Tag: martin-short

  • TV Review: ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5

    (L to R) Selena Gomez, Steve Martin and Martin Short in 'Only Murders in the Building' Season 5. Photo: Disney/Patrick Harbron.
    (L to R) Selena Gomez, Steve Martin and Martin Short in ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5. Photo: Disney/Patrick Harbron.

    Launching on Hulu on September 9th with the first three episodes (seven more debut once weekly), ‘Only Murders in the Building’ returns for a fifth season of mysterious death, quirky characters and, this time at least, the intersection of old mob ways with New York’s modern powerbrokers.

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    With John Hoffman (‘Grace and Frankie’) once again acting as showrunner, series regulars Steve Martin (‘Roxanne’), Martin Short (‘Innerspace’) and Selena Gomez (‘Emilia Pérez’) are joined by some returning favorites such as Meryl Streep (‘August: Osage County’) and Jackie Hoffman (‘Garden State’) with new recruits this year including Christoph Waltz (‘Django Unchained’), Renée Zellweger (‘Chicago’) and Logan Lerman (‘The Perks of Being a Wallflower’).

    Related Article: Renée Zellweger the Latest Star for ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5

    Initial Thoughts

    Steve Martin in 'Only Murders in the Building' Season 5. Photo: Disney/Patrick Harbron.
    Steve Martin in ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5. Photo: Disney/Patrick Harbron.

    For the last few years, ‘Only Murders in the Building’ has been a reliable provider of murder mystery mixed with the vaudeville comedy of Steve Martin and Martin Short, plus a side of eye-rolling millennial reactions from Selena Gomez. The combination has worked extremely well, providing confounding cases and lots of laughs.

    The question is, however, does the fifth season do enough to differentiate itself from what has gone before, or should we be happy that we’re getting more of the same if it’s still entertaining?

    Script and Direction

    Renée Zellweger in 'Only Murders in the Building' Season 5. Photo: Disney/Patrick Harbron.
    Renée Zellweger in ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5. Photo: Disney/Patrick Harbron.

    There remains a lot to like about ‘Only Murders’ –– the scripts remain witty and the central mystery thorny –– in this case, the death of longtime doorman Lester (Teddy Coluca).

    Yet there are some problems with the season this time around –– it’s just not as fresh as it usually feels. The new characters are fine, but compared to previous examples of guest casting, they just don’t have the same amount of zing.

    The show’s direction remains on point –– but with the focus on the Arconia once more (even given some new locations discovered), there’s only so much you can do to keep it interesting.

    Cast and Performances

    Christoph Waltz in 'Only Murders in the Building' Season 5. Photo: Disney/Patrick Harbron.
    Christoph Waltz in ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5. Photo: Disney/Patrick Harbron.

    Martin, Short and Gomez are still great in the lead roles; the issue is that much of what they get to do here is a variation on previous work.

    Naturally, Martin has some funny physical business, Short gets to be extra in all ways, and Gomez is still the best at a blend of vulnerability and heart, plus her ability to side-eye her older companions.

    Of the new faces this year, Logan Lerman makes the most impact as a young billionaire, while the likes of Christoph Waltz and Renée Zellweger don’t get as much to, but have fun with their roles.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) Selena Gomez and Logan Lerman in 'Only Murders in the Building' Season 5. Photo: Disney/Patrick Harbron.
    (L to R) Selena Gomez and Logan Lerman in ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5. Photo: Disney/Patrick Harbron.

    ‘Only Murders in the Building’ is definitely starting to show its age –– the concept only has so much flexibility in it.

    It’s still a very fun show to watch, but its best days may now be behind it.

     

    ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5 receives 65 out of 100.

    Tea Leoni in 'Only Murders in the Building' Season 5. Photo: Disney/Patrick Harbron.
    Tea Leoni in ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5. Photo: Disney/Patrick Harbron.

    What’s the plot of ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5?

    After their beloved doorman, Lester (Teddy Coluca), dies under suspicious circumstances, Charles (Steve Martin), Oliver (Martin Short), and Mabel (Selena Gomez) refuse to believe it was an accident. Their investigation plunges them into the shadowy corners of New York and beyond — where the trio uncovers a dangerous web of secrets connecting powerful billionaires, old-school mobsters, and the mysterious residents of the Arconia.

    The trio discovers a deeper divide between their storied city they thought they knew and the new New York evolving around them — one where the old mob fights to hold on as newer, even more dangerous players emerge.

    Who stars in ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5?

    • Steve Martin as Charles-Haden Savage
    • Martin Short as Oliver Putnam
    • Selena Gomez as Mabel Mora
    • Michael Cyril Creighton as Howard Morris
    • Jackie Hoffman as Uma Heller
    • Teddy Coluca as Lester Coluca
    • Da’Vine Joy Randolph as Detective Donna Williams
    • Meryl Streep as Loretta Durkin
    • Christoph Waltz as Bash Steed
    • Renée Zellweger as Camila White
    • Logan Lerman as Jay Pflug
    • Bobby Cannavale as Nicky Caccimelio
    • Téa Leoni as Sofia Caccimelio
    (L to R) Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez in 'Only Murders in the Building' Season 5. Photo: Disney/Patrick Harbron.
    (L to R) Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez in ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5. Photo: Disney/Patrick Harbron.

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  • Renée Zellweger Joins ‘Only Murders in the Building’

    (Left) Renée Zellweger as Bridget Jones in 'Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy'. Photo: Jay Maidment / Universal Pictures. (Right) Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu's 'Only Murders In The Building'. Photo: Craig Blankenhorn/Hulu.
    (Left) Renée Zellweger as Bridget Jones in ‘Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy’. Photo: Jay Maidment / Universal Pictures. (Right) Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu’s ‘Only Murders In The Building’. Photo: Craig Blankenhorn/Hulu.

    Preview:

    • Renée Zellweger will appear in ‘Only Murders in the Building’s fifth season.
    • She joins stars Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez.
    • The season has just started shooting.

    Only Murders in the Building’ has long been a witty blend of compelling murder mystery and old-school comedy chaos, anchored by stars Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez.

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    And as it has grown in popularity, the star wattage of its guest cast has grown exponentially.

    In its most recent season –– the fourth –– alone, the show included appearances from Eva Longoria, Eugene Levy, Zach Galifianakis, Molly Shannon, Kumail Nanjiani, Richard Kind, Scott Bakula, Daphne Rubin-Vega, Desmin Borges, Amy Ryan, Griffin Dunne and Jin Ha.

    And that’s without mentioning returning guest stars such as Paul Rudd and Meryl Streep.

    Meryl Streep as Loretta in Hulu's 'Only Murders in the Building.' Photo by: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.
    Meryl Streep as Loretta in Hulu’s ‘Only Murders in the Building.’ Photo by: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

    So it should be little surprise that the fifth season of the show will boast some suitably big names –– with Renée Zellweger the latest addition, according to Deadline.

    The new season recently started rolling its cameras in New York, following the show’s success at the Screen Actors Guild Awards, where it won Comedy Series Ensemble and a Male Actor in a Comedy Series gong for Short.

