Actor Barton Cowperthwaite, who is well known for his role in the popular drama series ‘Tiny Pretty Things’ has been diagnosed with Stage 2 brain cancer. After having undergone several seizures, the actor revealed that he has a brain tumour and detailed his plans to remove the cancerous growth.
Revealing that the tumour is not likely fatal, he wrote on social media: “So…. Yesterday I was diagnosed with at least a stage 2 Glioma. “It is a fairly decent-sized brain tumour. The tumor’s cells originate in the brain, so it’s not spread from a cancer anywhere else in the body.”
He added: “Docs so far have been confident that they’ll be able to remove most of the tumor, and that after a successful operation, and some rehab, I will be operating like my self. That being said it seems like scans and checkups will be a part of my life for its lengthy remainder.
Revealing that the tumour is not likely fatal, he wrote on social media: “So…. Yesterday I was diagnosed with at least a stage 2 Glioma. “It is a fairly decent-sized brain tumour. The tumor’s cells originate in the brain, so it’s not spread from a cancer anywhere else in the body.”
He added: “Docs so far have been confident that they’ll be able to remove most of the tumor, and that after a successful operation, and some rehab, I will be operating like my self. That being said it seems like scans and checkups will be a part of my life for its lengthy remainder.
- 11/14/2023
- by Agency News Desk
- GlamSham
Actor Barton Cowperthwaite, who is well known for his role in the popular drama series ‘Tiny Pretty Things’ has been diagnosed with Stage 2 brain cancer. After having undergone several seizures, the actor revealed that he has a brain tumour and detailed his plans to remove the cancerous growth.
Revealing that the tumour is not likely fatal, he wrote on social media: “So…. Yesterday I was diagnosed with at least a stage 2 Glioma. “It is a fairly decent-sized brain tumour. The tumor’s cells originate in the brain, so it’s not spread from a cancer anywhere else in the body.”
He added: “Docs so far have been confident that they’ll be able to remove most of the tumor, and that after a successful operation, and some rehab, I will be operating like my self. That being said it seems like scans and checkups will be a part of my life for its lengthy remainder.
Revealing that the tumour is not likely fatal, he wrote on social media: “So…. Yesterday I was diagnosed with at least a stage 2 Glioma. “It is a fairly decent-sized brain tumour. The tumor’s cells originate in the brain, so it’s not spread from a cancer anywhere else in the body.”
He added: “Docs so far have been confident that they’ll be able to remove most of the tumor, and that after a successful operation, and some rehab, I will be operating like my self. That being said it seems like scans and checkups will be a part of my life for its lengthy remainder.
- 11/14/2023
- by Agency News Desk
Barton Cowperthwaite, star of Netflix’s Tiny Pretty Things, is opening up about his health and revealed he was diagnosed with Stage 2 brain cancer.
The actor in the streaming series said that he plans to undergo surgery to remove the brain tumor.
“So…. Yesterday I was diagnosed with at least a stage 2 Glioma,” Cowperthwaite shared in an Instagram post. “It is a fairly decent-sized brain tumor. The tumor’s cells originate in the brain, so it’s not spread from a cancer anywhere else in the body.”
He continued, “Docs so far have been confident that they’ll be able to remove most of the tumor, and that after a successful operation, and some rehab, I will be operating like my self. That being said it seems like scans and checkups will be a part of my life for its lengthy remainder.”
Following the diagnosis, Cowperthwaite...
The actor in the streaming series said that he plans to undergo surgery to remove the brain tumor.
“So…. Yesterday I was diagnosed with at least a stage 2 Glioma,” Cowperthwaite shared in an Instagram post. “It is a fairly decent-sized brain tumor. The tumor’s cells originate in the brain, so it’s not spread from a cancer anywhere else in the body.”
He continued, “Docs so far have been confident that they’ll be able to remove most of the tumor, and that after a successful operation, and some rehab, I will be operating like my self. That being said it seems like scans and checkups will be a part of my life for its lengthy remainder.”
Following the diagnosis, Cowperthwaite...
- 11/14/2023
- by Armando Tinoco
- Deadline Film + TV
Barton Cowperthwaite, best known for his work on Tiny Pretty Little Things, has revealed he was diagnosed with brain cancer.
