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Tag: succession

  • Sarah Snook Reveals An Early Casting Agent Told Her:”You’re A Nobody”

    Sarah Snook Reveals An Early Casting Agent Told Her:”You’re A Nobody”

    Sarah Snook is on the crest of a wave, having just collected her second Golden Globe award for her role of Shiv in Succession, but the Australian star reveals that, as an actress starting out, she was treated very badly by both a casting agent and a producer.

    Snook told The Times newspaper that, on one of her very first films, she was told by a casting agent that they didn’t want her “because you’re a nobody,” but the director and writer were pushing for her. She was told: “What we’ll do is change all of you so that you’re marketable: we’ll whiten your teeth, darken your hair, we’ll give you a personal trainer so you can lose weight and look the part.”

    On the same project, Snook revealed that she ate a small piece of cake, and a producer told her off in front of cast and crew, while a costume designer told her to keep eating. “And all the while I am dying inside.”

    Snook played Shiv Roy, Logan Roy’s complex daughter, over four seasons of Succession and she told the newspaper that she wept when the finale aired in May 2023.

    “I was three or four weeks postpartum, the hormones were raging. But it was just the chrysalis of knowing that’s the end of this really important, special part of my life.”

    Her next role promises to be equally challenging, taking on all 26 parts in a production of The Portrait of Dorian Gray on London’s West End stage.

    Caroline Frost

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  • Memorabilia auction for HBO’s ‘Succession’ takes in $627,000 as fans scoop up props, including Tom Ford sneakers at $2,125

    Memorabilia auction for HBO’s ‘Succession’ takes in $627,000 as fans scoop up props, including Tom Ford sneakers at $2,125

    “Hey Buddha, nice Tom Fords,” says Roman Roy, pointing to Kendall’s sneakers in episode two, season four, of the HBO drama Succession. For a final price of $2,125, those Tom Fords could have been yours, spiritual teachings not included.

    The shoes were among 236 lots of memorabilia from the hit series auctioned by US Heritage Auctions on Saturday, fetching a total of $627,000. The priciest item: pink notecards scribbled with the eulogy that Roman (Kieran Culkin) left undelivered at his father’s funeral in the final season. The cards sold for $25,000.

    Succession, the story of three uber-rich siblings vying to take over their father’s media company, ended in May and is currently dominating the awards season. A week ago, the show scooped up four Golden Globes including best TV drama series.

    One of the most iconic items listed was the “ludicrously capacious” Burberry bag carried by an outsider to a family event, which sold for $18,750. The sight of which made Tom Wambsgans, played by Matthew Macfadyen, famously quip, “What’s even in there, huh? Flat shoes for the subway?”

    Collectors also vied for Lukas Matsson’s (Alexander Skarsgard) vape device; Roman’s Walmart kid’s T-shirt, which sold for $1,875; and Kendall’s (Jeremy Strong) fictional Forbes cover issue.

    “We could not be more pleased with Saturday’s auction, and we’re sure those taking home a piece of the Roy legacy will feel the same way,” Heritage Screenbid Managing Director Jax Strobel said in a statement.

    The auction brought in “a lot of fan engagement, not just collectors, but real fans of the show that are participating and bidding,” Strobel said in a separate statement.

    The show led to Instagram accounts documenting the characters’ outfits and is credited with sparking the so-called “quiet luxury” fashion trend. A few lucky collectors now have their hands on Kendall’s Prada suit, sold for $7,500, or Shiv Roy’s (Sarah Snook) Max Mara power outfits.

    Subscribe to the new Fortune CEO Weekly Europe newsletter to get corner office insights on the biggest business stories in Europe. Sign up for free.

    Irina Anghel, Alicia Diaz, Bloomberg

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  • ‘Succession’ Is Ready for a Victory Lap at the 2024 Emmys

    ‘Succession’ Is Ready for a Victory Lap at the 2024 Emmys

    In 2019, the same year that Succession competed for the Emmys for the first time, its network sibling Game of Thrones received a slightly unexpected final embrace from the Television Academy for its last season—unexpected, if only because the final run of HBO’s fantasy was so widely panned. Yet Thrones proved too big to fail, winning awards for outstanding drama series, acting, directing, and a slew of technical achievements. As the Emmys put a stamp on the end of a defining era in TV, a new one dawned. Succession won just one trophy in 2019, for creator Jesse Armstrong’s season-finale script—but from there, it would go on to dominate.

    But Succession’s road to its final Emmy moment has not been entirely smooth. A pandemic and an actors strike (not to mention an unwieldy corporate merger) helped delay the Shakespearean family drama’s Hollywood swan song to this Monday, when the Television Academy is poised to deliver a total sweep, barring any major surprises. Armstrong decided to end the show a bit earlier than most dramas of its popularity and acclaim, at season four; accordingly, perhaps, by all accounts it is going out on a high, having already won the equivalent Golden Globe and surely picking up many industry guild prizes later this winter. Here is one cultural phenomenon that did not overstay its welcome.

    Succession was nominated for more 2024 Emmys than any other program, with a staggering total of 27. Nipping at its heels was another HBO freshman now positioned to define the landscape going forward—The Last of Us, up for 24 awards. Already, the postapocalyptic drama dominated last weekend’s Creative Arts Emmys. It’s doing to Succession what Succession did to Thrones: continuing an extraordinary network legacy, even amid existential industry threats.

    The big question this year is not whether Succession will win for its goodbye run, but exactly who will win for its goodbye. Sarah Snook, nominated twice in supporting, appears to be an overwhelming front-runner for her first shot in lead actress, and should walk away with some Emmy gold before all is said and done. The supporting-actor race has come down to a past winner in Matthew MacFadyen, who arguably had his best season yet as he somehow wound up in the big chair by series’ end, and Alexander Skarsgård, a past winner for a different show (Big Little Lies) whose gleefully antagonistic turn imbued the show with fresh energy. Over in supporting actress, J. Smith-Cameron can’t even be counted out if Succession runs the table, though that may be a place for another network-mate, The White Lotus, to pick up an award for its scene-stealer Jennifer Coolidge.

    And then there’s the matter of best actor. Fully half of the Emmys’ six nominees in the category belong to Succession, with Jeremy Strong a previous winner, Brian Cox a two-time nominee, and Kieran Culkin a newbie to the field, having previously competed—like Snook—in supporting. Also like Snook, Culkin’s billing upgrade may just take him all the way, as Roman’s emotionally tortured arc in the final scene allowed Culkin to run away with many of the most celebrated episodes. Due to the Emmys’ winner-take-all, unranked voting system, there’s also a small chance that The Last of Us pulls off a grand upset here, with Pedro Pascal sneaking around three Roys who split votes, and kick-starting a new phase. How poetic would that be?

    There is less (read: no) chance of that happening in the top category, where Succession will meet a fond farewell and reign, one last time, as the king of dramatic television. It’s been a remarkable run against remarkable tumult, appropriate for a show so steeped in an era of cynical chaos. But of course, this won’t be all for Armstrong and the Roys. They’ll still have to go to the SAG Awards next month. Succession may be over, but awards season never stops.

    David Canfield

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  • Most Memorable Golden Globe Moments, From Lily Gladstone and Ali Wong Making History to Kristen Wiig and Will Ferrell Dancing

    Most Memorable Golden Globe Moments, From Lily Gladstone and Ali Wong Making History to Kristen Wiig and Will Ferrell Dancing

    The 2024 Golden Globe Awards were filled with smiles, laughter, tears and record-breaking moments as well as some awkward ones from the presenters, winners, host and Hollywood audience. From Lily Gladstone and Ali Wong making history with their wins to host Jo Koy struggling to get laughs during his monologue and Kristen Wiig and Will Ferrell showing off their dance moves onstage, here are some of the night’s most memorable moments.

    ‘Succession’ Ties Golden Globes Record

    Succession took home the Golden Globe Award for best TV drama series Sunday — tying a record for the awards in the process. The HBO series won its third Globe in the category, following its victories at the 2020 and 2022 ceremonies. Sunday’s victory ties it with The X-Files (1994, 1996 and 1997) and Mad Men (2007-09) for the most wins for best drama at the Golden Globes. Both Succession and The Crown came into the night with a chance to tie the record. Read more here. — Rick Porter

    Lily Gladstone Makes Golden Globes History

    It’s been exceedingly rare for Indigenous actors to play lead roles in Hollywood, even moreso for prestige, awards-contending projects. As such, it should be little surprise that Lily Gladstone’s 2024 Golden Globe win makes her the first Indigenous actor to win an award in the ceremony’s 81-year history. In taking home best actress in a motion picture, drama for their role in Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon, Gladstone (Blackfeet/Nimíipuu) makes history as the only Indigenous person to take home a Golden Globe. Irene Bedard is the only other actor to previously receive a nomination — for best actress in a miniseries or TV movie for 1994’s Lakota Woman: Siege at Wounded Knee — while director Taika Waititi was recognized for Jojo Rabbit’s best musical/comedy film nomination in 2020 and Reservation Dogs was nominated for best musical/comedy series in 2022. Read more here. — Rebecca Sun

    … As Well As Ali Wong With Her Win

    Ali Wong has struck gold in her first outing as a dramatic lead. The top stand-up comedian has won the 2024 Golden Globe for best actress in a limited series for her performance in Netflix’s Beef. Although Wong previously starred in the rom-com Always Be My Maybe and has a string of voice credits in animated comedies, Beef, with its darkly comic turns and existential meditations, was her first foray into substantive dramatic fare. As Amy Lau, a tightly-wound entrepreneur, wife and mother whose simmering self-loathing leads to an escalating battle of mutually assured destruction opposite Steven Yeun’s scammy contractor Danny (who also won a Golden Globe tonight), Wong, who executive produced the series, won widespread critical praise and is an Emmy nominee for the role. Read more here. — Rebecca Sun

    Host Jo Koy Gets Defensive Amid Monologue Struggles

    Well, there’s definitely been worse. First-time — and relatively last-minute — Golden Globes host Jo Koy struggled a bit to generate laughs during his monologue opening the 2024 awards show Sunday night. “I got the gig 10 days ago!” he told the Beverly Hilton’s celebrity-filled audience at one point. “You want a perfect monologue?” “Some I wrote, some other people wrote,” said Koy, who was announced as host on Dec. 21. “I wrote some of these and those are the ones you’re laughing at.” And later, after one joke got a tepid response, “That’s hilarious, I don’t care.” Read more here. — James Hibberd

