%Slideshow-293117%
Broadway’s biggest night goes down this Sunday, June 7, when the 2015 Tony Awards honor the best of the best from the magical world of theater. This year’s nominations even feature some Hollywood A-listers, including Helen Mirren, Carey Mulligan, and Bradley Cooper. It’s not uncommon for movie stars to take the New York stage — and sometimes they even get recognized for their theatrical endeavors with a coveted Tony nod. Here are 11 big stars you (probably) didn’t know were nominated for Tonys.

Tag: cbs
-
11 Stars You (Probably) Didn’t Know Were Nominated for Tonys
-
Has Reality TV Reached the Tipping Point?
Remember when they used to call TLC “The Learning Channel”? Well, the scandal that’s blown up during the last week surrounding TLC’s “19 Kids and Counting” seems like it ought to be a teachable moment, but it’s unclear if anyone will be learning the right lessons.You’d think that the revelations about the Duggar family’s cover-up of eldest son Josh’s alleged molestation of five girls, including four of his own sisters — and the corresponding revelation that TLC did a slapdash job of vetting the family, even though many people outside the family have known about this particular closet skeleton since 2006 — would mark the end of a certain kind of reality show. You’d think sponsors would stop supporting them, networks would stop creating them, and viewers would stop watching them. But the market for these shows may be stronger than the shame of being associated with them.
Indeed, even as sponsors desert the show (nine of them at this writing), even as Hulu yanks its reruns from streaming, TLC has yet to cancel the series. In fact, the channel is still mulling a spinoff featuring Jessa and Jill Duggar and their husbands. Apparently, there’s no brand so tainted that it doesn’t have at least a little life left to leverage.
This marks TLC’s second reality-related child molestation scandal in less than a year, after the channel yanked “Here Comes Honey Boo Boo” when Mama June Shannon allegedly rekindled a relationship with a convicted sex offender who, grown daughter Anna Cardwell claims, assaulted her when she was a girl. Does this mean TLC will be more careful in the future about vetting its reality stars? Probably not. After all, the genre depends on finding unusual, colorful people to put before the cameras.
If TLC was still pretending to have an educational mission, it could even claim there’s something educational about exposing viewers to the lives of unconventional people. Say what you will about the Duggars, or Mama June and her daughters, or the Robertsons of A&E’s “Duck Dynasty,” for that matter: at least they’re not the kind of people you see on TV all the time.
On scripted TV, characters tend to be city dwellers or suburbanites, middle class or wealthy, well-educated, professional, secular, youthful, able-bodied, attractive — people much like TV writers (except for the attractive part). We seldom see people who are rural or poor, people who are much bigger or smaller than the ideal body type, people who are old or physically challenged, or people who wear their religious beliefs on their sleeves. But these are the very people who make up a sizable percentage of reality stars.
Like the rest of American culture, TV has never been comfortable talking about class, or about the rural/urban divide, or about religion, or about any trait that challenges the American notion that we can all live comfortable middle-class lives if we just play by the rules. It used to be that real people whose lives contradicted that notion were considered freaks who were relegated to the sideshows of daytime TV, on confrontational talk shows like Jerry Springer’s or Geraldo Rivera’s or Ricki Lake’s. Today, however, such people get not 15 minutes of fame but a whole season (or several) on reality TV.
But we don’t watch these shows because we genuinely want to learn about the lives of people different from ourselves. We watch because we’re voyeurs peeping in our neighbors’ windows. We watch, not to see how such people succeed in life despite their challenges, but to see how they fail. There was actually a study done back in 2003, at the University of Missouri at Columbia, whose findings suggested that people enjoy reality TV because — well, not exactly out of schadenfreude, but rather relief that they’re not suffering the travails of the people on screen, a sense of “There but for the grace of God go I.”
The latest show to capitalize on this feeling among viewers is “The Briefcase,” the CBS series that debuted this week. It’s being sold as uplifting, a look at how generous and selfless people can be even when they’re in dire financial straits. But in practice, the show seems to pit two needy families against each other, with each offered a $101,000 windfall and told to keep or give away to the other family as much as they see fit, with the gimmick being that neither family is aware that they’ve both been offered an identical briefcase full of cash. You wouldn’t be alone in finding this sort of spectacle to be cruel and gladiatorial. (As New York magazine’s Vulture pointed out, CBS chief Les Moonves could fill both briefcases with less than a day’s worth of his annual salary, but what would the entertainment value be in that?).
