Tag: house-of-cards

  • Robin Wright Addresses Kevin Spacey Allegations and ‘House of Cards’ Firing

    Robin Wright Addresses Kevin Spacey Allegations and ‘House of Cards’ Firing

    House of Cards, Robin Wright, Kevin SpaceyNetflix

    Robin Wright is now steering the ship for the final season of “House of Cards.” She just spoke out for the first time on the Kevin Spacey scandal, in an interview with “Today.”

    Spacey — who played Frank Underwood to her Claire Underwood — was fired from “House of Cards” after multiple allegations of sexual misconduct, including several from staffers on the Netflix series .Just last week, three more people came forward against Spacey.

    “House of Cards” Season 6, the final season, will premiere on Netflix this fall.

    Savannah Guthrie asked Robin Wright how the HoC team reacted to the news about Spacey:


    “I think we were all surprised, of course, and ultimately saddened,” Wright said. “We forged ahead. We were so thankful that we were able to complete the series as planned.”


    Guthrie — who is familiar with this awkward subject herself as Matt Lauer’s former co-anchor — asked Wright if there was anything in the years of working with Spacey that would’ve made her think something like this was possible:


    “We were co-workers, really. Never socialized outside of work. Respectful, professional relationship. He was so great with me. He was never disrespectful to me. so that’s my personal experience. That’s the only thing I feel that I have the right to talk about. […]

    Kevin and I knew each other between action and cut, and in between setups, where we would giggle. I didn’t know the man. I knew the incredible craftsman that he is.”


    Asked if she felt Netflix made the right decision to cut ties with Spacey, Wright answered:


    “I don’t know how to comment on that. But I think at that time, the shock was so intense all over the nation — for many reasons, many stories, many people — I think that everybody felt that it was respectful to back off.”


    Robin Wright said she hadn’t heard from Kevin Spacey and didn’t even know how to contact him.

    Meanwhile, on July 4th, Netflix shared a brief teaser to promote the new season, with Claire Underwood wishing herself a Happy Independence Day:

    The final season ended filming in May, and Robin Wright shared a thank you message to the cast and crew. There’s no premiere date yet for the final season beyond this fall.

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  • ‘House of Cards’ Final Season Ends Filming: Robin Wright Praises Cast & Crew

    The “House of Cards” cast and crew have been through a lot in the past year, but they finished the series together. Minus Kevin Spacey, anyway.

    In late 2017, Netflix announced that Season 6 would be the final season. After the sexual misconduct allegations against Spacey (Frank Underwood) kept pouring out, Netflix said an eight-episode season would start production in early 2018, without Spacey.

    Robin Wright‘s Claire Underwood was already ready for her spotlight — “My turn” — and she will take the lead of the relatively short final season.

    Wright posted that filming for Season 6 finished last week. She thanked the cast and crew, calling them “family”:

    After the initial allegations against Kevin Spacey came out, eight “House of Cards” staffers stepped forward with their own stories of his inappropriate behavior. MRC — the company that produces “House of Cards” — then told CNN they had set up “an anonymous complaint hotline, crisis counselors, and sexual harassment legal advisors for the crew.” At the time, MRC said they were “deeply troubled” by the allegations; they were, however, aware of one previous incident that occurred in 2012, but that was “resolved promptly to the satisfaction of all involved.”

    A very brief first teaser for the final season of “House of Cards” came out in March:We’re waiting on a full trailer and release date, beyond “this fall” on Netflix.

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  • ‘House of Cards’ and ‘The Wire’ Star Reg E. Cathey Dies at Age 59

    We lost another great one.

    According to TMZ, actor Reg E. Cathey died at his home in New York, surrounded by friends and family after battling lung cancer. He was 59.

    Reginald Eugene Cathey played BBQ maestro Freddy on Netflix’s “House of Cards,” earning an Emmy for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series in 2015. In his 30-plus-year career, he played mayor’s aide Norman Wilson on HBO’s “The Wire,” Martin Querns on HBO’s “Oz,” Dr. Franklin Storm in the 2015 movie “The Fantastic Four,” Barry K. Word in the FX boxing drama “Lights Out,” and many more.