    ‘Barbie’ Wins Award for New Golden Globes Category

    More than five years after the Academy Awards introduced (and eventually pulled) a new category recognizing blockbuster films in an attempt to combat falling ratings, the Golden Globes have handed out its own award honoring high-grossing movies. Star Wars star Mark Hamill, who was at the center of one of the first blockbusters nearly 50 years ago, presented the award to Barbie, the top-grossing film of 2023. “Thank you so much for the Golden Globes for creating an award that celebrates movie fans,” said star and producer Margot Robbie, standing next to director and co-writer Greta Gerwig. Read more here. — Aaron Couch

    Kristen Wiig and Will Ferrell Showcase Dance Moves on Stage

    Kristen Wiig and Will Ferrell just couldn’t seem to get through their “serious” presentation at the 2024 Golden Globes Sunday and jokingly blamed “whoever is putting on this show.” While presenting the award for best male actor in a motion picture, musical or comedy (Paul Giamatti won for The Holdovers), the duo seemed to keep getting interrupted by a specific musical melody. “I’m not sure what that was,” Ferrell said after getting cut off mid-sentence the first time. As he continued, “Tonight we applaud the outstanding nominees, legends like Nicolas Cage, Matt Damon…” the Barbie actor got interrupted by the same song again. The pair eventually accepted their fate and just went with it, showing off their dance movies to the quite silly melody. Read more here. — Carly Thomas

    Find the complete list of 2024 Golden Globe winners here.

    Carly Thomas

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  • ‘Barbie,’ ‘Oppenheimer’ Among AFI 2023 Film and TV Award Honorees

    ‘Barbie,’ ‘Oppenheimer’ Among AFI 2023 Film and TV Award Honorees

    The American Film Institute has unveiled its choices for the year’s 10 best films and 10 best TV shows.

    The AFI Awards for films, which fete both Hollywood tentpoles and indie fare, goes to American Fiction, Barbie, The Holdovers, Killers of the Flower Moon, Maestro, May December, Oppenheimer, Past Lives, Poor Things and Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse.

    On the TV front, the 2023 AFI Awards go to Abbott Elementary, The Bear, Beef, Jury Duty, The Last of Us, The Morning Show, Only Murders in the Building, Poker Face, Reservations Dogs and Succession.
    The honorees will be recognized at a private reception on Jan. 12, 2024, at the Four Seasons Hotel in Beverly Hills.

    The intimate and non-competitive AFI Awards show each year draws the biggest creative and industry names in Hollywood to salute the year’s best offerings from the film and TV industry.

    “As our nation and our world continue to navigate difficult times, AFI is honored to shine a proper light upon these works of art that lift us up and, ultimately, lead us to empathy,” Bob Gazzale, AFI president and CEO, said in a statement on Thursday.

    “That we do so without competition is AFI’s hallmark, and we are proud to gather this community of artists together – as one – to celebrate their extraordinary contributions to our time,” Gazzale added.

    The AFI Awards, chosen by a jury comprising AFI trustees, artists, critics and scholars, honor creative teams as a whole by recognizing those in front of and behind the camera.

    Etan Vlessing

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  • Annual Critics Choice Awards TV Nominations: The Crown, Loki, The Last of Us, and Succession lead the way

    Annual Critics Choice Awards TV Nominations: The Crown, Loki, The Last of Us, and Succession lead the way

    The 28th Annual Critics Choice Awards TV Nominations are out for the public to see. It’s that time of the year again, the award season is starting in full force, with some of your favorite series about to get the recognition they deserve for entertaining you throughout the year. Shows like Succession, MCU’s Loki, The Crown, and the widely popular The Last of Us were always expected to make a splash during this season, but there are some underrated series that punched above their weight. Keep scrolling to see the full nominations list.

    BEST DRAMA SERIES

    The Crown (Netflix)

    The Diplomat (Netflix)

    The Last of Us (HBO/Max)

    Loki (Disney+)

    The Morning Show (Apple TV+)

    Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (Paramount+)

    Succession (HBO/Max)

    Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty (HBO/Max)

    BEST ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES

    Kieran Culkin – Succession (HBO/Max)

    Tom Hiddleston – Loki (Disney+)

    Timothy Olyphant – Justified: City Primeval (FX)

    Pedro Pascal – The Last of Us (HBO/Max)

    Ramón Rodríguez – Will Trent (ABC)

    Jeremy Strong – Succession (HBO/Max)

    BEST ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES

    Jennifer Aniston – The Morning Show (Apple TV+)

    Aunjanue Ellis – Justified: City Primeval (FX)

    Bella Ramsey – The Last of Us (HBO/Max)

    Keri Russell – The Diplomat (Netflix)

    Sarah Snook – Succession (HBO/Max)

    Reese Witherspoon – The Morning Show (Apple TV+)

    BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES

    Khalid Abdalla – The Crown (Netflix)

    Billy Crudup – The Morning Show (Apple TV+)

    Ron Cephas Jones – Truth Be Told (Apple TV+)

    Matthew MacFadyen – Succession (HBO/Max)

    Ke Huy Quan – Loki (Disney+)

    Rufus Sewell – The Diplomat (Netflix)

    BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES

    Nicole Beharie – The Morning Show (Apple TV+)

    Elizabeth Debicki – The Crown (Netflix)

    Sophia Di Martino – Loki (Disney+)

    Celia Rose Gooding – Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (Paramount+)

    Karen Pittman – The Morning Show (Apple TV+)

    Christina Ricci – Yellowjackets (Showtime)

    BEST COMEDY SERIES

    Abbott Elementary (ABC)

    Barry (HBO/Max)

    The Bear (FX)

    The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (Prime Video)

    Poker Face (Peacock)

    Reservation Dogs (FX)

    Shrinking (Apple TV+)

    What We Do in the Shadows (FX)

    BEST ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES

    Bill Hader – Barry (HBO | Max)

    Steve Martin – Only Murders in the Building (Hulu)

    Kayvan Novak – What We Do in the Shadows (FX)

    Drew Tarver – The Other Two (HBO/Max)

    Jeremy Allen White – The Bear (FX)

    D’Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai – Reservation Dogs (FX)

    BEST ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES

    Rachel Brosnahan – The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (Prime Video)

    Quinta Brunson – Abbott Elementary (ABC)

    Ayo Edebiri – The Bear (FX)

    Bridget Everett – Somebody Somewhere (HBO/Max)

    Devery Jacobs – Reservation Dogs (FX)

    Natasha Lyonne – Poker Face (Peacock)

    BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES

    Phil Dunster – Ted Lasso (Apple TV+)

    Harrison Ford – Shrinking (Apple TV+)

    Harvey Guillén – What We Do in the Shadows (FX)

    James Marsden – Jury Duty (Amazon Freevee)

    Ebon Moss-Bachrach – The Bear (FX)

    Henry Winkler – Barry (HBO/Max)

    BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES

    Paulina Alexis – Reservation Dogs (FX)

    Alex Borstein – The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (Prime Video)

    Janelle James – Abbott Elementary (ABC)

    Sheryl Lee Ralph – Abbott Elementary (ABC)

    Meryl Streep – Only Murders in the Building (Hulu)

    Jessica Williams – Shrinking (Apple TV+)

    BEST LIMITED SERIES

    Beef (Netflix)

    Daisy Jones & the Six (Prime Video)

    Fargo (FX)

    Fellow Travelers (Showtime)

    Lessons in Chemistry (Apple TV+)

    Love & Death (HBO/Max)

    A Murder at the End of the World (FX)

    A Small Light (National Geographic)

    BEST MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION

    The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial (Showtime)

    Finestkind (Paramount+)

    Mr. Monk’s Last Case: A Monk Movie (Peacock)

    No One Will Save You (Hulu)

    Quiz Lady (Hulu)

    Reality (HBO | Max)

    BEST ACTOR IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION

    Matt Bomer – Fellow Travelers (Showtime)

    Tom Holland – The Crowded Room (Apple TV+)

    David Oyelowo – Lawmen: Bass Reeves (Paramount+)

    Tony Shalhoub – Mr. Monk’s Last Case: A Monk Movie (Peacock)

    Kiefer Sutherland – The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial (Showtime)

    Steven Yeun – Beef (Netflix)

    BEST ACTRESS IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION

    Kaitlyn Dever – No One Will Save You (Hulu)

    Brie Larson – Lessons in Chemistry (Apple TV+)

    Bel Powley – A Small Light (National Geographic)

    Sydney Sweeney – Reality (HBO/Max)

    Juno Temple – Fargo (FX)

    Ali Wong – Beef (Netflix)

    BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION

    Jonathan Bailey – Fellow Travelers (Showtime)

    Taylor Kitsch – Painkiller (Netflix)

    Jesse Plemons – Love & Death (HBO/Max)

    Lewis Pullman – Lessons in Chemistry (Apple TV+)

    Liev Schreiber – A Small Light (National Geographic)

    Justin Theroux – White House Plumbers (HBO/Max)

    BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION

    Maria Bello – Beef (Netflix)

    Billie Boullet – A Small Light (National Geographic)

    Willa Fitzgerald – The Fall of the House of Usher (Netflix)

    Aja Naomi King – Lessons in Chemistry (Apple TV+)

    Mary McDonnell – The Fall of the House of Usher (Netflix)

    Camila Morrone – Daisy Jones & the Six (Prime Video)

    BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE SERIES

    Bargain (Paramount+)

    The Glory (Netflix)

    The Good Mothers (Hulu)

    The Interpreter of Silence (Hulu)

    Lupin (Netflix)

    Mask Girl (Netflix)

    Moving (Hulu)

    BEST ANIMATED SERIES

    Bluey (Disney+)

    Bob’s Burgers (Fox)

    Harley Quinn (HBO/Max)

    Scott Pilgrim Takes Off (Netflix)

    Star Trek: Lower Decks (Paramount+)

    Young Love (HBO/Max)

    BEST TALK SHOW

    The Graham Norton Show (BBC America)

    Jimmy Kimmel Live! (ABC)

    The Kelly Clarkson Show (NBC)

    Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO/ Max)

    Late Night with Seth Meyers (NBC)

    The Late Show with Stephen Colbert (CBS)

    BEST COMEDY SPECIAL

    Mike Birbiglia: The Old Man and the Pool (Netflix)

    Alex Borstein: Corsets & Clown Suits (Prime Video)

    John Early: Now More Than Ever (HBO/Max)

    John Mulaney: Baby J (Netflix)

    Trevor Noah: Where Was I (Netflix)

    Wanda Sykes – I’m an Entertainer (Netflix)

    ALSO READ: Song Hye Kyo’s The Glory and Nana’s Mask Girl secure nominations at 29th Critics’ Choice Awards

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  • Succession’s Jesse Armstrong Almost Didn’t Pick a New CEO

    Succession’s Jesse Armstrong Almost Didn’t Pick a New CEO

    Jesse Armstrong never intended for you to empathize with the Roys. In a new interview with The New York Times, the Succession creator shared his thoughts and intentions regarding the “deeply unmoored” Roy family, potentially ending Succession without naming a successor, and the depiction of wealth on the program: “It’s making them sicker.”