Here at last, we have people on TV who might be called poor, who might have been middle class once but fell into debt — and we pit them against each other in a contest to see who is most morally fit to get out of debt. (Where’s the moral test for the rich and powerful folks who sent their jobs overseas or who sent them off to be maimed on the battlefield?) Is this show supposed to be educational and inspirational, or does it just reinforce stereotypes that poor people are poor because of some moral failing? Oh, and a question for the show’s sponsors: Do you really think that consumers who spend an hour watching people agonize over money are going to be eager to drop disposable income on your products?
In a way, “The Briefcase” is an apt match with CBS’s “Undercover Boss,” which plays on the viewers’ unspoken assumption that it’s CEOs and not the rank and file who are reaping all the benefits of increased worker productivity, but which also doesn’t question how the system came to be rigged that way, or what could be done to change it. Viewers are supposed to be moved by how grateful the workers are for small favors and not question why they appear so downtrodden in the first place. Miraculously, “Undercover Boss” has persisted for six years, even though you’d think employees would be wise to the sudden appearance of a mysterious new co-worker and a camera crew. Similarly, it’s hard to see how “The Briefcase” could last beyond a season, once everyone is aware of its deception, but if “Undercover Boss” can do it, who knows?
One paradox is that, if reality TV perpetuates the notion that people are poor because they deserve to be, then it also presents rich people who by no means deserve their good fortune. Think of the various “Real Housewives” cast members and whose wealth routinely fails to bring them happiness. Yes, these shows do expose us to people unlike ourselves (the rich, like the poor, really are different from you and me), but if there’s any educational value here, it’s in learning that you wouldn’t want rich people’s problems, either.
On some level, viewers know that they shouldn’t enjoy these shows, that they ought to feel queasy about watching cash-rich networks exploit people’s misery for entertainment and profit. But while they tell pollsters what they think they ought to say, that reality as a genre is played out, they keep watching anyway.
And as long as we do, reality TV isn’t going to become any more enlightening or less exploitative. As a recent Atlantic article makes clear, the makers of these shows rely on the audience to tell them where the limits of acceptable spectacle lie. Viewer outrage kept “Jersey Shore” from showing promised footage of Snooki getting sucker-punched in the face. But viewers of the “Bachelor” were OK with Jason Mesnick dumping fiancée Melissa Rycroft on camera and proposing to runner-up Molly Malaney instead. Ratings and social media response seem to be the only guidelines the networks have for how much they can get away with. They’re depending on us to be their conscience. Judging by the fact that TLC still, after a week of viewer disgust and advertiser defections, hasn’t pulled the plug on “19 Kids and Counting” suggests that we viewers aren’t doing our job forcefully enough to make a difference.
%Slideshow-272556% -
This ‘Under the Dome’ Season 3 Trailer Takes Things Outside
CBS just released a new trailer for the upcoming third season of summer hit “Under the Dome,” and the action-packed clip teases that the show’s title may soon become irrelevant for the residents of Chester’s Mill.The clip checks in with all of our main characters, with Big Jim (“Breaking Bad” alum CSI”), who appears in the season premiere as a voice of hope for Chester Mill, preaching faith in the face of whatever dark times the dome may instill.
Of course, the dome may not be a problem for residents much longer, as one of the last shots in the trailer shows the structure being destroyed — and the bewildered characters realizing that they’ve finally been freed from their prison. As Barbie (Mike Vogel) says earlier on in the trailer, “Sometimes, you’ve gotta take a leap of faith.” Maybe that’s the key to the residents’ redemption after all?
Check out the clip below, and dream up your own theories about how Chester’s Mill escapes the clutches of the dome. “Under the Dome” makes its season three debut on June 25 on CBS with a special two-hour premiere.
Photo credit: YouTube%Slideshow-202264%
-
8 Reasons Why We Still Love ‘I Love Lucy’
This Sunday’s “I Love Lucy Superstar Special” on CBS may just be an elaborate repackaging of two 60-year-old black-and-white sitcom episodes, now meticulously colorized and shown back-to-back without a pause. But anything Lucy-related remains a gold mine for CBS, even six decades later, and the May 17 special will probably not be an exception.The two “I Love Lucy” episodes show a couple of Lucy Ricardo’s (Lucille Ball) typically frustrating brushes with fame. In “L.A. at Last!”, Lucy’s bandleader husband Ricky (Desi Arnaz) is cast in a movie, which means a Hollywood road trip for the Ricardos and their friends Ethel and Fred Mertz (Vivian Vance and William Frawley). Lucy and Ricky each make the acquaintance of movie icon William Holden, playing himself, and gamely taking a pie in the face. (The colorized version CBS is airing contains footage not seen on TV since the episode first aired 60 years ago.) The second episode, “Lucy and Superman,” has Lucy trying to book TV’s Man of Steel, George Reeves, to appear at Little Ricky’s birthday party, but when he can’t make it, she dons the Superman suit herself.
