Tag: starz

  • Jacki Weaver Learned Some Interesting New Sex Slang Filming ‘Blunt Talk’

    Premiere Of STARZ "Blunt Talk" - Arrivals Blunt Talk,” created by “Bored to Death’s” Jonathan Ames and executive produced by “Family Guy’s” Seth MacFarlane.

    An education in contemporary sex slang was just one of the reasons Weaver was compelled to take on the role of the supportive producer propping up a fraying-at-the-seams news anchor (Patrick Stewart), as the actress explained in a chat with Moviefone.

    Moviefone: Obviously, things have been going well in the feature film side of your career, but I can see why you couldn’t resist this series. What got its hooks into you about it?

    Jacki Weaver: Well, Jonathan Ames, who I adore, I’ve read several of his books, and I loved “Bored to Death.” He took me to lunch at the Sunset Tower Hotel and begged me to be in his new show, on his knees, and plied me with expensive food and drink and explained to me what it was going to be about. And of course, I couldn’t resist. And it’s been a joy. I’ve only seen four episodes, but we’ve had such fun making all ten of them. And I can’t wait to start all over again and do the next series.

    Give me a little bit of a fuller picture of Rosalie Winter.

    Well, Rosalie is the same height as I am [laughs]. She’s an Emmy award-winning, current affairs producer with many years of experience. She’s been in a relationship, a professional relationship with Walter Blunt for at least 20 years. Way back, we have indications that it was an intimate relationship, so they’ve been lovers. He’s still very dependent on her emotionally and professionally. She’s a very tough boss lady, but she’s also tender-hearted.

    She has a husband she absolutely adores played by the wonderful Ed Begley, Jr. And without giving too much away, she also has some extramarital adventures, so she’s a very complex woman, yeah, as are all the characters, thanks to Jonathan Ames. Nobody’s sort of very clear cut. Like real human beings, we’re all quite complex with flaws and foibles and some shocking things. Not that I’m shockable. With Seth MacFarlane behind the show, it’s bound to have some shocking things in it.

    I imagine anybody would be excited to work with Patrick Stewart, but we really get to see what he’s capable of comedically. Tell me about being an acting partner with this side of Patrick?

    Well, Patrick’s enormously brave, and he’s very hard-working. He comes on that set knowing that script, back to front, and he’s adventurous. I mean, he’ll try anything. And at the same time, he’s sweet and gentle and very non-arrogant and very self-deprecating and a joy to work with, a real team player. All of that stage experience. Mind you, there are some stage actors that aren’t good at teamwork [laughs], but yeah, he’s highly disciplined, very humble, very sweet -– and fun. He’s a lot of fun.

    What do you love about the news world that the show is set in? Is it new and fresh for you, or do you keep a sharp eye on it?

    Well, it’s not [new], actually. I know that world very, very well because my ex husband was, for many years, a sort of cross between -– in Australia -– Larry King and Dan Rather. He had his own top-rated current affairs program with his name on it. Not like “Blunt Talk,” but his name on it. So for all that time, I was very familiar with the way that world works. And back in the 70s, while I didn’t give up acting, I did have a job as an interviewer on a current affairs program, and I used to interview big stars who came from America like Sammy Davis, Jr., Burl Ives, Burt Lancaster. So it’s a world that I’m very familiar with. I know exactly what goes on in those TV studios [laughs]. I’m not familiar with the American programs, behind the scenes, but they probably don’t differ that much.

    When you were in it, what did you love about it and what drove you crazy about it?

    Well, what drove me crazy about it was I wasn’t acting. I’m fascinated by people, and I love finding out stuff from people, but I’m really, vocationally, a pretender. I need to become other people to get any fulfillment in life. That sounds men-tal! And I know I’ve been like that since the day I was born. And I’ve always loved getting into someone else’s head and pretending to be other people. It’s just the way I am.

    So that was always your path, your life?

