No, it's not about coronavirus
01.05.2020 - 17:31 / glamour.com
I started Hollywood, his new series on , with a clear bias: I love his brand. Not everyone has the palette or patience for Murphy's outlandish camp, made popular from classics like , , , and .
His first foray into Netflix, , was polarizing: Some loved the show's wit and lightning-fast dialogue, others hated it.And the same goes for Hollywood. The seven-episode series currently has a , making it one of Murphy's lowest-scored projects ever.
The criticisms are valid. This series—which re-imagines
.No, it's not about coronavirus
By Anita Bennett
There’s more “horror” coming from Ryan Murphy.
Get excited, fans!
There’s more “horror” coming from Ryan Murphy.
Ryan Murphy is expanding the “American Horror Story” universe to include a limited attention span-friendly spinoff series.
By Greg Evans
In the midst of the pandemic, fans of Ryan Murphy’s Netflix series The Politician were worried they wouldn’t see a second season anytime soon. Luckily, Murphy has confirmed a second season is coming in mid-June.
For award-winning actress and fierce LGBTQ ally Patti LuPone it all starts with the costume.
Ryan Murphy is rewriting history with a little help from his friends. Netflix’s Hollywood imagines a post–World War II Tinseltown in which systemic racism, gender bias and homophobia don’t exist — and puts on a flashy show at the same time! “The 1940s are just so ripe with their own mythology,” star Darren Criss, who also executive produces, exclusively says in the latest issue of Us Weekly.
Samara Weaving is ready for the much talked about release of her new Netflix show “Hollywood” on May 1.
By Marc Malkin
Ryan Murphy has a passion for the past — whether it’s revisiting the making of starring Bette Davis and Joan Crawford (), chronicling the lives of gay men during the HIV/AIDS crisis (), reexamining the events around the country’s biggest media scandals (), or exposing the masses to the underground world of the 1980s ballroom scene in New York City (). His latest project,, is no different.
Patti LuPone (left) and the cast of ‘Hollywood,” out today on Netflix. (Photo courtesy Netflix)
Ryan Murphy exposes the racism, hypocrisy and sexual discrimination that shaped the careers of major stars such as Rock Hudson (Jake Picking) and derailed the careers of others such as Anna May Wong (Michelle Krusiec) and Hattie McDaniel (Queen Latifah) in his new Netflix series “Hollywood.” Steeped in heavily researched history, the series introduces a fictitious storyline with invented characters to offer a picture of what might have been, had a more humane sensibility been allowed to flourish
By Daniel D'Addario