    Viewers had to wait till the final moments of Succession to find out whether Kendall (Jeremy Strong), Shiv (Sarah Snook), or Roman (Kieran Culkin) would succeed their father Logan Roy (Brian Cox) as the head of the family empire. But while determining who would take over Waystar Royco was the driving action of the series, Armstrong says that he toyed with the idea of never answering that question and ultimately leaving viewers in the dark. “That would be the sort of question I might come into the writers’ room with, like, ‘What would it be like if we didn’t give a successor? Could that be interesting?’” he tells the Times. “Through a process of discussion with smart people, we were like, ‘No, that would be annoying. Let’s not do it.’ One of the reasons for ending the show is that it starts to become either ridiculous or annoying if you continually defer that decision.”

    Armstrong admits that he never really intended for the viewer to empathize with Logan Roy and his progeny. “It was never really a consideration. That may be a defect in our working process,” says Armstrong. “Maybe I could try to elicit the audience’s sympathy for someone, but I wouldn’t want to with this show. It would just feel so fake.” While Succession may not be concerned with its audience empathizing with the Roy family, Armstrong goes onto elucidate what he believes the show really is about. “It’s a show with these particular familial dynamics and with this relationship to power and money,” he says. “Everything flowed from that.”

    Audiences took to Succession despite or, more likely because of, all the horrible things Roys did over the course of show’s four seasons. After reaching its bleak conclusion on May 28th, Succession earned 27 Emmy nominations, including nods for all of the main cast as well as two for Armstrong for writing and executive producing the series. According to the Times, Armstrong is only just now sifting through reactions to the show.  “At the time, I kept my nose out of most of the reactions, because it wasn’t useful to know what people were thinking about the show. You can get a bit bent out of shape,” he says. “I like critics. I believe in criticism as an important part of keeping the cultural world going. But I didn’t look at a ton of stuff before the show ended.”

    Now that the series is over, Armstrong can share that although Succession wasn’t designed to engender sympathy for the Roy family, he’s able to find “a lot of sympathy for the characters” when viewing them from a psychological perspective rather than an idealogical one. “The show takes more of a psychological view than a Marxist one. That’s the level at which I do have a lot of sympathy for the characters and I would hope that the audience does too,” he says. “They are pretty bad. They do bad stuff. But you see where they come from psychologically. That’s one of the tragedies of those kids’ lives.” 

    “A lot of the spaces that these people inhabit, these five-star hotels and private plane interiors, it’s not actually a beautiful world,” he continues. “That came from the research. There’s not a lot of fun going on in those worlds. Everyone is constantly thinking of the press release rather than the pleasure. That didn’t come from a precept that great wealth won’t make you happy. It probably could do. But not for these people.”

    Despite their obscene wealth, the Roys, it seems, were doomed from the start. “It’s a very particular world, right? It’s a portrayal of what is possible within the moral universe created by a business and a family. The possibilities are really circumscribed. But they exist. The intention is to show this world truthfully as possible,” Armstrong says. “One of the few more things they have is family, and it has that incredible magnetism for them. It’s like they’re hooking up constantly to an IV drip and they don’t realize that there’s a percentage of poison in the IV. It’s not making them better. It’s making them sicker.”

    Chris Murphy

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  • Alan Ruck grateful ‘nobody was killed’ in multicar crash at Hollywood pizzeria

    Alan Ruck grateful ‘nobody was killed’ in multicar crash at Hollywood pizzeria

    Alan Ruck is doing fine after crashing his Rivian truck into a Los Angeles pizzeria on Tuesday.

    The “Succession” star was spotted Thursday leaving a convenience store in L.A. and graciously answered a few paparazzi questions about the incident.

    “I’m OK,” Ruck said in the footage obtained by TMZ. “I’m fine and thank God nobody was killed.”

    Representatives for the actor did not immediately respond Friday to The Times’ requests for further comment.

    On Halloween, Ruck’s electric pickup truck smashed into the side of Raffallo’s Pizza in Hollywood. The Los Angeles Police Department confirmed to The Times that a crash occurred around 9 p.m. Tuesday at the intersection of La Brea Avenue and Hollywood Boulevard. Four vehicles were involved in the collision and minor injuries were reported.

    LAPD public information officer Matthew Cruz told The Times on Friday that “there was no crime involved in this incident and there was no arrest.”

    Surveillance footage showed the Rivian traveling south on La Brea approaching Hollywood Boulevard when it rear-ended a vehicle. The impact pushed that vehicle into the intersection, where it then crashed into another vehicle. The Rivian, meanwhile, continued in a southwest direction, clipping a separate car before slamming into the side of Raffallo’s Pizza. Photos show the cab of the truck breaking through the building’s exterior.

    A 32-year-old man from one of the other vehicles was hospitalized with non-life-threatening injuries, officials told KTLA-TV Channel 5. Ruck was not hurt and was later seen on video speaking with police at the scene, the local news station reported Thursday.

    Law enforcement officials also told KTLA that no charges will be filed as a result of the multicar crash and impairment was not suspected.

    While speaking to paparazzi Thursday, the 67-year-old Ruck acknowledged that he had been limping and wore a brace on his left knee. However, he said, they were not related to the crash.

    “This isn’t from the accident,” Ruck said. “This is because I’m getting old.”

    He also told the videographers that he’s aware that the recent crash is being compared to his famous Ferrari crash scene from his 1986 film, “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.”

    Incidentally, another of Ruck’s injuries made its way into a 2021 episode of “Succession.” The actor tore his shoulder while shoveling snow and the cast that he wore during his recovery was written into a Season 3 episode set inside Kendall Roy’s 40th birthday party. Ruck’s Connor Roy claims he had a fall at his ranch and annoys his younger brother by refusing to take off his coat during the lavish celebration.

    Times staff writer Emily St. Martin contributed to this report.

    Nardine Saad

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  • ‘Succession’ star Alan Ruck reportedly crashed into Hollywood pizza parlor

    ‘Succession’ star Alan Ruck reportedly crashed into Hollywood pizza parlor

    The universe apparently wanted “Succession” star Alan Ruck to get some pizza on Halloween.

    Surveillance video shows a Rivian truck — reportedly driven by Ruck — smash into the side of Raffallo’s Pizza in Hollywood. Los Angeles police confirmed to The Times that a crash occurred around 9 p.m. Tuesday at the intersection of La Brea Avenue and Hollywood Boulevard.

    Four vehicles were involved in the collision, according to LAPD Sgt. Hector Guzman.

    “There were injuries reported, but they appear to be minor,” Guzman said. “Nothing life threatening in nature.”

    Surveillance video captured the action. The Rivian is traveling southbound on La Brea approaching Hollywood Boulevard when it rear-ends a vehicle. The impact pushes that vehicle into the intersection, where it then crashes into a another vehicle. The Rivian, meanwhile, has continued in a southwest direction, clipping a separate car before slamming into the side of Raffallo’s Pizza. Photos show the cab of the truck breaking through the building’s exterior.

    A truck slammed into the wall of a pizza shop in Hollywood on Tuesday night.

    (KTLA)

    “The whole building shook and I thought a bomb or something had exploded,” Tim Ratcliff, who owns restaurants close to Raffallo’s, told KTLA.

    Ratcliff told the outlet that he rushed to help the driver, who “appeared more concerned about the well-being of others than his own.”

    No one involved in the incident was arrested for driving under the influence, police said.

    According to TMZ, Ruck stayed at the scene of the crash. He was seen outside of his vehicle, talking on his cellphone while the damage was assessed.

    The police investigation into the crash is ongoing.

    Emily St. Martin

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  • How Rupert Murdoch’s Retirement Protected Lachlan’s Perch

    How Rupert Murdoch’s Retirement Protected Lachlan’s Perch

    One of the pleasures of watching the final season of HBO’s media dynasty drama Succession was knowing that the Murdochs were obsessed with the show even as they professed not to watch it. In my May Vanity Fair cover story about the Murdochs—the inspiration for the fictional Roy clan—I reported that Rupert Murdoch’s divorce settlement with his fourth wife Jerry Hall mandated that Hall couldn’t give story ideas to the Succession writers. “Rupert and Lachlan hated the show,” a person close to the family told me.

    Which is why it’s deliciously ironic that Rupert’s decision to retire last month and elevate his eldest son Lachlan to the throne was made to avoid the chaos that played out on Succession’s final season. Spoiler alert: In the acclaimed third episode, patriarch Logan Roy dies suddenly on his private jet without having named a successor. In a document found in Logan’s safe about who should take over, his second eldest son Kendall’s name is either underlined or crossed out, depending on how you interpreted the handwriting. The ambiguity creates a power vacuum that paralyzes the family and the company.