Indeed, Lucy Ricardo was kind of a comedic superheroine, capable of doing just about anything, but only for a few minutes, before her efforts inevitably went catastrophically awry. Behind the camera, Lucille Ball was a heroine, too, blazing a path for TV performers and producers for which she’s never received proper credit. Both fiery redheads — the restless housewife and the woman who created her — managed to create an indestructible sitcom; not even colorization can mar it. Here are eight reasons why “Lucy” — and Lucy — still matter.
8. “I Love Lucy” pretty much invented the TV sitcom as we know it. Before the show’s 1951 debut, sitcoms on the new medium of television were essentially filmed half-hour plays, with fairly static cameras and minimalist sets. But Ball, Arnaz, and director Karl Freund came up with a way to make their show look and feel more dynamic, with a full set and three cameras shooting simultaneously from different angles, on 35mm film, so that scenes could be performed in sequence, just once, with shots and reaction shots edited together later. To accommodate the camera setup, and to provide Ball with the live feedback she thrived on, the couple custom-renovated a studio and shot the episodes in front of a live audience. The three-camera/live studio audience format is still widely used for sitcoms today, such as “The Big Bang Theory,” “Mike & Molly,” and “Mom.”
7. “I Love Lucy” also pretty much invented the rerun. Back then, networks often discarded a show after its initial airing, which is why much of 1950s TV is lost forever. But the Arnazes negotiated for the right to own their filmed episodes. The network would then be able to re-air the shows, though it would have to pay the couple for the rebroadcast rights. That’s what happened during the second season, when Ball became pregnant; to ease her schedule, fewer episodes were filmed, and CBS filled the remaining weeks with rebroadcasts. So the Arnazes not only invented reruns, but the whole second-run syndication market as well. It’s one reason why “I Love Lucy” has never gone off the air in 60 years, enabling several generations to fall in love with Lucy.
6. The show made TV safe for mixed couples. Ball had wanted her real-life Cuban bandleader husband to play her on-screen spouse, but CBS balked initially at doing a show where an all-American redhead was married to a Latino man. Ball and Arnaz developed a vaudeville act and took it on the road to prove that America was ready to see them as a couple. The tour was a hit, CBS relented, and Arnaz’s Ricky Ricardo became one of the most beloved TV husbands in history.
5. The show also made TV safe for pregnancy. Not that CBS allowed “I Love Lucy” even to use the word “pregnant.” Still, when Ball became pregnant in real life, the show couldn’t hide her bump, so the “Lucy” scribes wrote it into the show. (It wasn’t the first sitcom to include a pregnancy plot arc, but it was the first to make such a storyline widely acceptable.) Ball even managed to deliver Desi Arnaz Jr. on the same night that the episode of Little Ricky’s birth aired. It was the most-watched TV event that had ever aired up to that time. It would be a few more years before TV dared show a married couple whose bedroom had only one bed, but, you know, baby steps.
4. Lucy Ricardo would never have described herself as a proto-feminist, but she was. Although Ricky was a traditionalist who would have preferred a wife who stayed in the kitchen, many of the show’s plots revolved around Lucy’s efforts to break out of the domestic sphere (and especially to break into show business). Usually, she’d rope best friend Ethel, herself a former vaudeville performer, into her schemes. The women’s efforts would usually backfire spectacularly (and hilariously), but they never stopped trying to prove their worth outside the traditional roles of wife and mother.
3. In real life, of course, Ball was not only in show business as a performer, she was also a trailblazing TV producer. She was one of the first women to own her own TV production company. Even after “I Love Lucy” ended its run, her Desilu firm (she bought out Desi’s share in 1962, after their divorce) continued to produce such classic TV shows as “Star Trek,” “The Untouchables,” and “Mission: Impossible.”
2. Even today, there persists in show business the curious conventional wisdom that women can’t be both funny and beautiful. Ball and her show are Exhibit A that this premise is false.
