Tag: jim parsons

  • ‘Animal Farm’ Interview: Andy Serkis and Iman Vellani

    'Animal Farm' director Andy Serkis and actor Iman Vellani.
    ‘Animal Farm’ director Andy Serkis and actor Iman Vellani.

    Opening in theaters on May 1st is the new animated adaptation of George Orwell’s ‘Animal Farm’, which was directed by Andy Serkis (‘Venom: Let There Be Carnage’).

    The film features an all-star voice cast that includes Seth Rogen (‘Sausage Party’), Gaten Matarazzo (‘Stranger Things’), Kieran Culkin (‘Succession’), Glenn Close (‘101 Dalmatians’), Laverne Cox (‘Promising Young Woman’), Steve Buscemi (‘Hotel Transylvania’), Woody Harrelson (‘War for the Planet of the Apes’), Jim Parsons (‘The Big Bang Theory’),Kathleen Turner (‘Who Framed Roger Rabbit’), and Iman Vellani (‘The Marvels’).

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with director Andy Serkis and Iman Vellani about their work on ‘Animal Farm’, adapting George Orwell’s story and the changes they made, Vellani’s dual role, and putting together the all-star voice cast.

    Related Article: Andy Serkis Will be Back as Alfred Pennyworth for ‘The Batman: Part II’

    'Animal Farm', directed by Andy Serkis. Photo: Angel Studios.
    ‘Animal Farm’, directed by Andy Serkis. Photo: Angel Studios.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Andy, can you talk about why you wanted to adapt George Orwell’s story and the changes you made to the source material?

    Andy Serkis: It always entranced me, the book did from when I first read it on the bus going to school when I was about 12, and I knew, here was this book that was speaking about dark themes, and yet it was couched in this sort of innocence. That was one of the things that stuck with me and through the years, I realized I wanted to make a movie about it. When we were making the ‘Apes’ movies, I suddenly thought, there hasn’t been an adaptation of ‘Animal Farm’ for such a long time. So, it was originally going to be a motion capture and live action version. But animation retained its innocence and allowed us to go into the story for a much wider audience. When we were writing a script that really defined it, you know, in the book, the pigs are offstage characters, and the story is told objectively. So, we needed a protagonist, and I wanted to have it start with a young, innocent piglet who considered himself just one of the other animals, and then gradually, as the story progresses, he realizes that he’s being pulled in another direction that he thinks is right for everybody, but he’s been manipulated. So, the invention of that character, Lucky is new, but there are young piglets in the book from later, which become part of the story, but that was a choice. Then the other thing was, having a third act where there was some hope in a very otherwise bleak story, because this is really for a young audience to sit with their parents and grandparents and engage and actually just say, “Look, it may be difficult and there’s probably no answer because we always seem to get it wrong no matter how long we live on this planet, but we’ve got to keep trying.”

    'Animal Farm', directed by Andy Serkis. Photo: Angel Studios.
    ‘Animal Farm’, directed by Andy Serkis. Photo: Angel Studios.

    MF: Iman, were you familiar with the novella and what was it like voicing two different characters?

    Iman Vellani: I was familiar with the book, but that was about it. I didn’t have to read it in school, so it wasn’t until they said they set up this meeting with Andy and they told me it was ‘Animal Farm’. I was like, “I haven’t read it,” and I was so glad it was a novella. I skimmed through it, and I was like, “Oh my god, this is really intense”. Then that final image was so haunting, and it really stuck with me. Then you are wondering how this is going to be a children’s book or adaptation? So, I came in with so many questions, but Andy was so generous with his time and made it so accessible for me to also insert myself in because we are reorienting it to a young person’s perspective. I think there’s so much power in a coming-of-age story because you get personal stakes. You’re following these characters, making decisions, calling out injustices, and having these moments of rebellion and that’s exactly what kids are dealing with today. They just need the impetus to do it and something to inspire them. If all you’re getting is negativity in the news, in school and through your parents, you don’t feel like you’re growing up in a world that’s going to have anything left to offer to you, right? So, then with Puff and Tammy, they were just so much fun to play. Puff was really the only character I played initially. We didn’t know about Tammy until a bit later. She just felt like a great addition because you could show that extreme version of her, someone who doesn’t question authorities, someone who just goes with the flow of whatever’s attractive and speaking the loudest. So, that was fun for me to play. I learned so much from Andy because this was my first-time doing voice work. So, I didn’t realize how much play and looseness would be involved.