    I think it was a foregone conclusion in my whole family from the moment I could talk. I think going back to being three years old and putting on different accents, French accents, Italian accents and American accents and pretending to be a different character, all together from myself, I think it was always accepted in the family. And by me, that that’s what I’ll be when I grow up, or before I grow up.

    What is it about Jonathan’s writing that you admire?

    He’s very original, but I love that he [writes about] people with problems on the fringe. He’s pretty much obsessed with transgender people. I mean we’re all fascinated by them, but I love how people who are outsiders or on the fringe or who have special problems, Jonathan can look at them with such compassion and kindness and tell their story in a really good way.

    What’s been the other not-obvious joys of the job that you didn’t expect?

    I found out what “motorboating” is. I didn’t know that! Well, all the young people knew what it was. I mean, I’m not saying my generation never knew it, but we just didn’t have a name for it! [Laughs]

    Are you fine with saying, “Excuse me, what does this word here mean?”

    Well, it wasn’t even in the script. It was in the call sheet. It said, “So-and-so motorboat.” I was like, “What is this thing?” And they shrieked with laughter.

    Well, I’m glad your education is getting complete.

    Yeah, God bless America!
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  • ‘Star Trek: The Next Generation’ Cast: Where Are They Now?

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    Blunt Talk,” he gets to play an ambitious, reckless cable news host, and he gets to show off the comedic chops that he seldom displays in an acting career most famous for sci-fi heroics and Shakespearean speeches.

    Stewart, of course, has been the highest-profile member of the “Star Trek: The Next Generation” cast, ever since the beloved syndicated series went off the air in 1994 and the crew’s run of big-screen features ended in 2002. But what became of those who served on the starship Enterprise alongside Stewart’s Captain Jean-Luc Picard? Synthesize a cup of tea (“Earl Grey. Hot.”) and read on to find out. Ready? Engage.

  • ‘Outlander’ Boss Previews More ‘Urban’ and ‘Political’ Paris-Set Season 2

    Now that the brutal — but still hopeful and very emotional — “Outlander” Season 1 finale is in the past, what does the future hold for Claire (Caitriona Balfe) and Jamie (Sam Heughan) in Season 2? Executive producer Ronald D. Moore had several rounds of interviews after the May 30 finale, discussing plans for the next adaptation of Diana Gabaldon’s novels.

    Moore told Deadline they were roughly three weeks into Season 2 at the time, and “the footage looks really good.” Here are more Moore quotes to Deadline:

    The general plan is probably to try to do a book a season. Some of the books are bigger than others so we’ve definitely had conversations about, “well, you know, at some point we made need to split a book into two seasons,” but right now we’re not there yet so the plan is to do Dragonfly In Amber for Season 2.

    There will be twists and turns that aren’t in the book. The second book is more complex than the first book is. It’s a little tougher challenge to adapt it. It takes place in France and it deals with the Jacobite Rebellion. It’s much more political, it weaves in and out of actual historical events. There’s more complexity, just in terms of how Diana structured the story in Paris, in particular, as Jamie and Claire try to change history. […] It’s an urban setting and you’re dealing with aristocracy and the court of Louis XV so it’s a whole different thing. It’s not going to look anything like Season 1, so you’re really kind of prepping and shooting a whole new TV show into the second year. It has a lot of, you know, ‘oh my God, what can we do,’ those kind of moments to it.”

    Here’s some of what Moore shared with TVLine about what’s next for Jamie and Claire:

    It’s much more about deception, and lies within lies, and the gossips and the surroundings of Paris. And dinner parties, and going to the court of Louis the XV — and if you know those books, there’s St. Germain, and there’s Master Raymond, and there’s more of an occult feeling to a lot of that stuff. [Plus], she’s pregnant, and he’s got the aftermath of Jack Randall.

    In probably every which way you can think of, it’s going to be different than Season 1 was, which I think is one of the strengths of the series overall: its continuing evolution.

    In a lot of ways, [Parisian society] is more familiar to [Jamie] in certain ways than you would anticipate, because he is a laird in his own life, and he has lived in France, and he speaks the French language. It is a somewhat familiar culture to him. He does know his cousin, Jared, who runs a wine business, and he’s been to this place. Claire also speaks French, and she’s adapting in a different way, but she still struggles with the roles woman in these times, even in French society.

