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Year: 2013
Thursday’s “Elizabeth Hurley is a queen, Dan Stevens is a computer and Tom Hollander is Dylan Thomas” news
Film casting
- Jared Harris joins Poltergeist remake
- Benedict Cumberbatch to star in Lost City of Z
Trailers
- New trailer for Gravity
- Trailer for Kill Your Darlings
- Trailer for Best Man Down with Justin Long
Canadian TV
- Warren Christie joins Motive
New UK TV show casting
- Tom Hollander to play Dylan Thomas in BBC2’s A Poet In New York
US TV
- Cinemax to air original Strike Back as Strike Back: Origins
- Trailer for season 4 of Eastbound and Down
- HBO renews: The Newsroom?
US TV casting
- Cynthia Addai-Robinson joins Arrow [minor spoilers]
- Jason O’Mara to recur on The Good Wife
- Hafƥór Julius Björnsson to play The Mountain on Game of Thrones
- Walton Goggins to guest on Community
New US TV shows
- ABC orders: First Timers…
- …and Damaged Goods
- NBC orders: Half
New US TV show casting
- Elizabeth Hurley to star in E!’s The Royals
- Jennifer Finnigan to star in FX’s Tyrant
- Dan Stevens to voice TIM in The CW’s The Tomorrow People
- Graham McTavish and Gary Lewis joins Starz’s Outlander
- Jane Leeves to guest on We Are Men
The Wednesday Play: Up The Junction (1965)
What would Wednesday be like without a little bit of cheery social realism from Ken Loach, hey? You don’t have to imagine, because today’s play is Up The Junction, a Wednesday Play from 1965. Based on the 1963 Nell Dunn novel of the same name, which in turn was based on conversations the authoress overheard in local pubs, the play depicts then-contemporary life in Battersea, showing everything from petty thieving and sexual encounters, to births and deaths. Unsurprisingly, it was watched by 10m viewers and attracted a record 400 complaints.
More importantly, Loach’s characteristic documentary-style depiction of back-street abortions was powerful enough that the public debate was swayed and abortion was legalised in 1967. Loach commented that the use of documentary elements reflected the programme’s scheduling: The Wednesday Play appeared immediately after the evening news. “We were very anxious for our plays not to be considered dramas but as continuations of the news,” he added.
Less importantly, it led to a movie the same year that starred Dennis Waterman and Maureen Lipman. Can’t be helped, that.
Gosh. What larks they got up to behind the scenes of Star Trek: Into Darkness
Ooh, neutron cream. There’s fun. I’m assuming some form of mental deficiency or complicity among those who applied it?
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Wednesday’s “No more True Blood, Midsomer Murders goes to Denmark and NBC’s telenovelas” news
Film
- Horrible Bosses 2 happening
Film casting
- Jared Harris joins The Man From UNCLE, filming to start next week
- Kurt Russell joins Fast & Furious 7
Trailers
- New trailer for Man of T’ai Chi
Book
- Hercule Poirot to return next year
UK TV
- The Midsomer Murders to head to Denmark for 100th episode
US TV
- HBO cancels: True Blood
- Trailer for season 2 of Arrow
- Monday ratings
US TV show casting
- Jason Priestley to guest on 300th CSI episode
New US TV shows
- Starz developing: Survivor’s Remorse
- NBC developing: three telenovelas, including The Black Widow
- ABC adapting: No Way Back