The 31-year-old actor took to Instagram on Friday to reveal that doctors found "at least a stage 2" glioma.
A glioma is a growth of cells that starts in the brain or spinal cord.
"It is a fairly decent sized brain tumor," he wrote in the social media statement.
"The tumor's cells originate in the brain, so it's not spread from a cancer anywhere else in the body," he added.
Barton portrayed Oren on the Netflix hit Tiny Pretty Things, which launched in 2020.
"The only course of treatment for something like this is brain surgery." he wrote on Instagram.
"Docs so far have been confident that they'll be able to remove most of the tumor, and that after a successful operation, and some rehab, I will be operating like my self.
The 31-year-old actor took to Instagram on Friday to reveal that doctors found "at least a stage 2" glioma.
A glioma is a growth of cells that starts in the brain or spinal cord.
"It is a fairly decent sized brain tumor," he wrote in the social media statement.
"The tumor's cells originate in the brain, so it's not spread from a cancer anywhere else in the body," he added.
Barton portrayed Oren on the Netflix hit Tiny Pretty Things, which launched in 2020.
"The only course of treatment for something like this is brain surgery." he wrote on Instagram.
"Docs so far have been confident that they'll be able to remove most of the tumor, and that after a successful operation, and some rehab, I will be operating like my self.
- 11/13/2023
- by Paul Dailly
- TVfanatic
Tiny Pretty Things alum Barton Cowperthwaite revealed on Friday that he was diagnosed with a brain tumor, saying doctors found “at least a stage 2” glioma — a growth of cells that starts in the brain or spinal cord.
“It is a fairly decent sized brain tumor,” Cowperthwaite, 31, wrote on Instagram. “The tumor’s cells originate in the brain, so it’s not spread from a cancer anywhere else in the body.”
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“It is a fairly decent sized brain tumor,” Cowperthwaite, 31, wrote on Instagram. “The tumor’s cells originate in the brain, so it’s not spread from a cancer anywhere else in the body.”
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- 11/11/2023
- by Claire Franken
- TVLine.com
When the Netflix series “Tiny Pretty Things” premiered in mid-December of 2020, expectations were high that this was certainly the next big thing from Netflix.
True to the hype, it didn’t take so long before the show claimed a top spot on the global ranking of Netflix shows to watch. The glory was short-lived — for just eight days — before it was unseated by another Netflix original, “Bridgerton.”
Season one of the show ended with tons of unresolved drama — as well as a cliffhanger — and for a show with such hype, expectations were that the show would renew for a second season.
It’s been months since the finale of the first season, however, and there is no news yet about a second season.
Where has the show gone? Has it been canceled or will it renew for another season? Here’s all we know about what happened to “Tiny Pretty Things.
True to the hype, it didn’t take so long before the show claimed a top spot on the global ranking of Netflix shows to watch. The glory was short-lived — for just eight days — before it was unseated by another Netflix original, “Bridgerton.”
Season one of the show ended with tons of unresolved drama — as well as a cliffhanger — and for a show with such hype, expectations were that the show would renew for a second season.
It’s been months since the finale of the first season, however, and there is no news yet about a second season.
Where has the show gone? Has it been canceled or will it renew for another season? Here’s all we know about what happened to “Tiny Pretty Things.
- 5/4/2022
- by Buddy TV
- buddytv.com
Six writers will provide love stories about Black teens for the crossover project.
Barack and Michelle Obama’s Higher Ground is reteaming with Temple Hill Entertainment to develop Blackout, a film and TV project for Netflix.
The project, being developed concurrently as both a series and a feature under Higher Ground’s overall deal with Netflix, will be based on Black love stories written by six different writers and all set during a power cut on a hot summer night in New York City.
The stories, from writers Dhonielle Clayton, Tiffany D Jackson, Nic Stone, Angie Thomas (novelist behind Temple...
Barack and Michelle Obama’s Higher Ground is reteaming with Temple Hill Entertainment to develop Blackout, a film and TV project for Netflix.
The project, being developed concurrently as both a series and a feature under Higher Ground’s overall deal with Netflix, will be based on Black love stories written by six different writers and all set during a power cut on a hot summer night in New York City.
