Tag: alison-brie

  • ‘GLOW’ Season 2 Gets Release Date & Retro Fabulous ‘Flashdance’ Teaser

    The Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling are heading back in the ring!

    Netflix just shared the release date and plot details for “GLOW” Season 2.

    But they didn’t just post the Season 2 date, which is Friday, June 29. The streamer also shared a 1-minute, 41-second date announcement dance teaser set to “Maniac,” the song from the 1983 movie “Flashdance.”We missed those maniacs!

    Here are details on the second season:

    “Season 2 follows the women of GLOW as they become local celebrities, confronting the good, the bad, and the ugly realities of their newfound fame. As Ruth (Alison Brie) and Debbie (Betty Gilpin) settle into the day-to-day of making a season of TV together, they confront lingering issues at the heart of their friendship. Sam (Marc Maron) is still Sam, but now he has a teenage daughter living with him and twenty episodes to churn out. The wrestling is harder, the stakes are higher, and the hair is even bigger.”

    In addition to Alison Brie, Betty Gilpin, and Marc Maron, the Netflix comedy also stars Sydelle Noel, Britney Young, Jackie Tohn, Kate Nash, Britt Baron, Rich Sommer, Chris Lowell, Gayle Rankin, Kia Stevens, Sunita Mani, Ellen Wong, Marianna Palka, and more.

    “GLOW” Season 2 will have 10 episodes, premiering June 29.

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  • ‘We’re Back’: Alison Brie Shares Sexy First Photo From ‘GLOW’ Season 2 Set

    GLOW“GLOW” Season 2 is ready to put Zoya the Destroya and Liberty Belle back in the ring.

    Netflix’s Gorgeous Ladies Of Wrestling is now filming Season 2. Alison Brie — who stars as Ruth Wilder, aka Russian diva Zoya — shared the first set photo, possibly from the hair/makeup trailer, alongside Betty Gilpin as Debbie Eagan/Liberty Belle. Zoya’s hair and makeup seem done, but she’s not in full costume yet, unlike American diva Liberty.

    We’re back… #glownetflix #season2

    A post shared by Alison Brie (@officialalibrie) on

    Look at Betty Gilpin smizing for her LIFE. She retweeted Brie’s post, which was liked by at least one celebrity fan:

    The 1980s-set pro wrestling dramedy co-stars Marc Maron, Sydelle Noel, Britney Young, Jackie Tohn, Kate Nash, Britt Baron, and Rich Sommer. Netflix dropped the 10 episodes of its first season in June. The show was renewed for Season 2, but the release date for the next 10 episodes has yet to be revealed.

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  • From Perms to Piledrivers, ‘GLOW’ Star Alison Brie Is All About ’80s Wrestling Now

    Alison Brie in Netflix's GLOWAlison Brie may have only been alive for a portion of the 1980s, but she’s having a totally awesome time revisiting the era — even when she’s pinned to a wrestling mat.

    Brie, who came on the scene with a powerful one-two punch with her starring role on the cult-favorite sitcom “Community” and recurring appearances on the modern TV classic “Mad Men,” returns to television as the central contender in GLOW,” which turns back the clock to the glory days of the Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling, the Reagan Era’s female professional wrestling organization.

    Playing Ruth, a down-and-out aspiring actress whose desperate search for gainful employment leads her try her hand at suplexes and piledrivers and in the process finds herself on a road to an unexpected sort of stardom, Brie tells Moviefone she reveled in everything the role had to offer, from the physical challenges to the all-too-relatable auditioning process to those revealing high-cut leotards.

    Moviefone: You were just a baby in the ’80s! Do you have any hazy real-life memories of that period of time?

    Alison Brie: I do! I do, and I’m sure it’s a blend of actual memories, and then just like things I’ve seen in photographs, that sort of your mind tricks you into thinking, “I remember being there for that.”

    Definitely, I remember perms! I had a perm for this show, and the smell of the chemicals that they put in your hair to make a perm really took me back. It was some major nostalgia because my mom used to get constant perms. A lot of perms in our household!

    As you dove deep into the era, what blew you away — in a good way — about some of the styles and the pop cultural artifacts? And what made you think, “This was actually a thing”?

