There’s a lot to take in with he official announcement of a third installment in the American Crime Story franchise. First, it’s focusing on the Clinton presidency scandal and subsequent impeachment. Second, Monica Lewinsky is on board as a producer. And third, Sarah Paulson is confirmed to return and will play Linda Tripp.
Season one of the American Crime Story franchise debuted in February 2016 and explored the behind the scene maneuverings of the OJ Simpson murder trial. Season two followed in January 2018 and focused on the murder spree of serial killer Andrew Cunanan.
The third installment in the limited series, Impeachment: American Crime Story, will premiere on September 27, 2020 at 10pm ET/PT. Filming is expected to get underway in February 2020.
Impeachment: American Crime Story will also star Beanie Feldstein (Lady Bird) as Monica Lewinsky and Annaleigh Ashford (The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story) as Paula Jones.
Sarah Burgess is writing Impeachment: ACS, based on Jeffrey Toobin’s bestselling book, A Vast Conspiracy: The Real Story of the Sex Scandal That Nearly Brought Down a President. Burgess will also executive produce with Ryan Murphy, Nina Jacobson, Brad Simpson, Brad Falchuk, Larry Karaszewski, Scott Alexander, Alexis Martin Woodall and Sarah Paulson. Henrietta Conrad and Jemima Khan are on board as producers.
“FX’s American Crime Story franchise has become a cultural touchstone, providing greater context for stories that deserve greater understanding like the O.J. Simpson trial and saga, and Andrew Cunanan’s tragic crime spree which concluded with the assassination of Gianni Versace,” said John Landgraf, Chairman, FX Networks and FX Productions. “This franchise re-examines some of the most complicated, polarizing stories in recent history in a way that is relevant, nuanced and entertaining.
Impeachment: American Crime Story will likewise explore the overlooked dimensions of the women who found themselves caught up in the scandal and political war that cast a long shadow over the Clinton Presidency. We are grateful to Sarah Burgess for her brilliant adaptation, as well as Ryan Murphy, Nina Jacobson, Brad Simpson, Brad Falchuk, Larry Karaszewski, Scott Alexander, Alexis Martin Woodall, Sarah Paulson and the rest of the creative team and cast.”
According to FX, Impeachment: American Crime Story “unravels the national scandal that swept up Paula Jones, Monica Lewinsky and Linda Tripp as principal characters in the country’s first impeachment proceedings in over a century.”
Alicia Silverstone and Mark Feuerstein star in Netflix’s ‘The Baby-Sitters Club’ (Photos Courtesy of Getty Images/Netflix)
Alicia Silverstone and Mark Feuerstein are set to star in Netflix’s live-action The Baby-Sitters Club series. The upcoming series will be a single-camera comedy targeting a family audience.
Alicia Silverstone is on board to play Elizabeth Thomas-Brewer, mother of Kristy Thomas. Mark Feuerstein will play Silverstone’s love interest, Watson Brewer.
Silverstone’s credits include The Tribes of Palos Verdes, The Killing of a Sacred Deer, and Suburgatory. She’ll forever be best known for playing Cher in the 1995 comedy, Clueless.
Feuerstein recently starred in 9JKL, Wet Hot American Summer: Ten Years Later, and Royal Pains. His credits also include The Hustler, Nurse Jackie, and 3 lbs.
Filming is already underway in Vancouver on The Baby-Sitters Club, based on Ann M. Martin’s bestselling book series that debuted in 1986. Martin’s books have been published in 20+ territories and the series ranks as one of the most successful children’s book series in history. More than 180 million copies of the popular books have been sold.
The series is a Netflix and Walden Media production. Michael De Luca, Lucy Kitada, and Naia Cucukov executive produce. Rachel Shukert (GLOW) is the showrunner and Lucia Aniello (Broad City) is directing and executive producing. Author Ann M. Martin will be involved as a producer along with Aniello’s Paulilu Productions.
