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‘What We Do in the Shadows' cast on alternate series finale endings and the parody that didn't work

‘What We Do in the Shadows' cast on alternate series finale endings and the parody that didn't work

Yahoo2 days ago

The cast of What We Do in the Shadows was visibly sad when they realized they may be all together for the last time, appearing on stage at Disney FYC Fest at the DGA Theater. But as the sixth and final season of the FX series demonstrated — as well as a slew of alternate endings they screened at the panel — they've gotten pretty good at handling goodbyes.
Showrunner Paul Simms, who parodied the famous finale moments in The Usual Suspects, Rosemary's Baby, and Newhart in the alternate endings, revealed the additional iconic last-moments reference they were really trying to make happen but couldn't make work.
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"The one we talked about most besides these was the ending of M*A*S*H, where he leaves in the helicopter and he spelled out 'Goodbye' in the rocks," Simms said. "We thought, budget-wise, how would we do that? Then for a while we thought the vampires fly away and they look back and Guillermo has spelled out 'Goodbye.' Then we thought it was all too complicated."
"But if we were going to do a TV ending, Newhart was the one," he added.
Mark Proksch, who played Colin on the series, agreed that the Newhart finale — often called the best series finale moment of all time, with its clever callback to Bob Newhart's prior series The Bob Newhart Show — was held in the highest regard. "Paul and I, our idol is Bob Newhart," Proksch told Gold Derby. "[Bob] had an interview in Parade magazine about a year before his passing where he talked about his favorite show that he and his wife would watch was Shadows, which blew our minds! … That Newhart ending was a special one."
After a screening of the series finale, including all three alternate endings, Simms moderated a panel with the main cast, including Proksch, Matt Berry (who received the show's first acting Emmy nomination last year), Kayvan Novak, Natasia Demetriou, Harvey Guillén, and Kristen Schaal.
FX
Demetriou also had a special personal connection to one of the endings: Having played Nadja as Rosemary in Rosemary's Baby while in her last trimester of pregnancy, she believed she was about to deliver her very own baby right there on set. "I was seven months pregnant and felt like the baby was crowning," she said. "It was really hot and I had sweat dripping down my legs and I thought it was the baby."
"But that final scene was surreal and so sad, but I loved the Rosemary's Baby stuff," she added, quipping, "It was very prophetic because my child is a demon."
When asked what was his favorite part of the finale, Berry recalled the scene where the vampires are gathered together singing: " sat at the piano because I also turned 50 that day," he remembered. "That's the craziest birthday I think I'll ever have."
Gold Derby asked Berry if he could see a reunion in the future, and fans may not like his answer. "I think the best thing to do with it — and this is crazy as an actor saying this, but I would just recast the whole thing," he offered, suggesting, "You can have a whole new load of people, like SNL or Doctor Who... another load of new comics to do it. You can't go back to these things. You were who you were when you did it. … Let someone else do it."
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‘Andor' star Genevieve O'Reilly on her unlikely two-decade Mon Mothma journey: ‘I've closed the circle on her'
‘Andor' star Genevieve O'Reilly on her unlikely two-decade Mon Mothma journey: ‘I've closed the circle on her'

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time29 minutes ago

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‘Andor' star Genevieve O'Reilly on her unlikely two-decade Mon Mothma journey: ‘I've closed the circle on her'