    According to three sources close to the Murdochs, Rupert and Lachlan agreed Rupert should retire while he was alive to avoid a messy transfer of power as befell the Roys. “Lachlan’s message to Rupert was: You could drop dead on the job! There has to be a plan in place now,” said one of the sources briefed on the conversations. “Lachlan didn’t want his father to go, but it was more like, How long are we going to pretend you’re immortal?” As I’ve previously reported, Rupert’s health was buffeted by crises. In recent years, he was secretly hospitalized for a broken back, seizures, two bouts of pneumonia, atrial fibrillation, a torn Achilles tendon, and COVID-19.

    According to the second source close to the family, Rupert first broached the idea of retirement to Lachlan two years ago. Since then, the two have had long conversations about the timing of the decision. The source added that Lachlan did not pressure Rupert to go. Rupert told Lachlan he wanted to step down before this year’s annual shareholder meeting. None of my sources said the decision was made because Lachlan and Rupert were reacting to the Succession plotline. “It’s more of a case where truth is stranger than fiction,” the first source said.

    By retiring while still alive, Rupert has solidified his chosen heir’s place on the throne—for now. It’s harder to remove Lachlan when he’s been officially anointed by Rupert. But the ultimate future of the media empire will be decided by Rupert’s four adult children from his first and second marriages. As I’ve previously reported, Lachlan’s younger brother James wants Fox News to become a centrist and fact-based news network after Rupert’s death. But to topple Lachlan, James will need his older sisters Elisabeth and Prudence to support him. It’s too early to tell which way their votes would go. For now, at least, Lachlan is in charge.

    A spokesperson for Fox Corp declined to comment.

    Gabriel Sherman

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  • ‘Succession’ Actor Hospitalized After Rare Otter Attack

    ‘Succession’ Actor Hospitalized After Rare Otter Attack

    Otters in Northern California have just aligned themselves with “Succession” haters.

    The carnivorous mammals attacked Crystal Finn, who appeared in the HBO show’s final season as ATN producer Lauren Pawson, as she was swimming in the Feather River near Plumas National Forest, and sent her to the hospital with bite wounds.

    “I felt something on my backside and on my leg,” Finn told the San Francisco Chronicle Wednesday of the July encounter. “I started looking around and yelling out and [the otters] popped up right in front of me. Then they dove down and started going at me again.”

    “I could see the bites on my legs and knew I had been bitten on my butt — that one was the worst, but I couldn’t see it,” she continued. “The bites really hurt.”

    Finn, who won a Theatre World Award in 2022 for her Broadway debut opposite Debra Messing in “Birthday Candles,” was admitted to Tahoe Forest Hospital in nearby Truckee with bite injuries.

    Otter attacks are exceedingly rare, but the actor wasn’t the only recent victim.

    Martin Rosengreen, an emergency room doctor at the hospital, told the Chronicle that two people (possibly including Finn) were admitted for otter injuries within days of each other in July. That’s the first anyone at the hospital had seen an otter victim, he said.

    Finn said she was glad not have brought her daughter along for the harrowing swim in July.

    Left: CJ Rivera/Getty Images; Right: Jean-Francois Monier/AFP/Getty Images

    There have reportedly only been 59 documented otter attacks worldwide since 1875.

    The Chronicle suggested the otters that attacked Finn emerged as a result of heavy winter rains that raised river water levels.

    Jen Royce of Bozeman, Montana, chronicled a harrowing otter encounter of her own this week. She said she was floating down the Jefferson River with friends and “didn’t even have the chance” to warn them before otters nearly chomped off her ear.

    “Otters can be protective of themselves and their young, especially at close distances,” said Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks. “They give birth to their young in April and can later be seen with their young in the water during the summer.”

    Finn told the Chronicle she was glad not to have brought her own daughter along for her harrowing swim.

    “It would have been a lot worse,” she said.

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  • These Deserving Emmy Contenders Just Got a Significant Awards Boost

    These Deserving Emmy Contenders Just Got a Significant Awards Boost

    As Emmy voters prepare to submit their ballots later this month, the Television Critics Association just provided a good blueprint for shaking things up a bit this year.

    The organization honored Succession for both program of the year, its top award recognizing exceptional cultural import, and outstanding achievement in drama, its equivalent to the Emmys’ top drama-series prize. The Bear continued its hot streak by winning on the comedy side, as well as taking the new program category. But elsewhere, the TCA eschewed obvious front-runners by recognizing shows and performers that are very much in the conversation—which is to say, Emmy-nominated—but haven’t exactly gotten their big awards moment yet.  

    Most thrillingly, Rhea Seehorn won the individual-achievement-in-drama award. Notably, the TCAs do not differentiate between lead or supporting, and also combine nominees into a genderless performer category. This means that the Better Call Saul scene-stealer was up against both prime Emmy competitors in supporting actress as well as all those Roy siblings on Succession. It’s her highest-profile win with any awards group to date, a visibility boost that can hopefully increase her chances when it comes to her last Emmys stand for Saul’s final season. 

    Over in comedy’s performer race, the front-runners—including The Bear’s Jeremy Allen White and Abbott Elementary’s Quinta Brunson—were similarly beaten out in a welcome upset for Natasha Lyonne. The Poker Face star is the only above-the-line Emmy nominee for her Peacock breakout procedural, and she’s in a competitive Emmy race that also includes Dead to Me’s Christina Applegate and Wednesday’s Jenna Ortega. But her wonderfully funny and grounding performance stands apart, and may stand a shot as a fresher option for the Television Academy.

    Elsewhere, Jury Duty—nominated by the TCA for achievement in comedy and James Marsden’s performance—eked out a win for, of all things, reality program, for which the Emmys did not consider it eligible. I Think You Should Leave’s win in variety programming here tells a similar story, since the Tim Robinson sketch comedy competes instead as a short-form series with the Television Academy. At least both parties wound up agreeing on Beef’s classification as a limited series, after some initial categorization confusion. The Netflix dark comedy, starring Steven Yeun and Ali Wong, won the top race with TCAs this week, and is positioned as a strong favorite for the Emmys—whenever the broadcast may finally air. 

    All of which is to say—maybe it’s worth paying a bit more attention to these results, with so much of the usual phase two campaign apparatus MIA, due to the ongoing SAG-AFTRA and WGA strikes. Voters could do worse than look at these results for some inspiration. 

    Full winners list:

    • Program of the Year: Succession
    • Outstanding New Program: The Bear
    • Outstanding Achievement in Comedy: The Bear
    • Outstanding Achievement in Drama: Succession
    • Outstanding Achievement in Movies, Miniseries, or Specials: Beef
    • Individual Achievement in Comedy: Natasha Lyonne, Poker Face
    • Individual Achievement in Drama: Rhea Seehorn, Better Call Saul
    • Outstanding Achievement in Variety, Talk, or Sketch: I Think You Should Leave With Tim Robinson
    • Outstanding Achievement in Family Programming: Ms. Marvel
    • Outstanding Achievement in Children’s Programming: Bluey
    • Outstanding Achievement in Reality: Jury Duty
    • Outstanding Achievement in News and Information: The U.S. and the Holocaust

    Listen to Vanity Fair’s Little Gold Men podcast now.

    David Canfield

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  • Emmys 2023: Succession, The Last Of Us bag top nods. See the full list of nominations here:

    Emmys 2023: Succession, The Last Of Us bag top nods. See the full list of nominations here:

    The nominations for the 75th Emmy Awards 2023 have been announced. The past year has been eventful in terms of TV shows. From the hugely satisfying season of Succession to the fan-favourite The Last of Us led by Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey and the binge-worthy The White Lotus, a lot has happened.

    Among the shows that bagged tops nods is Succession. The series with its satisfying final season earned 27 nominations. The Last of Us followed close behind with 24 nominations. Meanwhile, The White Lotus got 23 nominations and Ted Lasso came in with 21.

    Here’s the full list of nominations for the Emmy Awards 2023:

    Outstanding drama series

    Andor
    Better Call Saul
    The Crown
    House of the Dragon
    The Last of Us
    Succession
    The White Lotus
    Yellowjackets

    Outstanding comedy series

    Abbott Elementary
    Barry
    The Bear
    Jury Duty
    The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
    Only Murders in the Building
    Ted Lasso
    Wednesday

    Outstanding limited series

    Beef
    Dahmer — Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story
    Daisy Jones & the Six
    Fleishman Is in Trouble
    Obi-Wan Kenobi

    Outstanding lead actor in a drama series

    Jeff Bridges, The Old Man
    Brian Cox, Succession
    Kieran Culkin, Succession
    Bob Odenkirk, Better Call Saul
    Pedro Pascal, The Last of Us
    Jeremy Strong, Succession

    Outstanding lead actress in a drama series

    Sharon Horgan, Bad Sisters
    Melanie Lynskey, Yellowjackets
    Elisabeth Moss, The Handmaid’s Tale
    Bella Ramsey, The Last of Us
    Keri Russell, The Diplomat
    Sarah Snook, Succession

    Outstanding supporting actor in a drama series

    F. Murray Abraham, The White Lotus
    Nicholas Braun, Succession
    Michael Imperioli, The White Lotus
    Theo James, The White Lotus
    Matthew Macfadyen, Succession
    Alan Ruck, Succession
    Will Sharpe, The White Lotus
    Alexander Skarsgård, Succession

    Outstanding supporting actress in a drama series

    Jennifer Coolidge, The White Lotus
    Elizabeth Debicki, The Crown
    Meghann Fahy, The White Lotus
    Sabrina Impacciatore, The White Lotus
    Aubrey Plaza, The White Lotus
    Rhea Seehorn, Better Call Saul
    J. Smith-Cameron, Succession
    Simona Tabasco, The White Lotus

    Outstanding lead actor in a comedy series

    Bill Hader, Barry
    Martin Short, Only Murders in the Building
    Jason Segel, Shrinking
    Jason Sudeikis, Ted Lasso
    Jeremy Allen White, The Bear

    Outstanding lead actress in a comedy series

    Christina Applegate, Dead to Me
    Rachel Brosnahan, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
    Quinta Brunson, Abbott Elementary
    Natasha Lyonne, Poker Face
    Jenna Ortega, Wednesday

    Outstanding supporting actor in a comedy series

    Alex Borstein, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
    Ayo Edebiri, The Bear
    Janelle James, Abbott Elementary
    Sheryl Lee Ralph, Abbott Elementary
    Juno Temple, Ted Lasso
    Hannah Waddingham, Ted Lasso
    Jessica Williams, Shrinking