    Related Article: Kumail Nanjiani and More Cast in ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 4

    What’s the story of ‘Only Murders in the Building’?

    (L to R) Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez in Hulu's 'Only Murders In The Building' season 2. Photo: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.
    (L to R) Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez in Hulu’s ‘Only Murders In The Building’ season 2. Photo: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

    ‘Only Murders in the Building,’ which started in August 2021, focuses on a trio of strangers –– Charles-Haden Savage (Martin), a misanthropic semi-retired actor who was the star of the popular 1990s crime drama, Oliver Putnam, (Short) an ambitious but financially struggling Broadway director and Mabel Mora, (Gomez) a young artist and apartment renovator living alone in her aunt’s unit, who was part of a quartet that solved pretend mysteries throughout her childhood and teenage years –– with a shared interest in true crime podcasts.

    The three become unlikely friends while investigating a succession of suspicious murders in the Arconia, their upscale apartment building on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, and producing their own podcast about the cases, titled ‘Only Murders in the Building.’

    Through the previous four seasons, they’ve investigated several mysterious slayings, including an old friend of Mabel’s in the first, another building resident in the second, an egotistical actor in the third and Charles’ good friend and colleague, stuntwoman Sazz Pataki (Jane Lynch).

    As is usual for the show, the end of Season 4 set up the new mystery for the fifth –– and it’s really the only solid information we have on the season.

    In the final episode of the season, Charles, Mabel and Oliver discover the body of Lester, (Teddy Coluca) the Arconia doorman, dead in the building’s fountain.

    This is what ‘Only Murders’ showrunner Jordan Hoffman told The Wrap about Season 5:

    “We’re trying to tell a particular kind of take from a New York angle. Season Five will hit on some very current things going on within New York, specifically very relevant things that are happening in the city right now, in ways that honestly we couldn’t have even predicted. We built our story and then certain things revealed themselves, and vice versa. It’s a little bit more reflective, deeply New York, both historically and the modern New York right now too. The show has always been classic meets modern.”

    Who else will show up on ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5?

    (L to R) Cooper Hoffman and Christoph Waltz in the Action/Comedy film 'Old Guy', a The Avenue release. Photo courtesy of The Avenue.
    (L to R) Cooper Hoffman and Christoph Waltz in the Action/Comedy film ‘Old Guy’, a The Avenue release. Photo courtesy of The Avenue.

    Zellweger isn’t the only Oscar winner who will appear on the show next season –– Christoph Waltz is aboard, alongside comedy veterans Tea Leoni and Keegan-Michael Key.

    But the creative team is staying quiet about who the new arrivals will be playing, looking to maintain the surprise.

    In the past, some of the guests have played themselves, while others added to the quirky ensemble of characters who make up the world of ‘Only Murders.’

    Where else will we see Renée Zellweger?

    (L to R) Renée Zellweger as Bridget Jones and Leo Woodall as Roxster in 'Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy'. Photo: Alex Bailey/Universal Pictures.
    (L to R) Renée Zellweger as Bridget Jones and Leo Woodall as Roxster in ‘Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy’. Photo: Alex Bailey/Universal Pictures.

    Zellweger was recently back on our screens in possibly her most well-known role, that of Bridget Jones in fourth franchise entry ‘Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy.’

    And while ‘Only Murders’ is the only confirmed next job for her, she does have several movies and shows in development including ‘The Back Nine,’ about a golfer getting back to her career and ‘Heft,’ about a mother reaching to her former writing professor to help with her son.

    When will Season 5 of ‘Only Murders in the Building’ hit Hulu?

    Hulu has yet to officially announce the launch date for the new season, but a March production start offers a clue.

    Season 4 started filming the same time last year, and was on screens the following August. So if we were to guess, we’d say to expect more murder, mayhem and comedy in late August.

    (L to R) Oliver (Martin Short), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Charles (Steve Martin) on Hulu's 'Only Murders In The Building'. Photo: Craig Blankenhorn/Hulu.
    (L to R) Oliver (Martin Short), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Charles (Steve Martin) on Hulu’s ‘Only Murders In The Building’. Photo: Craig Blankenhorn/Hulu.

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  • ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Casts Kumail Nanjiani and More

    Kumail Nanjiani in 'The Big Sick.'
    Kumail Nanjiani in ‘The Big Sick.’ Photo: Amazon Studios.

    Preview:

    • Kumail Nanjiani is the latest addition to ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 4.
    • The series stars Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez.
    • Season 4 has just started shooting.

    If there’s one thing that ‘Only Murders in the Building’ is known for despite its confounding, twisty murder mysteries, it’s the starry main and guest cast it is always able to attract.

    Anchored by a crime-solving trio of amateur sleuth podcasters played by Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez. The three are more normally found solving –– and occasionally being falsely implicated in –– murders at the swanky Arconia apartment building in New York where they all live.

    And for the latest, fourth season of the show, the cast is expanding once again, this time to include Kumail Nanjiani, Eugene Levy, Eva Longoria and Molly Shannon, as reported by Variety.

    Related Article: ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Gets Theatrical for a Smart, Knowing Third Season

    What’s the story of ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 4?

    Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu's 'Only Murders In The Building'.
    (L to R) Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu’s ‘Only Murders In The Building’. Photo: Craig Blankenhorn/Hulu.

    Most details of the plot for the fourth season are themselves a mystery right now, though in keeping with the show’s tradition, the main crime was set up at the end of the third season.

    In the finale of the last batch of episodes, we’re re-introduced to Sazz (Jane Lynch) the longtime friend and former stunt double of TV actor Charles-Haden Savage (Steve Martin).

    Sazz warns Charles that she has to talk to him privately, and while she’s waiting in his apartment, she is fatally shot by someone who presumably thought they were murdering Charles. Cue the dramatic sting!

    As they try to figure out what Sazz was mixed up in, Season 4 will see our heroes headed to Los Angeles.

    Here’s what show co-creator and executive producer John Hoffman told Us Weekly about the new season:

    “It is something we haven’t done before. So I’m excited about that. The joy of working on the show is rare and I think everyone working on the show knows that’s rare. So the instinct and inclination is that there’s room here — certainly in what we’re looking at and thinking about for season 4 — to explore something new.”

    Who are the new guest stars playing in ‘Only Murders in the Building’?

    Meryl Streep as Loretta in Hulu's 'Only Murders in the Building.'
    Meryl Streep as Loretta in Hulu’s ‘Only Murders in the Building.’ Photo by: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

    So far, all we know is that the newcomers will be integral to the story for the new season, but beyond that, only Molly Shannon’s character has been revealed: she’s playing a high-powered Los Angeles businesswoman who gets drawn into the mystery.

    Alongside the new faces, Meryl Streep will return as actor Loretta Durkin, who formed a love connection with Martin Short’s Oliver Putnam in Season 3.

    Has ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 4 started shooting?

    Since you ask, yes! The cameras started filming a few days ago, with Steve Martin posting a picture of himself, Short and Gomez relaxing in chairs on set.