“I’m amazed that there are so many passionate fans of The Baby-Sitters Club after all these years, and I’m honored to continue to hear from readers – now grown, who have become writers, editors, teachers, librarians, filmmakers – who say that they see a reflection of themselves in the characters of Kristy and her friends. So I’m very excited about the forthcoming series on Netflix, which I hope will inspire a new generation of readers and leaders everywhere,” stated Martin in February 2019 when the series was announced.
Season one will consist of 10 episodes.
The Baby-Sitters Club Plot:
Published by Scholastic, The Baby-Sitters Club is a classic story of female friendship, entrepreneurialism, and empowerment. The Baby-Sitters Club is a contemporary original series that will follow the friendship and babysitting adventures of five best friends – Kristy Thomas, Mary Anne Spier, Claudia Kishi, Stacey McGill, and Dawn Schafer – in Stoneybrook, Connecticut.
Amazon Prime Video had a huge presence at the 2019 San Diego Comic, setting up elaborate activations and hosting panels promoting three of their shows: Carnival Row, The Boys, and The Expanse. The Expanse was picked up by Amazon after being canceled by Syfy, but Carnival Row and The Boys are new original projects.
Carnival Row season one stars Orlando Bloom, Cara Delevingne, Tamzin Merchant, and David Gyasi. Amazon offers this description of the first season:
“The series set in a Victorian fantasy world filled with mythological immigrant creatures whose exotic homelands were invaded by the empires of man. This growing population struggles to coexist with humans — forbidden to live, love, or fly with freedom. But even in darkness, hope lives, as a human detective, Rycroft Philostrate (Bloom), and a refugee faerie named Vignette Stonemoss (Delevingne) rekindle a dangerous affair despite an increasingly intolerant society. Vignette harbors a secret that endangers Philo’s world during his most important case yet: a string of gruesome murders threatening the uneasy peace of the Row.”
David Gyasi plays Agreus, a wealthy faun who bucks the social order by buying a home in a wealthy human neighborhood. Tamzin Merchant is Imogen Spurnrose, “a young woman who sees in Agreus an opportunity to turn her aristocratic family’s fading fortunes around.”
Bloom, Merchant, and Gyasi joined writers/executive producers Travis Beacham and Marc Guggenheim for a press conference at SDCC. Season one of Carnival Row will premiere on Friday, August 30, 2019. Amazon has already greenlit the series for a second season.
How does something that’s so socially relevant but set among a fantastical premise affect how you play your character?
Orlando Bloom: “First of all, the great gift and opportunity of stepping into this show was because it was so timely, and it did feel like it spoke to a lot of the issues and with relevance to what’s happening in the world today. And alongside that, because we’re in this fantastical world created – this remarkable brainchild of Travis Beacham – we are able to examine with real humanity some of the really tragic and desperate situations that are happening in the world, but with an objective and empathic view, I think. Because we’re are looking at fauns, we’re looking at the fae folk as we call them, it enables us to sort of step outside of ourselves and look at this situation and think around it.
It was so beautifully handled by both Travis and Marc in the writing, that it was a gift for all of us. And, of course, I think as actors we sort of feel a certain sense of responsibility to deliver on that. But, that’s really down to the showrunners and the writing, and that was the great good fortune we had with them.”
David Gyasi: “I have two kids and I’m of African origin, and they’re showing signs of wanting to get into this business. So, there’s the African side of me that’s like, ‘Well, you have the option of being a lawyer, doctor, or engineer.’ And then there’s the other side of me that I think when you want to get into this business the best advice I give people is go out and talk to people and listen, because that helps you to get a perspective on life and how humans work. And so, as an actor when you get an opportunity that feels like this, speaking about our world and a world that we recognize, it’s just a real gift – like Orlando said – and an honor. That’s how we approached it.”
Travis Beacham: “I think the thing that art has a chance to do is get people to look at issues and discuss those issues. I don’t know if it necessarily needs to do more than that.
I think a lot of the problems that we have as a society stem from the fact that we don’t talk about things anymore. It’s considered rude to discuss politics. As a result, we all have placed ourselves in these bubbles. And the nice thing about art is it can maybe, hopefully, jumpstart some of those conversations. And having those conversations is ultimately healthy for our society.”
