NEW YORK, NY – JUNE 18: Actress Judith Light speaks on stage during SAG-AFTRA Foundation Conversations: ‘The Assassination Of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story’ at The Robin Williams Center on June 18, 2018 in New York City.
Tag: june 2018
NEW YORK, NY – JUNE 18: Actress Judith Light attends SAG-AFTRA Foundation Conversations: ‘The Assassination Of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story’ at The Robin Williams Center on June 18, 2018 in New York City.

Source | 18 June 2018
Hayley Atwell is a natural in ‘Howards End’
The category of Outstanding Limited Series is a hot topic this week. Lynette and Kristen discuss why it’s time for the rules to be changed, and if this is the year a streaming service will win. Plus, Hayley Atwell joins the podcast to discuss her role on the period drama Howards End. She also reveals who convinced her to take the role and shares some fun behind-the-scenes stories of her love for pulling on-set pranks. Credits: Hosts: Henry Goldblatt (@henrygoldblatt), Lynette Rice (@lynetterice), and Kristen Baldwin (@kristengbaldwin) Producer/Editor: Patrick Antonetti (@pja477) at Cadence13 Supervising Producer: Cristina Everett (@cristinaeverett) | 18 June 2018
michael.lane.parks: Extreme macro!
Trying to find the needle before the next take. Would sometimes take longer than I care to admit. 🤦♂️ .
Photography by @rebeccajoelson .
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#FX #versace #film #director #cinema #phantom #macro #promotion #onset #studio
Music is one of the final elements added to a film or television show, and for the four panelists on Gold Derby’s Meet the BTL Experts: Music panel, they all had various starting points when it came time to craft the sound of their projects.
[…] On the other hand, Brendan “Eskmo” Angelides (“13 Reasons Why”) and Mac Quayle (“The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story,” “American Horror Story: Cult,” “9-1-1”) are visual composers and prefer to wait for scenes or an episode cut before creating a score. “I could be saying something different in seven years, but I feel like I need the visuals in front of me to be able to do it,” Angelides said.Plus, as Quayle pointed out, sometimes the ultimate screen product could be vastly different from what was written on the page. “I’ve yet to write anything from reading a script. I’d start getting some ideas. The script obviously has some information there,” he said. “[But] there could be not much on the page and what’s on the screen is like this whole world, so I tend to wait.”And when those scenes come in, oftentimes they’re backed by temp music — placeholder music inserted in the editing process to serve as a guideline for composers to write something similar or simply to know where music is wanted. Quayle calls it “a blessing and a curse.”“The blessing is that if it’s a good picture editor and they’ve put the temp in and they’ve cut to it, there’s a lot of good information to get from it,” he said. “There could be a tempo, where a big modulation should happen, where it should hit here or hit there. There could be some really nice information there. And if I know that I have the freedom to just use some of that information and then write my music with that information in it, that’s great. The curse is when they think the temp is the best idea that could ever be in that scene.”
kmannmakeup: #bts with @darrencriss@edgarramirez25 @judithlight for @thewrap magazine
#darrencriss #styling @ashleypweston #grooming by me #kindramannmakeup @tmgla
#edgarramirez #grooming @sascha_breuer
#judithlight #makeup @jamiemakeup #hair @lightaaron
Emmy Nominations 2018: Variety’s TV Critics on Their Dream Picks
This year’s Emmy nominations are almost upon us, and with the possibilities more scattered than usual, so are our opinions on who deserves to get a nod. So, with voting now underway, Variety’s TV critics got together to hash out their favorite contenders and — more importantly — point to some of the stellar performances that might not have enough support or clout to be recognized, but really ought to be.
OUTSTANDING LIMITED SERIES
D’Addario: We’ve gotten spoiled in recent years—the era of “Big Little Lies,” “The People v. O.J. Simpson,” and “Fargo”—such that this year seems pretty widely considered “weak.” There are plenty of credible nominees that exist in a slightly older mode: The tony TV literary adaptation. I was pleasantly surprised by both Netflix’s “Alias Grace” and Showtime’s “Patrick Melrose,” series that assay widely-respected recent novels with elegance, but verve, too. They may not be quite as edgy as the limited series that have bloomed in recent years, but they weren’t “Masterpiece Theatre,” either.
Framke: I’ll freely admit that this category doesn’t excite me much this year, with a couple exceptions. One is “Alias Grace,” which crawled under my skin for days after I finished it. The other is “American Crime Story: Assassination of Gianni Versace,” which didn’t get nearly as much attention or adulation as “People vs. OJ,” but was slick and confrontational in a way that kept my attention.
D’Addario: I’m glad we agree on “Alias Grace”—its direction, by Mary Harron, was eerily discomfiting, expanding the question of just what accused murderess Grace does and doesn’t know about her own capacity for evil. But I’m going to diverge from you on “American Crime Story,” which troubled me and has stayed with me in not-good ways. While many found this the pinnacle of TV impresario Ryan Murphy’s achievements, I was dubious of its psychologizing of Andrew Cunanan, and the degree to which it seemed to paint all gay men as either villains or victims.