    Cathey was born in Alabama, spent his childhood in West Germany, and studied theater at the University of Michigan and the Yale School of Drama.

    Check out this HBO video from 2008, with “The Wire” actor revealing more about himself:And here are two Cathey scenes from “House of Cards” and “The Wire”:Fans, friends and costars reacted to his death as the news spread on Friday evening:

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  • 8 ‘House of Cards’ Employees Accuse Kevin Spacey of Harassment

    After “House of Cards” suspended filming in the wake of accusations of sexual harassment against star Kevin Spacey, eight staffers have come forward with their own stories of inappropriate behavior.

    That’s in addition to a man who told Vulture that, when he was 14, he had a consensual sexual relationship with the actor that nearly ended in his being raped by Spacey. (“Star Trek: Discovery” actor Anthony Rapp was the first to accuse Spacey, alleging that Spacey made a sexual advance on him when Rapp was 14.)

    Due to this snowballing of accusations, Spacey’s publicist Staci Wolfe and his longtime agency, CAA, have both dropped the Oscar-winning actor, Variety reports.

    Employees on “House of Cards” allege that Spacey created a “toxic” work environment. A production assistant told CNN that, while he was driving Spacey to the set, the actor put his hands down the assistant’s pants. “I was in a state of shock,” he told CNN. “He was a man in a very powerful position on the show and I was someone very low on the totem pole and on the food chain there.”

    The harassment allegedly continued once they reached the set, when the assistant helped Spacey bring his belongings into his trailer. “I told him, ‘I don’t think I’m OK with this, I don’t think I’m comfortable with this,’” the production assistant said. That’s when Spacey became “visibly flustered” and left the set for the rest of the day, according to the production assistant.

    “I have no doubt that this type of predatory behavior was routine for him and that my experience was one of many and that Kevin had few if any qualms about exploiting his status and position,” the employee said. “It was a toxic environment for young men who had to interact with him at all in the crew, cast, background actors.”

    A former camera assistant told CNN “everybody saw” that Spacey was touching crew members inappropriately. “All the crew members commented on his behavior. What gets me is we have to sign sexual harassment paperwork before the start of the show and apparently [Kevin Spacey] doesn’t have to do anything and he gets away scott-free with this behavior.”

    No one complained because they didn’t want to lose their jobs says the ex-employee: “Who is going to believe crew members? You’re going to get fired.”

    MRC, the company that produces “House of Cards,” told CNN on Thursday that they have set up “an anonymous complaint hotline, crisis counselors, and sexual harassment legal advisors for the crew.” They added they are “deeply troubled” by the allegations and that they were only aware of one incident that occurred in 2012 that was “resolved promptly to the satisfaction of all involved.”

    Space is currently “in treatment,” per the New York Times.

  • ‘This Is Us’ Removed a Kevin Spacey Reference From Halloween Episode

    In a very quick editing job, “This Is Us” Season 2, Episode 6.

    According to TVLine, Spacey was originally referenced in “The 20’s,” airing Tuesday, Oct. 31. The Halloween episode included a flashback to Kevin Pearson (Justin Hartley) in 2008, with the struggling actor resentful of his roommate for booking a job on a movie with Kevin Spacey. NBC gave media a copy of the episode ahead of time, including that Spacey reference, but after the recent sexual misconduct allegations against Spacey, the line was removed from the airing on NBC. Presumably, the show didn’t want to distract viewers with the unexpectedly timely reference.

    Spacey has been in headlines this week after actor Anthony Rapp accused him of trying to “seduce” him in the mid-80s when Rapp was only 14-years-old. Spacey’s apology statement didn’t seem to help much and was roundly criticized. Spacey’s “House of Cards” is currently filming Season 6, but Netflix has shut down production indefinitely. It was also revealed that Season 6 will be the final season of the show.

    “This Is Us” airs Tuesdays at 9 p.m. on NBC.

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  • ‘House of Cards’ Season 6: How Claire Breaks Fourth Wall Will Be ‘Exciting’ & ‘Different’

    “House of Cards” went full “Game of Thrones” in Season 5, leaving cliffhangers galore for Season 6.

