by The Guide
- The Guardian - Film News
Los Angeles – Ernest Borgnine was the movie star who was America’s “every man,” with roles like his Best Actor Oscar winning “Marty” (1955), Quinton McHale in TV’s “McHale’s Navy” (1962), tough guy Fatso Judson in the classic film “From Here to Eternity” (1953) and even as a cartoon voice (Mermaid Man) on “Spongebob Squarepants.” Borgnine died Sunday in Los Angeles at the age of 95.
I interviewed Ernest Borgnine twice for HollywoodChicago.com, and his wit, passion and voice was as strong in his 90s as it was sixty years earlier. He told me stories from the sets of “Marty,” “Emperor of the North” (1973) and “September 11” (2002), as if they had happened yesterday, with the same emphasis on the love of life that sustained him in his long career in show business, appearing in unforgettable film and TV roles.
Ernest Borgnine in Chicago, March 26th, 2011
Photo credit: Joe Arce of Starstruck Foto for HollywoodChicago.
I interviewed Ernest Borgnine twice for HollywoodChicago.com, and his wit, passion and voice was as strong in his 90s as it was sixty years earlier. He told me stories from the sets of “Marty,” “Emperor of the North” (1973) and “September 11” (2002), as if they had happened yesterday, with the same emphasis on the love of life that sustained him in his long career in show business, appearing in unforgettable film and TV roles.
Ernest Borgnine in Chicago, March 26th, 2011
Photo credit: Joe Arce of Starstruck Foto for HollywoodChicago.
- 7/9/2012
- by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
- HollywoodChicago.com
Ernest Borgnine, an Academy Award winner and three-time Emmy nominee, died of kidney failure on Sunday. He was 95.
On television, Borgnine played the titular Lt. Commander Quinton McHale in the World War II-set sitcom McHale’s Navy, which ran from 1962 to 1966. His small-screen resume also includes runs on Airwolf and 1996′s short-lived comedy The Single Guy, voice work on shows such as All Dogs Go to Heaven: The Series, The Simpsons (as himself) and SpongeBob SquarePants (voicing Mermaid Man as recently as September 2011), and guest-starring turns on myriad programs including two Season 15 episodes of ER, for which he earned one...
On television, Borgnine played the titular Lt. Commander Quinton McHale in the World War II-set sitcom McHale’s Navy, which ran from 1962 to 1966. His small-screen resume also includes runs on Airwolf and 1996′s short-lived comedy The Single Guy, voice work on shows such as All Dogs Go to Heaven: The Series, The Simpsons (as himself) and SpongeBob SquarePants (voicing Mermaid Man as recently as September 2011), and guest-starring turns on myriad programs including two Season 15 episodes of ER, for which he earned one...
- 7/9/2012
- by Matt Webb Mitovich
- TVLine.com
Ernest Borgnine, the prolific and beloved actor who won an Oscar for 1955's "Marty," has died.
Borgnine, 95, died Sunday (July 8) at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, the Los Angeles Times reports. Family members were with him at the end.
Borgnine started acting after serving in the Navy during World War II and scored a plum role as sadistic Sgt. Fatso Judson in "From Here to Eternity" in 1953. He earned his lone Oscar nomination and win two years later for "Marty," the story of a lonely butcher who finds love with a schoolteacher.
Pics: The life of Ernest Borgnine
He pretty much never stopped acting, racking up hundreds of credits in both movies and television over the years. His filmography includes everything from violent Westerns ("The Wild Bunch") to easygoing sitcoms ("McHale's Navy," "The Single Guy") to animation ("SpongeBob SquarePants").
Borgnine stayed on his game, too. He earned a Golden...
Borgnine, 95, died Sunday (July 8) at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, the Los Angeles Times reports. Family members were with him at the end.
Borgnine started acting after serving in the Navy during World War II and scored a plum role as sadistic Sgt. Fatso Judson in "From Here to Eternity" in 1953. He earned his lone Oscar nomination and win two years later for "Marty," the story of a lonely butcher who finds love with a schoolteacher.
Pics: The life of Ernest Borgnine
He pretty much never stopped acting, racking up hundreds of credits in both movies and television over the years. His filmography includes everything from violent Westerns ("The Wild Bunch") to easygoing sitcoms ("McHale's Navy," "The Single Guy") to animation ("SpongeBob SquarePants").