Marc Guggenheim: “I think in writing this and shooting it, one of the adjectives that comes up a lot is Dickensian. And, usually that’s meant on a superficial way, like, ‘It’s Victorian. There’s a lot of characters.’ But I have always been a fan of Dickens and it got me thinking what he’s really good at. And what I tried to aspire to in the writing of this show was wrestling with the issues of the times but in a way that’s very personal, very connected to character, and tells the story of the struggles people are going through through the specific struggles of an individual character and really takes that human perspective.
That’s how we’ve always tried to write this is that storytelling in general, I think it’s an act of empathy. And in dovetailing social issues with the actual story of this, it’s just finding what is the story. What is the story of the ‘other,’ whoever that is, whether it’s by gender or by race or by place of birth.”
What was your reaction to the set, and do you have a favorite detail fans should watch out for?
Orlando Bloom: “I was so excited when I first walked down the Row. First of all, I’m blessed. When I was on the set of The Lord of the Rings, it was like a mind-blowing experience. The bar has been set so high. But I was overjoyed to walk down Carnival Row and see the level of detail.
When you walked into this shop of Haruspex – a witchy oracle fairy – she’s got these potions. There are these creatures in these jars. You couldn’t even imagine that. I couldn’t imagine that. And it was the thing that was so exciting about when I first read the script. I was like, ‘Wow, I don’t think I’ve seen this before.’ I love this fantasy world because I feel like you can explore and go places with it. But to see it physicalized and created…like the Tarot cards that were created with like snakeskins on the back…it was just like I geek out over stuff like that. I really geek out over detail, and the jars with creatures that you could never imagine put together and created.”
Tamzin Merchant: “There was like a fish-monkey. Very strange.”
Orlando Bloom: “Exactly.”
Tamzin Merchant: “You knew that Travis had a backstory for it, probably.
I’ve done lots of period drama, lots of corsets and bustles and all that, but I’ve never done one where I’m having a full-blown tea party with a man with horns and hooves. That to me, it felt like this fully formed playground that had come right out of Travis’ head that all of us actors got to dive right into. And this whole world that we all got to play in with its own conventions, with its own traditions, own mythology, history, and you’re kind of just coming into this story at this point where we don’t usually come into a fantasy story at this point. You usually come in a lot earlier in the timeline. But now we’re like in this post-Industrial Victorian age with all its social conventions that are quite refined and quite complex and byzantine. And the audience is also just plunged right into the middle of that. I think that’s really cool.”
David Gyasi: “I would add similar to what everyone said. For me, It’s the detail. […] They put so much into it; it’s big and it’s vast and it’s expansive. And then you could be walking down the street and see a bit of graffiti.”
What are you excited for the audience to see with your character?
Tamzin Merchant: “I’m actually really excited for people to see me being difficult. I think as myself, as most of my life, I’m quite English. I’m quite polite, generally. I loved playing Imogen because she just kind of comes out with this stuff that maybe’s not okay to say. That’s such a treat.
So, yeah, I’m excited for people to see Imogen Spurnrose being kind of awkward in her own skin and not this conventional period drama like ice queen or anything like that. I think she’s so much more than one thing. And, actually, I think that the female characters, the actresses that we have on the show are all amazing and all really complex characters and performed beautifully. That is a massive treat for me as well to be in a cast of wonderful actors and so many wonderful women. I’m really excited for people to see very complex, multifaceted female characters.”
Orlando Bloom: “I kind of wear my heart on my sleeve quite a lot. I sometimes can be guilty of over-communicating and it was really wonderful to have a character that is guarded, holds secrets. That has an immense amount of empathy for his environment which we don’t explain away, which isn’t just thrown away. And to sort of embrace that sort of masculinity that is really well-balanced with a sort of feminine quality to it in a way of openness and empathy.
It was really special to have that shadow self explored a little, like the darker sides of the shadow self of a character and why is behaving that way and then not explaining it away which was really fun.”