    Outstanding supporting actress in a comedy series

    Anthony Carrigan, Barry
    Phil Dunster, Ted Lasso
    Brett Goldstein, Ted Lasso
    James Marsden, Jury Duty
    Ebon Moss-Bachrach, The Bear
    Tyler James Williams, Abbott Elementary
    Henry Winkler, Barry

    Outstanding lead actor in a limited series or TV movie

    Taron Egerton, Black Bird
    Kumail Nanjiani, Welcome to Chippendales
    Evan Peters, Dahmer — Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story
    Daniel Radcliffe, Weird: The Al Yankovic Story
    Michael Shannon, George & Tammy
    Steven Yeun, Beef

    Outstanding lead actress in a limited series or TV movie

    Lizzy Caplan, Fleishman Is in Trouble
    Jessica Chastain, George & Tammy
    Dominique Fishback, Swarm
    Kathryn Hahn, Tiny Beautiful Things
    Riley Keough, Daisy Jones & the Six
    Ali Wong, Beef

    Outstanding supporting actor in a limited series or TV movie

    Murray Bartlett, Welcome To Chippendales
    Paul Walter Hauser, Black Bird
    Richard Jenkins Dahmer, Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story
    Joseph Lee, Beef
    Ray Liotta, Black Bird
    Young Mazino, Beef
    Jesse Plemons, Love & Death

    Outstanding supporting actress in a limited series or TV movie

    Annaleigh Ashford, Welcome To Chippendales
    Maria Bello, Beef
    Claire Danes, Fleishman Is In Trouble
    Juliette Lewis, Welcome To Chippendales
    Camila Morrone, Daisy Jones & The Six
    Niecy Nash-Betts, Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story
    Merritt Wever, Tiny Beautiful Things

    Outstanding reality/competition series

    The Amazing Race
    RuPaul’s Drag Race
    Survivor
    Top Chef
    The Voice

    Outstanding variety talk series

    The Daily Show with Trevor Noah
    Jimmy Kimmel Live!
    Late Night With Seth Meyers
    The Late Show with Stephen Colbert
    The Problem with Jon Stewart

    Filmfare

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  • 2023 Emmy Awards nominations: ‘Succession,’ ‘Last of Us’ expected to win big – National | Globalnews.ca

    2023 Emmy Awards nominations: ‘Succession,’ ‘Last of Us’ expected to win big – National | Globalnews.ca

    It’s been a great year for television, and the 75th Primetime Emmy Awards are celebrating a number of fan favourites, including HBO’s Succession and The Last of Us.

    Actor Yvette Nicole Brown and Television Academy chairman Frank Scherma announced the Emmy nominations on Wednesday, though the mood was more sombre than usual amid the ongoing writers strike. An actors strike may also be looming, with Hollywood’s largest union representing about 160,000 actors currently demanding better compensation for streaming productions and protections from the use of artificial intelligence (AI).

    Succession, a satirical dramedy about a family of one-percenters fighting to control a media conglomerate, walked away with the most nominations for the show’s highly anticipated final season. Stars Brian Cox, Jeremy Strong and Kieran Culkin scored Best Actor nods. Sarah Snook, who plays Shiv Roy, is already a well-positioned frontrunner to score the Best Actress win.

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    The show leads all nominees with a whopping 27 in total. The Last of Us was close behind with 24, while The White Lotus received 23.

    The Last of Us and The White Lotus, two additional HBO productions, received several nominations, proving once again that streaming remains king in the television space.


    Click to play video: '2023 Emmy Awards nominees for lead actor, actress in a drama series announced'


    2023 Emmy Awards nominees for lead actor, actress in a drama series announced


    Popular duo Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey of The Last of Us received Best Actor and Actress nominations for their emotional portrayal of trauma-bonded apocalypse survivors. (Ramsey identifies as nonbinary and uses any pronouns)

    Jennifer Coolidge, who won the Emmy last year for Outstanding Actress in a Limited or Series or Movie, is nominated alongside The White Lotus co-stars Aubrey Plaza and Meghann Fahy.

    Christina Applegate, who in February hinted she would retire from acting as a result of her multiple sclerosis (MS) diagnosis, received a nomination for Best Lead Actress in a Comedy for Dead to Me. 

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    Barry, The Bear, Ted Lasso, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel and Abbott Elementary all earned several nominations as well.

    (Find a complete list of the nominees in the major categories, below.)

    Best Drama Series

    Andor
    Better Call Saul
    The Crown
    House of the Dragon
    The Last of Us
    Succession
    The White Lotus
    Yellowjackets

    Best Comedy Series

    Abbott Elementary
    Barry
    The Bear
    Jury Duty
    The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
    Only Murders in the Building
    Ted Lasso
    Wednesday

    Lead Actor, Drama

    Jeff Bridges, The Old Man
    Brian Cox, Succession
    Kieran Culkin, Succession
    Bob Odenkirk, Better Call Saul
    Pedro Pascal, The Last of Us
    Jeremy Strong, Succession

    Lead Actress, Drama

    Sharon Horgan, Bad Sisters
    Melanie Lynskey, Yellowjackets
    Elisabeth Moss, The Handmaid’s Tale
    Bella Ramsey, The Last of Us
    Keri Russell, The Diplomat
    Sarah Snook, Succession

    Lead Actor, Comedy

    Bill Hader, Barry
    Jason Segel, Shrinking
    Martin Short, Only Murders in the Building
    Jason Sudeikis, Ted Lasso
    Jeremy Allen White, The Bear

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    Lead Actress, Comedy

    Christina Applegate, Dead to Me
    Rachel Brosnahan, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
    Quinta Brunson, Abbott Elementary
    Natasha Lyonne, Poker Face
    Jenna Ortega, Wednesday

    Supporting Actor, Drama

    F. Murray Abraham, The White Lotus
    Nicholas Braun, Succession
    Michael Imperioli, The White Lotus
    Theo James, The White Lotus
    Matthew Macfadyen, Succession
    Alan Ruck, Succession
    Will Sharpe, The White Lotus
    Alexander Skarsgård, Succession

    Supporting Actress, Drama

    J. Smith-Cameron, Succession
    Jennifer Coolidge, The White Lotus
    Elizabeth Debicki, The Crown
    Meghann Fahy, The White Lotus
    Sabrina Impacciatore, The White Lotus
    Aubrey Plaza, The White Lotus
    Rhea Seehorn, Better Call Saul
    Simona Tabasco, The White Lotus

    Supporting Actor, Comedy

    Anthony Carrigan, Barry
    Phil Dunster, Ted Lasso
    Brett Goldstein, Ted Lasso
    James Marsden, Jury Duty
    Ebon Moss-Bachrach, The Bear
    Tyler James Williams, Abbott Elementary
    Henry Winkler, Barry

    Supporting Actress, Comedy

    Alex Borstein, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
    Ayo Edebiri, The Bear
    Janelle James, Abbott Elementary
    Sheryl Lee Ralph, Abbott Elementary
    Juno Temple, Ted Lasso
    Hannah Waddingham, Ted Lasso
    Jessica Williams, Shrinking

    Guest Actor, Drama

    Murray Bartlett, The Last of Us
    James Cromwell, Succession
    Lamar Johnson, The Last of Us
    Arian Moayed, Succession
    Nick Offerman, The Last of Us
    Keivonn Montreal Woodard, The Last of Us

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    Guest Actress, Drama

    Hiam Abbass, Succession
    Cherry Jones, Succession
    Melanie Lynskey, The Last of Us
    Storm Reid, The Last of Us
    Anna Torv, The Last of Us
    Harriet Walter, Succession

    Guest Actor, Comedy

    Jon Bernthal, The Bear
    Luke Kirby, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
    Nathan Lane, Only Murders in the Building
    Pedro Pascal, Saturday Night Live
    Oliver Platt, The Bear
    Sam Richardson, Ted Lasso

    Guest Actress, Comedy

    Becky Ann Baker, Ted Lasso
    Quinta Brunson, Saturday Night Live
    Taraji P. Henson, Abbott Elementary
    Judith Light, Poker Face
    Sarah Niles, Ted Lasso
    Harriet Walter, Ted Lasso

    Variety Talk Series

    The Daily Show with Trevor Noah
    Jimmy Kimmel Live!
    Late Night with Seth Meyers
    The Late Show with Stephen Colbert
    The Problem With Jon Stewart

    Best Competition Series

    The Amazing Race
    Ru Paul’s Drag Race 
    Survivor
    Top Chef 
    The Voice 

    Best Limited or Anthology Series

    Beef
    Dahmer—Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story
    Daisy Jones and the Six
    Fleishman Is in Trouble
    Obi-Wan Kenobi

    Lead Actor, Limited Series or Movie

    Taron Egerton, Black Bird
    Kumail Nanjiani, Welcome the Chippendales
    Evan Peters, Dahmer—Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story
    Daniel Radcliffe, Weird: The Al Yankovic Story
    Michael Shannon, George & Tammy
    Steven Yeun, Beef

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    Lead Actress, Limited Series or Movie

    Lizzy Caplan, Fleishman Is in Trouble
    Jessica Chastain, George & Tammy
    Dominique Fishback, Swarm
    Kathryn Hahn, Tiny Beautiful Things
    Riley Keough, Daisy Jones and the Six
    Ali Wong, Beef

    Supporting Actor, Limited Series or Movie

    Murray Bartlett, Welcome to Chippendales
    Paul Walter Hauser, Black Bird
    Richard Jenkins, Dahmer—Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story
    Joseph Lee, Beef
    Ray Liotta, Black Bird
    Young Mazino, Beef
    Jesse Plemons, Love & Death

    Supporting Actress, Limited Series or Movie

    Annaleigh Ashford, Welcome to Chippendales
    Maria Bello, Beef
    Claire Danes, Fleishman Is in Trouble
    Juliette Lewis, Welcome to Chippendales
    Camila Morrone, Daisy Jones & The Six
    Nicey Nash-Betts, Dahmer—Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story
    Merritt Wever, Tiny Beautiful Things

    The 75th Primetime Emmy Awards will be held in Los Angeles on Sept. 18, starting at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT.