The stories, from writers Dhonielle Clayton, Tiffany D Jackson, Nic Stone, Angie Thomas (novelist behind Temple...
- 7/13/2021
- by John Hazelton
- ScreenDaily
Netflix has ordered a six-part anthology “Blackout,” to be produced by the Obamas’ Higher Ground banner and Temple Hill.
The project is designed to will tell six different stories of Black teenagers who find love during a power outage in New York City. Each installment will be penned by a different writer. The project is being developed concurrently as a TV and a film project through Higher Ground’s overall deal with Netflix.
“When the lights go out and people reveal hidden truths, love blossoms, friendships transform, and all possibilities take flight,” Netflix said.
The stories will be adapted from works penned by authors Dhonielle Clayton (“Tiny Pretty Things”), Tiffany D. Jackson (“Allegedly”), Nic Stone (“Dear Martin”), Angie Thomas (“The Hate U Give”), Ashley Woodfolk (“The Beauty that Remains”) and Nicola Yoon. Among the storylines for the installments that Netflix revealed were “two boys trapped on the subway come face-to-face...
The project is designed to will tell six different stories of Black teenagers who find love during a power outage in New York City. Each installment will be penned by a different writer. The project is being developed concurrently as a TV and a film project through Higher Ground’s overall deal with Netflix.
“When the lights go out and people reveal hidden truths, love blossoms, friendships transform, and all possibilities take flight,” Netflix said.
The stories will be adapted from works penned by authors Dhonielle Clayton (“Tiny Pretty Things”), Tiffany D. Jackson (“Allegedly”), Nic Stone (“Dear Martin”), Angie Thomas (“The Hate U Give”), Ashley Woodfolk (“The Beauty that Remains”) and Nicola Yoon. Among the storylines for the installments that Netflix revealed were “two boys trapped on the subway come face-to-face...
- 7/12/2021
- by Cynthia Littleton
- Variety Film + TV
In the wake of the success of the Kevin Hart feature Fatherhood on Netflix, the producers of that movie, Higher Ground and Temple Hill, are collaborating with the streaming giant once again for a new project entitled Blackout, a film & television event which will be adapted from six different Black love stories written by six different writers.
Those scribes are Dhonielle Clayton (Tiny Pretty Things), Tiffany D. Jackson (Allegedly), Nic Stone (Dear Martin), Angie Thomas (The Hate U Give), Ashley Woodfolk (The Beauty that Remains) and Nicola Yoon. Blackout is being developed as part of Higher Ground’s overall deal with Netflix.
From the perspective of 12 teens with six shots of love, Blackout takes place as a heatwave blankets New York City in darkness and causes an electric chaos. When the lights go out and people reveal hidden truths, love blossoms, friendships transform, and all possibilities take flight.
Those scribes are Dhonielle Clayton (Tiny Pretty Things), Tiffany D. Jackson (Allegedly), Nic Stone (Dear Martin), Angie Thomas (The Hate U Give), Ashley Woodfolk (The Beauty that Remains) and Nicola Yoon. Blackout is being developed as part of Higher Ground’s overall deal with Netflix.
From the perspective of 12 teens with six shots of love, Blackout takes place as a heatwave blankets New York City in darkness and causes an electric chaos. When the lights go out and people reveal hidden truths, love blossoms, friendships transform, and all possibilities take flight.
- 7/12/2021
- by Anthony D'Alessandro
- Deadline Film + TV
Higher Ground Productions and Temple Hill are teaming back up for a new Netflix anthology event titled “Blackout.”
The project, developed concurrently as film and TV series, is an adaptation of six different love stories all written by six different authors, including “The Hate U Give’s” Angie Thomas.
Higher Ground Productions and Temple Hill recently collaborated on the Kevin Hart-led Netflix comedy, “Fatherhood,” which is on track to be watched in 61 million households during its first four weeks.
Here is the logline for the project:
Six prolific authors have written six Black love stories all taking place during a power outage on a sweltering summer night. From the perspective of 12 teens with six shots of love, Blackout takes place as a heatwave blankets New York City in darkness and causes an electric chaos. When the lights go out and people reveal hidden truths, love blossoms, friendships transform, and all possibilities take flight.