Donald Glover as Earnest Marks in ‘Atlanta’ season 2 (Photo by Matthias Clamer/FX)
Donald Glover’s critically acclaimed series, Atlanta, has earned an early fourth season renewal order. FX announced the show’s fourth season renewal and confirmed filming will take place on both seasons three and four beginning next spring.
Season one consisted of 10 episodes, season two was made up of 11, and seasons three and four will have eight episodes each.
Atlanta was created by Donald Glover who also stars and executive produces. Paul Simms, Dianne McGunigle, Stephen Glover, and Hiro Murai also serve as executive producers. The cast of seasons one and two included Brian Tyree Henry (If Beale Street Could Talk), Lakeith Stanfield (Sorry to Bother You), and Zazie Beetz (Deadpool 2).
The popular series has earned five Emmy Awards, two AFI Awards, two Golden Globes, two Critics’ Choice Awards, and a PGA Award.
“What more can be said about Atlanta than the critical acclaim and accolades that Donald, Paul, Dianne, Stephen and Hiro have earned for two exceptional seasons of what is clearly one of the best shows on television,” stated Eric Schrier, President, FX Entertainment. “This group of collaborators and cast have created one of the most original, innovative stories of this generation and we are proud to be their partners.”
A Look Back at Season 2:
“The second season, Atlanta Robbin’ Season, was hailed as the best show on television. In Atlanta Robbin’ Season, two cousins work through the Atlanta music scene in order to better their lives and the lives of their families. “Earn Marks” (Glover) is a young manager trying to get his cousin’s career off the ground. “Alfred Miles” (Henry) is a new hot rapper trying to understand the line between real life and street life. “Darius” (Stanfield) is Alfred’s right-hand man and visionary. “Van” (Beetz) is Earn’s best friend and the mother of Earn’s daughter.”
Derek Peth and Caelynn Miller-Keyes in ‘Bachelor in Paradise’ (ABC/John Fleenor)
ABC’s confirmed The Bachelorette and Bachelor in Paradise have earned new season renewal orders. The news should come as no shock to fans of The Bachelor franchise as the addictive reality dating shows have continued to be ratings winners for the network.
The just-announced renewals for The Bachelorette season 16 and Bachelor in Paradise season seven come as Bachelor in Paradise just launched its sixth season. The current season airs on Mondays at 8pm ET/PT.
Season five of Bachelor in Paradise ranked first in adult viewers among last summer’s Monday night shows. ABC says the Tuesday night airings also held the top spot among women viewers ages 18 to 34.
The Bachelorette season 15 concluded on July 30th with a shocking finale (no spoilers here for those who haven’t watched the final episode). According to ABC, the season 15 finale showed a 17% increase in adult viewers over season 14’s finale. And the season 15 finale was the show’s highest-ratings earner in two years.
The Bachelor was previously renewed for season 24 and will return in 2020. Season 23 with Colton Underwood was the top Monday primetime program among women 18 to 49 and adults 18 to 34.
Chris Harrison will return to host both The Bachelorette and Bachelor in Paradise in 2020. Mike Fleiss, Martin Hilton, Nicole Woods, Tim Warner, Louis Caric, and Peter Geist executive produce both shows. In addition, Bennett Graebner and Peter Gust serve as executive producers on The Bachelorette.
Bachelor in Paradise Description:
“Breakout fan favorites from The Bachelor franchise are back and ready for a second (or third) chance at finding love. They may have left their respective seasons brokenhearted, but now they have the opportunity to travel to a romantic paradise in hopes of turning a potential summer fling into the real thing.”
The Bachelorette Season 15 Description:
“Hannah Brown caught the eye of Colton Underwood early on during the 23rd season of The Bachelor, showing him, and all of America, what Alabama Hannah is made of – a fun country girl who is unapologetically herself. After being sent home unexpectedly, Hannah took the time to reflect on her breakup, gaining a powerful understanding of her desire to be deeply and fiercely loved. Now, with a newfound sense of self and a little southern charm, she is more ready than ever to find her true love on the milestone 15th season of The Bachelorette.”
