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Quinta Brunson Signals That ‘Abbott Elementary' May End Soon: ‘Our Show Is Very Time-Consuming'

Quinta Brunson Signals That ‘Abbott Elementary' May End Soon: ‘Our Show Is Very Time-Consuming'

Yahoo10-07-2025
Series creator and star Quinta Brunson indicated that 'Abbott Elementary' may soon come to a close, just days ahead of the cast's highly anticipated appearance on 'It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia' (airing July 9). 'Abbott Elementary' is set to begin its fifth season in the fall, and its first four outings have not only been a ratings hit for ABC but raked in scores of award nominations, a rarity for any network series in 2025.
'We are so fortunate and blessed to be on a network TV show for five seasons, and for people to still be fans,' the Emmy-winning actress and writer told Bustle. 'That being said, I have cast members who would love to pursue other projects, and our show is very time-consuming. We shoot about seven months out of the year. That can stop people from being able to do a lot of other things.'
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The other cast members — which include Sheryl Lee Ralph, Tyler James Williams, Janelle James, Lisa Ann Walter, Williams Stanford Davis, and Chris Perfetti — aren't the only ones looking to explore other projects. Brunson said that she's 'interested in playing against type.'
'I think that's any actor's dream. Right now my type is 'Janine' and 'teacher.' I'm looking forward to moving away from that a little bit,' she said.
Brunson added that she's receiving scripts right now and 'waiting for that moment that feels like, 'Oh man, this is exactly what I've been looking for.' She also said that she wanted to use the success of 'Abbott Elementary' to help 'get other people's projects off the ground.'
Last month at IndieWire and Disney's FYC Pass the Remote panel series, Brunson described the amount of passion the writers work to pour into each episode, no matter how difficult it can be to deliver 22 episodes a season.
'But I cannot tell you how hard it is to not make absolute garbage,' she said. 'You start going [into Episode] 22 like 'Honestly, I could phone it in.' We've seen other shows do it. We don't want to do that. We want to continue to make good television. We want every episode to be a surprise. We want you to not [say] 'I'm going to go back to the tired episode of the tired show.' We would like to keep it compelling.'
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Jonathan Kaplan Dies: Emmy-Nominated ‘ER' Director & ‘The Accused' Filmmaker Was 77
Jonathan Kaplan Dies: Emmy-Nominated ‘ER' Director & ‘The Accused' Filmmaker Was 77

Yahoo

time9 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Jonathan Kaplan Dies: Emmy-Nominated ‘ER' Director & ‘The Accused' Filmmaker Was 77

Jonathan Kaplan, the five-time Emmy-nominated director/producer of ER and filmmaker behind projects like The Accused, Bad Girls and Unlawful Entry, has died at the age of 77, per multiple media reports. His daughter Molly Kaplan said he died Friday at his home in Los Angeles of advanced liver cancer. More from Deadline Loni Anderson Dies: Emmy-Nominated 'WKRP In Cincinnati' Star Was 79 Soulja Boy Arrested On Suspected Weapons Charge During Traffic Stop Neon's 'Together' Scores For Indies, Original Horror In Studio Dominated Top Ten - Specialty Box Office Kaplan was born in Paris on Nov. 25, 1947 to industry veteran parents, father Sol Kaplan, a film and TV composer, and mother Frances Heflin, a regular on ABC soap All My Children. He began his career as a child actor in the Broadway production of The Dark at the Top of the Stairs, helmed by Elia Kazan. Later, he earned his bachelor's degree at the University of Chicago and studied film at New York University, where he was taught by Martin Scorsese. It was the Goodfellas director who recommended him to Roger Corman, who in turn called Kaplan to offer him his directorial debut, 1972's sexploitation flick Night Call Nurses, which was followed by another in 1973's The Student Teachers. That year, he also directed The Slams for Corman's brother, producer Gene Corman. Afterward, he helmed blaxploitation Truck Turner. In 1975, he directed his first major studio movie, Columbia Pictures' White Line Fever (1975), starring Jan-Michael Vincent in the crime neo-noir. His subsequent directorial credits include Mr. Billion, Over the Edge and TV movies like The Gentleman Bandit. Outside of film, he directed music videos for Barbra Streisand, Rod Stewart and John Mellencamp. Best of Deadline 2025 Deaths Photo Gallery: Hollywood & Media Obituaries Julian McMahon: His Life & Career In Photos From 'Nip/Tuck' To Doctor Doom & More Remembering Michael Madsen: A Career In Photos