    The clothes I actually really liked! Marc Maron has been very outspoken about his true hatred for the jeans that Ruth wears on the show. Nothing sexy about those jeans. But I actually really like the shapes of women’s clothes at the time. We see high-waisted jeans coming back in fashion now.

    But the fact that, like in even the ’50s and ’60s, we had those shapes, those hourglass shapes for women’s figures, that even women that had boobs and butts and things, could wear clothes in a cool way, and have that cinch at the waist, things that are more flattering, versus those really boxy shapes that we see in fashion now. I love everything about ’80s fashion. I really like the super high cut leotards, although, it makes for a bikini line challenge, I think for all the women on the show. That was a real tricky thing.

    Probably the racism is one of the more shocking things that I had kind of forgotten about the ’80s. Although, I guess you could argue that things like that are still a problem in our country today. However, in the wrestling world in particular, when you really look back at the characters from the ’80s, the really aggressive patriotism is interesting.

    After watching the first few episodes, It’s not entirely obvious whether Ruth was actually potentially a good actress or not. Did you have to decide that?

    I think that she is a good actress, but sometimes she’s so overzealous about it, that she gets in her own way. I think she has a lot of potential, but she needs to be reeled in some of the time — much like myself, I would say.

    Part of her journey, I imagine, was pretty easy for you to relate to. Tell me about connecting with her as far as the obstacles that she faced trying to follow her dreams.

    Oh, absolutely. As an actress, I could relate immediately and immensely to the challenges that Ruth is facing trying to get work, trying to find roles that she feels are worthy of her. Trying to find interesting and different roles to play is still a challenge for women — and men, but women I think a little more, acting today.

    When this role came along in this show, I think that’s one of the things that I loved most about it: just the sheer volume of unique and interesting female characters was enough to make me really excited, and Ruth herself is such a complex and interesting character that I really fought for this role. In my auditioning process for the show, I’ve never felt more like Ruth either.

    I imagine you — like every actor in Hollywood — have gone through a lot of bizarre auditions, a lot of brusque auditions and a lot of brutal auditions. Do you have a favorite “I can’t believe that somebody actually did or said this to me during an audition” story?

    I’ve never really been casting-couched or anything like that. I can remember an early audition for a movie that I booked called “Born,” a B horror movie, would be the best way to describe it, in which, in the audition I was playing a young woman in a fight with the demon fetus inside her body that’s possessing her, and that was a pretty wild audition. Then I had to do it again in the movie.

    How about those moments between gigs, like Ruth faces, when you’re trying to make progress, and you’ve got to do things like call home for that extra bill money or take a gig that you might think was beneath you in another circumstance. Have you had those experiences yourself?

    I’m lucky in that I’m from Los Angeles, so my family lives here. So rather than calling home for money, I just lived at home for a long time. I lived in my mother’s house in South Pasadena until we were going into our third season of “Community,” if that tells you anything about my confidence in my career. I really wanted to make sure I could support myself before I moved out of my mother’s house.

    Physically and maybe even mentally, how did playing this part change you?

    Definitely mentally. I’ve never done a more empowering job, and I think that the physical side had a lot to do with it. Doing our month-long wrestling training prior to shooting, as well as doing some really heavy lifting with my personal trainer, Jason Walsh, I really wanted to change my body, and build my muscles, and build strength, and then use it in the ring.

    As we were learning to do these moves, it’s like you’re overcoming your fears on a minute-by-minute basis, when you’re in the ring. More like a second-by-second basis, as you’re sort of having to make a choice and then commit to a move in a really major way. I think overcoming those fears so constantly made us all feel like badasses. I realized that I was capable of so much more than I ever would have imagined. That was a great feeling. I definitely was walking a little taller throughout the whole shoot.

    If you were to actually wrestle, what was the main move that you mastered?

    The suplex is my favorite move, and I think I have it down, on either side. I feel like I can suplex somebody, and I’m pretty good at getting suplexed. That’s my favorite move. It’s a crowd-pleaser.

    Did you have to work up the nerve to take on this part because it was going to be so challenging on a lot of levels?