Borgnine stayed on his game, too. He earned a Golden...
- 7/8/2012
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Pop2it
Longtime screen star Ernest Borgnine died Sunday of renal failure, his spokesman Harry Flynn told the Associated Press. He was 95. He was surrounded by his family at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, according to the report. While he often played the bad guy, Borgnine - who was known for his off-screen professionalism and friendliness - enjoyed a six-decade career that was also filled with many affable roles, from his sensitive, Oscar-winning turn as a homely Bronx butcher who finds love in 1955's Marty, to his popular Lieutenant Commander Quinton McHale on ABC's 1962-66 World War II sitcom McHale's Navy. The character of the gruff McHale came easily.
- 7/8/2012
- by Brian Orloff
- PEOPLE.com
NeNe Leakes is fast becoming Ryan Murphy‘s newest protégé.
The Real Housewives star — who’s made a handful of appearances on Glee this season — has joined the cast of Murphy’s NBC comedy pilot The New Normal.
Also among the latest wave of pilot castings: a Vampire Diaries alum returns to The CW, Notorious adds a Breakout Kings vet and more.
As for Leakes, she joins the project — which centers on a modern-day blended family of a gay couple and their surrogate — as the heavily recurring character, Rocky.
In other pilot news…
• Trent Ford (Vampire Diaries) will co-star in The CW’s Shelter,...
The Real Housewives star — who’s made a handful of appearances on Glee this season — has joined the cast of Murphy’s NBC comedy pilot The New Normal.
Also among the latest wave of pilot castings: a Vampire Diaries alum returns to The CW, Notorious adds a Breakout Kings vet and more.
As for Leakes, she joins the project — which centers on a modern-day blended family of a gay couple and their surrogate — as the heavily recurring character, Rocky.
In other pilot news…
• Trent Ford (Vampire Diaries) will co-star in The CW’s Shelter,...
- 3/27/2012
- by Megan Masters
- TVLine.com
Nerds alert! The Chuck Season 5 DVD package already has a release date — and TVLine has a bit of scoop on the extended series finale we told you about last week.
All told, Chuck: The Complete Fifth and Final Season, out May 8 on DVD and Blu-ray, packs in all 13 episodes plus over three hours of bonus features including a half-dozen featurettes. There’s also an extended version of the very final episode, “Chuck Versus The Goodbye,” which TVLine has learned runs a robust 52 minutes (versus the 45-minute broadcast edit).
Ready for more of today’s TV dish? Well…
Paula Abdul...
All told, Chuck: The Complete Fifth and Final Season, out May 8 on DVD and Blu-ray, packs in all 13 episodes plus over three hours of bonus features including a half-dozen featurettes. There’s also an extended version of the very final episode, “Chuck Versus The Goodbye,” which TVLine has learned runs a robust 52 minutes (versus the 45-minute broadcast edit).
Ready for more of today’s TV dish? Well…
Paula Abdul...
- 2/3/2012
- by Vlada Gelman
- TVLine.com
Interview With Jonathan Silverman On Swinging With The Finkels
Jonathan Silverman, who has made a name for himself on sitcoms such as as The Single Guy and In Case of Emergency, is now trying to prove his passionate side as Peter in the new British romantic comedy Swinging with the Finkels. The movie tells the story of how Peter and his wife, Janet's (Melissa George), best friends, Ellie and Alvin Finkel (Mandy Moore and Martin Freeman), have lost their chemistry and lust for each other. In an effort to save their marriage, Peter suggests that Ellie and Alvin spice up their relationship.
Thanks for reading We Got This Covered...
Jonathan Silverman, who has made a name for himself on sitcoms such as as The Single Guy and In Case of Emergency, is now trying to prove his passionate side as Peter in the new British romantic comedy Swinging with the Finkels. The movie tells the story of how Peter and his wife, Janet's (Melissa George), best friends, Ellie and Alvin Finkel (Mandy Moore and Martin Freeman), have lost their chemistry and lust for each other. In an effort to save their marriage, Peter suggests that Ellie and Alvin spice up their relationship.
Thanks for reading We Got This Covered...