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    When will ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 4 be on screens?

    Given that it has only just kicked off filming, we won’t expect the show to return until later in the year at the earliest. If it keeps to previous season premiere dates, it may well launch in August.

    Selena Gomez as Mabel, Martin Short as Oliver and Steve Martin as Charles in Hulu's 'Only Murders in the Building.'
    (L to R) Selena Gomez as Mabel, Martin Short as Oliver and Steve Martin as Charles in Hulu’s ‘Only Murders in the Building.’ Photo: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

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  • ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Interview: John Hoffman

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    Premiering August 8th on Hulu is the third season of the popular series ‘Only Murders in the Building,’ which was co-created by Steve Martin and John Hoffman, and nominated for 12 Emmys including Outstanding Comedy Series and Outstanding Writing For A Comedy Series at the upcoming ceremony that is scheduled to take place on January 15th, 2024.

    Selena Gomez, Shirley MacLaine, Director John Hoffman, Steve Martin, Martin Short, and Amy Schumer on the set of 'Only Murders in the Building' season 2.
    (L to R) Selena Gomez, Shirley MacLaine, Director John Hoffman, Steve Martin, Martin Short, and Amy Schumer on the set of ‘Only Murders in the Building’ season 2. Photo: Barbara Nitke/Hulu.

    SOME SPOILERS FOR ‘ONLY MURDERS IN THE BUILDING’ SEASON 1 AND 2 BELOW!

    ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 1 and 2 Recap

    Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu's 'Only Murders In The Building'.
    (L to R) Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu’s ‘Only Murders In The Building’. Photo: Craig Blankenhorn/Hulu.

    The series follows three amateur sleuths –– actor Charles-Haden Savage (Martin), who spent years on a low-rent police show and still dines out on his minor fame, down-on-his-luck, flamboyant theatre director Oliver Putnam (Martin Short) and Mabel Mora (Selena Gomez), a young artist whose life suddenly becomes intertwined with Charles and Oliver’s when a former friend and fellow resident of grand New York apartment building the Arconia is found murdered.

    The three also bond over their shared love of a true crime podcast called ‘All is not OK in Oklahoma’, and quickly decide to launch their own as they dig into the truth behind Tim’s death. As they work their way through the suspects (including the variety of quirky occupants of the building), they learn that the real killer is Jan (Amy Ryan), a musician who Charles has been dating.

    Season 1 ends with cranky building head chief Bunny Folger (Jayne Houdyshell) dead in Mabel’s apartment, with Mabel framed for her murder. The second season is dedicated to Charles, Oliver and Mabel figuring out what really happened with Bunny, and how a mysterious painting factors in.

    It also features more from Cinda Canning (Tina Fey), the driven, arrogant creator of ‘All Is Not OK in Oklahoma’ as she seeks to find a compelling follow-up to her hit series. Our heroes initially think that Cinda, and then artist Alice Banks (Cara Delevingne), whom Mabel briefly dated, might be the killer, but it is revealed to be Cinda’s overworked assistant Poppy White (Adina Version), who was actually the not-so-dead subject matter of ‘All is not OK’ and yearns to have a podcast of her own.

    What is the plot of ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 3?

    Paul Rudd as Ben in season 3 of 'Only Murders in the Building.'
    (L to R) Paul Rudd as Ben in season 3 of ‘Only Murders in the Building.’ Photo by: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

    At the end of Season 2, we jump a year forward, to the opening night of Oliver’s new play, ‘Death Rattle’. Its leading man, the annoying, smug Ben Glenroy (Paul Rudd), who clearly has no love for Charles, also starring in the production, collapses dead on stage.

    It’s revealed later in the initial episode that Ben is not actually dead but had a medical condition, and he promises to be a changed man, ready to make amends for his bad behavior during the play’s initial stages. He doesn’t get long to do that, though, as he’s pushed into an elevator shaft at the Arconia, landing on the car containing Charles, Oliver and Mabel. And so, another murder mystery is set in motion. Season 3 will also feature Oscar-winner Meryl Streep as Loretta Durkin, a struggling actress and Oliver’s love interest, who plays a small role in his Broadway show.

    Meryl Streep as Loretta in Hulu's 'Only Murders in the Building.'
    Meryl Streep as Loretta in Hulu’s ‘Only Murders in the Building.’ Photo by: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

    Who stars in ‘Only Murders in the Building’?

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with director, executive producer and series co-creator John Hoffman about his Emmy nominated work on season 2 of ‘Only Murders in the Building,’ creating the series with Steve Martin, setting up the mysteries, lessons he’s learned between seasons, improvisation on set, the lead actors’ chemistry, the show’s attraction to big name guest stars, and a little tease of season 3.

    Tina Fey and Director John Hoffman on the set of 'Only Murders in the Building' season 2.
    (L to R) Tina Fey and Director John Hoffman on the set of ‘Only Murders in the Building’ season 2. Photo: Craig Blankenhorn/Hulu.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch the interview.

    Moviefone: To begin with, congratulations on the show’s 12 Emmy nominations for season 2. How does it feel to get so much Emmy love?

    John Hoffman: I’m feeling very good, honored, relieved, all of the above. It’s been quite a ride with this show and the fact that for season two, dropping a year after our first season aired, to be recognized in this group of incredible shows, it’s rare air. So I am thrilled.

    MF: Season 3 begins on August 8th, are you excited for fans to see the next chapter?

    JH: I’m very excited for people to see what’s coming. We’ve got a good back half too. I promise you.

    Related Article: TV Review: ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 3

    Steve Martin as Charles in season 3 of 'Only Murders in the Building.'
    Steve Martin as Charles in season 3 of ‘Only Murders in the Building.’ Photo: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

    MF: Can you talk about creating the series with Steve Martin? Was it always designed to be a comedic murder mystery?

    JH: It began from the plucky mind of Steve Martin, and it was very much his notion. He’s a real fan and has a real interest in the world of crime and mystery, unfolding and getting underneath it and watching the reveals that happen around a case. So he’s a fan of that work. Then on top of it, he is a comedic genius. So that person held it all and very sweetly along with Dan Fogelman and Jess Rosenthal’s introduction, brought me into the fold of that. I was looking at it in a way of, once Steve said, “I would love Marty to be in this with me,” then I was hoping we could do something that felt like classic meets modern. You’ve got these two classic comedians with this very modern young woman in New York where that constantly feels like a theme and then it let the comedic and the mystery unfold in a fresh way. I think we got very fortunate and we worked really hard, but the goal is always to make it look as effortless as possible but behind the scenes it’s quite a challenge to pull this sucker off.

    MF: The end of the first season sets up the mystery for season 2. How much of the second season’s mystery was set in place when you introduced it at the end of the first season?