Andor actress Genevieve O'Reilly's Star Wars journey has been longer and more circuitous than most actors in the franchise, but what a payoff she received. The ethereal Rebel leader Mon Mothma was originally portrayed by actress Caroline Blakiston in Star Wars: Return of the Jedi. Though her appearance lasted less than 30 seconds, the character quickly became an iconic part of Star Wars lore. O'Reilly later stepped into the role in her 20s for Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith — a brief appearance as well, but one that laid the groundwork for her deeper involvement in the franchise later on. 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Attending an FYC event for the Disney+ series at the Writers Guild of America Theater in Beverly Hills, O'Reilly joined Gold Derby to reflect on her wildly unexpected two-decade tour of duty in the Rebellion (which has also continued forward in Ahsoka), including the challenging moments that tested her commitment as much as her character's. Lucasfilm/Disney Gold Derby: Is it too soon to lobby for a Mon Mothma series? From the end of this show to the end of , there's a lot of potential story still in there for her. Genevieve O'Reilly: I bet! Would you be excited if the right call came to pick this character up yet again? I mean, do you know what? It's been such a gift of a surprise for me to come back — and back — and Andor has been revelatory for me in regard to this woman. So, always! If we could go further, I don't know if that's possible because of what Andor has achieved, it's just extraordinary. But yes. You've participated in a lot of different projects. What did that mean to you to of be a part of what may be a whole new direction for a certain type of film or series? I can only speak from my perspective to the writing, to Tony [Gilroy] and all those writers and what they achieved, in regard to a depth of character, the depth of interaction. And I think something that Season 2 really achieved was by jumping that year every three episodes it allowed for a real specificity of character, a real specificity of this moment and who this is, which allowed for kind of big swings — swings of character. So that was really interesting to me, that you didn't have to carry the audience with you from one moment to the next. You could drop in and just reveal something quite different. Did you have any unanswered questions about Mon Mothma at the end of this, or are you pretty satisfied with what you do understand about her? 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The first one was just getting that role when I was a very young actor and just being wide-eyed and just it was so extraordinary to step onto those sets and be a tiny part of that. The real interesting moment for me was when they called me to ask me to do Rogue One, because that was 10 years later. So much had happened in that time. They didn't have to ring. They didn't have to ask me, do you know what I mean? They kind of could have reached out to anyone at that point and that felt special. So I thought, 'OK, maybe I have something to offer here.' And then when Tony rang in regard to Andor, I mean he's such an extraordinary writer. He had such a vision for the piece and he really wanted to allow space for her to have a proper story, to have story time, narrative time, rather than just be an expositional force, which she was previously. What was the most challenging but perhaps the most gratifying day of work on for you? Yeah, that was the speech. Mon's speech. 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Olivia Williams was more than happy to be ‘the wise old bird' on the ‘Dune: Prophecy' set
Olivia Williams was more than happy to be ‘the wise old bird' on the ‘Dune: Prophecy' set

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time29 minutes ago

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Olivia Williams was more than happy to be ‘the wise old bird' on the ‘Dune: Prophecy' set

