It’s not all interior design
and life makeovers for Nate Berkus anymore. The man who got his start as
Oprah’s go-to design guy is taking a cue from his powerful boss and branching
out into other creative endeavors. Now that his own show is a daytime hit,
Berkus has turned his attention to his first credit as an executive producer of
a feature film and his name will roll across the screen next year when the
highly anticipated movie adaptation of Kathryn Stockett’s novel The Help hits
theaters. The period picture examines the lives of African-American housekeepers
and their white employers and how those relationships changed in one small town
during the 1960s Civil Rights Movement. With a screenplay adapted by
actor-director Tate Taylor (Winter’s Bone, Pretty Ugly People, Prop 8: The
Musical), who’s also directing, the impressive cast includes Emma Stone, Bryce
Dallas Howard, Viola Davis, Octavia Spencer, Aunjanue Ellis, Cicely Tyson,
Allison Janney and Sissy Spacek. Bring your tissues along when it opens in
2011.
Pride, Prejudice, Zombies,
Gays
Mike White made his name with
oddball indies like Chuck and Buck and Year of the Dog while also crossing
over into the mainstream with projects like School of Rock. But now the gay
filmmaker is poised to step into the director’s role with what could turn into
his biggest success yet, the movie adaptation of the wildly popular comic novel
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. The movie will bloody up Jane Austen’s
classic with flesh-eating undead creatures, a plot device that story was crying
out for, and now that David O. Russell has dropped out of the project,
Lionsgate has offered White the job. The casting is all still up in the air,
but not-dead names like Scarlett Johansson and Bradley Cooper have been talked
about quite a bit. And why, besides impossible scheduling demands, would any
actor say no to the opportunity to either turn into a zombie or get their
brains eaten by a ravenous pack of them or both? See? There are no good reasons
to refuse.
Milo Ventimiglia gets no
Rest
TV loves Milo Ventimiglia.
After making a name for himself over several seasons as a brooding, bookish bad
boy on Gilmore Girls and then jumping over to the cult-hit Heroes for four
more years, the actor looks set to participate in his third hit when he stars
in and executive produces Rest, a series based on a comic book he co-created.
Working with power-gay producers Craig Zadan and Neil Meron, Ventimiglia would
star as a twentysomething man who gets addicted to a drug that eliminates the
body’s need for sleep. And while a lifetime of sleepless nights may sound like
a dream come true for workaholics and cheap people who never want to buy
another mattress, it sounds like a nightmare scenario, albeit one that could be
very cool to watch ruin someone else’s existence. As always, these things
have to go to pilot and then get a series order from the Suits, so stay tuned
for further developments.
Faith Evans to star in real
life Dreamgirls
By now everyone knows that
Dreamgirls, though fiction, was really pretty much the story of the Supremes,
only with a much happier ending. In real life, the story of Florence Ballard
(whose character loosely inspired "Effie," the outcast member of the group)
ended on a much sadder note. And a new film is being prepped that won’t shy
away from reality, whether good and bad. Blondie – The Florence Ballard
Story, due in theaters in the summer of 2011, will star R&B singer Faith
Evans as the woman who helped found the Supremes and sang lead until the
arrival of Diana Ross, who became the sole front-person. As the group evolved,
Ballard’s relationship with it became more strained until she left to start a
solo career, then died unexpectedly at age 32. Ballard’s daughters pursued
Evans for the role, and she’ll also record songs for the soundtrack. The film
– based on Peter Benjaminson’s book The Lost Supreme – is expected to
begin shooting soon in Atlanta.