    JH: Great question. They’re very tied in. As you’ve seen from the beginning of season three, we take a bit of a leap away, but those first and second seasons are more tied in than maybe evident from the beginning of season two, for sure. Going to the very notion that by episodes 9 and 10, you’re realizing, “Oh my God, the central person responsible ultimately in season 2 was present and was the actual person involved in the podcast and in the case of the podcast that first drew our trio together in episode one of season 1. So, that developed along the way, but it was also kind of in the back of my mind, at least as far as those ties that could happen that felt very exciting. But it was very challenging to thread that and not give it away and not let it be revealed. So that all was very exciting to do, but very in its own classic mystery way, a dance of mini balls in the air with character arcs and the personal relationship of this trio and the discoveries that have to happen. The comedic premises, you then have to create all in the while keeping a thrust of this mystery story that everyone’s hooked into.

    Selena Gomez, Martin Short and Steve Martin in Hulu's 'Only Murders In The Building' season 2.
    (L to R) Selena Gomez, Martin Short and Steve Martin in Hulu’s ‘Only Murders In The Building’ season 2. Photo: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

    MF: As a director and executive producer, what were the biggest lessons you learned between seasons working on this show?

    JH: How valuable everyone else is. I have to say that in this moment too, as I speak to you as a producer of this marvelous experience and show, that I am in great solidarity and recognizing every minute of the value of the collaboration between actors and writers specifically that make everything about this show and make me stand in full solidarity with fairness for all of them right now in this very challenging moment in our business. But that is really it. To be the person who has to answer all the questions along the way for story, for actors, for everyone else, is very comforting oddly for me. I like being that person. But you have to be very careful with everything. But then to be able to feel the luxury of opening up to brilliant artists around you who have much better ideas than you do, and to be able to say, “Oh, wait a minute. Stop the train. We’re going here because of this fantastic idea.” There’s nothing like it. This show is just a magnet for talent. So, who’s coming in next door? Everyone feels this urgency behind the scenes to step it up for this incredible collection of actors that are on the show. But it’s also the great opportunity to work with people who make everything better.

    MF: Obviously, the first season was a huge success. What were the big challenges going into season two to repeat that success?

    JH: That sits in your head in a way that I wasn’t as much expecting or thinking about because I get very deep down in a story that I would like to tell. So I try and push aside everything else that way, but there’s no way for it not to emanate through. Certainly within our writer’s room, it was one of those moments of like, “Wait, they’re saying what over there? Who said what? Who wrote what?” That does inform, it can’t help it. It is part of the collaboration with the audience we have too. When you’re doing a mystery, you want to feel what they’re thinking a little bit and maybe undercut that, swerve away from it or lean right into it. So, that’s very nice to have that inclusivity for both audience and creators on this one.

    Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez in Hulu's 'Only Murders In The Building' season 2.
    (L to R) Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez in Hulu’s ‘Only Murders In The Building’ season 2. Photo: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

    MF: Steve Martin and Martin Short are comedy legends, but what is surprising about the series is how organically Selena Gomez fits with their chemistry. Was that a pleasant surprise for you and is there room for improvisation on set? Do they come in with their own ideas, or stick to the scripts?

    JH: All three of them, I want to leave them completely unbridled to say and do whatever they want to say. Yet, I’ve recognized also that they have great comfort in these wonderful scripts that our writers work very hard on. There’s great trust and generosity from them. As I say, there’s great comfort too in knowing and recognizing the good fortune of having two geniuses and a very specific modern young woman, is that you hear their voices very distinctly and the way in which they can play is built into these characters that they are perfect for, comedically and dramatically. The fact that they’re so facile, it can go so many different ways, and gives us great leeway to really hone scenes, episodes and seasons that favor what they do best. So when they are with the material, they really stick to it in a larger way. I think they would say the same thing. More than that, it’s just about elevating all of it in the way that only they can do.

    MF: Finally, the show has become a magnet for very famous performers who want to guest star, Meryl Streep appears in season 3, for example. Season 2 featured Shirley MacLaine, Cara Delevingne, Tina Fey, Andrea Martin, and Paul Rudd, some of who carry over to season 3. Has there been an effort to get the biggest names possible to guest star, or has that just happened organically?

    JH: Yes. The simple answer is yes. To have Shirley MacLaine in the middle of a pandemic come out of her home in New Mexico to say, “I want to come play in the landscape of New York City with this great cast of characters,” was an honor to everyone. The minute she stepped on set, the whole temperature changed. She just was absolutely brilliant. You realize the air you’re in, but also it makes you step up to live up to these people. Cara was fantastic and a friend of Selena’s for a long time and was so sharp, witty, intuitive and also a lovely person. She fit perfectly into the world, and that went on and on. Andrea Martin is a comedic genius as well, and knows Marty and knows Steve and seamlessly fits in as well. So, it’s about being strong with what the show is and hoping that people recognize the tone and how they might work in it, and then watching them just create magic is incredible. Then that leaps off into the opportunities that come from a season 3 cast, which is, I don’t know, the greatest of any half hour comedy in history? I’m going to put it up there. I’m not going to lie, I can’t believe it.

    Director John Hoffman and Shirley MacLaine on the set of 'Only Murders in the Building' season 2.
    (L to R) Director John Hoffman and Shirley MacLaine on the set of ‘Only Murders in the Building’ season 2. Photo: Barbara Nitke/Hulu.

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  • TV Review: ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 3

    Selena Gomez as Mabel, Martin Short as Oliver and Steve Martin as Charles in Hulu's 'Only Murders in the Building.'
    (L to R) Selena Gomez as Mabel, Martin Short as Oliver and Steve Martin as Charles in Hulu’s ‘Only Murders in the Building.’ Photo: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

    Launched with the first two episodes on Hulu, the third season of ‘Only Murders in the Building’ proves that the creative team and cast have what it takes to (somewhat) move the show outside of the confines of the beautiful Arconia building for a story that makes even more use of Oliver Putnam’s (Martin Short) character.

    Created by John Hoffman and Steve Martin (who also stars as the wonderfully ego-tastic, but also charming Charles-Haden Savage), this is a show that successfully blends old school comedy with the present-day obsession with social media and true crime podcasts.

    ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 1 & 2 Recap

    Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu's 'Only Murders In The Building'.
    (L to R) Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu’s ‘Only Murders In The Building’. Photo: Craig Blankenhorn/Hulu.

    The series follows three amateur sleuths –– actor Savage (who spent years on a low-rent police show and still dines out on his minor fame), down-on-his-luck, flamboyant theatre director Putnam and Mabel Mora (Selena Gomez), a young artist whose life suddenly becomes intertwined with Charles and Oliver’s when a former friend and fellow resident of grand New York apartment building the Arconia is found murdered.

    The three also bond over their shared love of a true crime podcast called ‘All is not OK in Oklahoma’, and quickly decide to launch their own as they dig into the truth behind Tim’s death. As they work their way through the suspects (including the variety of quirky occupants of the building), they learn that the real killer is Jan (Amy Ryan), a musician who Charles has been dating.

    Season 1 ends with cranky building head chief Bunny Folger (Jayne Houdyshell) dead in Mabel’s apartment, with Mabel framed for her murder. The second season is dedicated to Charles, Oliver and Mabel figuring out what really happened with Bunny, and how a mysterious painting factors in.