The first season of Dune: Prophecy led to a revelation that redefined HBO series core relationship and shed new light on the origin of its central villain. Throughout the first six episodes of the series, which was renewed for a second season at the end of last year, viewers watched a Tula Harkonnen (Olivia Williams), dedicated member of the Sisterhood and literal sister to Valya (Emily Watson), played surrogate mother to the young acolytes of her order. More from GoldDerby 'Andor' star Genevieve O'Reilly on her unlikely two-decade Mon Mothma journey: 'I've closed the circle on her' 'Forever' star Lovie Simone on traveling back to a 'nostalgic' time for Netflix's teenage romance show 'Severance' star Tramell Tillman could make Emmy history as the first Black Best Drama Supporting Actor winner And there was a very good reason for that. Toward the end of the season, a flashback revealed that not only did Tula give birth to the child of a Atreides, but the fire-wielding Desmond Hart (Travis Fimmel) was that baby. The two were eventually reunited, but under terrible conditions. Hart ordered Tula's arrest, no doubt setting up more confrontation in Season Two. Gold Derby caught up with Williams to discuss how she worked her character's secret into her performance and how the dynamics between the characters of the Sisterhood were reflected between the actors on set. Gold Derby: How familiar were you with the world of before the show? Olivia Williams: I have to be completely honest with you — or, I don't have to be, but I'm going to be—I didn't know anything about it at all. But I had a very quick crash course as soon as I was up for the job. And [showrunner] Alison Schapker is very good at explaining it. What were your first impressions of Tula once you got your hands on the script and got to know her a bit? 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I was like, "No, actually, I really would have done it like that." The likeness is extraordinary. She's brilliant and a very lovely person. Did you know from the start of the job what Tula's secret was? I'm a cynical old bird, and I don't get involved in these things unless I've got something to do. There was a definite sense that closer to the finish of my career—though, not the end — I'm not wasting my time standing around for background action. I'd rather be in something small and have something to do than be in Hungary for six months on a big show with nothing to do. I made it very clear that I wanted to know whether this was going to be worth the time away from my family and dramatically, I wanted something to do. ... [The showrunners] were gloriously honest with me about what I was involved in, and I loved it from the beginning. ... Nothing is accidental. Everything that happened to me was present when we started shooting. Your readers might be astounded to learn how rarely that is the case with long-running series. What is it like going into a scene like the meeting between Tula and Desmond Hart? It can be many thing depending on the actor and how they work and how much contact you've had. If you were doing a play, you'd have sat down and talked about it like having therapy. But the way this was it was like having that real encounter. I don't know if you've watched any reality shows were people are reunited or united with their long-lost parent, and it doesn't go as either of them expect. In Travis' head, which I'm sure was born of the preparation he had done, he was absolutely driven with anger and resentment. And I went into it thinking, "My darling, dear lost child." That so often happens with family encounters. Each person goes into it assuming the other person thinks like they do, and there's that appalling realization that you come at something from polar-opposite positions. It was a sort of body blow, both real and metaphorical, that he wasn't pleased to see me and put me under arrest. We just went with the truth of that. I literally reached out my hands to embrace him, and he clamped me in irons. It was pretty shocking. We were in this exterior set, in the dying days of the shoot in Hungary, as Hungary plunged into a cold and bitter winter. The weather really reflected what was going on emotionally. It was tough shooting conditions and a tough scene to shoot emotionally as well. What was the experience of filming the scene in which Tula guides the acolytes through their dream? It's this appalling delusion of increasing age that I still think of myself as the youngest person on set. But I end up looking on in horror as these amazing young actors came up and said, "It's so amazing to work with someone with so much experience," which is a euphemism for "You're so old." But it was amazing as a different role to be cast in. Emily [Watson] and I were the wise old birds of the set, and once I got used to being a wise old bird, I settled sort of comfortably into that role and was prepared to give everyone the benefit of my wisdom whenever they were prepared to listen to it. To watch Chloe [Lea, who plays Sister Lila], in particular because our characters had a connection, she actually turned 18 as we were shooting and graduated from needing her grandmother there to be a chaperone to being a young woman free to roam as she pleased. We were a very sociable group who cooperated. That's a beautiful thing about acting. There isn't an age hierarchy, where a young actor usually leads the show. When you were acting, you're all equal. There's a beautiful evenness to it. Outside of that, Jade Anouka [who plays Sister Theodosia] was raising a young child, and I've had two kids. So anybody with kids was coming to Emily and me and going, "How do you mix filming with motherhood and being a good spouse?" 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15 great films and TV shows that feature Pride celebrations
15 great films and TV shows that feature Pride celebrations

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timean hour ago

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15 great films and TV shows that feature Pride celebrations