    Not at al! I fought for it tooth and nail. It’s all I wanted, once I heard about it. I had been really looking for a challenge, and I think really wanted to, similarly to Ruth, wanted to prove that I was capable of doing some different types of things. The element of wrestling in this show was something that really turned me on.

  • Aubrey Plaza, Alison Brie Are NSFW Nuns in ‘The Little Hours’ Trailer

    Holy mother … superior.

    The first trailer for “The Little Hours” dropped today and it is definitely NSFW. Definitely put earmuffs on any innocent souls, because Alison Brie and Aubrey Plaza play foul-mouthed uper raunchy nuns who roll their eyes when a priest lists their sins of “filthy conversation, lustfulness, homosexuality.”

    The humor mostly seems to derive from the juxtaposition of the religious setting with the profane language. When a local farmer bids the sisters a good morning, Plaza shoots back, “Don’t f—ing talk to us!”Dave Franco also stars as a hired hand who’s hiding out from a local lord (Nick Offerman), after sleeping with his wife. The highly inappropriate nuns soon begin harassing him and he has to scramble to keep up his disguise as mute and deaf.

    “The Little Hours” features quite a few of Hollywood’s comedic talent, including Fred Armisen, Molly Shannon, John C. Reilly, and Adam Pally. The movie opens in select theaters on June 30.

  • Dave Franco and Alison Brie Got Married!

    Dave Franco and Alison BrieCongrats to newlyweds Dave Franco and Alison Brie!

    The “How to be Single” actress’s reps confirmed to Entertainment Tonight that the couple, who’ve been dating since 2012, have tied the knot.

    The duo likely kept things very low-key. Franco told ET last year while he was promoting “Now You See Me 2” that he wasn’t a fan of elaborate weddings.

    “I don’t know if I’m gonna have a best man,” he said when asked if he’d ask either of his brothers, James and Tom to stand up for him. “I feel like when we do eventually get married, we’re not gonna do a lot of the traditions and we’re just gonna make it easy and who knows?”

    “We’re pretty lax about the whole thing,” Franco said at the time. “It’ll happen when it happens.”

    Brie feels the same way, as she told Yahoo Style last year: “I’m not very bridal, instinctually. Marriage never really interested me, I guess because I was very focused on my work. I wasn’t sure if I really saw the point to it.”

    She said meeting Franco changed her mind about marriage: “I just met that person that I was like, ‘Well, I’m really in love with you and would like to grow old with you.’ I actually think it’s much more romantic when two people are like, ‘Oh, I could go either way on marriage, but I want to marry you.’”

    The pair met in New Orleans during Mardi Gras and got engaged in August of 2015. “People were like, ‘So you’re … the ones it works out for,’” she says of their Mardi Gras hook-up. “I don’t think I’d recommend it normally; it’s sort of outside of both of our characters.”

    Don’t expect a slew of wedding details or photos: Brie told Yahoo Style: “We don’t go out of our way, we just don’t flaunt [our relationship].” But she did tell People in 2015: “I have an incredible fiancé. He’s so wonderful. He’s just the sweetest man I know. And he’s so funny and incredible in every way.”

    The newlyweds share the screen in brother James Franco‘s upcoming “The Disaster Artist,” which just debuted at SXSW. “I’ve never been more comfortable on a set, obviously,” she told Yahoo. “It was nice because you had your person to hang out with. We spend a lot of time apart because of work, and it was nice to say, “Oh, my gosh, I’m leaving for work … and I’ll see you in an hour!’”

  • Mini-‘Community’ Reunion: Alison Brie, Dan Harmon to Appear in ‘Dr. Ken’ Season Finale

    2017 Sundance Film FestivalAttention, Human Beings: A “Community” movie still isn’t imminent, but “Dr. Ken” has an enticing Greendale reunion planned in the meantime.

    “Community” star Alison Brie and the sitcom’s co-creator Dan Harmon are both going to appear in the upcoming “Dr. Ken” Season 2 finale, Variety reports. They’ll play themselves as they reunite with the ABC series’ titular star, Ken Jeong. In appearing on the show, they follow in the footsteps of multiple “Community” vets, including Joel McHale, Yvette Nicole Brown, Gillian Jacobs, and more.

