Month: November 2023

“The Crown”: warm portrait of humans in crisis

Peter Morgan is back on familiar turf now. He’s even edited himself a tad.
His latest “The Crown” (shown here) splurge – four episodes, ending with Diana’s funeral – is sort of “The Queen”-plus. In Morgan’s style, it has deep, fascinating human insights that may or may not be true.
Morgan has done this with others. His screenplays portrayed Idi Amin, Henry VIII, David Frost, Tony Blair and Anne Boleyn’s sister. But the 2006 “Queen” movie captured new attention. Read more…

Best-bets for Nov. 21: “Fargo” soars; sports women triumph

1) “Fargo” opener, 10 and 11:20 p.m., FX. This is “Fargo” at its best – weird and wild one moment, slow and droll the next, but always fascinating. A Minnesota mom (Juno Temple,shown here) accidentally gets in a fight, sparking events. There’s death, destruction and her claim that nothing happened. We meet her sweet husband, his disturbing mom and, in the 11:20 episode, a villain (Jon Hamm). The result is beautifully written and, at times, fiercely violent. Read more…

Best-bets for Nov. 20: Letterman’s back; reality shows ramp up

1) “The Late Show,” 11:35 p.m., CBS. David Letterman (shown here) finally visits his old domain. For 12 years, he hosted “The Late Show” in the Ed Sullivan Theatre, sometimes getting huge ratings. But he left in 2015 and Stephen Colbert took over. Letterman, now 76, has confined himself to a one-on-one interview show for Netflix. He did 22 episodes over four years, but the last was almost a year ago. Now he visits Colbert’s show. Read more…

This “Fargo” role feels like home

Jumping into the compelling “Fargo” characters, actors have tried different methods.
Some have tried speech coaches or studied tapes; David Rysdahl (shown here) had a quicker method.
“I called up my dad and listened to him,” he said. “I ended up calling my aunts and uncles, too.”
The result works wonderfully. In the newest “Fargo” mini-series – debuting at 10 p.m. Tuesday (Nov. 21) on FX – he’s Wayne Lyon, sweet-spirited and optimistic and not sure why people near his wife keep being killed or maimed. Read more…

Best-bets for Nov. 19: finales for PBS and for zombies

1) “Hotel Portofino” and “World on Fire” season-finales, 8 and 9 p.m., PBS. Two continuing dramas, each wtih World War II as a key factor, offer deep characters and strong emotions. The pre-war “Portofino” (shown hre in a previous episode) finds hope for saving the hotel, but agony for people near Lucian — his wife, his lover and his friend. For the wartime “Fire,” Harry is back from the front, but his wife is re-joining the Resistance and his mother is, as always, abominable. Read more…

Looking for ABC post-strike shows? It’s a long wait

As they wait for the real TV season to arrive, viewers will need patience – three months of it.
CBS has already announced that its post-strike shows will finally reach the air shortly after Feb. 11, when the Super Bowl airs. Now ABC says many of its returns will be even later.
“Grey’s Anatomy” (shown here in the Meredith farewell episode) won’t start until March; the same is true of its spin-off, “Station 19,” and of “9-1-1,” which is moving from Fox. Read more…

She’s led a revolution in women’s sports

Billie Jean King (shown here) announced her intentions, 70-plus years ago.
At 7, she says, she told her mother she was going to do something great. At 10, she “told my mom, ‘Mommy, I want to be the No. 1tennis player in the world.” At 12, she “promised myself that I would fight for equality the rest of my life.”
And then, remarkably, she did all of that.
Some of the result is clear in PBS’ “Groundbreakers,” from 8-10 p.m. Tuesday (Nov. 21), the eve of her 80th birthday. The documentary partly looks at King’s story – “I’ve had an amazing life, because of being in sports,” she said in a virtual press conference – and mostly looks at changes in life. Read more…

Week’s top-10 for Nov. 20: The holidays take over

1) Thanksgiving Day parade (shown here), 8:30 a.m. Thursday, NBC; 9 a.m., CBS. Both networks show the same 12 marching bands, 26 floats (bearing music by Jon Batiste, Chicago, the Muppets and more) and – just before noon – Santa. The difference is in the early part, with Broadway casts. NBC even starts a half-hour early, to squeeze in five musicals (including “Spamalot” and “Back to the Future”), plus the Rockettes. It has a preview hour at 8 p.m. Wednesday. Read more…