    And here are some similar but still interesting quotes from Moore to Entertainment Weekly:

    At the beginning, season 2 is going to look very different from season 1. The characters are going to Paris, which in those days was one of the most populated cities in the world. It’s a very urban environment. They’ll be in the French court. It’s a completely new palette visually. The color schemes are different. Everything about it is different—the chairs, the desks, the lamps, the costumes, and the props. They are definitely going to a different world. There’s more politics, because they’re caught up in the Jacobite rebellion more. You’re dealing with historical figures like Bonny Prince Charlie, who will be in the show. We’re dealing with the court of Louis XV. It’s just a very different story that Claire and Jamie suddenly get swept up in.”

    There’s no word yet on when Season 2 will debut, but Starz will give it “at least” 13 episodes. Season 1, which had 16 episodes, premiered last August and had a break between two batches of eight episodes — from August-September to April-May. So we’ll have to wait and see how they handle things for the next round. Are you excited for what happens next? In the meantime, revisit Moviefone’s interview with the great Tobias Menzies (Black Jack Randall).

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  • ‘Outlander’s’ Tobias Menzies Breaks Down the ‘Sadistic and Cruel’ Black Jack Randall

    Tobias Menzies at The Paley Center For Media's 32nd Annual PALEYFEST LA - "Outlander" - Arrivals Is there a nastier character on television than “Outlander’s” Black Jack Randall?

    As cruel a schemer as “Game of Thrones’” Cersei Lannister, as cunningly manipulative as “Gotham’s” Oswald Cobblepot, as homicidally ruthless as “Scandal’s” Rowan Pope and as sexually sadistic as “GoT’s” Ramsay Snow, Black Jack’s may be the blackest hearted Big Bad of them all, played to malicious, all-too-believable perfection by Tobias Menzies.

    With the first season of the Starz drama, adapted from novelist Diana Gabaldon’s bestselling series by acclaimed writer-producer Ronald D. Moore, concluding on Saturday, Black Jack has only just begun his brutal, bloody torment of the heroic Highlander Jamie Fraser (Sam Heughan), who sacrificed himself to her freedom for his time-traveling love Claire (Caitriona Balfe) — and, as readers of the books know, things get far, far uglier.

    In an exclusive conversation with Moviefone, Menzies meditates on the nature and motives behind monstrous Black Jack –- as well as his lookalike ancestor Frank Randall –- with some surprising perspectives.

    WARNING: There are a few spoilers ahead for those unfamiliar with the flow of the first and second novels’ storylines.

    Moviefone: When “Outlander” first came your way, what was your initial reaction to it?

    Tobias Menzies: I did think about it. It’s always a particular type of commitment to sign up for multiple years on a TV show. However, I mean, the thing that initially drew me to it was, obviously, the opportunity to play two different people is an unusual thing for a TV show — and, obviously, interesting. And also Ron [Moore] – I had admired “Battlestar Galactica.” That was a very character-driven – albeit sci-fi, but really that wasn’t the point. It was about the characters and very well-written, sort of psychological, really interesting. I thought it was really great TV.

    So I was struck by the fact that he was going to be creating the show. And then, in a way, much later came the awareness of the books and Diana and the sort of global phenomenon that is “Outlander.” But yeah, that was really the things that struck me first.

    Which Randall were you most drawn to at first? Black Jack or Frank?

    For obvious reasons, I think Black Jack is obviously the flashier and more sort of attention grabbing of the two, but I have really enjoyed having the variety of the two different people. It’s been a really enjoyable job to do for that reason, really. And yeah, I am now, equally as fond of them for their different reasons. And I think they both bring sort of different textures to the overall kind of show. And I think one of Diana’s strengths is she writes very good characters.

    One of the things I enjoy about your performance is there’s no gimmick to making one or the other work. There’s no limp or mustache. How did you navigate making them very different individuals?