1. The ultimate reason we still love Lucy is that the show is still uproariously funny. Even though we’ve seen some reruns so often that they’re practically burned into our DNA, we still laugh every time we see Lucy and Ethel trying in vain to keep up with that chocolate assembly line, or every time we watch Lucy stomp grapes, or every time we see her get sozzled on Vitameatavegamin, or every time Ricky tells her she’s “got some ‘splainin to do.” The show may have dated a bit, but the slapstick, the gags, the comic timing, and the volatile chemistry among the characters — all of that still holds up.
%Slideshow-281697% -
Melissa Benoist Soars in CBS’s First ‘Supergirl’ Preview
CBS has released the first preview for its upcoming “Supergirl” series, and while the extended clip is a bit jarring in tone — it starts as a rom-com and finishes with high-octane action — it shows some promise, particularly from lead Melissa Benoist.Benoist stars as Kara Zor-El, younger cousin of Superman, who was similarly jettisoned to Earth as their home planet of Krypton self-destructed. Now a twentysomething, Kara is living anonymously and has abandoned her powers, working instead as a meek assistant for a high-powered media maven (Calista Flockhart).
Some of the office scenes are particularly cringeworthy, bringing to mind the recent SNL parody of what a Black Widow movie may entail, especially when Kara is tongue-tied by a hot new coworker (Mehcad Brooks as Superman photographer
JimmyJames Olsen). And the way Flockhart’s Cat Grant snaps at our heroine is straight out of the “Devil Wears Prada” playbook (which was also referenced in the SNL sketch).Still, Benoist seems tailor-made for the part, particularly when the action sequences kick in. She more than earns her Supergirl cape (fashioned by her coworker who’s not-so-secretly in love with her, Winslow Schott, played by Jeremy Jordan), shining during the sequence where she saves her foster sister’s (Chyler Leigh) falling plane. “Last night I embraced who I am, and I don’t want to stop,” Kara tells Winslow, deciding that she wants to use her powers after all, and, like her more famous cousin, help the world in the process.
The jury’s still out on whether the series can strike a smoother balance between the two different worlds of the show (the clip really felt like it was for two separate series), but Benoist and the rest of the cast seem solid. We’re willing to give this ‘girl the benefit of the doubt for now.
Check out the preview below. “Supergirl” soars onto CBS this fall.
Want more stuff like this? Like us on Facebook.
%Slideshow-276358% -
All the CBS TV Show Cancellations and New Fall Lineup
Is CBS trying to freshen up its image? At its upfronts presentation to advertisers, the most-watched network announced it’s finally doing away with the aging “CSI” after 15 years. And the highest-profile new series on the fall docket is the younger-skewing “Supergirl.”
CBS canceled three shows: “Battle Creek,” “The McCarthys,” and “Stalker.” “Two and a Half Men” and “The Mentalist” concluded earlier this year.
Still, the Eye still boasts strong ratings across the board for its dramas and comedies, so there are not a lot of holes to plug.
Their new shows are: the comedy “Angel From Hell” with Jane Lynch as a guardian angel; medical drama “Code Black”; family comedy “Life in Pieces”; the movie adaptation “Limitless,” featuring guest appearances by Bradley Cooper; and “Supergirl.”
Here’s the new lineup for CBS:
MONDAY
8 p.m. Supergirl (starting in November)
9 p.m. Scorpion
10 p.m. NCIS: Los AngelesTUESDAY
8 p.m. NCIS
9 p.m. NCIS: New Orleans
10 p.m. LimitlessWEDNESDAY
8 p.m. Survivor
9 p.m. Criminal Minds
10 p.m. Code BlackTHURSDAY (starting in November)
8 p.m. The Big Bang Theory
8:30 p.m. Life in Pieces
9 p.m. Mom
9:30 p.m. Angel From Hell
10 p.m. Elementary(FRIDAY
8 p.m. The Amazing Race
9 p.m. Hawaii Five-O
10 p.m. Blue BloodsSUNDAY
8 p.m. Madam Secretary
9 p.m. The Good Wife
10 p.m. CSI: Cyber -
‘CSI’ to End With TV Movie After 15 Years on CBS
Fifteen seasons. Fifteen years. Talk about a good run. “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation” premiered back on October 6, 2000 and it’s finally ending on September 27, 2015. It’s not a shock to see the series end — how long would you expect it to go on? — but CBS made it official today, adding that the show will close with a two-hour TV movie starring OGs William Petersen and Marg Helgenberger. Season 15 already aired 18 episodes from September 2014 to February 2015, and the writing was on the wall when CBS cut the episode order by four. But at least they are giving the show a TV movie with the original cast, instead of just coldly announcing “You’re canceled.”In more positive news, current “CSI” star Ted Danson will just move on over to the Patricia Arquette spinoff, “CSI: Cyber.” So it’s not like they’re giving up on the franchise. But it’s truly the end of an era to see the original modern crime procedural fade to black. This is the show that popularized forensic science as something cool, and darn near badass. And it’s not too shabby to still earn more than 7 million viewers and a 1.1 rating after 15 seasons. Those were the Season 15 finale numbers, and that was without fans knowing for sure that this would be The End, so CBS can probably expect even better numbers for the 9/27 TV movie. Will you be tuning in for the big farewell?