    For a complete list of nominees, please visit the official Emmys site.

    With files from The Associated Press

    Sarah Do Couto

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  • How ‘Succession’ Director Mark Mylod Captured the Most Important Scene of the Series

    How ‘Succession’ Director Mark Mylod Captured the Most Important Scene of the Series

    It was the boardroom scene to end all boardroom scenes. In the series finale of HBO’s Succession, Roman (Kieran Culkin), Shiv (Sarah Snook), and Kendall (Jeremy Strong) chew each other to pieces in a literal knock-down, drag-out fight which spells the end of the Roy family empire as well as the Roy siblings.

    “The whole structure of the series is the cruelty of hope, isn’t it?” says frequent Succession director Mark Mylod, who helmed the finale and three other episodes this season. “When I’m reading it, even though I know where it’s going, I’m still thinking, Oh, actually, they could be happy. There is a life where they can escape the gravitational pull of Waystar and actually live free and independent lives and have healthy relationships. Of course, all of which is totally futile.”

    To capture this futility, Mylod and Succession cinematographer Patrick Capone leaned into the voyeurism of the Roy siblings’ final showdown, captured through the glass walls of a boardroom. After Shiv hurriedly exits the boardroom with the final vote for control of Waystar Royco still hanging in the balance, the three siblings convene to hash out whether she should vote for Kendall to take over as CEO or sell the company to Lukas Matsson (Alexander Skarsgård). Their conversation quickly devolves into a wrestling match between Roman and “eldest boy” Kendall, as Shiv ultimately decides to sell the company to Matsson rather than let Kendall take over as CEO.

    “We wanted to use the reflections and the glass bowl within the glass bowl within the glass building,” says Capone. The result is the Roy children on full display, putting on a show of their worst qualities and deepest insecurities in front of both board members and their employees. “With camera placement and the actors blocking, we were able to make their fight kind of on a little bit of a stage where the board members can see it and yet they can’t hear it,” continues Capone. “Only we can hear it until it really gets vocal toward the end.”

    “It was probably the most important scene of the entire series,” says Mylod. “It’s hard [for the actors] to wake up in the morning and think, This is what we’re going to explore today. There’s a dread that goes with that and a fear, but also, coming home from work after those days, a sense of almost elation when one has a feeling that we’ve captured the essence and the intention of the writing and the intensity of it and done it justice, hopefully.”

    Both Mylod and Capone tried not to get in the way of the action that unspools, letting it unfold as naturally as possible. “That’s the beauty of our style,” says Capone, “It’s just so subjective and the camera has the ability to really point the audience where we feel they should go to get what’s being told, like a fly on the wall.”

    THE SCRIPT

    Mylod reacted with “wonder and awe” when he finally received the script for the series finale which lays waste to the Roy siblings. “The actual final scripts come in very late and then there’s a number of drafts that come in,” Mylod says. “So it’s not like, bam, there’s your script and go.”

    Chris Murphy

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  • 8 Perfect TV Episodes: Death on ‘Succession,’ Romance in the Ruins on ‘The Last of Us,’ and More

    8 Perfect TV Episodes: Death on ‘Succession,’ Romance in the Ruins on ‘The Last of Us,’ and More

    THE BEAR

    Episode 7, “Review” FX

    There’s ample salt, acid, and heat—but little fat—to be found in The Bear’s frenetic seventh episode, directed by creator Christopher Storer. Executive producer Joanna Calo describes it as a “resting place” for the season’s character arcs, including Sydney and Richie’s fractious dynamic and Carmy’s increasingly “rageful, deep, dark feelings hidden inside,” all exacerbated by a rave review that brings a flood of customers their kitchen can’t handle. But in writing the script, Calo says, it became “this place where everyone exploded.” The propulsive, almost 20-minute one-take result created “this massive feeling of anxiety, which sort of encapsulates the energy that all people working in restaurants feel.”

    The Bear: Courtesy of FX.

    SUCCESSION

    Episode 3, “Connor’s Wedding” HBO

    Best not to get married on HBO. In “Connor’s Wedding,” the third episode of Succession’s final season, the eldest Roy’s nuptials on a boat quickly get overshadowed by an event of truly epic proportion: Logan Roy’s unexpected, ultimately unceremonious death. Rather than capture the fall of the king, director Mark Mylod focuses what he called his “sadistically voyeuristic” camera on the Roy siblings as they find themselves literally and emotionally at sea in a world without their father. “It had to stay really close without taking its eye off of them,” he said. “Because every time we cut away from the siblings, it seemed to let them off the hook.” With “Connor’s Wedding,” Succession simultaneously upended every expectation for the series while fulfilling its titular premise. What a way for L to the OG to go.

    RESERVATION DOGS

    Episode 8, “This Is Where the Plot Thickens” FX

    Director Blackhorse Lowe took inspiration from 1970s cinema for this surprisingly poignant episode, which swerves away from its central characters to follow tribal cop Big (Zahn McClarnon) after he mistakenly chugs a bottle of soda laced with psychedelic drugs. Walking through the pulsating, spinning forest, Big winds up on an introspective journey to the past, confronting his feelings of guilt over the death of his friend Cookie. “In this seemingly fun, trippy episode, we actually really get deep into character,” says series cocreator Sterlin Harjo. “There’s a pain that drives Big.” There’s also a heavy dose of Native humor, like when Big stumbles upon a mysterious group of Secret Society members in the woods chanting things like “The earth is a whore, and it is our will to take her!” The punch line? The cult ends up not being a hallucination at all.

    Reservation Dogs: Courtesy of FX.

    FLEISHMAN IS IN TROUBLE

    Episode 7, “Me-Time” FX

    Jesse Eisenberg’s Toby and his woes dominate much of the first six episodes, but by the penultimate “Me-Time,” it becomes clear he is not the Fleishman in real trouble. His missing ex-wife, Rachel (Claire Danes), reappears in this episode, which serves as both an explanation of where she’s been and a showcase of what Danes does best—raw, messy emotion. “Before the pandemic, I’d written my book out of a sort of primal scream,” says Taffy Brodesser-Akner, who adapted her book for the series, and a primal scream defines this episode too. Growing apart from her married boyfriend, Rachel lets loose in a therapy session so loud it shakes the trees outside. It’s a taut, cathartic reflection on what happens when your heart feels overstuffed and empty all at once.

    ANDOR

    Episode 12, “Rix Road” Disney+

    It all builds to a brick. The first season’s extraordinary climax takes place at the funeral march for Maarva (Fiona Shaw), the adoptive mother of Diego Luna’s title rebel leader, whose remains have been forged into a hexagonal funerary stone. When Maarva delivers her own fiery eulogy by way of prerecorded hologram, a riot breaks out—and Maarva’s brick becomes a weapon used to clobber Imperial soldiers. “That is when the moviemaking takes off past the script,” says series creator Tony Gilroy. “I remember being really surprised when I saw it and going, ‘Holy…look what they did!’ ”

    Savannah Walsh, Chris Murphy, Christian Allaire, Kase Wickman, Anthony Breznican, Rebecca Ford, David Canfield, Hillary Busis

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  • What’s With Our Need For Nostalgia?

    What’s With Our Need For Nostalgia?

    I grew up during Disney Channel’s golden era — you know exactly what I’m talking about. It was the when Disney Channel Original Movies (DCOMs) were at their prime and peak Disney TV starring the Jonas Brothers, Miley Cyrus, Demi Lovato, the Sprouse twins, and more. In hindsight, it was wild. There has never been such a hotbed for stardom since Ryan Gosling, Justin Timberlake, Britney Spears, and Christina Aguilera were all on the Mickey Mouse Club.


    And, yes, as I continue growing up I miss having these lighthearted shows and movies to watch. Every so often, my roommates and I will binge Disney movies like
    High School Musical or classics like The Princess Diaries. But lately, there’s been a shift.

    Has anyone noticed that we as a society are lacking a little…creativity? I mean, sure, it’s completely normal to crave a little dose of your childhood here and there — who isn’t comforted by memories of your life before you had an overwhelming sense of anxiety. But I almost feel as though we’ve gotten
    too comfortable with bringing back the old.

    Some of the nostalgia-inducing events are
    exciting. Think: the fervor for Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour or The Jonas Brothers’ The Tour, where they play all of their old songs spanning their entire career. It’s exciting and it’s a good way to get fans of old and new in the room.

    We’re also in an era of reboots galore. Take a short glance at any of your streaming platforms and you’ll see a lot of familiar titles. Former early 2000s favorites like
    Zoey 101, iCarly, and That’s So Raven are finding themselves back on our television screens. And if you think that’s all…oh, boy.

    Some reboots are reimaginations of the show…like
    Gossip Girl with a new cast and fresh, young faces. While others are continuations of the show just in the future – think iCarly and Zoey 101 (the reboot being Zoey 102).

    And then, there’s Disney.

    Disney is constantly trying to get the older generations into theaters, not only with Marvel, but with live action remakes of our favorite films. Over the past decade, we’ve seen versions of
    Aladdin, The Lion King, Beauty and the Beast, and most recently, The Little Mermaid. And while I surely will watch out of curiosity and lack of alternatives, I’m always left feeling a little underwhelmed.

    Nostalgia-core is literally
    everywhere. It’s in the way we dress, with Y2K trends consistently leading the pack. People are preferring jelly shoes and mini skirts over any other decades-inspired trend. But when do we border the line between nostalgia and overdoing something?

    Maybe it’s because we went through a global pandemic for so many years, we are craving stability and childhood…going back to our roots and finding comfort in what we know after a lot of uncertainty.
    Watching reboots of your fave show or movie can feel like the adult version of a pacifier.

    Or maybe it’s because we have completely lost identity in today’s society…where we can’t thrive on anything but the past. Unoriginal ideas cycling back into the trendscape just because we can’t think of anything new.

    Or maybe, just maybe, it’s the “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” mentality. If something is getting those viewers in and bringing in the money, why wouldn’t they keep rebooting shows? Why wouldn’t Disney just make live action versions of their entire filmography? That way, they can release one original and make it really amazing in the interim.

