Nellie Andreeva Co-Editor-in-Chief, TVDays Of Our Lives is returning to production sooner than originally planned.Filming on the NBC daytime drama was suspended on Oct. 12 for two weeks after a production team member tested positive for COVID-19.
02.10.2020 - 22:32 / etonline.com
it was canceled in June amid worldwide protests following the death of George Floyd. However, the show will only air internationally.A spokesperson for Langley Productions, Inc, which produces, tells ET that production has been riding with the Spokane County Police Department in Washington since September and will likely continue into November.
Nellie Andreeva Co-Editor-in-Chief, TVDays Of Our Lives is returning to production sooner than originally planned.Filming on the NBC daytime drama was suspended on Oct. 12 for two weeks after a production team member tested positive for COVID-19.
Nellie Andreeva, Dominic Patten Three more Vancouver-based series — the CW’s Riverdale and Batwoman and Netflix’s Maid, all from Warner Bros TV — have been cleared to resume production tomorrow after receiving the delayed COVID-19 tests for their casts and crews.
Nellie Andreeva Co-Editor-in-Chief, TVEXCLUSIVE: Apple’s The Morning Show is headed back to production. The award-winning series is slated to restart filming its second season on October 19.
Nellie Andreeva Co-Editor-in-Chief, TVThe CW’s All American will be taking a break from filming on Monday after a positive COVID-19 test for a person from the production.The Warner Bros. TV-produced series was up and running on Friday.
said Spokane’s Sheriff’s Office, noting that two area crews began filming last month and will continue through early November.However, Langley Productions said that the episodes are not intended for US audiences, and will be released only to the international territories still in contract with the show, according to the Hollywood Reporter.The 33rd season premiere of “Cops” was originally postponed in observance of the unrest prompted by the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.
Nellie Andreeva Co-Editor-in-Chief, TVLong-running docu-reality series Cops is back in production four months after it was canceled by Paramount Network. In a press release put out on Sept.
Nellie Andreeva Co-Editor-in-Chief, TVUPDATE THURSDAY PM: One more series in Vancouver, the CW/CBS TV Studios’ Charmed, will return to production tomorrow after getting the delayed COVID-19 test results for the cast and crew. There are still a number of shows that have been dark for days due to the backlog.
Four months after Paramount Network pulled the plug on one of TV’s longest-running reality shows, “Cops” appears to have been resurrected from the dead.
according to The Hollywood Reporter.
Nellie Andreeva Co-Editor-in-Chief, TVAfter a months-long coronavirus-related delay, National Geographic’s Genius: Aretha resumed production today in Atlanta as planned, and cast and crew were greeted with a welcome back letter from executive producer/showrunner Suzan-Lori Parks.Genius: Aretha, starring Cynthia Erivo as the legendary singer Aretha Franklin, had filmed 5 1/2 episodes of its eight-episode order when production shut down mid-March amid the escalating coronavirus outbreak.
Nellie Andreeva Co-Editor-in-Chief, TVEXCLUSIVE: Cameras will start rolling again on ABC’s A Million Little Things tomorrow, Thursday, I have learned.
Denise Petski Senior Managing EditorOWN: Oprah Winfrey Network is set to resume production in New Orleans on the remainder of the 10-episode season 5 of Queen Sugar, shut down in March due to COVID-19.Since filming came to a halt nearly seven months ago, creator Ava DuVernay decided to completely revamp the remainder of the season to reflect the very real issues our country is facing through the lens of the Bordelon family and the fictional community of St. Josephine.
Will Thorne Staff Writer“Queen Sugar” is getting back in action.The OWN series is officially returning to set for production on season 5 in New Orleans to shoot the remainder of its 10-episode season.Production on the fifth season had previously begun in March, but like almost every show it the planet, it was forced to shutdown due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Jazz Tangcay Artisans EditorFollowing weeks of lockdown, production for several shows has resumed with new safety protocols in place to protect cast and crew members.
Film and television productions are ramping up in many areas despite looming concerns over the coronavirus pandemic -- and the latest reality TV series to hit go on filming is “Top Chef.” The competition cooking show is all hands on deck to begin shooting its next edition in Portland, Ore. And with the greenlight, COVID-19 measures will be implemented to keep production on track and positive tests hopefully at a minimum.
Nellie Andreeva Co-Editor-in-Chief, TVEXCLUSIVE: National Geographic’s Genius: Aretha is set to resume filming Oct. 1 in Atlanta.
Nellie Andreeva Co-Editor-in-Chief, TVEXCLUSIVE: Filming has just resumed in New Zealand on Amazon’s sprawling The Lord Of The Rings TV series, an adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien’s fantasy novels, I have learned.
Lucifer.The supernatural Netflix series halted production in March as a result of the coronavirus pandemic. Although filming had wrapped for all the episodes in the second half of the show’s fifth season, the production team hadn’t managed to complete the finale in time.Fans have waited patiently for the second half of season five to air along with the closing episode.
The Batman has resumed following Robert Pattinson’s positive COVID-19 diagnosis.Filming was brought to a standstill on September 3, after Warner Bros. confirmed an individual on set had contracted the virus – with Vanity Fair then confirming it was Pattinson.“Following a hiatus for COVID 19 quarantine precautions, filming has now resumed on The Batman in the UK,” a Warner Bros.