B Positive” and a reboot of “The Equalizer” starring Queen Latifah.
B Positive” and a reboot of “The Equalizer” starring Queen Latifah.
British actor Dominic Sherwood is no stranger to the supernatural.His career has involved vampires (“Vampire Academy,” 2014), angels and demons (“Shadowhunters,” 2016-2019), and now Showtime’s “Penny Dreadful: City of Angels,” an ensemble period piece drama about murder and the occult set in 1938 LA, with Natalie Dormer co-starring as a shape-shifting demon.Sherwood’s character, Kurt, is a regular human — although the show (Sundays at 10 p.m.) has revealed that he’s an American member of the
HBO show of the same name (premiering Sunday at 9 p.m.), where he’s played by the “Americans” star Matthew Rhys.
since the pandemic shutdown in mid-March.The quirky, imaginative steps are being taken to adhere to state, county and industry protocols regarding COVID-19 — as “B&B” became the first US broadcast series to go back into production Wednesday at Television City in LA.“When we were reviewing the scripts we started taking out all the romantic scenes and [the scripts] just fell flat,” the show’s executive producer/head writer Bradley Bell tells The Post.
HBO’s “Perry Mason” shares a title with its TV series predecessor — and that’s where all similarities end.This new eight-episode drama, with Matthew Rhys in the title role, deviates sharply from the CBS series (1957-66) starring Raymond Burr as the brilliant, no-nonsense Eisenhower-era LA defense attorney who, with his penetrating stare and rising-crescendo cross-examinations, coerced on-the-stand confessions from the “real killers” in virtually every episode, much to the chagrin of DA Hamilton
Doom Patrol” as Dorothy Spinner when the superhero series returns June 25 on HBO Max and DC Universe.Shapiro, who celebrates a birthday next week — “It’s my golden birthday: I’m turning 20 on June 20 in 2020,” she says — is no stranger to acting.
starring Mark Ruffalo (as the older brothers).As the series progresses, Thomas’ paranoid schizophrenia manifests itself when the brothers get to college; Dominick, who fiercely loves and protects his brother, can only look on helplessly.“My brother, who’s 13 years older than me, started to get symptoms [of schizophrenia] when he was in his early 20s and I was around 9,” says Ettinger, who grew up in nearby Fair Lawn, NJ.
not working together.”Machado, who’s no stranger to voiceover work — having lended her pipes to the video game “Gears of War” — says she was tickled by seeing Penelope rendered in cartoon form.“When they did the whole [animated] picture of everybody, they made me a very little person,” she says.
episodes of “House Hunters” — with a pandemic twist.The series, premiering Thursday at 10 p.m., features Levy and Leggero, whose friendship dates back nearly 20 years, watching the classic episodes separately and remotely (hence the “Couches” in the show’s title).In each episode, they’re joined by one of their comedian friends (including JB Smoove, Whitney Cummings and “SNL’s” Chris Redd) as all three add humorous (sometimes caustic) commentary as the onscreen couples decide which of three
If the narrator of popular rock docuseries “Breaking the Band” sounds familiar, that’s because it’s former Twisted Sister frontman Dee Snider — who’s parlayed his hard-rockin’ raspy pipes into a successful voiceover career.
Famously feuding “American Chopper” stars Paul Teutul Sr. and Jr. have reunited to build their first bike together in over a decade.
Thomas John, who bills himself as a psychic medium, is getting his closeup in a new series.
“The Carol Burnett Show” is making its streaming debut.
The new Amazon series “El Presidente,” premiering Friday, lays bare the 2015 FIFA soccer scandal that exposed the international organization’s wide-ranging corruption, resulting in the ouster of its president, Sepp Blatter, and the arrests of top-tier members — including US officials.
Rachael Ray says that producing live cooking segments for her daytime talk show during the pandemic, from her home in upstate New York, has worked better than she expected.
Marcia Gay Harden had some interpretive freedom regarding Mathilde, the strong-willed innkeeper she plays in “Barkskins,” Nat Geo’s new historical drama set in 1690s New France.
Producer/director Paul Feig is a bona-fide starmaker. His hit 2011 movie “Bridesmaids” launched Melissa McCarthy into the stratosphere; his cult TV series, “Freaks and Geeks” (1999-2000), was a major early stepping stone for Hollywood A-listers Jason Segel, Seth Rogen, James Franco, Busy Phillips and Linda Cardellini.
Michelle Obama’s former hair stylist, Johnny Wright, is teaming up with Tamar Braxton “To Catch a Beautician” on VH1.
Rob McElhenney wasn’t going to let a global pandemic stop him from making his Apple+ workplace comedy series “Mythic Quest: Raven’s Banquet.”
Is your coronavirus quarantine driving you kooky? Try sheltering in place “At Home With Amy Sedaris.”
With summer vacations on hold thanks to the pandemic, everyone is watching more TV than ever.
There’s a reason, beyond its catchy title, that “Dead Still” has quickly gained a foothold in the crowded TV universe.
The psychological melodrama “Penance” is, by turns, creepy, silly, predictable and overwrought — and would fit snugly into Lifetime’s over-the-top “women-in-jeopardy” lineup.
It’s an election year, so naturally “The Politician” is coming back for another campaign.
If you’re looking for a place to escape from the home you’ve been stuck in for two-plus months on lockdown, then “Laurel Canyon” just might be it.
Luke Wilson has done nearly everything in Hollywood except play a superhero — but with his role in “DC’s Stargirl,” he can now cross that off the list.
Illinois native Julie Montagu hosts “An American Aristocrat’s Guide to Great Estates,” an eight-episode series premiering Sunday (9 p.m.) on Smithsonian Channel.
“Jay Leno’s Garage” returns May 20 on CNBC (10 p.m.) — with all-new episodes, celebrities and wild car rides.
Mark Hamill brought a new dark side to Wednesday’s episode of the FX series “What We Do in the Shadows.”
Team Flash, in this season’s (early) finale, scored a couple of wins — but also may have unknowingly suffered a great loss.
Fans of “How to Get Away with Murder” won’t be disappointed by Thursday night’s series finale, which closes the book on morally ambiguous lawyer Annalise Keating (Viola Davis) and her not-so-merry band of student accomplices.
The crime drama “Hightown,” set in Cape Cod, combines three unlikely topics — the opioid epidemic, the LGBT community and some good old-fashioned murder.
ABC remembers television and movie wizard Garry Marshall in a two-hour special airing Tuesday night.
Veteran “Dateline” correspondent Josh Mankiewicz has gone digital with his first podcast.
The world might be on pause for now but the streaming wars continue.
Hulu’s new ‘toon “Solar Opposites” will benefit from the fandom of “Rick and Morty,” Adult Swim’s extremely popular animated series that’s stamped itself into pop culture and even has its own line of merchandising — the mark of a keeper.
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