Netflix; Universal Pictures; FX Networks (L-R) Sense8; Bros; What We Do in the Shadows It's time to celebrate Pride once more! This summer, millions of people around the world celebrate Pride with picnics, concerts, festivals, parades, and protests. Others will celebrate privately, or with friends and family. Some have been celebrating for decades, while others are going to their first Pride this year. It's an essential time of year, especially when it seems like there's more attacks on the queer community than ever before. If you're looking for depictions of Pride events in film and television, we've got the perfect list for you! Scroll through to check out 15 TV shows and movies that celebrate LGBTQ+ Pride. Subscribe to TRAILERS: Subscribe to COMING SOON: Subscribe to INDIE TRAILERS: ... - YouTube Of course, a movie named Pride features Pride celebrations! This 2014 film is based on the true story of a group of lesbian and gay activists who raised money to support miners striking in Wales in the 1980s. The film features the 1985 Pride Parade, where hundreds of miners join the Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners as they march. Read our . Watch it on . We are all worth fighting for. Sense8 Season 2 is now streaming on Netflix. Watch Sense8 on Netflix: ... - YouTube The Wachowski's science fiction series Sense8 centers a group of eight strangers who develop a psychic connection. This early-days Netflix show features a large queer cast and had a few scenes featuring Pride celebrations. In the series pilot, lesbian couple Nomi and Amanita celebrate Pride at a park. In season 2, episode 6, Lito, a closeted actor, comes out publicly during São Paulo Pride. Streaming on . - YouTube The series finale of the delightful animated kids' show Danger & Eggs — from creators Shadi Petosky and Mike Owens — was titled "Chosen Family" and featured the main characters going to a Pride festival. Moreover, a trans girl (voiced by Jazz Jennings) performs a song about her first day at school as the real her. Streaming on . In an effort to win more votes in Sean's campaign for comptroller, he and Charmaine recruit the vampires to help with their pride ... - YouTube Season 5, episode 3 of What We Do in the Shadows — a vampire mockumentary from FX — is titled "Pride Parade" and features the vampires' neighbor Sean organizing a parade in their Staten Island neighborhood after he announces he's running for comptroller. This culminates with the characters singing "It's Raining Men," as a naked Nandor falls from the sky after attempting to fly to outer space. Streaming on . It's the Blue's Clue's And You Pride Parade and we need you to sing-along as the 'Families Go Marching' proudly! Subscribe to ... - YouTube This special Pride Parade sing-along from Blue's Clues features an animated version of Nina West singing "Families Go Marching" as a parade full of cartoon animals with their queer families walks past. Stream Noah's Arc: The Movie on June 20 on the Paramount+ with SHOWTIME plan. The stars have aligned. Paramount+ is the ... - YouTube The groundbreaking Noah's Arc series about Black gay men living in Los Angeles had a series finale in which the main characters celebrated Black Gay Pride on July 4th. Streaming on . Promo for the first episodes of Season 2 of South of Nowhere. all clips belong to the-n and Tom Lynch Co. - YouTube South of Nowhere is a teen drama series about a family that moves from Ohio to Los Angeles. In the eighth episode of season 3, Spencer, the family's youngest daughter, wants to go to Pride with her mom, but she is unavailable. When Spencer's bisexual friend Ashley stops by, she convinces Paula to go to Pride. Streaming on . - YouTube The American version of Russell T Davies' Queer as Folk follows a group of gay and lesbian friends living in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. In the second season, the group celebrates Gay Pride. Streaming on . La introduccion de la serie de The L Word en su sexta temporada.... Final Sesion. - YouTube Seeing as The L Word is all about a group of queer women, it makes sense that they'd go to Pride. In season 2, episode 11, "Loud & Proud," the women attend WeHo Pride and celebrate. Streaming on . BPM compellingly combines elegy, tragedy, urgency and a defiant euphoria… It is full of cinematic life" - The Guradian. - YouTube This French drama is set in the early 1990s and follows the members of ACT-UP Paris as they figure out how to best advocate for people living with HIV/AIDS. It features the group debating how to best celebrate Pride, with some people wanting to maintain a positive outlook. In contrast, others want to focus on the somber atmosphere created by the epidemic. Read our . Streaming on . Jane (Ellen Muth) is a seemingly typical 15-year-old high school student; she's popular at school, does well in her classes, and ... - YouTube This Lifetime original movie from 2000 stars Stockard Channing as Janice, the mother of a teen girl named Jane (Ellen Muth). When Jane comes out on The Truth About Jane, Janice struggles to accept her daughter, but eventually, she begins attending PFLAG meetings. The two also go to a Pride parade together. Streaming on . From writer Tracy Oliver (Girls Trip), Harlem is a new comedy following a group of stylish and ambitious best girlfriends in Harlem ... - YouTube Season 2, episode 5 of Harlem sees the newly out Quinn going to her first-ever Pride festival. Streaming on . - YouTube This Lena Waithe-produced BET series served as a sequel to the 1992 film of the same name. In the season 1 episode titled "Family," the crew goes to Atlanta's Black Pride festival. Streaming on . Milk (2008) - Gay Pride Rally Speech Clip Harvey Milk (Sean Penn) gives a speech at the Gay Pride Rally in San Francisco and ... - YouTube Milk, a biopic about gay politician Harvey Milk (played by Sean Penn) gives a speech at San Francisco's Gay Freedom Day, where he delivers his famous "My name is Harvey Milk, and I'm here to recruit you" speech. Streaming on . Here's the NEW TRAILER for #BrosMovie! Trust me, it looks way BIGGER in theaters. See you September 30. --- Bros In ... - YouTube In Billy Eichner's gay romantic comedy Bros, Bobby (Eichner) needs to go to Provincetown to meet with a potential investor for his museum, and takes his boyfriend Aaron (Luke Macfarlane) with him. The visit takes place during Pride Weekend, and the two get to explore the town when it's at its most gay. Streaming on .

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