The project, developed concurrently as film and TV series, is an adaptation of six different love stories all written by six different authors, including “The Hate U Give’s” Angie Thomas.
Higher Ground Productions and Temple Hill recently collaborated on the Kevin Hart-led Netflix comedy, “Fatherhood,” which is on track to be watched in 61 million households during its first four weeks.
Here is the logline for the project:
Six prolific authors have written six Black love stories all taking place during a power outage on a sweltering summer night. From the perspective of 12 teens with six shots of love, Blackout takes place as a heatwave blankets New York City in darkness and causes an electric chaos. When the lights go out and people reveal hidden truths, love blossoms, friendships transform, and all possibilities take flight.
- 7/12/2021
- by Tim Baysinger
- The Wrap
Beloved authors Dhonielle Clayton, Tiffany D. Jackson, Nic Stone, Angie Thomas, Ashley Woodfolk, and Nicola Yoon celebrate the beauty of Black love in Blackout, an unforgettable interlinked novel of charming, hilarious, and heartwarming stories that take place on a sweltering starry night through New York’s many boroughs. Here’s the summary… A summer heatwave blankets New […]
The post Blackout – Book Review appeared first on Cinelinx | Movies. Games. Geek Culture..
The post Blackout – Book Review appeared first on Cinelinx | Movies. Games. Geek Culture..
- 6/22/2021
- by SteveDunk
- Cinelinx
Exclusive: Kylie Jefferson, breakout star of Netflix’s hit ballet drama Tiny Pretty Things, has signed with Buchwald for representation.
Tiny Pretty Things takes inspiration from Dhonielle Clayton and Sona Charaipotra’s book and follows a group of aspiring ballerinas and danseurs as they seek to rid their pre-professional school of scandal and toxicity. Jefferson drew critical praise in her acting debut as the mature drama’s ambitious and dedicated lead Neveah Stroyer.
Jefferson can also be seen in Netflix’s Dance Dreams: Hot Chocolate Nutcracker, which gives a behind-the-scenes look at the Debbie Allen Dance Academy and their award-winning version of The Nutcracker.
Los Angeles native Jefferson began training as a ballerina at age four and at six was the youngest student ever accepted into the academy level at the elite Debbie Allen Dance Academy in Culver City, CA. Under Allen’s training, Washington DC’s Kirov Academy of Ballet,...
Tiny Pretty Things takes inspiration from Dhonielle Clayton and Sona Charaipotra’s book and follows a group of aspiring ballerinas and danseurs as they seek to rid their pre-professional school of scandal and toxicity. Jefferson drew critical praise in her acting debut as the mature drama’s ambitious and dedicated lead Neveah Stroyer.
Jefferson can also be seen in Netflix’s Dance Dreams: Hot Chocolate Nutcracker, which gives a behind-the-scenes look at the Debbie Allen Dance Academy and their award-winning version of The Nutcracker.
Los Angeles native Jefferson began training as a ballerina at age four and at six was the youngest student ever accepted into the academy level at the elite Debbie Allen Dance Academy in Culver City, CA. Under Allen’s training, Washington DC’s Kirov Academy of Ballet,...
- 2/6/2021
- by Denise Petski
- Deadline Film + TV
Tiny Pretty Things is so wild it'll make you do a double take pirouette. Now, is wild a good thing? In this case, we're not so sure. The Netflix teen drama, based on Dhonielle Clayton and Sona Charaipotra's novel, tackles the highly-competitive ballet world by following fictional students at an elite Chicago-based school for budding ballerinas. Prior to its release, Tiny Pretty Things was described as "Black Swan meets Pretty Little Liars." For more context, the series kicked off with newcomer Neveah (played by Kylie Jefferson) joining the Archer School of Ballet, where a star student mysteriously fell from a rooftop. As fans of ballet content, including Center Stage and Dance...
- 1/8/2021
- E! Online
The coronavirus pandemic has shuttered dance studios and dimmed the lights on live productions. But despite beloved holiday dance traditions sitting out or opting for a virtual option this year, audiences and dance enthusiasts can still get their ballet fix with new titles from Netflix and Disney+. Tiny Pretty Things, Dance Dreams: Hot Chocolate Nutcracker and On Pointe pull back the velvet curtain on the ballet world to reveal updated on-screen representations of the ever-evolving art and help fill the pandemic void for performing arts.