    In the episode, Jeong’s character will try to land a role on a fictional new Harmon show. While auditioning, he’ll read with Brie, a series regular. Unfortunately for Dr. Ken, though, the meeting will get awkward.

    It will be fun to see the three share the screen. They previously worked together for six seasons — and die-hard fans are still holding out for a movie.

    The “Dr. Ken” Season 2 finale airs on Friday, March 31 at 8:30 p.m. ET/PT on ABC.

    [via: Variety]

  • Best TV Shows to Watch for Singles

    Broad CitySome days, it can feel like most TV shows are all about couples — or how to become part of one. But a growing number of shows are exploring single life without forcing their characters to find, or even want, love. Check out how these pioneers — and a few classics — are perfect for audiences content with solitude.

    ‘Master of None’ (2015 – )

    Master of None,” finds the stand-up comedian confronting the hard truths about single life and a variety of other topics. While each episode focuses on a theme, the episodes are strung together by main character Dev’s blossoming relationship — and the work it takes to keep it going. “Master of None” consistently offers a realistic portrayal of love — something single TV-watchers will definitely appreciate — as his relationship goes from its honeymoon phase, to a plateau, to a state of major doubt. For viewers tired of TV’s constant portrayal of love as either euphoric or dramatic, “Master of None” offers an unflinchingly honest take, and one that ultimately leaves the audience to decide if that’s a good or a bad thing.

    ‘Bojack Horseman’ (2014 – )

    “Bojack Horseman” is one of those shows you need to see to fully understand — it’s hard to explain just how insightful the show is, when on the outside it’s about a half-man, half-horse, former sitcom star dealing with his fading relevance and growing depression. While the backdrop of animated anthropomorphic animals is at times off-putting and other times hilarious, the heart of “Bojack Horseman” is in how Bojack (Will Arnett) deals with his own loneliness. With meaningful performances from Arnett and co-stars Alison Brie and Paul F. Tompkins, “Bojack” ultimately finds hope and happiness in solitude, reminding single members of the audience that it’s OK to hit rock bottom — because from there, the only way to go is up.

    Broad City (2014 – )

    “Broad City” is the modern-day equivalent of “Laverne & Shirley” — a buddy comedy focused on the friendship of two 20-something women. The show is part of a refreshing trend of female characters that don’t exactly have their lives together — along with “2 Broke Girls,” and “Playing House” — except, in “Broad City,” Ilana (Ilana Glazer) and Abbi (Abbi Jacobson) are two stoners living in New York City, and their misadventures are far sillier than those in the other shows. And while Ilana and Abbi have their share of romantic entanglements, they’re part of a rare breed of TV character that’s comfortable being alone. “Broad City” is worth it for the clever comedy, and it’s also a nice break from the perpetual romances of other sitcoms.

    ‘The O.C.’ (2003 – 2007)

    “The O.C.” delighted audiences for four seasons as it followed bad boy Ryan Atwood (Benjamin McKenzie) from the wrong side of the tracks straight into his adoption by an elite Newport Beach family. While the fun of the show was in watching Ryan acclimate to rich-kid life — and get into fist fights almost every week — “The O.C.” was at its best when dragging each character through his or her own relationship heartaches. “The O.C.” was filled with enough flirtation, romance, and character chemistry that a rewatch is bound to restore anyone’s faith in love.

    ‘Men at Work’ (2012 – 2014)

    “Men at Work,” from creator Seinfeld” as it tackles the nuances of modern dating. In one episode, as Milo questions how to best use his smartphone in a new relationship, one can hear echoes of Jerry: “What … is the deal … with texting?” With clever writing and unpredictable plots, “Men at Work” brings good news to the single: Being alone is totally fine, and it’s all right to rely on your pals.

    Sources

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  • Watch Alison Brie Sell Jimmy Kimmel 400 Boxes of Girl Scout Cookies

    ‘Tis the season for your kids, and your neighbor’s kids, and your co-worker’s kids, to ask you to sign your life savings away to buy cookies so addictive they should be kept behind a pharmacist’s counter. Everyone seems to be selling Girl Scout cookies right about now, even “Jimmy Kimmel Live” Wednesday night, and she showed up a bit early to pressure Jimmy into buying cookies.

    Alison: “All the talk show hosts are buying them. Ellen bought 400 boxes.”

