Netflix has lured another A-list movie star to the small screen.
Naomi Watts has signed on to headline Gypsy, a 10-episode psychological thriller that, save for the title, shares absolutely nothing in common with the iconic musical. The two-time Oscar-nominated actress will play Jean Holloway, a therapist who begins to develop dangerous and intimate relationships with the people in her patients’ lives.
RelatedMarvel’s Iron Fist: Netflix Series Casts Thrones Actress as Female Lead
Fifty Shades of Grey helmer Sam Taylor-Johnson is directing the first two episodes. Liza Chasin, Lisa Rubin, Tim Bevan and Eric Fellner are among the project’s executive producers,...
Naomi Watts has signed on to headline Gypsy, a 10-episode psychological thriller that, save for the title, shares absolutely nothing in common with the iconic musical. The two-time Oscar-nominated actress will play Jean Holloway, a therapist who begins to develop dangerous and intimate relationships with the people in her patients’ lives.
RelatedMarvel’s Iron Fist: Netflix Series Casts Thrones Actress as Female Lead
Fifty Shades of Grey helmer Sam Taylor-Johnson is directing the first two episodes. Liza Chasin, Lisa Rubin, Tim Bevan and Eric Fellner are among the project’s executive producers,...
- 4/18/2016
- TVLine.com
The first and most important thing that happened as a result of the staging of "Sticks and Stones" at the Met Theater as part of the Act One Festival was that Scott Swan and I got our first agent. Barbara Baruch worked for Ambrosio/Mortimer, a smaller boutique agency at the time, and from the moment we met her, she seemed like what I imagined an agent to be. She was nurturing, she was a cheerleader, she was a ballbuster, and she was always, always, always in our corner. Our time with her was unfortunately too short, and by the time the agency imploded in accusations of embezzlement, we were already repped by Gersh out of New York. Barbara was first, though, and she was the first one to start pushing people to come see our show and to read our work. The strangest thing about those early days is...
- 6/11/2015
- by Drew McWeeny
- Hitfix
It just dawned on me today that I completely forgot about Parasomnia when I was doing my favorite films of the year. It really is tough to keep up on the many pictures I watch, and William Malone’s sleeper spectacle is one that I saw some time back. It is a blessing in disguise that I was absent-minded because it allows me to put his sleeping beauty fable in the spotlight. The irony is Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland made some many critics worst list, whereas Parasomnia is Alice in Acidland and will make you forget than expensive blunder. Here is the interview I did with William Malone prior to the Blu-ray/DVD release of the flick.
Jason Bene: You are a huge devotee of the 1920 silent film The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari. How much of that style and vision can be seen in Parasomnia?
William Malone:...
Jason Bene: You are a huge devotee of the 1920 silent film The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari. How much of that style and vision can be seen in Parasomnia?
William Malone:...
- 12/23/2010
- by Jason Bene
- Killer Films
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