Netflix’s Tiny Pretty Things, which debuted on Monday, takes inspiration from Dhonielle Clayton and Sona Charaipotra’s book and follows a group of aspiring ballerinas and danseurs as they seek to rid their pre-professional school of scandal and toxicity. Kylie Jefferson, who makes her acting debut as the mature drama’s ambitious and dedicated lead Neveah Stroyer, says the Netflix series brings a Black...
Netflix’s Tiny Pretty Things, which debuted on Monday, takes inspiration from Dhonielle Clayton and Sona Charaipotra’s book and follows a group of aspiring ballerinas and danseurs as they seek to rid their pre-professional school of scandal and toxicity. Kylie Jefferson, who makes her acting debut as the mature drama’s ambitious and dedicated lead Neveah Stroyer, says the Netflix series brings a Black...
- 12/16/2020
- by Alexandra Del Rosario
- Deadline Film + TV
Some of the best teen dramas are as well known as the books they were based on: Gossip Girl, Pretty Little Liars, and now Tiny Pretty Things by Sona Charaipotra and Dhonielle Clayton. If you've seen any of Netflix's adaptation, you already know that it's full of backstabbing drama, dark secrets, and manipulative gossip, all carefully orchestrated by the most unassuming ballerinas at an elite ballet academy. But the new series just barely scratches the surface. The rest unfolds in the Tiny Pretty Things books, and we have all the thrilling details.
Where does Tiny Pretty Things take place?
While the Netflix show takes place in Chicago, the books take place in New York City, specifically at an elite ballet academy in the heart of Manhattan. This ballet academy is by far the most prestigious one in New York City, as it trains its students to enter the American Ballet Company after graduation.
Where does Tiny Pretty Things take place?
While the Netflix show takes place in Chicago, the books take place in New York City, specifically at an elite ballet academy in the heart of Manhattan. This ballet academy is by far the most prestigious one in New York City, as it trains its students to enter the American Ballet Company after graduation.
- 12/16/2020
- by Kalea Martin
- Popsugar.com
If the name Kylie Jefferson doesn't ring a bell, don't worry, it will soon. The 26-year-old newcomer is making her small-screen debut on Netflix's latest teen drama, Tiny Pretty Things, and it's not every day that an actor's breakout role is the lead of a show. Based on the Sona Charaipotra and Dhonielle Clayton novel of the same name, Jefferson stars as Neveah Stroyer, a dancer who gets the opportunity to attend a prestigious ballet school in Chicago after the star pupil, Cassie Shore, is mysteriously pushed from a building. When Neveah arrives at the Archer School of Ballet, she soon uncovers a web of dark secrets that could bring down the academy.
I would say the show is a mix between Gossip Girl and Pretty Little Liars, and Jefferson agrees. "Neveah is a cross between Serena and Blair. Serena has it naturally, but Blair is like 'I have to have it' type,...
I would say the show is a mix between Gossip Girl and Pretty Little Liars, and Jefferson agrees. "Neveah is a cross between Serena and Blair. Serena has it naturally, but Blair is like 'I have to have it' type,...
- 12/14/2020
- by Monica Sisavat
- Popsugar.com
Netflix has launched a new trailer for thriller series ‘Tiny Pretty Things’ where it’s each ballet dancer for themselves in this dog eat dog world.
The project is in the vein of ‘Black Swan’ meets ‘Pretty Little Liars’. Based on the book by Sona Charaipotra and Dhonielle Clayton, The series is set in the world of an elite ballet academy and charts the rise and fall of young adults who live far from their homes, each standing on the verge of greatness or ruin. As Chicago’s only elite dance school, the Archer School of Ballet serves as the company school for the city’s renowned professional company: City Works Ballet. The Archer School is an oasis for an array of dancers: rich and poor, from north and south, and a range of backgrounds. Yet they all share a rare talent and passion for dance, a loyal sense of community…...