    Jimmy pointed out that Alison (age 33) is a bit old to be in the Girl Scouts. She said it’s for her kids, then trotted out two “daughters” she claimed were her own, even though one of them is male and Alison doesn’t actually have any children.

    Eventually, Alison told Jimmy to stop f–king around and just buy the damn cookies. Not wanting to be outdone by Ellen, Jimmy signed up for 400 boxes (which is $2,000?!) and made Guillermo pay for them. (The best part of the video is Guillermo muttering “sonofab-tch” under his breath.) You’re not supposed to pay until the cookies arrive, though, so clearly Alison is running a talk show scam. She should keep all the cookies for herself — especially any Thin Mints. Dang, those things are good.

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  • Alison Brie ‘Almost’ Lost Her Foot in an Escalator Mishap

    Alison Brie‘s newest movie, “Sleeping with Other People,” is a romantic comedy and would never be mistaken for an action film, but that doesn’t mean there wasn’t an action-packed moment surrounding the movie.

    After leaving a press event for the film, the actress told James Corden on “The Late Late Show” that she had a “very dramatic incident.”

    “This is probably the most action-packed moment in my life,” she said.

    And then, it happened.

    “I was going down an escalator, innocently enough, and my heel got caught in the escalator,” she said, recalling the horror. “We were pretty close to the bottom already. I couldn’t get it out. I was struggling, one foot was loose, the teeth were getting closer. I had to leap from the shoe. There was no time to save the shoe. I had to save myself.”

    The immobile high heel ended up causing the escalator to stop immediately.

    “Louboutin’s are super strong it turns out,” she said.

    However, she did take some grief for the great shoe incident of 2015. There was a woman behind her on escalator in a foot cast. Brie said, “She came hobbling down and she was like, ‘You know, I already have a broken foot!’”

    She thought to herself, “I almost lost a foot myself here. Can I have a little sympathy?”

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  • Is ‘Sleeping With Other People’ Worth Committing to In Theaters? Critics Decide!

    If rom-com-of -the-year is what you are after, it doesn’t sound like “Sleeping with Other People” is going to be that stand-out flick – but if you’re seeking a light piece of sexy entertainment, then it is likely you won’t be disappointed with the movie that hits theaters on Friday.

    Director Leslye Headland’s Sundance-debuted film about two serial cheaters (Jason Sudeikis and Alison Brie) who develop feelings for one another is praised by some critics for its wit and panned by others for being a bit too all over the place. Rotten Tomatoes gave it an overall rating of 52 percent.

    “‘Sleeping with Other People,’ described by its own writer-director Leslye Headland as ‘When Harry Met Sally for A–holes,’ is so deeply in debt to its predecessor that it’s a near-remake. Which could be awful, except Headland’s script is so hilarious, so full of achingly well-observed one-liners on sex and relationships and parenting, that it qualifies as a sparkling new rethink of a beloved film we’ve all seen too many times. I didn’t enjoy some of the early scenes; it’s distracting to watch Jason Sudeikis and Alison Brie (especially the former) pass for Columbia students who lose their virginity to each other in a strange meet-cute …” — Kyle Smith, NYPost.com

    “There might have been a worthy romantic comedy within this mess, but Headland pursues the currently fashionable penchant for raunch at the expense of her characters and not as a means of revealing them as [Amy] Schumer did in [‘Trainwreck’]. None of the action, comic or otherwise, comes off as believable but rather a search for laughs by a filmmaker unsure of what she wants to do with her material. Thus the tone shifts from scene to scene or even within scenes and the characters are unsure even of what they wish to be insincere about.” — Kirk Honeycutt, HoneycuttsHollywood.com

    “It’s silly and funny and charming in a way you’d absolutely expect from its stellar comedic cast, but ultimately Jason Sudeikis fingering an empty bottle of green tea just isn’t enough to dig the film out of its corny rom-com grave … Looking a little out of place in every film festival its visited, ‘Sleeping With Other People’ was described best by Variety as ‘too broad for the arthouse and too small for the multiplex’ — diving in and out of sincerity and sap, it seems really unsure of what it wants to do.” — Meg Watson, TheJunkee.com

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