Loni Anderson, ‘WKRP in Cincinnati' Star, Dies at 79
Loni Anderson, ‘WKRP in Cincinnati' Star, Dies at 79

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Loni Anderson, ‘WKRP in Cincinnati' Star, Dies at 79

Loni Anderson, who starred as the shrewd radio station receptionist Jennifer Marlowe on WKRP in Cincinnati before her fairy-tale marriage to and acrimonious divorce from Burt Reynolds kept her uncomfortably in the tabloids, died Sunday. She was 79. A two-time Emmy nominee, Anderson died in Los Angeles following 'an acute prolonged illness,' publicist Cheryl J. Kagan announced. More from The Hollywood Reporter Robert Charles Hunter, Former PepsiCo CEO and Diane Ladd's Husband, Dies at 77 Jeannie Seely, "Don't Touch Me" Singer and Longtime Grand Ole Opry Host, Dies at 85 Arnold Schwarzenegger's 'FUBAR' Canceled at Netflix After Two Seasons The Minnesota native also portrayed doomed Hollywood sex sirens in two telefilms: 1980's The Jayne Mansfield Story — alongside an untested Arnold Schwarzenegger as her second husband, Mickey Hargitay — and 1991's White Hot: The Mysterious Murder of Thelma Todd. And from 1988-90, she toplined TV movie remakes of the classic films Leave Her to Heaven (in the Gene Tierney role), Sorry, Wrong Number (in the Barbara Stanwyck part) and Three Coins in the Fountain). After appearing on such series as S.W.A.T., Police Woman, Barnaby Jones and Phyllis and auditioning to play Chrissy Snow on Three's Company, Anderson in 1978 read for Jennifer on MTM Enterprises' WKRP in Cincinnati, created by Hugh Wilson. Anderson liked the concept of the sitcom but had a problem with her role, 'so I refused,' she explained in a 2020 interview. 'I went in and sat on my little soapbox and said, 'I don't want to play this part because she's just here to deliver messages and is window dressing.' Then Hugh said, 'Well, how would you do it?' … He said, 'Let's make her look like Lana Turner and be the smartest person in the room.'' With Jennifer refusing to take dictation, type letters or make coffee as the opposite of the 'dumb blond' stereotype that blanketed TV back then, Anderson starred on all but one of the show's 90 episodes during its four-season run through April 1982. She received Emmy nominations after the second and third years of the series in 1980 and '81 but lost out to Loretta Swit of M*A*S*H and Eileen Brennan of Private Benjamin, respectively. After WKRP, Anderson appeared as Sunday school teacher Pembrook Feeny alongside Reynolds as a NASCAR driver in Stroker Ace (1983), directed by Hal Needham. She and Reynolds had met for the first time in 1981 on The Merv Griffin Show when she was still married to actor Ross Bickell and he was involved with actress Sally Field, and they began dating a year later. (He had been married to actress Judy Carne from 1963-66.) On April 29, 1988, the couple exchanged vows on Reynolds' 160-acre ranch in Jupiter, Florida. During the ceremony, he presented her with a seven-carat ring, which he designed and People in its cover story about the wedding described as 'a canary yellow diamond surrounded by smaller white diamonds.' She was 41, he was 52. 'We all cried,' said actor Robby Benson, who was a guest. 'It couldn't have been lovelier. They looked like the perfect couple, the kind you see on the top of a wedding cake, only bigger.' Loni Kaye Anderson was born on Aug. 5, 1945, in Saint Paul, Minnesota. Her father, Klaydon, was an environmental chemist, and her mother, Maxine, a model. She was naturally dark-haired. 'I loved being a brunette,' she said. 'It was exotic, people weren't quite sure what nationality I was, there was a mystery. When acting, I could be the bad lady.' Anderson graduated from Alexander Ramsey Senior High School in Roseville in 1963 and finished runner-up in the 1964 Miss Minnesota pageant while an art student at the University of Minnesota. Also in '64, she eloped with Bruce Hasselberg, the brother of a fellow Miss Minnesota contestant. They had a daughter, Deidra, but their marriage was effectively over in a matter of months. The 5-foot-7 Anderson donned a blond wig and was hired to play Billie (in the role made famous by Judy Holliday) on a Minneapolis stage in Born Yesterday, kickstarting her career. She was in another play with veteran actor Pat O'Brien, who told her she should try her hand in Hollywood. She moved to Los Angeles in 1975 with Bickell, dyed her hair platinum blond and found steady TV work, including a guest-starring stint on MTM's The Bob Newhart Show as a woman who files a paternity suit against Dr. Hartley patient Elliot Carlin (Jack Riley), then wants to rescind it. Anderson didn't land the Three's Company gig because 'she was too beautiful, too savvy,' John Ritter said in Chris Mann's 1998 book, Come and Knock on My Door. 