    One thing I know for sure is that trends recycle all the time. There was a time not so long ago where anything low-rise was considered a fashion crime and you wouldn’t dare wear Crocs out of your house unironically. But in the early 2000s, and subsequently in 2023, you would be considered right on trend.

    And while the Disney films will always be successful in some capacity, I don’t know if every show needs a reboot. Some shows ended where they ended, and that’s how it should stay. Honestly, I feel like I’m getting bored too easily, I already know the plotline of everything coming out!

    With popular shows like
    Succession and Ted Lasso in their final episodes forever, we are met with the realization that we will soon run out of original content if we keep rebooting everything. And yes, I get that a reboot is still somehow original if it’s a continuation of the series…you know that’s not my point here.

    So, I’m left with the question: when is it time to let the past be….the past?

    Jai Phillips

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  • The Eyes Don’t Have It: Succession’s Series Finale, “With Open Eyes,” Emphasizes That Hubris Makes You Blind

    The Eyes Don’t Have It: Succession’s Series Finale, “With Open Eyes,” Emphasizes That Hubris Makes You Blind

    If Kendall (Jeremy Strong) hugging Roman (Kieran Culkin) toward the end of the series finale of Succession reminded viewers of anything, it’s that, when it comes to the Roys, love fucking hurts—and seems to cause far more pain than it’s worth. The last episode, “With Open Eyes,” offers an ominous title in and of itself without any backstory, but taking into account that it continues the Succession season finale tradition of using lines from John Berryman’s “Dream Song 29,” it adds yet another sinister layer. Berryman himself was haunted his whole life by his father’s suicide when the poet was just eleven. With Succession being, at its core, a show about daddy issues and what they can wreak, it seems appropriate to interweave this writer into final episode titles. And oh, what a final episode “With Open Eyes” is. And yes, it’s all about eyes in this narrative. Particularly how those with sight can be so blind (see also: King Lear).

    The emphasis on eyes begins the moment Shiv (Sarah Snook) arrives in Barbados at the urging of her mother, Caroline (Harriet Walter), to come and comfort Roman after the beating he took at the end of episode nine, “Church and State.” Naturally, Shiv is only really interested in taking the trip so she can lock down another vote and really secure the GoJo deal for Lukas Matsson (Alexander Skarsgård), who has promised to make her the CEO once the merger and acquisition goes through.

    Alas, in the business realm, where misogyny reigns more supremely than anywhere else besides politics, it’s clear that Matsson actually doesn’t feel that comfortable with Shiv taking the front seat while he rides shotgun at best, and in the trunk at worst. A profile in some New Yorker-esque rag featuring a cartoon of Shiv as the puppet master pulling Matsson’s strings (even though the article is called “Is Lukas Matsson Taking Over the World?”) does little to assuage his wounded ego. After all, he’s already being forced to stand in the shadows for the sake of the deal going through with an anti-foreign business president taking the reins (or not…the finale leaves that open-ended as well). And it seems to dawn on him that it would be so much better to have someone (a man, of course) in charge that he could boss around with far more ease than he can Shiv, who easily lives up to her nickname by shiving Kendall in the back at the end of the episode. And just when it seemed like the trio was getting along so well, too. That is, back in the kitchen of Caroline’s “hellhole in paradise.” After Caroline remarked to Shiv about being unable to “tend to” Roman, “There’s something about eyes. They just kind of, ugh, revolt me.” Shiv clarifies, “Eyes? Like human eyes we all have?” “Yeah, I don’t like to think of all these blobs of jelly rolling around in your head. Just…face eggs.” To be sure, that is what they amount to when you can’t really see past the blinding nature of your own hubris.

    Something all four of the Roy children suffer from…because let’s not forget about Connor (Alan Ruck). Even if his appearance is minimal as usual, but nonetheless effective. Especially when, via a fresh home movie, he stands next to Logan (Brian Cox) and delivers a performance of “I’m a Little Teapot” “in the manner of Logan Roy.” The lyrics then, naturally, go, “I am a little teapot—fuck off! Short and stout—what did you fucking call me? Here’s my handle, here’s my fuckin’ spout. When I get steamed up, you can hear me shout—Frank Vernon is a moron, Karl Muller is a kraut!” But Karl (David Rasche) can still sing a good Scottish folk song as he regales the dinner table with his rendition of “Green Grow the Rashes, O.” The lyrical content of which hits too close to home for the Roy children as they listen to the words, “Green grow the rashes, O/The sweetest hours that e’er I spend/Are spent among the lasses, O/The war’ly race may riches chase/And riches still may fly them, O/And even though they catch ‘em fast/Their hearts can ne’er enjoy them, O.”

    What modicum of something resembling “hearts” the Roy children might have certainly don’t allow them to enjoy much, that’s for sure. Indeed, they all seem like masochists who actually relish torturing themselves, and reminding the other siblings of who they really are. For a brief moment in the episode, Shiv and Roman are compelled to make Kendall forget who he is at his core by obliging him in his long-standing, ceaseless desire to become Waystar Royco’s CEO. Upon Kendall informing Shiv that Matsson ousting her (per craftily-secured intel from Greg [Nicholas Braun]), the trio at last aligns to form a bloc that will stop the vote from going through. The only problem, as usual, is that none of them can agree on who should be CEO.

    With Kendall swimming out to a dock to let his siblings confer in the darkness of a Barbados beach, Shiv and Roman discuss whether or not they ought to finally just let Kendall have what he’s been dreaming of ever since this whole saga began. Roman asks, “Should we give it to him?” An annoyed Shiv says, “Yeah, we probably should.” Shiv pauses and then adds deviously. “Unless we kill him.” Although meant “in jest,” it’s ultimately exactly what Shiv decides to do by ousting her big bro at the last minute. And when she cuts him with that knife, he definitely bleeds, saying, “I feel like…if I don’t get to do this—I, I feel like, that’s it. I might, I might, uh, like I might die.” And there is that exact feeling as we watch him sink via the elevator back into the bowels of the cruel real world. Whether or not he tries to kill himself now, Kendall is already dead.

    Perhaps it’s all part of his karma for Andrew Dodds (Tom Morley), the waiter who ended up drowning at the end of season one as a result of Kendall’s insatiable search for drugs. When Kendall spots the waiter, just fired from Shiv’s wedding by Logan, he asks him for a “powder” connect. When Andrew tries to offer him some ketamine, which he does himself, Kendall insists he needs a “different vibe tonight”: coke. Thus, Kendall drives them through the darkened English countryside in search of Andrew’s connection. When he sees a deer in the road and swerves, Kendall crashes the car in the water, leaving a ket’d-out Andrew to die. In the present, when Shiv and Roman bring the murder up (which Kendall confessed to them in the season three finale, “All the Bells Say”), Kendall has lost all sense of guilt for the “incident,” immediately responding, “It did not happen. I wasn’t even there.” He then reiterates, “It did not happen!” Because when rich people say something didn’t happen, then it definitely didn’t. But this denial makes Shiv all the more disgusted by her brother, and therefore convinced they’re better off selling the company than letting him be the CEO. Blinded by her own jealousy, of course, she would rather watch the company burn in someone else’s hands than let Ken take his shot. And, talking once more of eyes and sight, when Roman reminds that, in terms of “bloodline,” Ken’s children aren’t “‘real’ real,” he escalates the eye jelly comment Caroline foreshadowed to the next level by pressing Roman’s eyeballs in (already having mushed Roman’s face into his shoulder in that previous scene of “aggressive love”).

    This gives Shiv her opportunity to go back into the meeting and cast her vote in favor of the GoJo deal despite being betrayed by Matsson. And despite the fact that the CEO position will go to, of all people, Tom fucking Wambsgans (Matthew Macfadyen). The one person who should have been axed ages ago both personally and professionally, but managed to shapeshift his way to the top. Indeed, it’s his “mutability” that makes him so appealing to Matsson, whose opinion of this non-person is obviously cinched when Shiv describes him as “very plausible corporate matter” and “a highly interchangeable modular part.” In other words, exactly what Matsson is looking for in his own puppet. And, being that Tom sells himself by noting of his current position, “I’m cutting heads and harvesting eyeballs,” Matsson can tell he’s got the chops to give the chop to whoever he says, whenever he says. Of course, Tom’s mention of harvesting eyeballs is yet another nod to the notion of sight and vision—or rather, lack thereof—in this episode, and in Logan’s progeny.

    Kendall obviously had no foresight about Shiv’s sudden treachery, prompting him to continue to stand in disbelief in the office where the emotional and physical altercation transpired. Roman finally lays the truth out for him: “It’s fuck-all, man. It’s bits of glue and broken shows, fuckin’ phony news, fucking come on.” Unable to see that reality, Kendall keeps urging, “We have this, we can still do this.” Himself seeing clearly for the first time, Roman balks, “Oh my god, man, it’s nothing. Okay? It’s just nothing. It’s fucking nothing. Stop it!” Kendall, who has placed his entire identity into this role of “successor” cannot believe what Roman is saying, repeating “no” over and over again until Roman interjects, “Yeah. Hey, we are bullshit… You are bullshit. You’re fucking bullshit, man. I’m fucking bullshit. She’s bullshit. It’s all fucking nothing, man. I’m telling you this because I know it, okay? We’re nothing. Okay.”

    And so it is that Roman is the one to finally admit that what Logan said at the beginning of season four was accurate, even if harsh: “You’re such fucking dopes. You’re not serious figures. I love you, but…you are not…serious people.” Only ornaments and pawns in the life of Logan, the quintessential King Lear figure of this narrative. And yet, a Cordelia never seems to manifest in any of his children. It’s nothing but Regans and Gonerils where the obsession with “winning at inheritance” is concerned.

    Genna Rivieccio

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  • ‘Succession’ Lives: 6 Entirely Serious Spinoff Ideas

    ‘Succession’ Lives: 6 Entirely Serious Spinoff Ideas

    Like the rest of you, we here at VF are still trying to pull ourselves together after a bruising Succession series finale. It’s hard to believe that HBO’s Emmy magnet is actually done for good… especially since Kieran Culkin told us just one week ago that creator Jesse Armstrong had some “really awesome” ideas for a potential fifth season. But even if that can’t happen, the world of Succession is rich and layered enough to support any number of potential spinoffs. 