    That’s interesting. I’m glad that you brought that up. I’m interested that you like that, because that was something I was very keen to do, was not to ink in the difference too heavily. But obviously that comes with a certain amount of risk. The danger is that you don’t quite delineate them enough. And obviously, I get asked this quite a lot, and I can’t really come up with a satisfactory answer. It’s been quite sort of –- it wasn’t particularly logical. It was intuitive.

    I remember the fittings, putting on the clothing, being very helpful. The very different sort of weight of cloth and made me stand differently, especially the uniform for Jack. But in a way, I just to a certain degree was daring to trust that the costumes and the script and the setting would do a lot of the work for me – and then daring to be maybe at times a little bit similar. And wanting the difference to be in the eyes rather than, as you say, the mustache or a limp.

    But yeah, there’s an element of risk about that. And I’m, obviously very encouraged that people do feel there is a definite difference between the two people. Because, as you say, I’m not doing anything particularly radically different with my face. But that was certainly much more interesting to me to have that rather than something very overt. Because in a way, then you take away what is kind of fun and interesting about having the same actor play two different people.

    Once the scope of Jack’s story was revealed to you –- and the fact that he’s quite vicious –- how did you work with that to make him as evil as he needs to be, but also to make him a realistic person?

    I think I was keen from the beginning -– and Ron had a similar kind of sensibility in this regard -– to make him as three-dimensional as I could possibly make him. Make him very much a product of his time, of his experiences, of the Jacobite rebellion, to root him very strongly in that. To avoid him being just purely evil, just sort of a black-and-white villain. I wanted him to be as complicated as I think Diana has written it, actually.

    And so Ron and the writers really helped me to do that, with, for instance, taking what in the book is only, I think, half a page, which is the interrogation of Claire by Jack, and taking that sort of small piece of the book and folding that out in an entire episode, which then gave me the opportunity for us as an audience and as a show to look into the psyche and the thinking of Jack. And I think that’s gone a long way to helping us fill him out a bit and give some context, some understanding, if not empathy, for how he behaves and what he does.

    In every interaction with him, he goes to a cruel or vicious place. Is there another side to him that we’re going to see or delve into what got him to that place?

    I’m not completely clear about this, because I have not completely crossed the second book. But my understanding is that some of the softer sides of Jack are revealed in his interactions in the second book with his brother. His brother, Alex, comes into it -– who, in my correspondence with Diana, is of the opinion that really maybe that’s the only person that he truly ever loved was this younger brother.

    So it will be interesting to see what the writers come up with, but I think certainly that might be an opportunity to see a softer aspect of Jack in an intimate situation. Because you’re right: thus far, he never lets anyone close. And whenever he becomes one-on-one, seeks to dominate. But so far, we haven’t seen him interact with family. Family is, obviously, always different.

    I think that’s what’s good about the character is you feel there’s plenty of rope for us to sort of continue to understand and unpack what drives someone who, on the face of it, is so sadistic and cruel. It’s inevitable that you then raise questions about why, how does someone arrive to this place?

    When the sexual element of the character came up for you, was that an exciting place to go, or did you have to wrap your head around “How am I going to navigate these scenes?”

    I wasn’t nervous about it. I’m not nervous about nudity or portraying sexuality. But here’s the one thing that I wrestled with a little bit was, the point of the sexuality. The sexual aggression or the sexual attacks that he does, I suppose I was very keen to make that a tool that he used, rather than the goal. That he’s not about -– his interest is not to rape someone. His interest is to use rape to break someone down, as a tool of war in a way. Since war began, it’s been a tactic that’s been used, and Jack is no different.

    And also, I feel that’s, in a way, not completely the objective when it comes to Jamie as well. And I know there are plenty of people who probably disagree with me in that regard about Jack. Fans have written about the fact that he’s in love with Jamie, and I’m not sure I completely agree with it. I was more interested in the attraction being more psychological and more about his sadism, about meeting someone who was his equal. Beginning with this event where he flogs him a hundred times after he had already been flogged a hundred times. And he finds or encounters a young man who is able to endure more pain than he’s ever administered to anyone else.