    Netflix has not officially renewed the series yet, but it’s only a matter of time. They would not dare refuse the Underwoods, especially the new President Claire Underwood. Season 5 showed Claire (Robin Wright) is as willing to get her hands dirty as Frank (Kevin Spacey), with the season basically killing off or maybe killing off anyone who defied them. (They don’t even like when you use the wrong “tone” when complaining about the dead body they left in your home.)

    Melissa James Gibson and Frank Pugliese took over as co-showrunners this season, and they talked to TVLine about what happens next for the show’s iconic fourth-wall-breaking, now that Claire is the one controlling it. Season 4 ended with Claire looking into the camera alongside President Frank Underwood as he spoke to the viewers, but Season 5 ended with just POTUS Claire looking into the camera to tell us, “My turn.”

    Gibson: “We were trying, in a disciplined way, to navigate that shift at the end of last season [when Claire first talked to the camera] and not overplay it [this season]. But I think it’s inevitable that that will need to be explored further [in Season 6].”

    Pugliese: “The question is going to be HOW. I don’t think she’s going to do it the way Francis did it. HOW she does it could be really exciting.”

    He argued to TVLine that Frank Underwood broke the fourth wall to campaign for support and seek “allegiance” from viewers, but that’s not what Claire will do.

    Pugliese: “Claire’s needs from the audience are unique to her. We want Francis and Claire to be equal but different.”

    Hopefully Netflix keeps “House of Cards” to its annual schedule so we get Season 6 around this time next year. There’s clearly still enough story for at least one more season, and still plenty of enemies for the Underwoods to try to kill off — including each other.

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  • 9 Times Claire Underwood Was the Ultimate HBIC

    What would “House of Cards” be without Claire Underwood?

    The smart and ruthless political powerhouse is a merciless force to be reckoned with and we certainly wouldn’t want to be a name on her list of enemies. Here are nine times she proved she was the ultimate HBIC.

  • This Creepy ‘House of Cards’ Season 5 Teaser Has ‘a Simple Request’ for Viewers

    Looks like Claire Underwood has gotten pretty comfortable breaking the fourth wall. This new “House of Cards” Season 5 teaser gives her a 1:25 minute speech to the cameras, asking Americans for a favor: To spy on each other, Orwell style.

    Hey, it’s 13 o’clock somewhere!

    Season 5 arrives on Netflix on Tuesday, May 30, and even though it’s hard to imagine how this fictional look at the White House will be any match for our current reality, Kevin Spacey’s President Frank Underwood and Robin Wright‘s First Lady/Veep candidate Claire Underwood are going to give it their best/worst shot.

    Claire Underwood leads Netflix’s chilling new promo, telling viewers she’s been meaning to speak with them, because she and the president have a simple request:

    “Tell us what you see. If anything in your environment strikes you as a bit odd, a bit off, pick up the phone…”

    As she speaks, the screen distorts, emphasizing how the oddness and offness is right there in front of us.

    Is this season going to hit a little too close to home? Guess we’ll find out. Check out the full Season 5 trailer over here.

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  • Check Out the First Photos From ‘House of Cards’ Season 5

    If you’ve seen “House of Cards” Season 4 — and if you haven’t, you deserve the very iciest of stares from Claire — you know it ended with the surprise of both Francis “Frank” Underwood (Kevin Spacey) and Claire Underwood (Robin Wright) staring into the camera. Will Claire continue to break the fourth wall with Frank in Season 5, or was that just a hint to their stronger partnership this year?

    Netflix will give us answers when the fifth season starts streaming May 30. In the meantime, Entertainment Weekly debuted a few photos from the new season, showing the Underwoods campaigning for POTUS and Veep. “That’s something the show has been building towards for quite some time now,” executive producer Melissa James Gibson told EW. “Francis wasn’t elected president, so this is the real test: What is the will of the people, and can he work his Machiavellian magic on them?”

    Returning for more action are author/hot-piece-on-the-side Tom Yates (Paul Sparks); Underwood rivals Will (Joel Kinnaman) and Hannah Conway (Dominique McElligott); and Team Underwood “frenemies” Doug Stamper (Michael Kelly) and Leann Harvey (Neve Campbell).