    It also features more from Cinda Canning (Tina Fey), the driven, arrogant creator of ‘All Is Not OK in Oklahoma’ as she seeks to find a compelling follow-up to her hit series. Our heroes initially think that Cinda, and then artist Alice Banks (Cara Delevingne), whom Mabel briefly dated, might be the killer, but it is revealed to be Cinda’s overworked assistant Poppy White (Adina Version), who was actually the not-so-dead subject matter of ‘All is not OK’ and yearns to have a podcast of her own.

    Where does Season 3 take the story of ‘Only Murders in the Building’?

    Paul Rudd as Ben in season 3 of 'Only Murders in the Building.'
    (L to R) Paul Rudd as Ben in season 3 of ‘Only Murders in the Building.’ Photo by: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

    At the end of Season 2, we jump a year forward, to the opening night of Oliver’s new play, ‘Death Rattle’. Its leading man, the annoying, smug Ben Glenroy (Paul Rudd), who clearly has no love for Charles, also starring in the production, collapses dead on stage.

    It’s revealed later in the initial episode that Ben is not actually dead but had a medical condition. And he promises to be a changed man, ready to make amends for his bad behavior during the play’s initial stages. He doesn’t get long to do that, though, as he’s pushed into an elevator shaft at the Arconia, landing on the car containing Charles, Oliver and Mabel. And so, another murder mystery is set in motion…

    Who else appears in ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 3?

    Meryl Streep as Loretta in Hulu's 'Only Murders in the Building.'
    Meryl Streep as Loretta in Hulu’s ‘Only Murders in the Building.’ Photo by: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

    Along with some recurring faces, including Arconia residents Howard Morris (Michael Cyril Creighton) and Uma Heller (Jackie Hoffman), the show draws on a typically rich mix of guest stars, most notably Meryl Streep, who plays wannabe actress Loretta Durkin. Also guesting this year are Andrea Martin (introduced briefly last season) as a make-up artist who used to work with Charles on Brazzos and still carries a torch for him, Ashley Park (as another member of the ‘Death Rattle’ cast and Jesse Williams as Tobert (not a spelling error, his actual name), who has been hired to document Ben’s work on the play.

    Related Article: ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Serves Up More Murder-Podcast hijinks with August 8th Return

    Does ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 3 kill it?

    Selena Gomez as Mabel and Ryan Broussard as Will in season 3 of 'Only Murders in the Building.'
    (L to R) Selena Gomez as Mabel and Ryan Broussard as Will in season 3 of ‘Only Murders in the Building.’ Photo by: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

    Given that it helped kick off the current trend of more comedic murder mysteries and has enjoyed big success with its first two seasons, the pressure is naturally on the third to keep the magic happening. It’s fortunate to report then, that the formula continues to work, and expanding the scope of the show further beyond the Arconia and into the world of theatre provides plenty of fuel for fresh mystery and comedy.

    Short’s Oliver in particular is given room to shine this year, his dedication to the play and typically over the top style working really well as he attempts to mount his big comeback and slowly falls for Streep’s struggling artiste.

    She is, as you might expect, fantastic in the role of Loretta, who has been enchanted with theatre and acting since she was a young girl but has faced years of frustration and rejection. Beyond the sheer meta pleasure of seeing one of the most highly regarded actors playing someone who can barely get an audition, she grabs every moment and makes it work, from her sensitive, tentative flirtation with Short to her laugh-out-loud attempts at accents during the first read-through.

    Meryl Streep as Loretta and Martin Short as Oliver.
    (L to R) Meryl Streep as Loretta and Martin Short as Oliver in Hulu’s ‘Only Murders in the Building.’ Photo: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

    Rudd is also a great addition, playing the typical movie actor who has fully bought into his own publicity but still wants to come across as everyone’s friend. As with Streep, him playing against his own personality works superbly.

    Which is not to diminish the work of the main cast, who still put in excellent performances as ever. Short, as mentioned, flourishes given the altered setting, while Martin and Gomez are right there with him. It’s a part of ‘Only Murders’ magic that Gomez blends so well with the old school comedy stylings of Martin and Short.

    The show itself is still just as clever, and while perhaps not as funny as previous seasons, still has plenty of wit to display.

    Any issues?

    Selena Gomez as Mabel and Steve Martin as Charles in season 3 of 'Only Murders in the Building.'
    (L to R) Selena Gomez as Mabel and Steve Martin as Charles in season 3 of ‘Only Murders in the Building.’ Photo by: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

    It’s perhaps a pity that the main three are kept largely separate early on, as the repartee between Martin, Short and Gomez as the main two bicker and Mabel puts up with her favorite “olds” is a true highlight of the series.

    Yet kudos to the writers, directors and cast for pushing ‘Only Murders’ in refreshing new directions while maintaining what really makes it a killer watch. The competition might have heated up in the past couple of years in the mystery-comedy genre, but this remains among the best.

    ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 3 receives 9 out of 10 stars.

    Martin Short as Oliver in Hulu's 'Only Murders in the Building.'
    Martin Short as Oliver in Hulu’s ‘Only Murders in the Building.’ Photo: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

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  • Meryl Streep Joins ‘Only Murders in the Building’

    Meryl Streep as Miranda Priestly in 2006's 'The Devil Wears Prada .'
    Meryl Streep as Miranda Priestly in 2006’s ‘The Devil Wears Prada .’

    TV comedy thriller series ‘Only Murders in the Building’ already features one of the best casts on the small screen, and it’s about to get even better. Star Steve Martin revealed on twitter that Meryl Streep has joined the ensemble.

    https://twitter.com/SteveMartinToGo/status/1615457362629861389

    The show stars Martin, Selena Gomez and Martin Short as Charles-Haden Savage, Mabel Mora and Oliver Putnam, three very different residents of a swanky, high-rise apartment building in Manhattan. When one of the other people in the building is murdered––one who had a connection to Mabel––the three unlikely citizen detectives team up to investigate what really happened.

    Along the way, they launch the podcast that gives the show its name. Season 2 follows their attempts to unmask who killed Arconia Board president Bunny Folger (Jayne Houdyshell). Along the way, they’re publicly implicated in her murder and are the subjects of a competing podcast.

    ‘Only Murders’ has built a reputation for quirky characters, engaging mysteries and a wealth of acting talent in its cast beyond the central three.

    Those either guest starring or part of the supporting cast include Nathan Lane, Jackie Hoffman, Amy Ryan, Cara Delevingne, Tina Fey, Da’Vine Joy Randolph, Sting, Jane Lynch, Andrea Martin, Michael Rapaport and Shirley MacLaine.

    Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu's 'Only Murders In The Building'.
    (L to R) Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu’s ‘Only Murders In The Building’. Photo: Craig Blankenhorn/Hulu.