LEAD ACTOR, LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE
Framke: Given your ambivalence towards “The Assassination of Gianni Versace,” I’ll stump here for Darren Criss, whose performance just about chilled my blood with every blink. And on the complete opposite of the spectrum (and in what I’ll admit is a “no way in hell” nomination dream), I’ll say that Jimmy Tatro‘s surprisingly grounded “American Vandal” role deserves more attention than it got.
D’Addario: I’ll admit I didn’t vibrate on “Vandal’s” frequency. I admired Kyle MacLachlan’s sheer commitment to his “Twin Peaks” role(s) enough to hope he lands a nomination, but find myself rooting for “Patrick Melrose’s” Benedict Cumberbatch. The actor’s no stranger to the Emmys thanks to “Sherlock,” but his compelling, painful, redemptive journey through addiction and self-loathing on “Melrose” deserves notice.
SUPPORTING ACTOR, LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE
Framke: If the FYC campaigns are any indication, this might be Jeff Daniels’ race to lose, but his consciously hammy performance in “Godless” left me pretty cold. Instead, I find myself in a somewhat hilarious position that my middle school self would find perfectly appropriate: rooting for Ricky Martin’s heartbreaking performance in “ACS: Versace.” I will also happily accept Cody Fern’s.
D’Addario: Cody Fern was a genuine discovery in “Versace.” My vote, though, would go to Jason Ritter, putting his considerable charm towards risky and, eventually, genuinely scary use as a predator in “The Tale.” It’s a performance that walks close to the edge without losing balance.
SUPPORTING ACTRESS, LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE
D’Addario: If anyone onscreen in “Versace” earned a prize, it’s Penelope Cruz’s uncanny Donatella, balancing feral pain with the need to save face. In my dream world, Riley Keough’s sharp, dogged work in “Paterno” pays off, and Frances Conroy gets in for an eerie, brief appearance in “The Tale,” one that leaves a painful afterburn.
Framke: I see your Penelope Cruz and raise you a Judith Light — which might be one of my favorite sentences I’ve ever written. Bless TV forever and ever, amen.
Emmy Nominations 2018: Variety’s TV Critics on Their Dream Picks
MTV Movie & TV Awards: Stars Praise Gender-Neutral Awards, Inclusion on Red Carpet
Last year, Emma Watson and Millie Bobby Brown made history by winning gender-neutral acting awards at the MTV Movie & TV Awards, the first ever in the show’s existence. This year, stars on the show’s red carpet made it clear: There’s no looking back.
“We don’t need to separate,” Black Panther’s Winston Duke told The Hollywood Reporter about the move to gender-neutral awards while on the carpet Saturday night outside the Barker Hangar in Santa Monica. “We have to be inclusive about how we celebrate people’s work. It’s a very brave step into the future that we’re all asking for.”
At Monday’s awards ceremony, Saiorse Ronan and Daisy Ridley are up for best performance in a movie alongside Ansel Elgort, Timothee Chalamet and Chadwick Boseman. The best performance in a show category features four women — Maisie Williams, Issa Rae, Katherine Langford and Brown — and Darren Criss.
Gender-neutral awards are only one way Hollywood is looking to make changes to promote inclusivity. At the 2018 Academy Awards, Frances McDormand shed light on inclusion riders, a requirement in a particular talent’s contract to have a certain level of gender and racial diversity on set. Since the speech, stars including Michael B. Jordan and Brie Larson have been vocal about inclusion riders being the new norm.
Avengers: Infinity War co-director Joe Russo, who recently launched the new studio AGBO with his brother Anthony, told THR on Saturday that inclusion riders will be a point of emphasis at the company, adding that it’s up to Hollywood now to set the new standard.
“It is our job to be as inclusive as possible, whether that be through race or gender or sexual orientation. It’s 1,000 percent incumbent on us to lead the way,” Russo said. He went on to say that gender-neutral awards should be adopted at other awards ceremonies moving forward.
Actress-writer-producer Lena Waithe will be honored at Monday’s show with the Trailblazer Award for her work in adding and promoting diverse voices in the writers room and beyond. Waithe is currently executive producing Showtime’s The Chi, which she created, as well as the upcoming TBS comedy Twenties, which follows a queer black woman and her two straight friends.
As for what her speech will entail on Monday, Waithe told THR that it will “pay homage to those who came before us.”
The MTV Movie & TV Awards will be hosted by Tiffany Haddish and is scheduled to air at 9 p.m. ET.
MTV Movie & TV Awards: Stars Praise Gender-Neutral Awards, Inclusion on Red Carpet





