    'Animal Farm', directed by Andy Serkis. Photo: Angel Studios.
    ‘Animal Farm’, directed by Andy Serkis. Photo: Angel Studios.

    MF: Finally, Andy, you cast some of the most recognizable voices in the industry in this movie including Seth Rogen, Woody Harrelson, and Kathleen Turner. Can you talk about putting together the voice cast?

    AS: Well, obviously they had to quintessentially hit those characters immediately. With every member of the cast, from Woody Harrison to Jim Parsons, we were so blessed because everyone was so passionate about the source material and the book. We started talking to people many years ago and they stuck with it. They really wanted to tell this story because they were passionate about what it had. I think everyone just crystallized and each of the actors were perfect for their roles. We were so blessed and particularly with Iman having to do two characters, one of them thrown in much later. But it was wonderful to observe. So, we were very lucky, but it came from a lot of passion for the book and wanting to tell this story for a young modern audience.

    'Animal Farm', directed by Andy Serkis. Photo: Angel Studios.
    ‘Animal Farm’, directed by Andy Serkis. Photo: Angel Studios.

    What is the plot of ‘Animal Farm’?

    A satirical allegory of revolution and power that traces how a movement for equality is systematically corrupted. As the pigs consolidate control, truth is erased, dissent is crushed, and the farm descends into a ruthless dictatorship.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Animal Farm’?

    • Seth Rogen as Napoleon
    • Gaten Matarazzo as Lucky
    • Kieran Culkin as Squealer
    • Glenn Close as Freida Pilkington
    • Steve Buscemi as Mr. Whymper
    • Laverne Cox as Snowball
    • Woody Harrelson as Boxer
    • Jim Parsons as Carl and Carl’s flock
    • Andy Serkis as Mr. Jones and Old Major
    • Kathleen Turner as Benjamin
    • Iman Vellani as Puff and Tammy
    'Animal Farm' opens in theaters on May 1st.
    ‘Animal Farm’ opens in theaters on May 1st.

    List of Movies Directed by Andy Serkis:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Animal Farm’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Andy Serkis Movies on Amazon

  • Andy Serkis Finds His ‘Animal Farm’ Voice Cast

    (Far Left) Seth Rogen in 'The Studio,' premiering March 26, 2025 on Apple TV+. (Center Left) Kieran Culkin accepts the Oscar® for Actor in a Supporting Role during the live ABC Telecast of the 97th Oscars® at the Dolby® Theatre at Ovation Hollywood on Sunday, March 2, 2025. (Center Right) Woody Harrelson as Marcus in director Bobby Farrelly's 'Champions,' a Focus Features release. Courtesy of Focus Features. (Far Right) Steve Buscemi in 'Boardwalk Empire'. Photo: HBO Entertainment.
    (Far Left) Seth Rogen in ‘The Studio,’ premiering March 26, 2025 on Apple TV+. (Center Left) Kieran Culkin accepts the Oscar® for Actor in a Supporting Role during the live ABC Telecast of the 97th Oscars® at the Dolby® Theatre at Ovation Hollywood on Sunday, March 2, 2025. (Center Right) Woody Harrelson as Marcus in director Bobby Farrelly’s ‘Champions,’ a Focus Features release. Courtesy of Focus Features. (Far Right) Steve Buscemi in ‘Boardwalk Empire’. Photo: HBO Entertainment.

    Preview:

    • Seth Rogen, Glenn Close and more will lend their voices to ‘Animal Farm.’
    • Andy Serkis is in the director’s chair.
    • The movie adapts the classic George Orwell novel of authoritarianism.

    In development for several years now, it would seem that Andy Serkis has quietly finished work on his adaptation of George Orwell classic ‘Animal Farm.’

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    We’ve been hearing about this one on and off for a while now, with talk of performance capture and at least one cast list floating around.

    Yet Variety brings word of a seemingly confirmed all-star cast for the project.

    Seth Rogen, Gaten Matarazzo, Steve Buscemi, Glenn Close, Laverne Cox, Kieran Culkin, Woody Harrelson, Jim Parsons, Kathleen Turner and Iman Vellani are all reportedly aboard the movie.