    At the end of Season 2, Oliver––a seasoned, though as the show starts, unemployed––theater director, got his chance to helm a new show on Broadway. His cast includes Savage (an actor who made his career and a healthy fortune starring in a cheesy 1980s police series) and Paul Rudd’s Ben Glenroy, a snobbish fellow performer who in a flash-forward, has disagreements with Savage. He dies on stage, and Season 3 will explore the backstory to that.

    As for Streep’s character, the ‘Only Murders’ team have yet to reveal how she’ll factor into the story for the new season and whether she’ll have any connection to the core trio.

    Streep, of course, needs little introduction, an Oscar winning actor more normally found in movies (but occasionally on TV). She seems like a perfect fit for the ‘Only Murders’ world and it’ll be interesting to see how she fits in.

    From the looks of Gomez’ Instagram post that also served to announce Streep’s casting, she’s already interacting well with the main cast, larking around pretending to be an assistant providing them with new cushions, while being asked by Short for the “tea I ordered a half hour ago”.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/Cnh-j5TIc0U/

    Created by Martin and showrunner John Hoffman, ‘Only Murders’ has now been shooting its third season for roughly a week, but there is no date on the books yet for when it might return to Hulu. Despite its quality, it hasn’t won as many awards as you might imagine, but Streep’s presence could well change that.

    Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu's 'Only Murders In The Building'.
    (L to R) Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu’s ‘Only Murders In The Building’. Photo: Craig Blankenhorn/Hulu.
  • ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Renewed for Third Season

    Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu's 'Only Murders In The Building'.
    (L to R) Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu’s ‘Only Murders In The Building’. Photo: Craig Blankenhorn/Hulu.

    It’s a true sign of faith in a show when the company responsible for producing it announces a new season even as the current batch of episodes is still arriving.

    Raise a cheer, then, for ‘Only Murders in the Building’, which has confirmed that it will be back for a third season as Season 2 continues to arrive weekly on Hulu.

    The show, which stars Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez, revolves around mysterious and murderous goings-on in a classic New York apartment building called the Arconia.

    Martin plays Charles-Haden Savage, an actor whose golden years (particularly a 1990s TV cop show called ‘Brazzos’) are behind him. He’s a nervous, particular man used to living alone.

    Short is Oliver Putnam, a flamboyant theater director with a penchant for hummus and other dips, who is always looking for his next gig.

    Gomez, meanwhile, appears as Mabel Mora, a serious, mysterious young artist living in her aunt’s spacious apartment and harboring a deep pool of secrets.

    Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu's 'Only Murders In The Building'.
    (L to R) Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu’s ‘Only Murders In The Building’. Photo: Craig Blankenhorn/Hulu.

    When they start investigating the murder of one of Mabel’s former friends, they decide to collaborate on a podcast to help chart the suspects. Soon, though, they’re dragged into it all on a much more personal level.

    Though they cracked the case at the end of Season 1, they ended up as potential persons of interest in the suspicious death of grouchy building manager Bunny (Jayne Houdyshell). And, along the way, they make a number of enemies, including Nathan Lane’s local deli magnate Teddy Dimas.

    ‘Murders’ also features an impressive ensemble including Amy Ryan, Jackie Hoffman, Tina Fey, Da’Vine Joy Randolph and James Caverly.

    Martin co-created the show with showrunner John Hoffman, while ‘This Is Us’ boss Dan Fogelman is involved as a consultant. The series has won plenty of praise and awards and is expected to feature in the Emmy nominations this year. The renewal is hardly a surprise, given all the buzz around the first season.

    “‘Only Murders in the Building’ is the true crown jewel of our slate,” says Craig Erwich, president of Hulu Originals and ABC Entertainment in a statement announcing the show’s renewal. “Its appeal across generations, the intersection of humor and heart, and its truly original approach are a hallmark of and testament to Dan, John, Steve, Marty and Selena’s work. We are grateful to be able to continue telling the stories of Charles, Oliver and Mabel to viewers that have consistently shown us they crave more of this story.”

    ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 2 is currently arriving weekly on Hulu every Tuesday. Season 3 should be on screens next year.

    Oliver (Martin Short), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Charles (Steve Martin) on Hulu's 'Only Murders In The Building'.
    (L to R) Oliver (Martin Short), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Charles (Steve Martin) on Hulu’s ‘Only Murders In The Building’. Photo: Craig Blankenhorn/Hulu.
  • Amazon’s ‘Good People’ Adds Martin Short to Talented Cast

    Amazon’s ‘Good People’ Adds Martin Short to Talented Cast

    Martin Short in Inherent Vice
    Warner Bros. Pictures

    Amazon’s upcoming comedy pilot “Good People” just keeps adding good actors.

    Comedian Martin Short has boarded the project from Lee Daniels and Whitney Cummings, THR reports. He joins a cast the already includes the likes of Lisa Kudrow and Greg Kinnear. Cummings, too, has a role.

    The potential series centers on three generations of women working in a college ombudsman’s office, meaning they look into complaints against maladministration. As they do so, they’ll navigate today’s cultural climate, dealing with issues such as sex, race, class, and gender, per Amazon. They’ll also contend with different understandings of feminism across generations.

    Short’s character is one who will have plenty of dealings with the ombudsman’s office. He’ll play the university’s dean, an administrator described as having “no concept of what’s appropriate.” He, as well as Kinnear’s philosophy professor character, will cause trouble for the woman who heads the office (Kudrow).

    Short is well-known for his work as a comedian, including on “Saturday Night Live.” He recently did a comedy special for Netflix with Steve Martin, “Steve Martin and Martin Short: An Evening You Will Forget for the Rest of Your Life.” Meanwhile, his most recent film is the 2014 neo-noir “Inherent Vice,” and he has continued to have guest spots on various TV shows.

    Daniels and Cummings co-wrote the pilot for “Good People,” and Daniels will direct. The two are executive producing alongside Kudrow.

    [via: THR]

  • 15 Things You Never Knew About Steve Martin’s ‘Father of the Bride’

    What’s not to like about “Father of the Bride,” which celebrates its 25th anniversary this week (it was released on December 20, 1991)?

    It has Steve Martin at the peak of his overwhelmed-dad period, a luminous Diane Keaton, a delightful Kimberly Williams-Paisley (in her screen debut), an unhinged Martin Short, and all the drool-worthy, catalog-quality consumerism and home decor you’d expect in a movie from Nancy Meyers.

    Still, as many times as you’ve lusted after Annie Banks’s lavish dream wedding — or groaned like George over its costly excesses — there’s plenty you may not know about “Father of the Bride.” Read on for the story of how this bridal party came to be.
    1. In the original 1950 “Father of the Bride,” it was Spencer Tracy who played exasperated dad Stanley Banks, with Elizabeth Taylor as his soon-to-be-wed daughter. MGM scheduled the film’s release to coincide with the 18-year-old starlet’s real-life wedding to hotel heir Nicky Hilton, hoping for a once-in-a-lifetime publicity bonanza. Little did anyone know at the time that a Taylor wedding wouldn’t be that rare of an event.