    Now that the main series is kaput, could the Succession-verse press on via a Veep-esque single-camera comedy about Connor’s adventures in Slovenia? A limited series in which a certain P.R. maven launches his own firm, titled Hugo, Boss? A high-stakes, high-budget, Survivor-style reality competition called Boar on the Floor? The possibilities are endless. But we’ll start with these six ideas.

    St. Stewy

    Few supporting characters flip-flopped as much as Stewy Hosseini during Succession’s four-season run, and fewer still benefited so greatly from the one-liners hurled at them. (“You like pancakes and waffles and you kiss guys on molly,” Kendall sniped, setting Twitter ablaze.) But who is Arian Moayed’s fickle venture capitalist, really? This miniseries follows Stewy after the GoJo acquisition as he looks to the future—just as a ghost from his past resurfaces with a dangerous claim. He’s forced to make amends with Sandi (Hope Davis), who cast an opposing vote in Succession’s final board meeting, and confront others he’d crushed in his climb to the top. Might we meet a fresh-faced, college-aged Kendall Roy on that journey? Perhaps. But more importantly, Stewy’s time in the spotlight will prove precisely why the man who was “spiritually and emotionally and ethically and morally behind whoever wins” was always destined to be the real victor. —Tyler Breitfeller

    Karolina in Hollywood

    Let’s be honest: the Tom Wambsgans era at GoJo-Waystar-Royco is not going to last forever. So when Tom inevitably flames out, or Matsson loses interest and decides to replace him with a Danish supermodel, PR maven Karolina will be out the door as well— and freed up to lead another company with her inimitable combination of quiet reserve and killer instinct. And what institution could use her help more than the struggling Waystar Studios, with their expensive, doomed tentpole projects and the ex-studio head Joy Palmer (played still, of course, by Annabeth Gish) suing for wrongful termination after Roman dismissed her? Heading west to Los Angeles, freed of the Roys and Hugo but not the problems they created, Karolina arrives in Hollywood to show them what it really means to take no prisoners. —Katey Rich

    Gerri’s Turn

    “Gerri gets it,” Tom declares at the end of Succession’s series finale, surveying the longtime Waystar execs and considering who he’d want to keep on. “She’s not afraid of the dark.”

    Cue the title card for Gerri’s Turn, the secretly-anticipated Succession spinoff in which J. Smith-Cameron’s character—emboldened by Logan’s death, Roman’s removal from her contact list, and all of that settlement money—does what she damn well pleases. Smith-Cameron has said, since the finale, that she sees a world in which Gerri happily returns to Waystar—“with an incredible pay increase,” natch—and puppeteers U.S. CEO Tom. In addition to seeing Gerri mop the floor with Tom, whip misogynist GoJo founder Matsson into shape, and breathe withering one-liners like fire, viewers will finally get to see how Gerri lives. Who are her romantic partners? What is her interior design style? What does she do when she takes that updo down? And most pressingly, how have those decades of Logan’s abuse and dark corporate secrets manifested themselves in Gerri’s personal life? —Julie Miller

    Marcia Washington

    Logan Roy’s widow has been enjoying her wealth in Milan—designer shopping, eating fabulous meals, taking young lovers—when she gets a surprising call: the Lebanese Charge d’Affaires to the United States, Ahmed Chehab (Tony Shalhoub), wants her to take a job as his social secretary. Marcia isn’t quite sure why she’s been asked to fill this seemingly frivolous role, but she suspects her intimate connections with the wealthy elite of the world have something to do with it. Bored with European flaneuring, Marcia warily accepts and buys a lovely townhouse in Georgetown. She soon finds herself ensconced in the power playing of Washington D.C., making a frenemy in conniving White House chief of staff Rhonda Nash (Kimberly Elise); coyly swatting away the flirtations of Indian attache Shekhar Jhaveri (Anil Kapoor); and negotiating the strange intrusions of paranoid, mercurial U.S. president Arlene Ritt (Melissa Leo). The final moments of the pilot reveal a shocking twist: Marcia has been assigned to work the above-ground galas and summits typical of the job, but also to ferret out a renegade mole hiding in the upper echelons of capital society. With an occasional appearance by Marcia’s politically ambitious stepson, Connor Roy, Marcia Washington is a glamorous thriller whose hero proves to be much more than just a wife. —Richard Lawson

    Willa’s World

    It’s approximately 6 to 8 months after the Succession finale. Willa’s play, First La-die—an experimental yet semi-autobiographical work inspired by both Connor’s presidential run and the death of Logan—becomes a critical and commercial success, running downtown at The Vineyard before transferring to the Circle in the Square theater on Broadway. But while Willa’s finally the toast of New York, her play causes ripples and waves in her already fractured family with everyone upset by her portrayal of them in the show. (Well, everyone except Connor. Connor loves it.) After years of observing the action from the sidelines, Willa and her cow-print couch are center stage. Will Willa’s success spell more disaster for the Roy family? It’s finally Willa’s World, and the Roys are all just living in it. —Chris Murphy

    Succession: The Next Generation

    It’s 15 years in the future. Lo Roy Wamsgans, Tom and Shiv’s daughter, is a sophomore at Constance Billard School in Manhattan. Shiv, her withholding mother, is now completely estranged from her brothers and in a loveless relationship with Tom—who, somehow, is still CEO of GoJo, with “Uncle Greg” as his right-hand man. While wandering around her family’s triplex penthouse apartment, Lo stumbles upon a cut up photo of Shiv, Roman, Kendall and Connor—the uncles she never knew. The photo sends her on a journey to find her estranged cousin, Sophie, an artist in Berlin; Iverson, a coder in Silicon Valley; and Roman’s secret lovechild, identity TBD. Succession: The Next Generation follows Lo as she tries to bring her fractured family back together, all while navigating high school as the progeny of one of New York’s most powerful and prominent families. —CM

    Nan!

    Every episode follows Nan Pierce as she moseys around the Montecito Farmers Market, stuffing her NPR tote with locally foraged morels and $20 strawberries. Written and directed by Nancy Meyers. —Hillary Busis

    Chris Murphy, Richard Lawson, Tyler Breitfeller, Katey Rich, Hillary Busis

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  • Succession’s Matthew Macfadyen on That Tom Twist and Shiv’s Change of Heart

    Succession’s Matthew Macfadyen on That Tom Twist and Shiv’s Change of Heart

    Well, that was unexpected. On Sunday, Succession ended four seasons’ worth of Waystar-heir speculation by naming Tom Wambsgans (Matthew Macfadyen) the company’s dark-horse successor—meaning that he beat out Kendall (Jeremy Strong), the genetic frontrunner candidate; Roman (Kieran Culkin), the still-mourning Roy sibling; and his own wife Shiv (Sarah Snook), the woman who spent years humiliating him in public and private. 

    Macfadyen, the British actor who embodied this shape-shifting middle-class striver for five years, was just as surprised by the outcome as viewers likely were. Midway through filming the HBO drama’s fourth and final season, Macfadyen asked series creator Jesse Armstrong about Tom’s fate, and learned that Tom—not any of Logan Roy’s (Brian Cox) blood relatives—would wind up American CEO.

    “Well, that’s interesting,” Macfadyen remembers thinking, he says on a Zoom with VF Monday morning. But Macfadyen quickly put the plot twist out of his head. “You don’t want to get attached to a storyline. They may very well change.”

    As the actor approached filming the finale, “With Open Eyes,” Macfadyen began accepting his character’s fate—even if he figured that Tom himself would be blindsided by the turn of events. After all, in seemingly 24 hours, Tom goes from thinking he will be fired by Matsson (Alexander Skarsgård) to learning that Matsson wants to anoint him.

    “I don’t think Tom was planning for it at all. I don’t think it’s what he ever rationally thought would happen for him,” says Macfadyen. “He was mostly concerned about not being fired from ATN. He genuinely thought he was toast with Matsson—and [had to endure] all of these terrible hang outs with him at art galleries and dinners.” To be named surprise successor at the series’ buzzer, Macfadyen says, “I thought it was quite a neat thing.”

    With his relationship to Shiv seemingly beyond repair after the balcony fight in this season’s “Tailgate Party” episode, Macfadyen agrees to keep Matsson’s decision a secret from Shiv ahead of the Waystar board meeting. Asked whether he thinks that Tom’s relationship with the cold-hearted Shiv has helped make his character more ruthless, especially in the final two seasons, Macfadyen demurs. He thinks that beneath his bumbling exterior, Tom has always been this calculating.

    “Even though he’s sort of annoying and ungainly in everything he does—you know, he doesn’t have the same sort of cold-hearted sophistication as the Roys—he’s not without ambition or a brain,” says the actor. “He will put up with a lot of shit and humiliations from everybody, including his wife—you know, she asked him to have an open marriage on their wedding night—and in order to stay in the family and near his father-in-law Logan.”

    While some people write off Tom as being a spineless shape-shifter happy to “suck the biggest dick in the room,” as Shiv tells Matsson, Macfadyen sees cunning in Tom. He didn’t view Tom’s season-three offer to go to jail for Logan as strictly being “pathetic and obsequious,” although it was definitely shades of that. 

    “He’s quite brave as well,” Macfadyen points out. “I think his spine was always there, but he makes practical decisions certainly at the end of season three when he betrays Shiv in favor of Logan. He’s hitching his [cart] to the man who he thinks is going to win. There’s something unsentimental about it. He hopes for the best and hopes that it will all be okay, but he’s quite ruthless about things.”

    “I’m sometimes asked about Tom coming out on top,” continues Macfadyen, disagreeing with the phrasing of the question. “I don’t think he has a plan. None of [the Succession characters] have a plan. Right? If they have a plan, it’s a sort of vanity that inevitably goes wrong or changes. I think he just keeps himself in the game. There are plenty of those sort of plausible men who end up in positions of great power because they’ve been there all the way, and attached themselves to other, more charismatic people.”

    For Macfadyen, ever the modest gentleman, Tom being selected CEO wasn’t the most dramatic plot point of the episode. “What was awful for me was Shiv’s reversal of her decision to back Kendall as CEO and block the deal,” he says. “I thought that was a great dramatic moment.”

    Julie Miller

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