Ben Stiller and Patricia Arquette hit the red carpet for the season finale event for Severance at DGA Theater Complex on Friday night (April 8) in Los Angeles.
25.03.2022 - 18:21 / etcanada.com
“Grown-ish” is going through some major changes.
On Thursday night, the show aired its graduation-themed season 4 finale, and with it said goodbye to six original cast members, Francia Raisa, Emily Arlook, Chloe Bailey, Luka Sabbat, Halle Bailey, Jordan Buhat.
READ MORE: ‘Grown-ish’ Star Yara Shahidi And Her Mom Take Jimmy Fallon’s ‘Mother Daughter Challenge’
Three of the show’s original cast members will be sticking around, including star Yara Shahidi, as well as Trevor Jackson and Ziggy Simmons.
Also joining the show next season, according to TVLine, is Shahidi’s brother from the show “Black-ish”, played by Marcus Scribner.
“Francia, Emily, Chloe, Halle, Luka and Jordan will always be a part of the -ish’ family. This new season isn’t a goodbye, we are just expanding the world; there will always be an open door for them to return,” showrunners Zakiyyah Alexander and Courtney Lilly said in a statement to TVLine. “For Season 5, we’re excited to dive deeper into the storylines of Zoey, Aaron and Doug in their post-grad adventures and welcome a new dynamic class to Cal-U, including Junior.”
READ MORE: Yara Shahidi Celebrates Completing Her Thesis, Getting 1 Step Closer To Graduation
A number of the departing stars are off to big new projects, including Raisa, who is currently starring in “How I Met Your Father”, and Halle Bailey, who is starring in the upcoming “The Little Mermaid”, as well as continuing her music career with her sister as the duo Chloe x Halle.
Ben Stiller and Patricia Arquette hit the red carpet for the season finale event for Severance at DGA Theater Complex on Friday night (April 8) in Los Angeles.
Former Netherlands international Rene van der Gijp insists Erik ten Hag must be allowed to breathe a new lease of life into Manchester United this summer, admitting that "players like Paul Pogba" need to be moved on.
SPOILER ALERT: The following story contains details from the season finale of Apple TV+’s Severance.
It's the end of an era for the cast of , but it's also the beginning of a new one for its Freeform spinoff, . ET spoke with the cast on the red carpet of the 39th Annual PaleyFest LA, a bittersweet affair since it's the final one that the family will attend together as a cast. For the stars attending, which include Anthony Anderson, Tracee Ellis Ross, Yara Shahidi, Marcus Scribner, Miles Brown, Marsai Martin and Jenifer Lewis, it feels as if they came together for the first time just yesterday.For Shahidi — who left the main cast at the end of season 3 to lead -- the ability to decide on their ending has been «really beautiful.»«It's really beautiful to end this as a celebration.
ABC‘s biggest hits now all have season finale dates.
Eiza González debuted a platinum blonde hairdo, the Mexican actress is back to her brunette locks. The star was captured visiting the San Vicente Bungalows ahead of her movie premiere.González upcoming film, Ambulance, hits theaters on April 8 and tells the story of two brothers (Jake Gyllenhaal and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II) who hijack an ambulance after their robbery goes wrong.
Jesse Spencer said goodbye to Chicago Fire at the start of season 10, but it looks like he could be back for the upcoming season finale.
Jonathan Bailey is addressing some criticism surrounding season two of Bridgerton.
giving Will Smith a standing ovation after he smacked Chris Rock — saying that to call Hollywood types hypocritical “elites” is akin to racism.The actress — who is back on “The View” after her suspension for saying the Holocaust was “not about race” — came to the defense Thursday of her celebrity colleagues after they dismissed Smith’s onstage slap, with her shrugging, “Stuff happens.”Guest “View” co-host Tara Setmayer had been outraged by the ritzy audience’s reaction, insisting there needs to be “a lot of self-reflection in Hollywood.“They gave [Smith] a standing ovation,” she noted.“Which goes back to why some people feel like Hollywood elites are a bunch of hypocrites,” added the show’s lone conservative voice.Goldberg — who serves as the governor of the Academy’s Actors branch and won her own Oscar in 1991 as Best Supporting Actress for the flick “Ghost” — quickly cut off her fellow host.“I’m sorry, as one of those people, I’ve got to stop you,” Goldberg snapped.“I just want to stop with all this ‘elite’ stuff, because a lot of us work for a living,” she said, insisting that while “some are making millions of dollars,” that’s “not everybody” in the movie industry.“And it really pisses me off when people start to talk about people who work in Hollywood, not just actors, but all the other folks.
Gary Oldman, who collaborated with Christopher Nolan on his trilogy of Batman movies, says he is set to feature in one scene of the director’s next picture.
SPOILER ALERT: The following article contains details about the “Bel-Air” season finale.
Phil Collins has bid farewell to fans after what’s said to be his final performance with Genesis, closing the book on a rock journey that began in the late 1960s and extended through the next six decades.
Graduation means it’s time to move on. For six members of the cast at grown-ish, the season finale means just that.
cast had their own real-life issues to work through. In the new book Into Every Generation a Slayer Is Born: How Buffy Staked Our Hearts, several members of the cast are interviewed by Evan Ross Katz about their time on the cult classic series, which ran for seven seasons from 1997 to 2003. Sarah Michelle Gellar, who played the titular role, is extremely candid in the book about the on-set tension and the rumored feuds between her and other castmates.“I think that unfortunately, the set we were on and the world we were in was pitting us against each other,” Gellar says of the Joss Whedon-run show. “I think it would have been different if it was today.
A.D. Amorosi In the Season Four finale of Amazon’s “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel,” Tony Bennett managed to be arguably the episode’s biggest star without having to show his face or sing a note.The episode — “How Do You Get to Carnegie Hall?,” written and directed by the streaming comedy’s creator, Amy Sherman-Palladino — took place immediately before and after famously risqué comedian Lenny Bruce (played by Luke Kirby) performed his historic Feb.