    2. In the remake, co-scripted by Meyers and then-husband Charles Shyer (who also directed), Stanley became George Banks, now named for the apoplectic dad in “Mary Poppins.” But he kept Stanley as a middle name.
    3. At 45, Martin was beginning to move on from the wacky comedies that had launched his film career and was starting to play conventional dads in movies like “Parenthood.”

    “I’m not doing ‘wild and crazy,’ “Man With Two Brains” comedy anymore,” he said at the time of the film;s release. “If I didn’t change, I’d be an idiot. I’d look really foolish if I were doing those kind of comedies now. I’m not the same age as I was. I’m wiser than I was.”

    4. Tom Irish made his debut in the 1950 “Father” and his final screen appearance in the 1991 remake. In both films, he played a relative named Ben Banks.
    5. Phoebe Cates was the filmmakers’ first choice for the bride, but she was pregnant and unavailable, so they went with newcomer Williams.

    6. Martin said he didn’t try to pay homage to Tracy’s performance, which he considered “flawless.” Instead, he just tried to be himself.

    “What I’m personalizing in ‘Father of the Bride’ is the melancholy that I feel, or that people feel,” he said. “I like that emotion. It’s a very perplexing emotion. All you can do when you’re indicated by it is just stand there. You can’t do anything about it. If you’re angry, you can yell, of if you’re sad, you can cry. But if you have melancholy, you just can’t believe what’s happening. I like to play it.”
    7. The picture-perfect Banks home (above) is a real house in Pasadena, California that was recently sold in 2016. Shyer filmed most of the interior and exterior shots there, but the backyard where the wedding takes place was that of another house in Alhambra, California.

    8. Martin wasn’t the only one essentially playing himself on screen. “Everybody in this movie is kind of playing themselves,” he said. Citing on-screen wife Keaton, he said, “Diane is very much like that. Her personality is like quicksilver, and she talks like that, and when you first meet her, you think she’s doing a Diane Keaton impression. She really is lightning and erratic and crinkling with electrical charge.”
    9. George Newbern, as bridegroom Bryan MacKenzie, was also drawing from his own life. He’d recently married (in fact, you can see the tan line on his ring finger during the ceremony) and had to win over a formidable father-in-law named George.

    “It’s just not fun,” he said. “Girls don’t have to do that. I’m from the South, from Arkansas. My father had to do it. My grandfather was a federal judge, and my father had to go talk to him. He said that was just like descending into hell.”
    10. Perhaps the only person playing someone broader than himself was Short, as wedding planner Franck. But Short said, if anything, he was underplaying the character.

    “If you go meet a wedding coordinator in Beverly Hills, you’d ask, ‘Why is he playing it so down?’” Short said he largely improvised Franck’s dialogue, which he said was mostly gibberish on the page. As for the character’s incomprehensible accent, Short acknowledged, “The accent was a complete mishmash. There was no consistency. Maybe he was from Poland, educated in England, visited Prague, and made side trips to Yugoslavia.”

    11. Yep, that’s future “Fargo” co-star Kieran Culkin as Annie’s brother, Matty. Having made his debut as bed-wetting cousin Fuller in “Home Alone,” the eight-year-old Culkin enjoyed his first major speaking role in “Father.”
    12. After the film’s release, Martin claimed “Father” marked the first time “I looked at a movie I was in and liked myself.”

    13. “Father” cost a reported $20 million to make. It made $89 million in theaters, prompting a sequel four years later.
    14. Williams and Newbern capitalized on their newfound fame by appearing together as a young couple, much like the MacKenzies, in a series of Hallmark ads.

    15. In 2014, Martin shot down reports that he’d signed on to star in a belated threequel, one that would have had kid brother Matty now grown and engaged — to another man.

  • ‘Hairspray Live!’: The All-Star Cast Sings the Praises of the Source Material as They Prep for Live Broadcast

    Hairspray Live! - Season 2016When it comes to crafting a live broadcast of one of the most popular musicals of modern times, “Hairspray Live!” is a whole new ‘do.

    Based on the 1988 cult film starring Ricki Lake and Divine as Tracy and Edna Turnblad from camp auteur John Waters, “Hairspray” was re-shorn in 2002 into a Tony-winning Broadway production headlined by Marissa Jaret Winouker and Harvey Fierstein, and madeover once again in 2007 with a feature film musical adaptation starring Nikki Blonsky and John Travolta. With the ratings success of live musicals airing on network TV, NBC is restyling the production yet again as “Hairspray Live!”

    Moviefone sat down with several members of the all-star cast – including Fierstein, who wrote the television adaptation and reprises his acclaimed role of Edna; newcomer Dancing With the Stars” pro Derek Hough as Corny Collins – to get their take of re-inventing a classic they loved through and through, whether they played it on stage or watched from the audience.
    Hairspray Live! - Season 1
    Maddie Baillio: Funny story. When I was like ten, I was at my friend’s house, and I think I was pretty sheltered. I always called my mom and asked her if I could watch a movie if it was not [rated] G. So I called my mom and I asked her if we could watch the original “Hairspray,” the John Waters film. And she said, “No no no no no!” Because there was like making out in it, and that was not okay for me to see – I didn’t see that until a couple months ago, the original movie. I love it so much.

    I saw the 2007 movie with those great people, and I fell in love with the spirit of Tracy. She’s like the ultimate underdog, so everyone can relate to her. And she’s the ultimate optimist, and I really relate to that. She sees a rat on the street and she thinks it’s like, the coolest thing in the world.

    Then I watched clips of the Broadway production with Harvey, who’s playing my mom, which is so cool. This is like the ultimate master class for me. There are so many amazing people in the show — I wake up every morning on cloud nine. I can’t believe that this is really happening. This is my first audition outside of school, and I finished my sophomore year the day before they told me that I got this part. It’s been crazy!
    Press Junket For NBC's "Hairspray Live!"
    Harvey Fierstein: I wrote “The Wiz” last year, and they called me and said, “Would you be insulted if we asked you to write this but didn’t ask you to act in it?” And I said “No!” I am really not that way – I love watching other people do my work! Like “Torch Song” or “La Cage [au Follies]” – I love watching other actors do it. So I’m not territorial in that way.

    I knew [Hairspray’s Broadway writer] Mark O’Donnell had passed, and so I felt like to bring [composer and lyricists] Marc Shaiman and [co-lyricist] Scott Wittman‘s vision – because they wrote a lot of the score before the show was even written – to bring their vision to life, to write it, I was thrilled. And then when they came to me and asked me to perform it, there was a whole other energy.

    So how do you step back into these shoes? It’s a process. I know who Edna is and all that, but there’s the Hardy Har Hut, there’s the Hefty Hideaway. For these places to become real and I’m living in it, it’s really very spacey, I guess is the best way to describe it!

    Having performed Edna a thousand times myself, knowing what that did to the audience, I said “I want that experience for this audience at home. How do we do that?” So I stayed as close as I could to the Broadway experience, told the story that way, but hopefully used everybody, or allowed everybody else’s storytelling in there.
    2016 American Music Awards
    Ariana Grande: I’ve always been very attracted to quirkier, nerdier characters – I don’t know where that comes from, but I loved Penny from the moment I saw the original Broadway cast. I was like, “That’s my track. When we go to karaoke, I’m singing Penny. When we go to therapy, I’m singing Penny’s parts.” I’ve always loved the role.