Want more stuff like this? Like us on Facebook.
%Slideshow-270403%
-
First Look: ‘Supergirl’ Takes Off (PHOTOS)
Melissa Benoist looks like she’s ready for some good, old-fashioned comic book action in these first photos from “Supergirl.” The CBS TV show, which stars Benoist as Kara Zor-El, begins production this week. Fans had already deduced that filming would begin sometime in March, based on a handful of casting calls in the Los Angeles area, so there’s sure to be more news coming from comic book buffs in the weeks to come.Supergirl’s super costume was designed by Oscar winner Colin Atwood, who said, “In designing Supergirl, I wanted to embrace the past, but more importantly, thrust her into the street-style action hero of today.” That cape looks like a little bit of a liability when it comes to hand-to-hand combat, but we’ll take an Oscar-winning costume designer’s word over our limited street fighting experience.
There is currently no premiere date for “Supergirl.”

%Slideshow-204061%
-
Chyler Leigh and David Harewood Suit Up for ‘Supergirl’

The CBS “Supergirl” pilot continues to build up its star-studded roster, with the addition of Chyler Leigh and David Harewood to the ensemble.Leigh and Harewood will be featured as series regulars. Here’s a breakdown of their characters, per TheWrap:
Harewood (“Homeland,” “Selfie”) will play Hank Henshaw, a former CIA agent who heads up the Department of Extra-Normal Operations and tracks extraterrestrial threats. In DC Comics lore, he eventually becomes Cyborg Superman. Leigh, meanwhile, (“Grey’s Anatomy,” “That ’80s Show”) plays Kara’s/Supergirl’s (Melissa Benoist) foster sister Alexandra “Alex” Danvers, described as a confident doctor who became fascinated by her sibling’s powers at a young age.
Those two are just the latest to sign up for “Supergirl,” with Calista Flockhart also joining the cast this week. Laura Benanti and Mehcad Brooks also star.
TheWrap also reports that Andrew Kreisberg, who worked on fellow DC Comics properties “Arrow” and “The Flash” for The CW, has joined the show as a writer and executive producer.
[via: TheWrap]
Photo credit: Alberto E. Rodriguez via Getty Images
%Slideshow-204061%
-
Calista Flockhart Joins CBS ‘Supergirl’ Pilot

Emmy nominee Calista Flockhart is returning to TV: She’s just snagged a major role in new CBS series “Supergirl.”According to The Hollywood Reporter, Flockhart will play Cat Grant, described by THR as “the self-made media magnate and founder of CatCo. Cat started her career as a reporter and has built her company into a global powerhouse.”
“Supergirl” marks Flockhart’s first foray into television in almost four years, following the 2011 end of ABC drama “Brothers & Sisters” after five seasons. Flockhart also earned critical acclaim for her run on “Ally McBeal.”
Melissa Benoist (“Glee,” “Whiplash”) will star as the titular superheroine, a.k.a. Kara Zor-El, who works as Cat’s assistant. Kara is Superman’s cousin, and escaped Krypton in much the same way as her more famous relative, and has been living with a foster family on Earth ever since.
Though she’s denied her powers her entire life, 24-year-old Kara eventually comes to terms with her abilities after “an unexpected disaster forces her to use her powers in public,” per THR. The synopsis continues:
Energized by her heroic deed, for the first time in her life Kara begins embracing her extraordinary abilities. She begins helping the people of her city, and they soon take notice. She’s even given a new moniker: Supergirl.
Laura Benanti (“Nashville”) and Mehcad Brooks (“Necessary Roughness,” “True Blood”) also star. The show is still in the pilot stage; no word yet on when it shoots or when it may be featured on CBS’s schedule.
[via: The Hollywood Reporter]
Photo credit: Getty Images
%Slideshow-204061%