    Related Article: Andy Serkis and ‘Luther’ Creator Neil Cross Talk ‘Luther: The Fallen Sun’

    What’s the story of ‘Animal Farm’?

    Andy Serkis at a London Special Screening of 'The Batman.' Copyright: © 2021 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    Andy Serkis at a London Special Screening of ‘The Batman.’ Copyright: © 2021 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Orwell’s 1945 novella tells the story of a group of anthropomorphic farm animals who rebel against their human farmer, hoping to create a society where the animals can be equal, free, and happy. Ultimately, the rebellion is betrayed, and under the dictatorship of a pig named Napoleon, the farm ends up in a far worse state than before.

    The author –– who also touched on authoritarian metaphors with ‘1984,’ –– always said that ‘Animal Farm’ reflects events leading up to the Russian Revolution of 1917 and then on into the Stalinist era of the Soviet Union, a period when Russia lived under the Marxist–Leninist ideology of Joseph Stalin.

    Orwell, a democratic socialist, was a critic of Stalin and hostile to Moscow-directed Stalinism, an attitude that was critically shaped by his experiences during the Barcelona May Days conflicts during the Spanish Civil War.
    While Serkis’ ‘Rise of the Planet of the Apes’ director Rupert Wyatt worked on an earlier draft, Nicholas Stoller, who has been responsible for movies such as ‘The Muppets,’ ‘Storks’ and ‘You’re Cordially Invited,’ wrote the actual shooting script.

    Who is who in ‘Animal Farm’?

    Seth Rogen in 'The Studio,' premiering March 26, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Seth Rogen in ‘The Studio,’ premiering March 26, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    While not every cast member has a confirmed character, we do have a few details…

    Rogen is voicing Napoleon, the pig who assumes command of the farm and ends up becoming a despot on four legs (and then two legs).

    Culkin is on to be Squealer, a small, white, fat large white pig who serves as Napoleon’s second-in-command and minister of propaganda.

    Serkis, meanwhile, is playing Benjamin, a donkey, one of the oldest, wisest animals on the farm, and one of the few who can read properly. He is skeptical, temperamental and cynical: his most frequent remark is, “Life will go on as it has always gone on –– that is, badly.” Many have pointed to Orwell adding something of himself to the character.

    Here’s what Serkis has previously said about the project:

    “The challenging journey to bring this extraordinary story to the screen has been finally rewarded by the opportunity to partner with the brilliant team at Aniventure and Cinesite. Together we hope to make our version of Orwell’s ever relevant masterpiece, emotionally powerful, humorous, and relatable for all ages. A tale not only for our times, but for generations to come.”

    Where else can I seen the cast?

    (L to R) Cath (Glenn Close) and Jady (Peter Dinklage) in 'Brothers'. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Cath (Glenn Close) and Jady (Peter Dinklage) in ‘Brothers’. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Rogen is currently enjoying great reviews for his Apple TV+ series ‘The Studio,’ about a stressed movie executive trying to navigate art and commerce.

    Close has earned eight Oscar nominations for the likes of ‘Fatal Attraction,’ ‘Dangerous Liaisons,’ and ‘The Big Chill,’ but has also been seen in ‘Guardians of the Galaxy’ and TV series ‘Damages.’

    Matarazzo is best known for his work on Netflix’s ‘Stranger Things,’ He has also lent his voice to movies including ‘My Father’s Dragon’ and ‘The Angry Birds Movie 2.’

    Buscemi might be most famous for movies including ‘Fargo,’ ‘Reservoir Dogs’ and ‘The Big Lebowski,’ and while on TV, he starred in ‘Boardwalk Empire.’ Voice-wise, his recognizable tones were heard in “Monsters, Inc.

    Steve Buscemi attends the launch of the Sky Atlantic channel at the Sky pop-up venue on February 4, 2011 in London, England.
    Steve Buscemi attends the launch of the Sky Atlantic channel at the Sky pop-up venue on February 4, 2011 in London, England. Photo by Ian Gavan/Getty Images.

    Cox starred in Netflix’s ‘Orange is the New Black,’ and has since appeared in ‘Promising Young Woman,’ ‘Inventing Anna’ and ‘Disclosure.’

    Culkin recently won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role in Jesse Eisenberg’s ‘A Real Pain’ He also won an Emmy for his work as Roman Roy on HBO’s ‘Succession.’