'No one would believe she couldn't live in her own apartment, that she would have to struggle to get the rent paid.' Suzanne Somers, of course, would gain fame as Chrissie. Bickell had auditioned for the part of Andy Travis on WKRP and told her about the Jennifer opportunity. After getting hired, she would have an affair with Gary Sandy, who would play Travis the station manager, she revealed in her 1995 autobiography, My Life in High Heels. In the summer of 1980, she asked for a big raise from the WKRP producers and got it. In 1984, Anderson starred with Lynda Carter as private detectives who share an ex-husband who is murdered on NBC's Partners in Crime, which lasted just 13 episodes. Also that year, she appeared as herself in The Lonely Guy, starring Steve Martin. She reunited with Wilson in 1986 on the NBC comedy Easy Street, playing a former showgirl who inherits a bundle after her younger husband dies, much to the dismay of his sister. It lasted one season. After marrying Reynolds, they voiced pooches in All Dogs Go to Heaven (1989), appeared in 1990 on an episode of his short-lived ABC series B.L. Stryker and attempted to play husband and wife of a new CBS series, Evening Shade, but network execs wanted Marilu Henner instead. In 1991, Anderson let a chance to replace the fired Delta Burke on CBS' Designing Women slip away but returned as Jennifer for two episodes of The New WKRP in Cincinnati. She joined the third and final season of the NBC sitcom Nurses in 1993. Meanwhile, her marriage was falling apart. Reynolds served her with divorce papers in June 1993 and began publicly bashing her, saying she had cheated on him and calling her unfit to raise their son, Quinton, whom they adopted weeks after his 1988 birth. She said he was the one having an affair and that he was hooked on painkillers and had abused her. 'I'm very happy that we were able to sell papers for a year and a half,' Reynolds told reporters in 1994. 'Why that doesn't translate into money, I don't know. … I'm glad America is curious about us.' During David Letterman's Top 10 List on his inaugural Late Show broadcast on CBS on Aug. 30, 1993, No. 3 on the list of the 'Ways the New Show Will Be Better' was: 'I'm more focused since my break-up with Loni.' One of the nastiest divorces in Hollywood history became official in December 1994, and two years later, Reynolds filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. It wasn't until September 2015, when he wrote Anderson a check for $154,520, that their financial ties would finally end. However, Anderson said she and Reynolds would occasionally meet with their son and that after the actor died in September 2018, she spoke at his funeral and would keep his ashes. Anderson also played the conniving Teri Carson on Melrose Place in 1996 and Tori Spelling's materialistic mother in So Notorious in 2006, and her résumé also included work on Sabrina the Teenage Witch, Clueless, The Mullets, My Sister Is So Gay and A Night at the Roxbury (1998). In addition to her daughter and son, survivors include her fourth husband, folk singer and musician Bob Flick (The Brothers Four), whom she married in May 2008 after they first met 45 years earlier; grandchildren Megan and McKenzie; stepson Adam; and step-grandchildren Felix and Maximilian. A private family service will be held at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery followed by a celebration of life at a future date. Contributions in her memory can be made to the National Lung Health Education Program and/or the American Cancer Society. 'Loni was a class act. Beautiful. Talented. Witty. ALWAYS a joy to be around,' Steve Sauer, president/CEO of Media Four and Anderson's manager for 30 years, wrote in a statement. 'She was the ultimate working mother. Family first … and maintained a great balance with her career. She and I had wonderful adventures together that I shall forever cherish. I will especially miss that infectious chuckle of hers.' Best of The Hollywood Reporter 'The Studio': 30 Famous Faces Who Play (a Version of) Themselves in the Hollywood-Based Series 22 of the Most Shocking Character Deaths in Television History A 'Star Wars' Timeline: All the Movies and TV Shows in the Franchise Solve the daily Crossword