    And on his journey as a sadist, in his life, that is a red letter day. And so it functions on different levels. There may well be a sexual attraction, but that’s only one of a mixture of things that attracts him or interests him about Jamie.

    What makes me curious is the encounter with Jamie’s sister Jenny, where Jack had the intent but not the ability. What did you make of that?

    Again, I wanted that to be not just about a gay man not getting it up with a woman, because I’m not sure that that’s what Jack is. I’m not sure he is. And also, the idea of homosexual was not even a language, or an idea that was really fully formed in that period. Sexuality was much more… the lines were less clearly drawn. So no, what interested me about that encounter was to see a chink in his armor, really.

    For whatever reason, the sister stumbles on a response that unmans him. And I suppose that you could make that argument that out of tyrannical behavior, he’s unraveled by ridicule or satire. That you could probably make the Nazi regime… one of the strongest against megalomania is satire and humor, and so it feels like quite a modern moment there. I think it was less about Jack not getting it up, but about what gets under his skin. And I think it makes it quite a peculiar kind of moment.

    Tell me about the aspect of the cast having to go to those dark places and everybody coming away not too traumatized by the acting exercise. Has it been pretty smooth sailing with everybody?

    I think the truth is, when you do it, you can’t see what you’re doing, so it’s really cathartic — and often, by the nature of filming, it’s strangely technical. About hitting that mark and not covering that light. And really, the true impact of it only really comes together when it’s all cut together and the music, and then you see it on the screen. And you go, “Okay — that’s what we made.” But in a way, you’re worrying about the details at the time. And so you rarely get a chance to look up and see the bigger picture, and that’s probably a helpful thing [laughs].

    After a day of that on set, do you shake it off right away?

    The funny thing about that — and this may be a peculiarity of me, but I don’t find it — it’s not something I have to shake off really. It feels… because it’s a sort of cathartic thing, in the doing of it, in a way, you burn it. So no, I’ve never really had moments of going “Oh, I feel sullied or uncomfortable about what we’ve done.” Because I think that’s why we tell dark stories is because they can be the story and not in our lives, you know. And so I think that cathartic thing stops it maybe seeping into your life or feeling the need, as you say, to shake it off.

    Did you and Sam use humor about these two characters’ relationships amongst yourselves, so when you got to the point you had to act this out you had a comfort zone?

    There wasn’t that. I was always kind of wary of doing that. But it was interesting that people would sort of josh about it. In some ways, I was interested that we never really sat down and talked about it. And that’s probably kind of right, that we sort of saved it for doing it in a way. Because I think you can drain something of energy, if you talk it to death. And for whatever reason, I noticed that we both avoided that conversation, I think [laughs]. Which is interesting.

    For Frank Randall, what was the hook you saw in him?

    I remember Ron saying something interesting when we first started working together, was he noticed that both Jack and Frank were products of war: men of war, who’d been through war. Frank had been through the Second World War. Jack had been through the Jacobite rebellion. So I think the war was certainly a touchstone for Frank. Understanding what that had been. Then, I feel like the main sort of thematic role that Frank plays in the stories and going forward is probably a study in loss, really. Obviously, in this story, it’s the rather esoteric, sci-fi example of someone disappearing through time. But in a way, I think we can all relate to losing people from our lives, however they live. Whether they just leave or whether they die. And that’s what’s beautiful about his story, I think. And going forward into the second book, when he then has to encounter her again, she returns to him with this apparently absurd story. And the fact that his love is able to transcend those barriers and those difficulties, speaks to a lot of stoicism in him, a lot of character.

    And so that portrayal of love between Claire and Frank is a very different beast than the much more maybe youthful, romantic, dashing love that is between Claire and Jamie. But I think no less interesting and sort of heartfelt for all that. And so I look forward to bringing that different sort of colors of what love is, I suppose, into the story. Because, obviously, there’s a huge amount of the sort of romantic aspect of it.