    House Of Cards Season 5Pictured (center):  Kevin Spacey as Francis J. "Frank" Underwood

    House Of Cards Season 5Pictured from left:  Kevin Spacey as  Francis J. "Frank" Underwood, Robin Wright as Claire Underwood

    House Of Cards Season 5Pictured from left:  Joel Kinnaman as Will Conway, Dominique McElligot as Hannah Conway

    House Of Cards Season 5Pictured from left:  Michael Kelly as Doug Stamper, Neve Campbell as LeAnn HarveyGibson told EW, “The battlefield for Season 5 is the American psyche. That may be one parallel with our real world.”

    “House of Cards” Season 5 will be available for streaming on Netflix on May 30.

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  • Constance Zimmer Gets Real About Hollywood, Fan Love, and ‘UnREAL’ Season 3

    It’s one of the most delightful aspects of a professional life in Hollywood: You can find your niche in the industry, do good work on good shows, and carve out a solid career for yourself. And then, one day, a certain special role on a certain special project clicks with a certain special audience, and just like that, you’re a superstar,

    Just ask Constance Zimmer.

    Zimmer’s been a familiar face appearing on dozens of television shows since she first hit the scene, especially after breakthrough roles in “Joan of Arcardia,” “Boston Legal,” and, most significantly, “Entourage” as studio exec/Ari Gold sparring partner Dana Gordon. An array of high-profile projects followed — including “Grey’s Anatomy,” “The Newsroom,” “Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.” and “House of Cards” — establishing the diversity of her range, but it took an unlikely pitch-black comedy on an even unlikelier cable network to shoot her into the stratosphere: as the deliriously manipulative dating show producer Quinn King on Lifetime’s “UnREAL,” Zimmer’s reveling on the role of her career, one that’s earned her an Emmy Award nomination and a degree of notoriety she hadn’t experienced before.

    As she preps to head into “UnREAL” Season 3, Zimmer can next be seen on the big screen in “”Better Things.”

    Moviefone: I’m sensing a pattern here in your work with “Run the Tide”: finding seemingly unsympathetic characters and making them surprisingly sympathetic.

    Constance Zimmer: Yeah, sure. I’ll take that. I’ll take it!

    What was the challenge here in figuring out who she was, owning the dark side, but showing that she did have the potential for some light side, too?

    Once again, it’s a character that I was scared of because of everything you just mentioned, but realizing that the characters that I’m afraid of are the ones that tend to have the biggest reward in the end, because you have to find what it is, who they were before they were broken. Because we all have that in us, but it’s been marred along the way from this, that or the other thing.

    Her stuff is very obvious, and I had to kind of go at her, again, [being] completely nonjudgmental. I had to find where the honesty and the truth was going to come from, and knowing that she really had to claw her way back up. I don’t think, for me, it was the reality that it wasn’t going to be as easy as she thought it was.

    So the awareness of becoming so, like, keen to knowing you’ve hurt people to a depth that you didn’t even know, made it such a more emotional journey than I thought. But always knowing that there was a light at the end of the tunnel was how I was able to know that in two hours I was going to be able to prove to these people that I had changed, I had learned, I had grown, and I was here. I was in it to win it now.

    We don’t get those chances in life. We have no idea what tomorrow brings. So in a movie like this, that I think helps too, to heal the character and heal the path.

    What was intriguing for you to work with a guy like Taylor Lautner — who could certainly coast on the audience that he already has, could coast on the superficial look or the people’s image of him — and to see him digging deep in a movie like this, seeing him broaden his range and his skill and come at it to work?

    I definitely think it was, again, one of the reasons why I wanted to do it because I was excited for him. Because I always find that a lot of these actors who have been put into these franchises at such a young age, without even knowing what it was going to do to them, or how it was going to catapult them into a specific area, and that he was so excited about this being nothing like he had ever done.

    I was so excited for him, and I wanted to be a part of it. I wanted to see it because I knew that if he could do it, he was going to do it big, because he was so committed and so into it, and all of us were. It’s a small film. It’s a small cast. Everybody has a story to tell and every character is so deep and so rich. So I knew that everybody that was signed on to the movie was kind of here to commit to these characters.