Katey Sagal (Sons of Anarchy) and Adrian Pasdar (Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.) guest star in ABC’s Grand Hotel season one episode nine, “Groom Service.” Episode nine was directed by Elodie Keene from a script by Desta Tedros Reff and will air on Monday, August 12, 2019 at 10pm ET/PT.
The cast of season one includes Oscar nominee Demián Bichir (Best Actor, A Better Life) as Santiago Mendoza, ALMA award winner Roselyn Sánchez (Outstanding Actress in a Drama Television Series, Without a Trace) as Gigi Mendoza, Denyse Tontz (The Fosters) as Alicia Mendoza, and Bryan Craig (Valor) as Javi Mendoza. Wendy Raquel Robinson (The Mayor) is Mrs. P, Lincoln Younes (Home and Away) is Danny, Shalim Ortiz (Magic City) is Mateo, and Anne Winters (13 Reasons Why) plays Ingrid.
Chris Warren (The Fosters) plays Jason, Feliz Ramirez is Carolina, and Justina Adorno (Seven Seconds) is Yoli in the show’s first season.
Grand Hotel is written and executive produced by Brian Tanen. Eva Longoria, Ben Spector, Bob Daily, Ramón Campos, Teresa Fernández-Valdés, and director Bill D’Elia also executive produce.
The “Groom Service” Plot – Danny struggles to keep his relationship with Alicia from her family. Gigi discovers the secrets that Santiago has been keeping from her, while Felix continues to try and make his way back into Gigi’s life.
Series Details:
Charismatic Santiago Mendoza owns the hotel, while his glamorous second wife, Gigi, and their adult children enjoy the spoils of success. The hotel’s loyal staff round out a contemporary fresh take on an upstairs/downstairs story. Wealthy and beautiful guests bask in luxury, but scandals, escalating debt and explosive secrets hide beneath the picture-perfect exterior.
Demian Bichir and Shalim Ortiz in ‘Grand Hotel’ season 1 episode 9 (ABC/Richard Cartwright)Shalim Ortiz in season 1 episode 9 (ABC/Richard Cartwright)Shalim Ortiz in season 1 episode 9 (ABC/Richard Cartwright)Shalim Ortiz in season 1 episode 9 (ABC/Richard Cartwright)
Disney’s just released a striking new poster for Maleficent: Mistress of Evil, the 2019 sequel to Maleficent. The gorgeous poster’s basically black and white, with sparks of color leaping out. Angelina Jolie’s ruby red lips draw your focus as do the blue flowers in Elle Fanning’s hair.
The sequel stars Oscar winner Angelina Jolie (Girl, Interrupted) reprising her role as Maleficent and Elle Fanning as Princess Aurora. The cast also includes Michelle Pfeiffer (Ant-Man and the Wasp) as Queen Ingrith, Chiwetel Ejiofor (12 Years a Slave), Sam Riley (Pride and Prejudice and Zombies) as Diaval, Harris Dickinson (Trust) as Prince Phillip, Ed Skrein (Kill Your Friends), Imelda Staunton (the Harry Potter films) as Knotgrass, Juno Temple (Dirty John) as Thistlewit, and Lesley Manville (Harlots) as Flittle.
Joachim Rønning (Kon-Tiki, Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales) directed from a screenplay by Linda Woolverton, Micah Fitzerman-Blue, and Noah Harpster (story by Woolverton). Joe Roth, Angelina Jolie, and Duncan Henderson produced, with Matt Smith, Jeff Kirschenbaum and Michael Vieira executive producing.
The behind the scenes team includes director of photography Henry Braham, editors Laura Jennings and Craig Wood, production designer Patrick Tatopoulos, and costume designer Ellen Mirojnick.
Maleficent: Mistress of Evil is set to hit theaters nationwide on October 18, 2019.
The Plot:
“The years have been kind to Maleficent and Aurora. Their relationship, born of heartbreak, revenge and ultimately love, has flourished. Yet the hatred between man and the fairies still exists. Aurora’s impending marriage to Prince Phillip is cause for celebration in the kingdom of Ulstead and the neighboring Moors, as the wedding serves to unite the two worlds.