Loni Anderson, ‘WKRP in Cincinnati' Star, Dies at 79
Loni Anderson, ‘WKRP in Cincinnati' Star, Dies at 79

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Loni Anderson, ‘WKRP in Cincinnati' Star, Dies at 79

Loni Anderson, who starred as the shrewd radio station receptionist Jennifer Marlowe on WKRP in Cincinnati before her fairy-tale marriage to and acrimonious divorce from Burt Reynolds kept her uncomfortably in the tabloids, died Sunday. She was 79. A two-time Emmy nominee, Anderson died in Los Angeles following 'an acute prolonged illness,' publicist Cheryl J. Kagan announced. More from The Hollywood Reporter Robert Charles Hunter, Former PepsiCo CEO and Diane Ladd's Husband, Dies at 77 Jeannie Seely, "Don't Touch Me" Singer and Longtime Grand Ole Opry Host, Dies at 85 Arnold Schwarzenegger's 'FUBAR' Canceled at Netflix After Two Seasons The Minnesota native also portrayed doomed Hollywood sex sirens in two telefilms: 1980's The Jayne Mansfield Story — alongside an untested Arnold Schwarzenegger as her second husband, Mickey Hargitay — and 1991's White Hot: The Mysterious Murder of Thelma Todd. And from 1988-90, she toplined TV movie remakes of the classic films Leave Her to Heaven (in the Gene Tierney role), Sorry, Wrong Number (in the Barbara Stanwyck part) and Three Coins in the Fountain). After appearing on such series as S.W.A.T., Police Woman, Barnaby Jones and Phyllis and auditioning to play Chrissy Snow on Three's Company, Anderson in 1978 read for Jennifer on MTM Enterprises' WKRP in Cincinnati, created by Hugh Wilson. Anderson liked the concept of the sitcom but had a problem with her role, 'so I refused,' she explained in a 2020 interview. 'I went in and sat on my little soapbox and said, 'I don't want to play this part because she's just here to deliver messages and is window dressing.' Then Hugh said, 'Well, how would you do it?' … He said, 'Let's make her look like Lana Turner and be the smartest person in the room.'' With Jennifer refusing to take dictation, type letters or make coffee as the opposite of the 'dumb blond' stereotype that blanketed TV back then, Anderson starred on all but one of the show's 90 episodes during its four-season run through April 1982. She received Emmy nominations after the second and third years of the series in 1980 and '81 but lost out to Loretta Swit of M*A*S*H and Eileen Brennan of Private Benjamin, respectively. After WKRP, Anderson appeared as Sunday school teacher Pembrook Feeny alongside Reynolds as a NASCAR driver in Stroker Ace (1983), directed by Hal Needham. She and Reynolds had met for the first time in 1981 on The Merv Griffin Show when she was still married to actor Ross Bickell and he was involved with actress Sally Field, and they began dating a year later. (He had been married to actress Judy Carne from 1963-66.) On April 29, 1988, the couple exchanged vows on Reynolds' 160-acre ranch in Jupiter, Florida. During the ceremony, he presented her with a seven-carat ring, which he designed and People in its cover story about the wedding described as 'a canary yellow diamond surrounded by smaller white diamonds. She was 41, he was 52. 'We all cried,' said actor Robby Benson, who was a guest. 'It couldn't have been lovelier. They looked like the perfect couple, the kind you see on the top of a wedding cake, only bigger.' Loni Kaye Anderson was born on Aug. 5, 1945, in Saint Paul, Minnesota. Her father, Klaydon, was an environmental chemist, and her mother, Maxine, a model. She was naturally dark-haired. 'I loved being a brunette,' she said. 'It was exotic, people weren't quite sure what nationality I was, there was a mystery. When acting, I could be the bad lady.' Anderson graduated from Alexander Ramsey Senior High School in Roseville in 1963 and then finished runner-up in the 1964 Miss Minnesota pageant while an art student at the University of Minnesota. Also in '64, she eloped with Bruce Hasselberg, the brother of a fellow Miss Minnesota contestant. They had a daughter, Deidra, but their marriage was effectively over in a matter of months. The 5-foot-7 Anderson donned a blond wig and was hired to play Billie (in the role made famous by Judy Holliday) on a Minneapolis stage in Born Yesterday, kickstarting her career. She was in another play with veteran actor Pat O'Brien, who told her she should try her hand in Hollywood. She moved to Los Angeles in 1975 with Bickell, dyed her hair platinum blond and found steady TV work, including a guest-starring stint on MTM's The Bob Newhart Show as a woman who files a paternity suit against Dr. Hartley patient Elliot Carlin (Jack Riley), then wants to rescind it. Anderson didn't land the Three's Company gig because 'she was too beautiful, too savvy,' John Ritter said in Chris Mann's 1998 book, Come and Knock on My Door. 