    Harrelson is a three-time Oscar nominee whose credits include HBO’s ‘True Detective,’ ‘Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri’ and ‘The People vs. Larry Flynt.’

    Parsons is best known for his work on ‘The Big Bang Theory,’ while Vellani broke out with her role as Kamala Khan in Marvel/Disney+ series ‘Ms. Marvel’ and follow-up movie ‘The Marvels.’

    When will ‘Animal Farm’ be on screens?

    While Variety’s story makes no mention of a release date (and the movie’s connection to Netflix would not naturally scream theatrical), World of Reel is reporting, and the IMDb lists, a July 11th release for ‘Animal Farm.’

    Of course, given the long history of this one, we’ll believe it when it’s in cinemas or on our screens some other way.

    Director Andy Serkis and Tom Hardy on the set of 2021's 'Venom: Let There Be Carnage.'
    (L to R) Director Andy Serkis and Tom Hardy on the set of 2021’s ‘Venom: Let There Be Carnage.’

    List of Movies Directed by Andy Serkis:

    Buy Andy Serkis Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘Spoiler Alert’ Interviews with Jim Parsons and Sally Field

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    Opening in theaters on December 2nd is the new romantic drama ‘Spoiler Alert,’ which is an adaption of the memoir “Spoiler Alert: The Hero Dies” by Michael Ausiello, and was directed by Michael Showalter (‘The Eyes of Tammy Faye’).

    Based on a true story, the film follows the last year of New York photographer Kit Cowan’s (Ben Aldridge) life. From his diagnosis with terminal cancer to his death, Kit’s spouse, entertainment reporter Michael Ausiello (Jim Parsons), and Kit’s parents, Marilyn and Bob (Sally Field and Bill Irwin) do their best to comfort him in his final days.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Jim Parsons, Ben Aldridge, Sally Field, and Bill Irwin about their work on ‘Spoiler Alert,’ the true story it is based on, their characters, why they wanted to make the movie, and working with director Michael Showalter.

    Bill Irwin stars as Bob, Sally Field as Marilyn, Ben Aldridge as Kit Cowan and Jim Parsons as Michael Ausiello in director Michael Showalter’s 'Spoiler Alert,' a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Bill Irwin stars as Bob, Sally Field as Marilyn, Ben Aldridge as Kit Cowan and Jim Parsons as Michael Ausiello in director Michael Showalter’s ‘Spoiler Alert,’ a Focus Features release. Photo: Linda Källérus / © 2022 Focus Features LLC.

    You can read our full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Parsons, Aldridge, Field, Irwin, and author Michael Ausiello.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Jim, what was it about Michael and Kit’s story that really spoke to you both as a producer and an actor, and why was it important for you to make this movie?

    Jim Parsons: I think that at a somewhat surface level, there was a lot of mirror between their relationship and my own relationship with my husband. Meeting around the same time, around the same year, in the same city. But I think that it was the really laid bare way in which Michael told the tale in all the gritty details that made it such an obvious love story and in a way that I don’t feel like I’ve necessarily read or seen a lot with a gay couple.

    It’s got a real universality to it. The story has echoes of stories I’ve heard before, but with people that weren’t exactly like me. Both as an actor and as a producer, I was really hungry to get a shot at making that story a visual reality. It was more rewarding than I think I was even prepared for.

    MF: Why was director Michael Showalter the right filmmaker to bring this story to the big screen?

    Jim Parsons: Mike has a beautiful way of seeing stories that are so real to life in a way. We talked all through the shoot about why he was a good match for us, and it would vary day to day. But he was really good about letting us explore things at a very deep level. He would never let anything stay too long, which was very smart and wise.

    He wasn’t sentimental and he was a perfect balance for us in a lot of ways. He made it a very safe space for us that we felt we could get in, do it, and not get stuck there. He would always help come pull you out of it and move on.

    MF: Ben, Kit is an only child and has a very close relationship with his parents, can you talk about that and working with Sally Field and Bill Irwin?

    Ben Aldridge: I think of course you’d hope in any good parent-child relationship that a parent would be there for someone, particularly in that moment in their suffering. But I think what we see in what I think the film chronicles nicely is something that I think a lot of queer people can relate to is that until your parents know about your authentic self, you kind of hold them at a slight distance. You hold them away from the truth and I think that can permeate adult life in a way that is actually unhelpful.