When an unexpected encounter introduces a powerful new alliance, Maleficent and Aurora are pulled apart to opposing sides in a Great War, testing their loyalties and causing them to question whether they can truly be family.”
Disney and ABC will be celebrating the 30th anniversary of the classic animated film, The Little Mermaid, with a special live musical event. The Wonderful World of Disney presents The Little Mermaid Live! will feature live musical performances by Moana star Auli’i Cravalho as Ariel. Grammy Award winner Queen Latifah will play Ursula and Grammy Award winner Shaggy has signed on to tackle the role of Sebastian the crab.
The live musical will be performed in front of a studio audience. Hamish Hamilton will direct and executive produce. Additional executive producers include Katy Mullan, David Jammy, Raj Kapoor, and Ian Stewart. Richard Kraft, producer and director of the Hollywood Bowl productions of Beauty and the Beast and The Little Mermaid, is also executive producing.
The Little Mermaid Live! will air on Tuesday, November 5, 2019 on ABC at 8pm ET/PT (tape delayed on the West Coast). Expect additional cast members to be announced closer to the November air date.
The live musical production comes hot on the tail of the casting announcements for a live-action The Little Mermaid film. Disney’s live-action version will star Halle Bailey as Ariel, Jacob Tremblay as Flounder, and Awkwafina as Scuttle.
The Little Mermaid Live! Details, Courtesy of ABC:
“This special tribute to the original animated classic and its timeless music will take viewers on a magical adventure under the sea as live musical performances by a star-studded cast will be interwoven into the broadcast of the original feature film. This never-before-seen hybrid format will feature beautifully intricate sets and costumes, with music from the original animated film and the Tony Award-winning Broadway stage version, originally composed by eight-time Oscar-winning composer, Alan Menken. Howard Ashman’s iconic film lyrics will also be showcased, while lyricist for the Broadway adaptation, Glenn Slater, will contribute to the star-studded spectacular.”
Bush and +Live+ have added nine additional dates to their ALT-IMATE Tour. The new dates include stops in San Diego, Portland, Seattle, and Salt Lake City. The extended tour will now finish up on Wednesday, October 23, 2019 in Cedar Park, TX at the HEB Events Center.
The ALT-IMATE Tour will kick off on August 6th in Los Angeles, CA at the Greek Theatre. The first round of dates includes concerts in Baltimore, Miami, Pittsburgh, Dayton, and Atlanta. Initially, the tour was set to wrap up on September 8, 2019 in Rochester, MI at the Meadow Brook Amphitheatre.
The 2019 tour is in celebration of the 25th anniversaries of Bush’s 6x platinum-selling Sixteen Stones album and +LIVE+’s Throwing Copper album. Tickets for the just-announced dates go on sale on Friday, August 9th at 10am local time via LiveNation.com.
In an interview with Consequence of Sound, Bush’s Gavin Rossdale said, “I’ve known Live since back in the day and they’re great people. As far as what people can expect, it’s a thousand percent and lots of energy, a couple of new songs and a just a celebration of the summer. It’s good fun.”
“So thrilled that the ALT-IMATE Tour is extending into October! From the first concert with Bush and Our Lady Peace, we knew that this show was something special,” said +LIVE+ frontman Ed Kowalczyk. “The fans have been so supportive and are obviously sharing our excitement! See you on the road!”
