Let's start the weekly round-up with Grimm.
Grimm's ratings dropped a little this week, but the show still won the 18-49 demo in its timeslot, finishing ahead of CSI: NY, Fringe and Supernatural, and rising by a full frakking ratings point (1.8) after Chuck (0.8). Wake up, Chuck.
Hitfix visited the set in Portland recently and posted a lengthy report. Here is a snippet:
Sasha Roiz on how his character will develop later in the series: "I’m not a Grimm descendent, but I'm a descendent of a long line that dates back just as Grimm does and we have a bit of a history and a past, so my line is a royal line and that will slowly unfold throughout the series."Collider has a longer interview with Sasha and Reggie Lee (more at the link):
It’s nice to see your character – like the main character – has the duality.
Grimm's ratings dropped a little this week, but the show still won the 18-49 demo in its timeslot, finishing ahead of CSI: NY, Fringe and Supernatural, and rising by a full frakking ratings point (1.8) after Chuck (0.8). Wake up, Chuck.
Hitfix visited the set in Portland recently and posted a lengthy report. Here is a snippet:
Sasha Roiz on how his character will develop later in the series: "I’m not a Grimm descendent, but I'm a descendent of a long line that dates back just as Grimm does and we have a bit of a history and a past, so my line is a royal line and that will slowly unfold throughout the series."Collider has a longer interview with Sasha and Reggie Lee (more at the link):
It’s nice to see your character – like the main character – has the duality.
- 11/6/2011
- by fanshawe
- CapricaTV
Laura Prepon will return to television comedy soon enough -- very soon, in fact -- but first, she's diving into the depths of drama.
Formerly the slyly funny Donna on "That '70s Show," she samples anything but amusement in "Iris Johansen's The Killing Game," a mystery-novel adaptation debuting Sunday (Oct. 30) on Lifetime Movie Network. It casts Prepon as forensic sculptor Eve Duncan, who re-creates images of crime victims.
While doing so, she's taunted by someone claiming to be the person who killed her daughter 10 years earlier. The child's resting place never has been revealed, so Eve plays along, hoping to determine that site. Naomi Judd, who also worked with director Bobby Roth on the 1995 NBC miniseries "Naomi & Wynonna: Love Can Build a Bridge," co-stars.
"I've never really done anything like this before," Prepon tells Zap2it. "Everybody had such a good time that when we finished and we were at the wrap party,...
Formerly the slyly funny Donna on "That '70s Show," she samples anything but amusement in "Iris Johansen's The Killing Game," a mystery-novel adaptation debuting Sunday (Oct. 30) on Lifetime Movie Network. It casts Prepon as forensic sculptor Eve Duncan, who re-creates images of crime victims.
While doing so, she's taunted by someone claiming to be the person who killed her daughter 10 years earlier. The child's resting place never has been revealed, so Eve plays along, hoping to determine that site. Naomi Judd, who also worked with director Bobby Roth on the 1995 NBC miniseries "Naomi & Wynonna: Love Can Build a Bridge," co-stars.
"I've never really done anything like this before," Prepon tells Zap2it. "Everybody had such a good time that when we finished and we were at the wrap party,...
- 10/26/2011
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Zap2It - From Inside the Box
Laura Prepon has no fear of tackling roles people might have preconceptions about.
The "That '70s Show" alum is about to do that twice: as forensic sculptor Eve Duncan in "The Killing Game," a Lifetime movie adaptation of an Iris Johansen best seller debuting Monday, Oct. 31; and as a doppelganger for comedian and E! talk-show host Chelsea Handler in the midseason NBC sitcom "Are You There, Vodka? It's Me, Chelsea."
Prepon took a similar gamble last season by embodying novelist Richard Castle's (Nathan Fillion) crime-fighting character Nikki Heat -- or, more specifically, an actress playing her -- in an episode of ABC's Monday drama "Castle."
"There was a lot of pressure on that one," Prepon tells Zap2it. "People love that show, and before I was even going to play it, everyone had an opinion of who should play Nikki Heat. People took it very seriously, and luckily, it turned out well.
The "That '70s Show" alum is about to do that twice: as forensic sculptor Eve Duncan in "The Killing Game," a Lifetime movie adaptation of an Iris Johansen best seller debuting Monday, Oct. 31; and as a doppelganger for comedian and E! talk-show host Chelsea Handler in the midseason NBC sitcom "Are You There, Vodka? It's Me, Chelsea."
Prepon took a similar gamble last season by embodying novelist Richard Castle's (Nathan Fillion) crime-fighting character Nikki Heat -- or, more specifically, an actress playing her -- in an episode of ABC's Monday drama "Castle."
"There was a lot of pressure on that one," Prepon tells Zap2it. "People love that show, and before I was even going to play it, everyone had an opinion of who should play Nikki Heat. People took it very seriously, and luckily, it turned out well.
- 9/26/2011
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Zap2It - From Inside the Box
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