    But I think what we see, and I think which was true to life, is that it really deepened their connection and they became much closer the more they knew about Kit, and the more they got to know Michael as well. So, that was really lovely to play something I recognize and relate to in my own life as well.

    Then, with Sally and Bill, I definitely was intimidated. Sally was wonderfully generous, but knowing that I was going to have to look in her eyes and hope that she believed me was a tense moment. But it was so great to have them on set and it felt like such a gift that she was going to be playing my mom. I mean, I couldn’t believe it. It was really a “pinch myself” moment.

    Ben Aldridge, and Jim Parsons star in director Michael Showalter’s 'Spoiler Alert,' a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Ben Aldridge, and Jim Parsons star in director Michael Showalter’s ‘Spoiler Alert,’ a Focus Features release.

    MF: Sally, can you talk about Marilyn’s close relationship to her son and how she is able to be there for him when he really needs her?

    Sally Field: I’m not sure how to talk about that. It just is right there, and it’s the film. You know, you can only come into a film and create what’s on the page. I mean, we weren’t doing historical characters that are well known in the public eye. So, Bill and I were just creating this husband and wife who has this wonderful son that they’re devoted to, and all that that means about loving that child, loving each other, and how hard it is, how hard it is to love anybody.

    Ultimately, that’s what the movie is about, is loving someone, what it costs, how hard it is, and how that’s all there is, ultimately. As the world is full of hate, we need to remember that human beings are also meant to love each other.

    MF: Finally, Bill, your character seems like the “Fun Dad,” can you talk about your approach to playing Bob and his relationship with his son?

    Bill Irwin: When I got the call that there would be this part, and I would get to play husband to Sally, I was in. Telling stories is so tough. During rehearsals, Sally said some line to me, and I said, “Oh, it does not.” I just put in an argumentative response, and so I felt like we had something going.

    But then it wasn’t until, for me anyway, we were really on camera that I realized this magnificent young man. I mean, Ben Aldridge is magnificent. This magnificent spirit whom he’s aligned himself to, Jim Parsons, they’re our family too. I was a little slow on the uptake, I guess.

    Well, that part of the family, it wasn’t until we were actually on camera that I began to realize, “Oh, yeah.” So, I had to come up with a name for my son. Everybody else calls him Kit. I call him Kitty. Just these layers of family-ness that you’re looking for as storytellers, and if you’re going to work with a storyteller, Sally’s one that you can just nestle into and hold on to for dear life.

    Sally Field, and Bill Irwin star in Michael Showalter’s 'Spoiler Alert,' a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Sally Field, and Bill Irwin star in Michael Showalter’s ‘Spoiler Alert,’ a Focus Features release.
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  • Ryan Murphy Bringing Broadway’s ‘Boys in the Band’ to Netflix With Original Cast

    Ryan Murphy Bringing Broadway’s ‘Boys in the Band’ to Netflix With Original Cast

    NBC

    The band is getting back together.

    Ryan Murphy revealed (via Instagram) that he is bringing the Broadway play “The Boys in the Band” to Netflix. And the movie adaptation will reunite original cast members Jim Parsons, Matt Bomer, Zachary Quinto, and Andrew Rannells.

    Last year, Murphy produced the record-breaking Broadway production of Mart Crowley’s landmark 1968 play about gay New Yorkers in the pre-Stonewall era.  The story follows a group of gay men who convene for a friend’s birthday party. As the evening continues, the cracks beneath their friendships begin to show, bringing to light self-inflicted heartache and identity crises.

    The stage production’s director Joe Mantello will also return to helm the movie version.

    “The Broadway cast of BOYS was so important to me, and as equally groundbreaking as Mart Crowley’s seminal work,” Murphy wrote on Instagram.

    “Everyone in the cast was out and proud…and feeling so blessed to mark the 50th anniversary of Mart’s landmark play.”

    “Boys in the Band” is expected to debut on Netflix sometime in 2020.

  • ‘The Big Bang Theory’: Jim Parsons’s Decision Not to Return Prompted Show’s End: Report

    ‘The Big Bang Theory’: Jim Parsons’s Decision Not to Return Prompted Show’s End: Report

    Jerry O'Connell and Jim Parsons in The Big Bang Theory
    CBS

    Fans of “The Big Bang Theory” got sad news Wednesday when word came that Season 12 would be the show’s last, and now they’re left wondering why.