+LIVE+ and Bush The ALT-IMATE Tour 2019 Dates:
Tuesday, August 06, 2019 – Los Angeles, CA at Greek Theatre
Wednesday, August 07, 2019 – Concord, CA at Concord Pavilion
Friday, August 09, 2019 – Tuolumne, CA at Black Oak Casino – West Side Pavilion*
Saturday, August 10, 2019 – Costa Mesa, CA at OC Fair*
Sunday, August 11, 2019 – Tucson, AZ at AVA Casino*
Wednesday, August 14, 2019 – Rogers, AR at Walmart AMP
Friday, August 16, 2019 – Tampa, FL at MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre
Saturday, August 17, 2019 – Miami, FL at Bayfront Park Amphitheater
Sunday, August 18, 2019 – Jacksonville, FL at Daily’s Place
Tuesday, August 20, 2019 – Atlanta, GA at Cadence Bank Amphitheatre at Chastain Park
Friday, August 23, 2019 – Essex Junction, VT at Champlain Valley Expo*
Saturday, August 24, 2019 – Baltimore, MD at MECU Pavilion
Sunday, August 25, 2019 – Pittsburgh, PA at Stage AE*
Tuesday, August 27, 2019 – Allentown, PA at The Great Allentown Fair
Thursday, August 29, 2019 – Wantagh, NY at Northwell Health at Jones Beach Theater
Friday, August 30, 2019 – Bethel, NY at Bethel Woods Center for the Arts
Wednesday, September 04, 2019 – Dayton, OH at The Rose Music Center at The Heights
Friday, September 06, 2019 – Tinley Park, IL at Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre
Saturday, September 07, 2019 – Allegan, MI at Allegan County Fair*
Sunday, September 08, 2019 – Rochester, MI at Meadow Brook Amphitheatre
New Dates:
Thursday, October 10, 2019 – San Diego, CA at North Island Credit Union Amphitheatre
Friday, October 11, 2019 – Las Vegas, NV at The Joint at Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Las Vegas
Saturday, October 12, 2019 – Salt Lake City, UT at USANA Amphitheatre
Tuesday, October 15, 2019 – Portland, OR at Veterans Memorial Coliseum
Wednesday, October 16, 2019 – Seattle, WA at ShoWare Center
Saturday, October 19, 2019 – Reno, NV at Grand Sierra Theatre
Sunday, October 20, 2019 – Temecula, CA at Pechanga Resort and Casino
Monday, October 21, 2019 – Phoenix, AZ at Comerica Theatre
Wednesday, October 23, 2019 – Cedar Park, TX at HEB Events Center*
AMC’s The Terror: Infamy, season two of the anthology series, is set during World War II. The new season shines a spotlight on the chilling chapter in American history in which the United States government locked up Japanese Americans in internment camps. Stars George Takei and Derek Mio were among the cast members representing the series at the 2019 San Diego Comic-Con, and each had direct connections to that disturbing period in America.
George Takei spent years in internment camps as a child. Derek Mio’s grandfather was forced to leave his family when he was placed in a camp. Takei and Mio joined their co-stars Kiki Sukezane and Cristina Rodlo as well as co-creators/executive producers Alexander Woo and Max Borenstein for a press conference to discuss The Terror: Infamy.
The Terror: Infamy will premiere on August 12, 2019 at 9pm ET/PT.
The first season featured a lot of flashbacks and flash-forwards. Will we see that in The Terror: Infamy and will we spend time outside the internment camps?
Alexander Woo: “If you loved season one, none of it will be the same in season two. Everyone here is new. New cast, new story, new subject matter, new writers – everything is different. But I think it shares some of the DNA of the first season which is we’re telling a historical story using a genre category. This case it’s Japanese ghost stories and the Japanese horror movies that have descended from that.
In terms of where our settings are, we’re not going to be locked in one location.”
Why did you decide to tell this story about a time period a lot of people aren’t familiar with?
Alexander Woo: “So many good reasons.”
George Takei: “That’s the very reason that you cite is why it’s important to tell this story. This is a part of American history. It happened in the United States to American citizens of Japanese ancestry ordered by the United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt and imprisoned in the United States. I hate the term the press always uses, ‘Japanese internment camp.’ Now, anyone who knows simple English grammar knows Japanese internment camps would be run by the government of Japan. It was not. It was an American story.
It’s an important story that has chilling resonance for us today. And yet so many Americans are aghast when I tell people about my childhood. They don’t believe that something like that happened. That’s why it’s important for Americans to know their own American history.”
(Takei clarifies when asked about his dislike for the term ‘internment camp.’)