    You didn’t have a choice, and as dark and as messed up as some of them are, we had to all go in knowing that in the end there’s going to be hope. But it was super exciting to do a lot of those scenes with him too because he and I were so in it, and all I wanted was I wanted to give him everything. I wanted to give him every emotion so that we could do it together, and it was fun. It was fun and so emotionally draining every day.

    You’ve almost gotten Taylor’s experience in reverse. You’ve built a body of work: “Entourage,” I’m sure, got you recognized on the street and got you good tables in restaurants —

    Barely!

    Then this “UnREAL” comes along, and all of a sudden people are invested in you and they want to talk to you about that character and know about your personal life. So what was that like to have a new degree of fame enter the picture after you were a solid, professional working actor?

    It’s funny because I don’t really even necessarily think that I have any more or less than I’ve had. It’s just, yeah, more people care what I have to say, which has been weird. I take all of it as a compliment. I feel so grateful that I’ve been around for so long, and yet some people can say, “Where did you come from? I’ve never seen you before.”

    And I always say “Thank you.” Because you always have this fear of … it’s weird: right before I did “House of Cards,” I had this whole thing in my career where I thought everyone was done with me. They were like over me — like, “We’re over her, we’ve seen her in too many things, we’re done.” I was like, “That’s it. I had my time, my moment is over. And then I did “House of Cards” and it was like a whole different resurgence of sorts of characters in different outlets and all this kind of stuff.

    So that’s all I’m ever looking for, is to constantly grow through characters and shine light in dark characters that are really not the ones that people might jump to go, “Oh, I want to do that, I want to be in that blockbuster and look amazing and beautiful.” No, I’m really always for the underdog, because I’ve always felt I was an underdog, and I actually like being an underdog.

    So it’s been fun. It’s still shocking for me. If somebody comes up to me and says my whole name, I’m like, “Is that written somewhere? Is my name on a piece of paper and that’s why you know who I am?” Because still, I like being like a chameleon and not it being one thing in particular.

    Was there a fear factor when “UnREAL” came around to you?

    Of course there was! The big story on the block is how many times I turned it down, because it had to be done right, and it had to be done in a way that was going to be different. It being on Lifetime, and they hadn’t done anything like it before, we had to put all of our faith and all of our trust that they were going to do it the way that it needed to be done to break out into something more than just, like, “Hey, here’s a new show about behind the scenes of reality television.”

    What I like more about it, I was afraid that everyone was going to hate Quinn. So, again, I was playing a character that I was just like, “Oh God. Are they going to get me? What do I do?” But obviously I could not be happier. It’s really kind of superseded anything I think any of us had every hoped for or dreamed of happening with the show. Now, this season, we’re diving into another new territory of a female suitor. So I don’t know. It’s always exciting, and challenging, and scary, even the show has its cult status, it’s still scary.

    People have said what they wanted to say about Season 2 in comparison to Season 1. That must have been interesting, to go from being a total darling to “Hmm …”

    Yeah, but it’s OK. You know why? People cared, and that’s the way I saw it. I was like, “Wow, people really care about this show.” They care when we miss our mark, and that you don’t get very often, and yet people were still watching it, even though they were like, “Hmm, you kind of missed the mark on that, but I’m still going to watch the next episode.” And we all were taking it as a learning curve. I hope that this next season will bring it all back together cohesively.

    The table was really reset at the end of Season 2. There are so many different things that you can do. Have you had those creative discussions? Have they given you an awareness of what the overall picture is going to be like?

    Not yet. I’ve heard sprinkling of things. We’ll do that probably in the next month or so, and then we’ll see where they’re going to take us, and we’ll see if we agree.

    Are you excited to get back to work on it?

    I’m excited and I’m scared, but that’s why I love this part, because nothing is anticipated, and nothing is set. They’re loose cannons, all of them, and the show is a loose cannon. The characters are loose cannons. So it’s “What are we going to do?” I don’t know. I know what we’re doing, story point-wise, but how is that going to mix in the whole pot? It’s like a big stew, of sorts.

    And it’s one thing when they do put it on the page, and it’s another thing to make it come alive.