    But of course, I turn 41 this year, and love and what it is becomes more and more multi-faceted the older you get. I don’t know whether you’d agree, but what love has to endure, what love is when it’s had to encounter loss or disappointment or betrayal, it becomes maybe less idealistic, but maybe richer for it. I feel like that relationship between Frank and Claire is all about that, really.
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  • 10 Reasons You Should Already Be Watching ‘Outlander’

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    The season finale of “Outlander” is set to air on Saturday, so now is the perfect time to binge watch it before the second season starts. The show follows Claire Randall (Caitriona Balfe) after she kind of accidentally travels back to 1743 during her second honeymoon. Shortly after she arrives in the unknown land, Claire is forced to marry warrior Jamie Fraser (Sam Heughan). The two start a passionate relationship that leads to a lot of drama, romance, and shirtless Jamie scenes.

    If you’ve been on the fence about whether or not you want to watch it, we have 10 solid reasons to give this show a chance.

  • Here’s the Groovy First Teaser for Starz’s ‘Ash vs Evil Dead’ (VIDEO)

    Ash vs Evil Dead, the evil dead, starz
    Starz has released the first teaser for its upcoming “Evil Dead” sequel series, “Ash vs Evil Dead,” and while it’s short on plot, it’s enough to get fans’ chainsaws revving in excitement.

    The brief clip is really meant to tout the reunion of the franchise’s original masterminds, made up of creator/director Sam Raimi, producer Rob Tapert, and star Bruce Campbell, who are all producing the series. It also features the show’s logo — a callback to the original “Evil Dead” poster — and yes, Campbell’s character’s infamous chainsaw arm.

    The official synopsis, per Starz’s press release:

    Campbell will be reprising his role as Ash, the stock boy, aging lothario and chainsaw-handed monster hunter who has spent the last 30 years avoiding responsibility, maturity and the terrors of the Evil Dead. When a Deadite plague threatens to destroy all of mankind, Ash is finally forced to face his demons –personal and literal. Destiny, it turns out, has no plans to release the unlikely hero from its “Evil” grip.

    “Ash vs Evil Dead” also stars Lucy Lawless, Jill Marie Jones (“Sleepy Hollow”), Ray Santiago (“Touch,” “Meet the Fockers”), and Dana DeLorenzo (“A Very Harold & Kumar 3D Christmas”). The series is set to premiere on Starz sometime later this year.

    [via: Starz]

    Photo credit: Starz

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  • Lucy Lawless Joins Starz Series ‘Ash vs Evil Dead’


    TV veteran Lucy Lawless is bringing her butt-kicking skills to Starz: The actress will play a lead role in upcoming horror-comedy series “Ash vs Evil Dead.”

    The show is a follow-up to the classic film series “The Evil Dead,” and is shepherded by original director Sam Raimi, original star Bruce Campbell, and original producer Rob Tapert. Lawless is set to star as Ruby, described in the official press release as “a mysterious figure who is myopic in her quest to hunt down the source of the recent Evil outbreaks. The only problem: she believes that Ash (Bruce Campbell) is the cause of it all.”

    Lawless previously collaborated with Raimi and Tapert — who are executive producing “Ash” alongside Campbell — on fantasy series “Xena: Warrior Princess” (on which Campbell also cameoed) and “Spartacus,” which also aired on Starz. She also made a memorable recent turn on NBC sitcom “Parks and Recreation.”

    The official “Ash” synopsis, per the press release:

    Bruce Campbell will be reprising his role as Ash, the stock boy, aging lothario and chainsaw-handed monster hunter who has spent the last 30 years avoiding responsibility, maturity and the terrors of the Evil Dead. When a Deadite plague threatens to destroy all of mankind, Ash is finally forced to face his demons –personal and literal. Destiny, it turns out, has no plans to release the unlikely hero from its “Evil” grip.

    Ray Santiago, Dana DeLorenzo, and Jill Marie Jones also star. The series is expected to debut in late 2015.

    [via: TV by the Numbers]

    Photo credit: Getty Images

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