    I think what’s so fun about her, other than her quirkiness and her weirdness, is her evolved mind, considering the household she grew up in. Prudy Pingleton, Penny’s mother, is a nightmare. So the fact that Penny came out with this beautiful brain, and she’s like, I love Tracy, so she’s going to be my best friend, and I love Seaweed, so that’s going to be my man. You know what I mean? That’s so beautiful to me.

    When you’re a kid, you don’t hate people. You are taught to hate people. You’re taught to judge people. You’re taught to segregate. You’re taught to discriminate. It’s all taught. So she kind of maintained her childlike love for everybody. She doesn’t see it that way.
    Press Junket For NBC's "Hairspray Live!"
    Kristin Chenoweth: Why do I keep playing these villains, people? The most fun and the biggest challenge is to find out what’s their good quality. The words are on the page, right? So I just have to play the role. But I need to find out. If I don’t, if Kristin doesn’t find something good in that person, I can’t play her. And I’d like to think that Miss Baltimore Crabs, Velma, she is living in her past, and really wants it for her daughter, and that’s the positive. But to a point. There are stage moms, and then there’s Miss Baltimore Crabs.
    Hairspray Live! - Season 1
    Dove Cameron: I have seen it live in a couple different incarnations – obviously, I saw the recent interpretation of the movie when it came out, and I liked it so much that I saw it three times in theaters and I had the poster up in my wall when I was a kid for like three years. It’s so funny because I totally forgot about that, but people keep asking me and it sounds like I am making it up but I was a huge fan of the show!

    I don’t want to work with anyone else, ever, I want Kristin to be on every one of my projects. She has been my hero since I have been seven years old! So to work with her in “Descendants” three years ago was one of the more monumental moments of my career and my life, but then I performed with her at the Disney Concert Hall when we sang “For Good.”

    When we found out that we would be involved in this, I called her up and I was like, “Guess what? We are going to see each other all the time!” I love her. She is the most incredible person. I go to her for advice for everything, she is a great all around person. I could go on about her forever but I won’t, she is my hero!
    Press Junket For NBC's "Hairspray Live!"
    Martin Short: I was there opening night when “Hairspray” opened on Broadway, and I have seen the film, but this becomes its own event. This becomes something.

    One of the big things for me, beyond working with the fabulous Harvey, is Marc Shaiman’s one of my oldest friends. We’ve done Broadway together, Mark was my music director when I was on “SNL” as a cast member in 1984. And we did “Fame Becomes Me,” my Broadway show, together, and scored specials I’ve done for HBO, so there’s a long history and this is their beloved baby so I was thrilled to be asked.
    Hairspray Live! - Season 2016
    Derek Hough: It’s fun, especially Corny Collins because he’s so over the top. We’d be in rehearsals and having fun, but the other day we finally put on the costumes and got on the set for the first time and we were like, “This is amazing!” You really feel like you’re there. Even like the old cameras, everything – it’s amazing. It’s very immersive.

    We, as a cast, actually watched a documentary about the 60s, about that era to try to grasp hold of it. Our director Kenny Leon was like, “You guys aren’t reacting enough to this, this moment – this is not normal.” We were like, “Okay, whatever” but back then that was like sacrilegious. The Twist was an abomination! We were watching this show and people were saying, “Disgusting new dance coming out! The Twist! It’s disgusting!” And people trying to do it – it was bizarre. Watching that really helped us get into the era. It was wild.
    Hairspray Live! - Season 1
    Garrett Clayton: I was super stoked to work with Harvey… Because he is Harvey, he is who he is. I also look up to him not just as an actor but as someone that has kind of writes things that he gets to be a part of, and I think that is the dream for anyone that lives in this city. But, as I get older I would love to have a little more control and produce and direct things one day. I want to create and I look to those that have been able to not only be successful actors but successful producers or writers or creators. For me that is a big dream and goal and I have looked up to him for that!
    Hairspray Live! - Season 1
    Ephraim Sykes: [The timing is] perfect! Everything happens for a reason, there is a reason we are all here. There is a reason that this cast has been assembled. The reason we are going through what we are going through and this message right now has to be told. And I believe the power is always in the hand of the people and through this love and through this understanding and especially through the differences in a show that preaches your individuality and what makes you different is what makes us the same and what we should trust and love.

    That is how we are going to find out way through, we are going to find our way through to a place we could have never imagined so that is why we are going through what we are going through!

    Grande: It’s so beautiful. I’m so excited that we’re doing these things now. The live musicals being seen by millions and millions of people, who didn’t know that they loved musicals. They didn’t know they loved theater. Or like maybe some young boy in a town who likes to dance, and nobody else in his school likes to dance, he’s about to see this and be like, “Oh!

    Chenoweth: “That’s what I can do.” We could have never afforded to come to New York to see any show. Growing up in Broken Arrow, we just wouldn’t have had the money. But when I saw Julie Andrews on top of the hill singing “The Hills Are Alive” [in the “The Sound of Music“], which was a movie – thank God they had it, so that’s what we’re doing here. I’m glad that NBC started this, and is doing it. I’m thrilled. And also, it’s making it cool again. I was a music theater geek.

    Baillio: Everyone in the cast is brilliant. Martin Short, he makes up lines all the time. So that leaves me hanging, so I don’t really know what to say. I’m not that great at improv. But the fact that it is live, and that anything can happen, it’s really nerve-wracking. Now I’m scared, but I’m mostly excited.

    Hough: Jennifer Hudson, when she sings her song – I mean, people are in tears. We were all crying. Even more so now – listen to it, geez! – you’re kind of upset that we’re here again and it’s so relevant now. The song itself is powerful but when you add her voice to it, it’s undeniable. It’s interstellar. I can’t explain it. It’s out of this world. And everyone will hear Maddie, she’s incredible, and her voice just exudes energy and light.

    Harvey is hilarious. When you work with him you realize what a legend he really is. And Martin Short! It’s funny to see these living legends, how they work – they’re full out, every single time. It could be 9 a.m. and they’re 110 percent every time we run it. It’s amazing to see.

    Grande: I’m not a watcher, but I will watch this 100 times. I am generally, literally if this were anything else, I probably wouldn’t watch it. Once I’ve put out a music video, I never have to see it again. I don’t have to look at anything again. I did it. I don’t ever see performances back. I don’t want to look at anything.

    But this is just such an important thing. This is something I have loved and listened to in the car on the way to school when I was younger. I had a birthday party, we all sang “Hairspray” songs, and I was like, okay, where’s my Seaweed? I’m Penny. I think this is different. I’m definitely going to watch this. We’re going to watch it together. We’ll cry our eyes out. We’re going to be like, “Why is it over?” With popcorn.

    Chenoweth: You do popcorn, I’ll do Xanax.