'No one would believe she couldn't live in her own apartment, that she would have to struggle to get the rent paid.' Suzanne Somers, of course, would gain fame as Chrissie. Bickell had auditioned for the part of Andy Travis on WKRP and told her about the Jennifer opportunity. After getting hired, she would have an affair with Gary Sandy, who would play the station manager, she revealed in her 1995 autobiography, My Life in High Heels. In the summer of 1980, she asked for a big raise from the WKRP producers and got it. In 1984, Anderson starred with Lynda Carter as private detectives who share an ex-husband who is murdered on NBC's Partners in Crime, which lasted just 13 episodes. Also that year, she appeared as herself in The Lonely Guy, starring Steve Martin. She reunited with Wilson in 1986 on the NBC comedy Easy Street, playing a former showgirl who inherits a bundle after her younger husband dies, much to the dismay of his sister. It lasted one season. After marrying Reynolds, they voiced pooches in All Dogs Go to Heaven (1989), appeared in 1990 on an episode of his short-lived ABC series B.L. Stryker and attempted to play husband and wife of a new CBS series, Evening Shade, but network execs wanted Marilu Henner instead. In 1991, Anderson let a chance to replace the fired Delta Burke on CBS' Designing Women slip away but returned as Jennifer for two episodes of The New WKRP in Cincinnati. She joined the third and final season of the NBC sitcom Nurses in 1993. Meanwhile, her marriage was falling apart. Reynolds served her with divorce papers in June 1993 and began publicly bashing her, saying she had cheated on him and calling her unfit to raise their son, Quinton, whom they adopted weeks after his 1988 birth. She said he was the one having an affair and that he was hooked on painkillers and had abused her. 'I'm very happy that we were able to sell papers for a year and a half,' Reynolds told reporters in 1994. 'Why that doesn't translate into money, I don't know. … I'm glad America is curious about us.' During David Letterman's Top 10 List on his inaugural Late Show broadcast on CBS on Aug. 30, 1993, No. 3 on the list of the 'Ways the New Show Will Be Better' was: 'I'm more focused since my break-up with Loni.' One of the nastiest divorces in Hollywood history became official in December 1994, and two years later, Reynolds filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. It wasn't until September 2015, when he wrote Anderson a check for $154,520, that their financial ties would finally end. However, Anderson said she and Reynolds would occasionally meet with their son and that after the actor died in September 2018, she spoke at his funeral and would keep his ashes. Anderson also played the conniving Teri Carson on Melrose Place in 1996 and Tori Spelling's materialistic mother in So Notorious in 2006, and her résumé also included work on Sabrina the Teenage Witch, Clueless, The Mullets, My Sister Is So Gay and A Night at the Roxbury (1998). In addition to her daughter and son, survivors include her fourth husband, folk singer and musician Bob Flick (The Brothers Four), whom she married in May 2008 after they first met 45 years earlier; grandchildren Megan and McKenzie; stepson Adam Flick; and step-grandchildren Felix and Maximilian. A private family service will be held at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery followed by a celebration of life at a future date. Best of The Hollywood Reporter 'The Studio': 30 Famous Faces Who Play (a Version of) Themselves in the Hollywood-Based Series 22 of the Most Shocking Character Deaths in Television History A 'Star Wars' Timeline: All the Movies and TV Shows in the Franchise

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