The most Marvel-ous nominations. Marvel has taken on Ragnarok, Ultron and Thanos, but now they’re fighting for the Emmys. The first superhero series from Marvel Studios scored big with the 2021 Emmy nominations.
30.06.2021 - 02:21 / deadline.com
John Erman, an Emmy-winning director-producer who helmed multiple episodes of such classic TV series as Star Trek, M*A*S*H and Peyton Place along with Part 2 of Roots and much of its sequel miniseries Roots: The Next Generations, has died. He was 85.
His friend, Charles Silver of SMS Talent, told Deadline that Erman died June 25 in New York City after a brief illness.
Born on August 3, 1935, in Chicago, Erman began his show business career as an actor, including an unbilled role in 1955’s
The most Marvel-ous nominations. Marvel has taken on Ragnarok, Ultron and Thanos, but now they’re fighting for the Emmys. The first superhero series from Marvel Studios scored big with the 2021 Emmy nominations.
Cobra Kai really a comedy?–but some triumphs as well. After being shut out by the , returned triumphant, with nominations for Best Limited Series and for Michaela Coel, its star (and creator) for acting.
Bridgerton or bust! Nearly three months after announcing his departure from the hit series, Regé-Jean Page is raking in awards show acclaim.
In a recent major announcement, it was confirmed that host of A-list stars including the likes of Henry Cavill, John Cena, Sam Rockwell have been roped in for a spy thriller franchise that is being directed by Michael Vaughn. According to Deadline, the film titled Argylle will be based on an upcoming spy novel by the same name from author Ellie Conway that is yet to release. Along with this exciting spy franchise, pop singer Dua Lipa will be making her acting debut.
Deadline, which first reported the news of Erman’s passing.Erman won a Directors Guild of America award in 1978 for his work on the second installment of “Roots.” He later went on to direct multiple episodes of the sequel series “Roots: The Next Generation” at ABC, as well as the CBS miniseries adaptation of the Alex Haley novel “Queen.”Throughout his career, Erman received a total of 10 Emmy nominations, winning once in 1983 for “Who Will Love My Children?”He picked up a second DGA award in
John Lawton, the vocalist for the long-running Uriah Heep during one of the British rock bands most popular eras, died June 29 of undisclosed causes.
initially postponed last year due to unrest tied to the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Paramount Network later canceled the series altogether, but some versions of the show still air in syndication internationally.Langley, an Oklahoma City native, grew up in Los Angeles and served in the US Army in the early 1960s.
Mexico, a family spokeswoman said.Langley died in Baja, Mexico, of an apparent heart attack Saturday during the Coast to Coast Ensenada-San Felipe 250 off-road race, family spokeswoman Pam Golum said. He was 78.“Cops” was among the first reality series on the air when it debuted in 1989, and it would become an institution through 32 seasons.
John Langley, creator and executive producer of the long-running reality series Cops, died of an apparent heart attack June 26 in Baja, Mexico as he was competing in the Coast to Coast Ensenada-San Felipe 250 off road race.
John McAfee, whose McAfee antivirus software was a go-to standard in the late 1980s and early 1990s but was later overshadowed by his globe-trotting wild activities, died in a Barcelona jail cell Wednesday. His death at age 75 was an apparent suicide, authorities claimed. .
John McAfee, of McAfee Antivirus Software, has died.
Joanne Linville was an actress known for roles including a Romulan commander in a 1968 episode of “Star Trek.”Linville’s portrayal of the Romulan commander made her “Star Trek” episode, “The Enterprise Incident,” one of the original series’ most memorable – fans loved the romantic tension between her character and Spock, played by Leonard Nimoy (1931–2015). Another notable appearance was on a 1961 episode of “The Twilight Zone,” playing a Confederate widow at the end of the Civil War.
Joanne Linville, a prolific character actress best known for playing a Romulan commander in an episode of the original “Star Trek,” died Monday, CAA confirmed to TheWrap.The character actress worked alongside Barbra Streisand in the 1976 “A Star is Born”Born in Bakersfield and raised in Venice, CA, Linville established herself an actress in the mid-‘50s and ‘60s, gaining guest roles on “Studio One,” “Alfred Hitchcock Presents,” and “Kraft Theatre.”While Linville never became a series regular,