    A new Deadline report says the decision was made after star Jim Parsons told Chuck Lorre, one of the show’s creators and executive producers, that he planned to move on. The actor reportedly broke the news on Friday and stood firm on his decision over the weekend, spelling the end of the series. As Deadline notes, Lorre had previously indicated that the sitcom wouldn’t continue if Parsons, Johnny Galecki, or Kaley Cuoco chose not to return.

    The rest of the people who work on the show reportedly learned that the show is ending on Wednesday, and Deadline’s sources say Parsons spoke to the entire cast and was “tearful.” (CBS declined to comment on the news, and Moviefone had not heard back from Parsons’s rep at the time of publishing.) They’ve been together for 11 seasons already, so it’s not surprising that it was a hard announcement for him to make.

    Cuoco shared in an Instagram post that her heart was “broken,” but she was careful to note that it would have been no matter when “The Big Bang Theory” ended. As for Parsons, he was having a hard time, too. He wrote a lengthy post that expressed his gratitude for all the people who have worked on the show.

    “I will miss all of you and all of this more than I can say and more than I can know at this time,” he wrote in part.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/Bm1ATQcgQHE/

    There are a lot of people in an emotional place right now, but the good news is that we still have 24 episode of “The Big Bang Theory” to look forward to.

    Season 12 premieres Monday, Sept. 24 at 8 p.m. ET/PT on CBS.

    [via Deadline]

  • ‘The Big Bang Theory’ to End With Season 12

    ‘The Big Bang Theory’ to End With Season 12

    Big Bang Theory
    CBS

    “The Big Bang Theory” will end after the upcoming 12th season on CBS.

    “We are forever grateful to our fans for their support of ‘The Big Bang Theory’ during the past twelve seasons,” WBTV and Chuck Lorre Productions said in a joint statement.

    “We, along with the cast, writers and crew, are extremely appreciative of the show’s success and aim to deliver a final season, and series finale, that will bring ‘The Big Bang Theory’ to an epic creative close.”

    When “TBBT” ends in May, it will go out as the longest-running multi-camera comedy in television history with a record-breaking 279 episodes.

    It has been a ratings behemoth for CBS, ranking as the No. 1 TV comedy until last season (when ABC’s “Roseanne” revival bumped it). “TBBT” also helped launch prequel spinoff “Young Sheldon,” which became an instant hit.

    A few weeks ago, CBS Entertainment boss Kelly Kahl told reporters there were preliminary discussions about a 13th season. However, that would mean negotiating new deals for the cast.

    Last fall, the actors signed lucrative new contracts worth $900,000 each, plus backend points and overall deals. The original five stars —Jim Parsons (Sheldon), Johnny Galecki (Leonard), Kaley Cuoco (Penny), Simon Helberg (Howard) and Kunal Nayyar (Raj) — all took pay cuts so that castmates Mayim Bialik (Amy) and Melissa Rauch (Bernadette) could achieve salary parity.

    Sources told The Hollywood Reporter that the decision to continue on after Season 12 likely rested with Emmy-winning star Parsons. If he wanted to return, the rest of the cast would, too.

    Season 12 just taped its premiere episode, which means the writers have plenty of time to figure out an endgame for the series.

  • ‘Big Bang Theory’ Star Jim Parsons Marries Longtime Partner Todd Spiewak

    'An Act Of God' Broadway Opening Night - Arrivals“Big Bang Theory” star Jim Parsons married his longtime partner, graphic designer Todd Spiewak, Saturday night in New York City. The couple has been together for 14 years.

    The Emmy winner quietly came out in a May 2012 New York Times profile which described as “gay and in a 10-year relationship.” Coincidentally, his character on “Big Bang Theory,” Sheldon Cooper, recently proposed marriage to Mayim Bialik’s character. Bialik was among the guests at the wedding.

    Parsons posted Instagram photos from the ceremony and reception, held at the Rainbow Room.

    CBS renewed “The Big Bang Theory” for two more seasons. Parsons is also expected to narrate the “Young Sheldon” spinoff of the series in the fall.

  • Jim Parsons Is Confident ‘The Big Bang Theory’ Will Be Back for Season 11

    23rd Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards - Press RoomNot even the stars of “The Big Bang Theory” are sure whether or not they’ll have jobs next season, since CBS is still negotiating with the show and its leads over new contracts. But Jim Parsons, who plays scientist Sheldon on the wildly popular program, is extremely confident that fans will get to enjoy more “Bang” next year.