    Yes, yes. But I have to say, with “Run the Tide,” everything that was on the page was very much what was shot, because that’s why, when I read the script, I was like, “I see this. I know what this is. This is just dark, and emotional, and deep, and we just all have to go there every day.” But that was scary. So it’s not that the content was scary. It was about the emotional journey was scary.

    I have to ask you about probably your shortest job of the year, your audition waiting room scene on “Better Things.” A brilliantly funny scene. I’ve heard this story from Pamela Adlon, but tell me about it from your side when they came to you with it, and how you reacted to it, had said yes.

    [Laughs] It’s as simple as Pam texted me, and she’s like, “I have this really funny scene that I want to write in my show. I’m curious if you’d be willing to do it with me.” I was like, “What are you talking about?” So I called her and we talked about it, because she’s talked about it for years. We’ve talked about the fact that everybody thinks I’m her and she’s me, and I have gotten to the point where I just say, “Yes,” because I’m just so tired of trying to explain it to people.

    So she’s always said, “I swear one day I’m going to do something. I’m going to put both of us in a scene, and I’m going to prove to people we’re not the same person.” So here it was. Here was our moment. I was like, “Yes, what do you want me to do? Where do I go? I’m available, any time, anywhere,” and it’s the greatest thing. I keep saying to her, I was like, you realize you have to have an audition scene in every season, and we should just always look whatever the part is, because it doesn’t end. It doesn’t end today.

    She’s the face of a show. I’m the face of a show. People still — I was at the Emmys and somebody came up to me and said, “Your show is so amazing. I love you so much. I can’t believe you’re a mom with three kids.” I was like, “I’m not Pam Adlon.” She said, “Yes, you are.” I said, “No, I’m not, but thank you. I take it as a compliment.” So it’s fun. I love it. I love that kind of stuff.

    We’ll get to that scene where you guys beat out Julie Bowen for the part. I think that’s what we need next season.

    Yes. That would be great. That would be awesome. But the thing is, it’s real life. It’s kind of like, that’s what I think everyone was so amazed that we were willing to just show that that’s what it is. I’m like, “No, that’s what it is. It happens. It’ll happen tomorrow.” The second that I’m not on “UnREAL,” I’ll be right back there, right back there in those rooms, with the same girls. It’s just, that’s the truth.

    What great gig have you gotten as a result? Is there something coming up that we’re going to see you in that has kind of come as a result of the exposure that you got on “UnREAL”?

    No, because I’m still doing “UnREAL,” and so my window of opportunity is small. We do such a big press tour on that show as well. So there’s times and moments where I just kind of want to exist in my life and I kind of don’t take anything, or want to take anything.

    For me, it’s more going to be about, like, when “UnREAL” is over. I’d like to then, once again, try and find that character that is different from what I’ve just done. I’d love to go to like a straight full-on comedy and just flip everybody’s heads from being dramatic and so strong, and all of that fun stuff. For me, right now the greatest reward has been getting the Emmy nomination and getting the Critics’ Choice Award. Those are the greatest things so far that are coming to me through this show that I never anticipated.

    From the Emmy experience — It’s a surreal thing. Any aspect of the awards ceremony process is super-surreal. So give me a stand-out crazy memory from being part of it all.

    I have to say, it’s when you are walking, when you’re doing the red carpet that is all the on-camera interviews, and you’re passing people like Henry Winkler and Padma Lakshmi. It’s like this whole crazy mix of so many different people from different parts of the entertainment world, and it’s as if you’ve all known each other and you’re best friends. We’re all here for the same reason.

    It becomes this love fest. I never thought … I couldn’t get through the crowds because everybody was like, “I’m so excited for you! This is a long time coming! You deserve it!” And I was like, “Hi, nice to meet you.” It was this overwhelming, for me, sense of love and appreciation that is not necessarily what you are around every day in this business.

    So that for me was unbelievably heartwarming and it was probably one of the greatest times because
    that’s a long carpet to get down. It was every step was somebody new, or somebody I’ve known in my career for 25 years that’s like, “We’re here! We did it!” That, to me, it was like I could have stood on that carpet for days and just been like, just crying.