Getting what they are worth! As viewers enjoy their favorite TV shows across cable, network and streaming platforms, a new report released by Variety earlier this month revealed the biggest salaries.
11.08.2021 - 18:19 / theplaylist.net
Will HBO make another season of “Mare of Easttown?” It’s a question that has been asked numerous times since the acclaimed drama wrapped up its run weeks ago. But with prestige limited series, it’s not always a guarantee that we’ll see more, whether it’s because the talent involved doesn’t want to come back or because it just costs too damn much for the studio to make it happen.
Getting what they are worth! As viewers enjoy their favorite TV shows across cable, network and streaming platforms, a new report released by Variety earlier this month revealed the biggest salaries.
The stars are jetting into Venice!
Jazz Tangcay Artisans EditorEmmy nominated actress Kate Winslet admits that she has spent the past year eating far too much Cheez Whiz.In HBO’s Emmy nominated show, “Mare of Easttown” Winslet plays a no-nonsense police detective who eats the liquid spray cheese right from the can.
Amazon Studios chief Jennifer Salke revealed the streamer pitched for Mare Of Easttown but lost the Kate Winslet-starring cop drama “in negotiations.” Speaking in conversation with James Corden at the Edinburgh TV Festival on Wednesday, Salke admitted that the show, which was created by Brad Ingelsby and eventually went to HBO, was a show she wished Amazon had done.
Naman Ramachandran Jennifer Salke, head of Amazon Studios, has revealed that the streamer lost a bid for “Mare of Easttown,” Brad Ingelsby’s hit show with Kate Winslet that eventually landed at HBO.“We tried hard to get ‘Mare of Easttown’ and we lost it in the negotiation,” Salke said in a conversation with TV host and actor James Corden on Wednesday at the Edinburgh TV Festival. “I do think about the process.
Kate Winslet is not only one of Hollywood’s most recognizable actresses, but she is also an award-winning star, having won an Oscar, a Golden Globe and an Emmy – but that doesn’t keep her fear of "f—king up," as she put it, at bay. In a discussion with Variety about her recent hit miniseries "Mare of Easttown" on HBO, the actress revealed that she’s nervous that others will see her lesser-than should she turn in a performance that’s not well researched.
and, Evan Peters, who earned his first Emmy nomination for the latter, can do just that.
Our diets go under the microscope in the new environmental documentary “Eating Our Way To Extinction”, narrated by Kate Winslet.
Netflix deal, that kind of accomplishes everything,” says another agent. Or if the studio has leverage, it can “bifurcate the deal” and hold on to some rights.
Gordon Cox Theater EditorIt’s the question on all of Broadway’s mind right now: With the delta variant spreading just as shows are getting back up and running, how do we all — cast, crew and audiences — return to theaters safely?Listen to this week’s “Stagecraft” podcast below:According to the epidemiologist and economist Dr.
The HBO limited series Mare of Easttown, which received a whopping 16 Emmy nominations this year, got off to such a compelling start with a title character so strong that Kate Winslet admitted in a chat for Deadline’s Contenders Television: The Nominees award-season event that she needed to read only two of the seven episodes created and written by Brad Ingelsby to commit. Winslet was joined in the panel by Ingelsby and Craig Zobel, who helmed all the episodes.
The category is Covid-19 production realness, and the producing team behind RuPaul’s Drag Race and Untucked! is serving.
Michael Schneider Variety Editor at LargeThe success of HBO’s “Mare of Easttown” couldn’t have come at a better time for Wiip, the boutique production company behind Kate Winslet’s limited series. The murder mystery was nominated for 16 Emmys this year, earning raves for its unique storytelling and performances — and also for its twisty, satisfying ending.“Mare” has become a nice calling card for Wiip, which former ABC Entertainment chief Paul Lee launched with the backing of CAA in 2018.
William Earl Variety is pleased to announce the lineup for its first-ever Virtual TV Fest: The Nominees, airing on Aug. 18.This year, Variety extended its TV Fest franchise to include panels with Emmy-nominated actors, directors, producers and writers in the comedy, drama, documentary series and nonfiction special and limited series categories.
Danielle Turchiano Senior Features Editor, TVIn many ways, HBO’s “Mare of Easttown” told two stories: one was a gripping, small-town murder mystery and the other was an exploration of grief and guilt for a mother, the titular Mare (played by Kate Winslet), who lost her son too young.
Hilarie Burton, 39, wasn’t a fan of the love scenes she was forced to film throughout the six seasons she starred as Peyton Sawyer on One Tree Hill. And it was one intimate scene from Season 1 in particular that left her crying in her trailer and feeling “a prostitute”.
What’s the difference between an actor and a prostitute? Not much, actually, according to Hilarie Burton.
HBO’s Mare of Easttown, nominated for 16 Emmys this year including for Outstanding Limited or Anthology Series, kept the audience on the edge of their seats with a mystery filled with twists and turns. Kate Winslet stars as Detective Mare Sheehan as she investigates the grisly murder of a teenage mother in her small town. Winslet is nominated in the Outstanding Lead Actress in a Limited or Anthology Series category for her role in the seven-episode drama.
Kate Winslet is revealing the biology behind one of her beauty tricks.