
Jennifer Lopez
Image by: Melissa Moseley
Jennifer Lopez jumping the
American Idol ship wasn’t really that surprising when you consider the show’s
slowly fading public profile and Lopez’s perception of herself. This isn’t a
woman who likes to hide in the background of popular culture. She’s got plans,
and the next one involves developing groundbreaking television. Specifically, she’s
behind a one-hour drama for ABC Family about a pair of lesbian moms and their
ever-growing brood of children. The untitled pilot, created and written by
Queer As Folk’s Peter Paige and writing partner Brad Bredeweg, will be
executive produced by Lopez and tell the story of a couple – a police
officer and a teacher – whose child-filled home welcomes a troubled teenager
into the mix. Next question: Could Lopez please play the cop? In fact, could it
be the tough Karen Sisco, her character from Steven Soderbergh’s brilliant 1998
film Out of Sight? That would be great.
Wicked casts a spell on
Daldry
Casting aside the question of
whether or not acclaimed filmmaker Stephen Daldry (The Reader, The Hours,
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close) is still a gay man after being married
to a woman for 12 years – look, it’s complicated and, more importantly, his own
life to live – it only makes sense that Universal would at least be courting a
gay-ish person to direct the film version of the musical Wicked. And that’s
exactly what they’re doing. Other names have been tossed around, of course;
that’s how it works. But you’re telling an alternate take on a pre-Dorothy
Wizard of Oz here, so it just makes sense to go with the gay guy.
Furthermore, Daldry would definitely lend an element of dignity to the
situation; it’s more or less his trademark as a director, and when one of your
characters is green like Shrek you need all the dignity you can get. Meanwhile,
in the world of the not-quite-so-gay musical, Jon Favreau is in negotiations to
helm Jersey Boys for its leap to the big screen. That makes sense, too, since
Favreau’s straight guy camaraderie skills were well-honed in the ’90s with
Swingers. And if the failure of Rock of Ages has proven anything, it’s that
jukebox musicals need a point of view and purpose for the public to care.
Favreau seems like just the right man for that job.
Tony-winning Nina Arianda
breathing new life into Janis Joplin
It wouldn’t be a shock if
– after a dozen years of false starts, speculation and turnaround
– the proposed film about the life of bisexual rocker Janis Joplin never
happened at all. From early buzz about the late Brittany Murphy’s audition tape
to Melissa Etheridge to Pink to Zooey Deschanel to Renee Zellweger and now to
at least one project with Amy Adams still attached, it seems like every woman
in Hollywood with singing ability has been considered, then un-considered, with
nobody getting any closer to actually making a movie. So now they’ve turned to
Broadway, where Tony-winner Nina Arianda (Best Actress In a Play for Venus In
Fur) is now on board to handle Joplin’s life in Joplin from director Sean
Durkin, recently acclaimed for last year’s dark indie hit Martha Marcy May
Marlene. There’s no timeline yet and, well, we’re not holding our breath that
there’ll be one, but this is the latest news on a project that may or may not
take another 12 years to find its way into actual movie theaters
Melanie Griffith and Sandra
Bernhard roll with DTLA
A one-hour television drama
about the lives of gay men and lesbians in Los Angeles that doesn’t incubate
its characters in a tiny homosexual bubble of interactions and life
experiences? That’s a novel idea; one that shows like The L Word and Queer
As Folk, as entertaining as they often were, only occasionally accomplished.
But that’s the concept behind DTLA, a series from Larry Kennar – himself
a former producer of L Word – that will focus on a group of friends in
L.A. who don’t shy away from actually having straight friends. And the coolest
news surrounding the production is the presence of both Sandra Bernhard and
longtime friend Melanie Griffith co-starring as lesbian exes. The pair are
already shooting their scenes and if the powers that be are smart these two
will have meaty roles and not just occasional cameos (and, naturally, we also
want to see them making out, exes or not). The show begins airing in Canada
this October, with U.S. networks still in negotiations to run the series at an
unknown date.
Romeo San Vicente’s straight male friends are acting gayer and gayer all the time.