The project is in the vein of ‘Black Swan’ meets ‘Pretty Little Liars’. Based on the book by Sona Charaipotra and Dhonielle Clayton, The series is set in the world of an elite ballet academy and charts the rise and fall of young adults who live far from their homes, each standing on the verge of greatness or ruin. As Chicago’s only elite dance school, the Archer School of Ballet serves as the company school for the city’s renowned professional company: City Works Ballet. The Archer School is an oasis for an array of dancers: rich and poor, from north and south, and a range of backgrounds. Yet they all share a rare talent and passion for dance, a loyal sense of community…...
- 11/17/2020
- by Zehra Phelan
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
Grasshopper Film has secured the U.S. distribution rights to Iwow: I Walk on Water, a documentary feature from New York-based photographer and filmmaker Khalik Allah, to released in physical and virtual theaters later this year. In Iwow, Allah focuses on longtime muse Frenchie, a 60-something schizophrenic, homeless Haitian man, who he becomes increasingly intertwined with. In parallel, Allah, the filmmaker behind Black Mother, also turns the camera on himself to document a turbulent romantic relationship and grapple with personal notions of spirituality and mortality – all inquiries about which he gathers advice from charismatic confidants including Fab 5 Freddy, members of the Wu-Tang Clan, and, in deeply moving exchanges, his own mother. Allah, who made his debut with the 2015 documentary Field Niggas, said “My objective hasn’t changed, it’s always been to keep it real with myself; to stay true to my vision and to have the courage to express it cinematically.
- 9/15/2020
- by Amanda N'Duka
- Deadline Film + TV
Exclusive: Dani Montalvo (Dispatches from Elsewhere) and Luke Humphrey (Tiny Pretty Things) are set to star as controversial couple Lorena and John Bobbitt in the Lifetime feature I Was Lorena Bobbitt. Currently in production in Toronto, the film will premiere this summer as part of the network’s Ripped from the Headlines slate.
Lorena Bobbitt became a household name and made tabloid headlines when after years of abuse by her husband, she cut off his penis with a knife in 1993. Now nearly 30 years later, the fully authorized film in which Bobbitt serves as an executive producer, follows her journey from a wide-eyed, immigrant bride to a battered wife into an unlikely media sensation. I Was Lorena Bobbitt also documents her ultimately emerging as a strong, thoughtful woman who has devoted her life to advocating for other abused women.
Following the premiere of the movie, Lifetime will run a PSA for...
Lorena Bobbitt became a household name and made tabloid headlines when after years of abuse by her husband, she cut off his penis with a knife in 1993. Now nearly 30 years later, the fully authorized film in which Bobbitt serves as an executive producer, follows her journey from a wide-eyed, immigrant bride to a battered wife into an unlikely media sensation. I Was Lorena Bobbitt also documents her ultimately emerging as a strong, thoughtful woman who has devoted her life to advocating for other abused women.
Following the premiere of the movie, Lifetime will run a PSA for...
- 3/5/2020
- by Denise Petski
- Deadline Film + TV
Exclusive: Anna Maiche (The French Teacher) is set as the narrator in Tiny Pretty Things, Netflix’s upcoming hourlong drama series based on the book by Sona Charaipotra and Dhonielle Clayton, from writer Michael MacLennan, Insurrection Media, Mojo Films and Peacock Alley.
Written by MacLennan based on the book, Tiny Pretty Things is set in the world of an elite ballet academy and charts the rise and fall of young adults who live far from their homes, each standing on the verge of greatness or ruin. As Chicago’s only elite dance school, the Archer School of Ballet serves as the company school for the city’s renowned professional company: City Works Ballet. The Archer School is an oasis for an array of dancers: rich and poor, from north and south, and a range of backgrounds. Yet they all share a rare talent and passion for dance,...
Written by MacLennan based on the book, Tiny Pretty Things is set in the world of an elite ballet academy and charts the rise and fall of young adults who live far from their homes, each standing on the verge of greatness or ruin. As Chicago’s only elite dance school, the Archer School of Ballet serves as the company school for the city’s renowned professional company: City Works Ballet. The Archer School is an oasis for an array of dancers: rich and poor, from north and south, and a range of backgrounds. Yet they all share a rare talent and passion for dance,...
- 9/20/2019
- by Denise Petski
- Deadline Film + TV
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