
Scarlett Johansson
Image by: Twentieth Century Fox
The scandalous allure of
Tennessee Williams never dies. His sexually frustrated characters keep on
teasing new generations with that winning combination of lust and despair. And
now the Williams classic Cat On A Hot Tin Roof is set to enjoy a Broadway
revival with the no-brainer casting of Tony-winning actress Scarlett Johansson
as Maggie "The Cat." She’s in good company, too, joined by Broadway
heavy-hitters Ciaran Hinds as Big Daddy and Debra Monk (Tony-winner for
Redwood Curtain and a recurring presence on Glee) as Big Mama. Johansson
will conduct a smoldering contest opposite up-and-comer Benjamin Walker as
Brick, a man no doubt happy to return to non-historical roles after taking on
two presidents – on Broadway as a rock ‘n’ roll version of our country’s most
disturbing leader in Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson and in multiplexes as
Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter. The Pulitzer Prize-winning drama begins
previews in December and opens officially in January. Rev up those credit
cards, ticket hunters.
The Fosters: J. Lo’s moms
are all right
That ABC Family drama
executive produced by Jennifer Lopez just got itself some lesbians. Well, not
actual lesbians – at least not that we know of – but a pair of ladies to
play them; how’s that? Sherri Saum (from In Treatment) and Teri Polo (Meet
The Parents) are coming soon as The Fosters, a mixed-race couple raising a
Cheaper By The Dozen-amount of children, both biological and adopted, who
become foster (get it?) parents to a young girl. Wrinkle: the kid’s disruptive
influence in the family threatens to turn the happy home into the kind you see
getting intervened upon by Dr. Phil. Of course, this being ABC Family, you can
probably expect something a little more in line with the adorable Bunheads
than, say, Shameless, and a built-in audience of lesbian parent households
who’ll be eager to see this first-of-its-kind series. Good luck, Fosters!
Cheyenne Jackson’s next big
move is porn
And he’s doing it with Fonzie
in a kind of musical-comedy Boogie Nights. OK, sorry, backing up: 30 Rock
regular Cheyenne Jackson is headed back to Broadway to star in The
Performers, a romantic comedy about porn stars, one in which "sex, love and
Barry Manilow intersect." (We’re sure the details are someone less strange than
whatever’s going on in your imagination right now.) Jackson will star as porn
actor "Mandrew," opposite Henry Winkler (’70s icon Fonzie on the hugely
successful sitcom Happy Days). Winkler’s character – an adult industry
veteran named "Chuck Wood" –gives Jackson some advice on life and love when the
pair wind up in Las Vegas at the Adult Film Awards. The publicity pics working
their way around the Internet show Jackson looking ripped and muscular in a
gladiator costume, but that’s probably as much daring stage nudity as you’re
going to get from the handsome star, and
way more than Winkler will be expected to demonstrate. Or so we hear.
See for yourself when previews begin late in October.
The Quiet Passion of
Cynthia Nixon
What do you know about Emily
Dickinson besides her inability to "stop for death?" Not much, right? Well,
that’s what movies are for, to teach you a lot of speculative history about the
celebrities of olden times. And Cynthia Nixon is here to help. The woman whose
serious acting cred will only ever be in question if she agrees to return to the
Sex and the City well for another fat paycheck (and even then we might not
hold it against her) will play Dickinson for acclaimed, gay, British director
Terence Davies (The Deep Blue Sea, The House of Mirth, The Long Day Closes).
At the moment the film is known as A Quiet Passion, which sums up Davies
ongoing career tone of hushed melancholy and Dickinson’s real, reclusive life
quite nicely, a pairing of sensitive filmmaker and literary subject matter made
in chocolate-and-peanut-butter heaven. That means arthouse audiences are in for
a rollicking, miserable time sometime in the next year or so. Roll those
cameras and let’s get sad.
Romeo San Vicente creates loud passion according to his disgruntled neighbors.