    In an interview with “Today,” Parsons briefly addressed the ongoing uncertainty over the show’s renewal for a potential season 11. While the actor cautioned that he didn’t have any official news, he said he and his fellow cast members are all eager to return.

    “I know everybody wants to,” Parsons told “Today” of coming back for season 11. “I would be shocked if that doesn’t happen, I really would be.”

    That’s a more hopeful answer than others involved in the show’s production have given in recent months. Back in September, Kaley Cuoco dodged queries about the show’s future (she’d only say that season 11 was “a very expensive question,” a likely nod to her, Parsons, and costar Johnny Galecki collecting $1 million paychecks per episode). And earlier this year, a CBS exec said he was “guardedly optimistic” about a renewal, though he added that there would be “tough negotiations” ahead.

    Fans will have to keep waiting until CBS officially makes up its mind. At least audiences will have the upcoming young Sheldon spinoff to keep them happy if “Bang” goes out with a whimper.

    [via: Today, h/t TVLine]

  • Why Hidden Figures Script Immediately Added Up for Kevin Costner, Jim Parsons

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    Why Hidden Figures Immediately Added Up for Kevin Costner, Jim Parsons

    “Hidden Figures” has charmed audiences and critics. And from the very beginning, the stars also sensed something special about this story that history had overlooked.

    “When we see a movie for the first time, we see it in its rawest form. We see it on pages. It’s not realized the way you see it,” Kevin Costner tells Made in Hollywood reporter Kylie Erica Mar. “So we have to imagine what this could be.”

    Kevin Costner Plays a NASA Manager in Hidden Figures

    Set at the dawn of the American space program, “Hidden Figures” follows three brilliant African-American women — played by Taraji P. Henson, Octavia Spencer and Janelle Monae — who provide important mathematical data to make the first space launches successes.

    Costner plays a gum-smacking, crew-cutted NASA project manager dealing with the mounting racial tensions within his ranks.

    “It’s very difficult to predict what a hit will be, but it’s not hard to know what a good movie is,” says Costner. “And so the satisfaction in ‘Hidden Figures’ … is that we know this movie will be a movie that is very easy for people to watch and view and pass down 25 years from now.”

    Jim Parsons, who plays Costner’s increasingly overlooked pet employee, saw the film’s potential as soon as he read the script.

    “You never know once it gets through everybody’s hands what’s going to come out at the other end,” he says. “There was no denying this had all the makings of a very surprising story. Not just because it was actual history that everyone didn’t know, but the way it unfolds, the way it’s being told, it just has a certain feel to it. You know this could really be something.”

    Both credit director/co-screenwriter Theodore Melfi. “It was everything it seemed like it was going to be and a little bit more,” says Parsons. “It really was. He is such a good storyteller, Ted is, and he was so clear about it.”

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  • A ‘Big Bang Theory’ Prequel Series About Sheldon Could Be Coming to CBS

    the big bang theory, sheldon, dr. sheldon cooper, jim parsons, spinoff, prequelIt’s currently unclear if CBS comedy hit “The Big Bang Theory” will continue past its current 10th season, but the network hopes to keep the “TBBT” brand alive with a spinoff series centered around the show’s breakout character.

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, CBS is currently developing a prequel to the show that will focus on a young version of Dr. Sheldon Cooper (Jim Parsons), with sources telling the trade that it’s being modeled on another coming of age sitcom, “Malcolm in the Middle.” Parsons will reportedly executive produce the project, which was conceived by “Big Bang” creators Chuck Lorre and Bill Prady and will be executive produced by showrunner Steve Molaro.

    The spinoff news comes as “TBBT” currently sits in renewal limbo, with the main cast — who famously secured $1 million per episode paydays back in 2014 — set to renegotiate their contracts, and reportedly angle for even bigger paychecks. While the show is still a hit for CBS (it remains America’s most-watched comedy in the 18-49 demographic), it may make more financial sense for the Eye to cut ties with it now, before costs balloon further; adding the prequel into the mix would continue the brand, but with a new, smaller-salaried cast.

    No other details about the new show have been revealed yet. Stay tuned to see how this project pans out.

    [via: The Hollywood Reporter]

    Photo credit: Sonja Flemming/CBS