- 8/25/2011
- by Karen Benardello
- We Got This Covered
Since the mid-1980s, NBC has always had at least two sitcom footholds during their Must See Thursday offerings, with shows like: "The Cosby Show," "Family Ties" "Different Strokes," "Mad About You," "Night Court," "Cheers," "Taxi," "Seinfeld," "Frasier," "Friends," and -- for the last few years -- "The Office" and "30 Rock." But the network has often struggled to fill in those gaps. launching a number of mediocre to putrid sitcoms in those holes. Yet, up until "Friends" left the air, and before the prevalence of DVRs, NBC had such a stronghold on on the night, that many of those sitcoms managed top ten ratings. Few probably remember the Christina Applegate sitcom, Jesse," for instance, but it ran for two years. In its first year, it was the sixth-highest rated show of 1998 -1999, receiving about two-and-a-half times more viewers than "The Office" does today (or five times the viewers of "Community.
- 4/12/2011
- by Dustin Rowles
At 94 the legendary Ernest Borgnine doesn't want to be called "Mr. Borgnine," preferring "Ernest" or even "Ernie." Speaking in his signature gravelly voice, Borgnine is matter-of-fact about his achievements, still delighted and slightly awed that he has been able to make his living doing what he loves most: acting. He continues to be enthralled with movies, though he is no admirer of much of what is produced today and is dismissive about acting methods. "I learned to act by just sitting on a park bench and watching people go by," he says. "I follow what the author has written and take it from there. I don't have a method. You work with your head and your heart and then you create a character."Whatever his method—or perhaps more precisely, non-method—it has worked for him. For more than six decades, the Oscar winner has rolled up more than 200 movie and TV credits,...
- 1/12/2011
- backstage.com
By Marilyn Beck and Stacy Jenel Smith
HollywoodNews.com: Don’t be surprised if Jonathan Silverman turns up on ABC’s “Better with You” as a guest star, possibly even for a guest arc, according to show star Jennifer Finnigan — a.k.a. Mrs. Silverman.
“I could definitely see him doing a few episodes of the show, but I’m not sure when. Everyone would love that,” she adds, “Everyone knows what a good comedic actor he is.”
The star of “Weekend at Bernie’s” and “The Single Guy” fame is a familiar face around the “Better with You” set. “He’s incredibly supportive. He’s here every week on tape night. He’ll sit in my dressing room and watch on the monitor, hang out, ask if I’d like water, get me food,” Jennifer reports. “It’s an amazing thing. I think he’s more excited about my successes than I am.
HollywoodNews.com: Don’t be surprised if Jonathan Silverman turns up on ABC’s “Better with You” as a guest star, possibly even for a guest arc, according to show star Jennifer Finnigan — a.k.a. Mrs. Silverman.
“I could definitely see him doing a few episodes of the show, but I’m not sure when. Everyone would love that,” she adds, “Everyone knows what a good comedic actor he is.”
The star of “Weekend at Bernie’s” and “The Single Guy” fame is a familiar face around the “Better with You” set. “He’s incredibly supportive. He’s here every week on tape night. He’ll sit in my dressing room and watch on the monitor, hang out, ask if I’d like water, get me food,” Jennifer reports. “It’s an amazing thing. I think he’s more excited about my successes than I am.
- 11/3/2010
- by Beck / Smith
- Hollywoodnews.com
By Josef Adalian
"The Single Guy" may be sliding to Syfy: Jonathan Silverman is attached to a script set up at the network.
Silverman and "Smallville" star Michael Rosenbaum are set to play actors who once appeared together on a popular science-fiction show but have now hit hard times and must work together to get back on track. Sony-based Happy Madison is producing the project, which was created by Rosenbaum.
(Sidebar-- We once sat in a booth at Jones Hollywood right next to Silverman. Stars: They're just like Us!)...
"The Single Guy" may be sliding to Syfy: Jonathan Silverman is attached to a script set up at the network.
Silverman and "Smallville" star Michael Rosenbaum are set to play actors who once appeared together on a popular science-fiction show but have now hit hard times and must work together to get back on track. Sony-based Happy Madison is producing the project, which was created by Rosenbaum.
(Sidebar-- We once sat in a booth at Jones Hollywood right next to Silverman. Stars: They're just like Us!)...
- 3/26/2010
- by Adalian
- The Wrap
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