“No, Japanese internment camp. It’s that combination of ‘Japanese’ and ‘internment.’ They were American internment camps for Japanese Americans. Many Japanese Americans prefer the word concentration camp because that’s precisely what it was. We had barbed wire fences confining us, tall sentry towers with soldiers with guns pointed at us. When I made the runs from our barrack to the latrine, searchlights followed me. But I was five years old at the time and five-year-old me I thought it was nice that they lit the way for me.”
George Takei as Nobuhiro Yamato and Shingo Usami as Henry Nakayama in ‘The Terror’ (Photo by Ed Araquel / AMC)
Which came first, the idea for a story set in the internment camps or the supernatural elements?
Max Borenstein: “Obviously the first season of The Terror was its own story. When AMC contemplated doing a second season, the challenge was how do you take another moment in history and combine it with a genre element that would heighten the supernatural. And I told the story of George.
I’m a history buff and I had sat in on a class that a cousin of mine taught where George was visiting the seminar and talking about his experience. He talked about his story having grown up in an internment camp. So, I had that in mind. And after meeting with AMC and thinking about what would be an interesting historical moment to explore and put a supernatural element in it, that was the genesis.”
Why is now the right time for this story?
Max Borenstein: “I think we’ve hit on a peak television time when greater risks are being taken. And then the great strengths of the medium…one of the strengths of the television medium is that you can really build a relationship between the viewer and the characters and build a really strong empathy. That’s what we’re trying to do.
And our strategy rather than telling this as a docudrama – although there have been many very, very good ones, that puts you at a bit of a safer room. We didn’t want the viewer to feel safe. We wanted the viewer to feel the terror. We’re using the vocabulary of the Japanese ghost stories and horror in order to hopefully make the viewer feel a constant, ambient dread of horror of what it was like to not only go through wartime but wartime in an internment camp.”
George, with you actually living the experience, what’s your take on the events combined with a supernatural aspect?
George Takei: “It was a harrowing time for my parents. Their bank account was frozen. Their house was taken away from them. They were placed under curfew. They had to be home by 8pm and stay home until 6am…imprisoned in our homes and straight-jacketed financially. And then they imprisoned you for no good reason other than you looked like the people who bombed Pearl Harbor.
But that was not the end of it. The constant horror of goading with outrage. When Pearl Harbor was first bombed, young Japanese Americans – like all young Americans – rushed to their recruitment centers to volunteer to serve the US military. This act of patriotism was met with a slap in the face. They were denied military service and classified as enemy aliens. They were patriots volunteering to possibly die for their country and calling them an enemy made no sense at all. And equally senseless was to call them aliens.
They were born here. My mother was born in Sacramento, California. My father was a San Franciscan. People were born here, raised here, educated here. To call them aliens was crazy. And then with no charges, no trial, no due process, to imprison them was un-American. Due process is a central pillar of our justice system. And then a year into the imprisonment the government realized there’s a wartime manpower shortage and here are all these people that they could have had that they classified as enemy aliens. How do you justify drafting them out of the concentration camps for service to the United States military? They came down with a loyalty questionnaire. Can you imagine the outrage of that? But, that loyalty questionnaire was put together very sloppily. People who were not literate in the English language. Everyone over the age of 17 had to respond to the questionnaire.
Two questions became the most controversial. Question 27 asked will you bear arms to defend the United States of America. This was being asked of my mother. I was by that time six years old, my brother was five years old, my baby sister was a toddler. She was being asked to abandon her children and bear arms to defend the nation that was imprisoning her family. It was preposterous.
The next question was even more insidious. In one sentence, it asked will you swear your loyalty to the United States of America and forswear your loyalty to the Emperor of Japan? We’re Americans; we never even thought of the Emperor, much less pledged loyalty to him. But the government thought we had an inborn racial loyalty. That’s how ignorant they were.
So, if you answered no, meaning ‘I don’t have a loyalty to the Emperor to forswear,’ that also applied to the first part of the very same sentence. If you answered yes, meaning I do swear my loyalty to the United States, then that yes meant you were confessing that you had been loyal to the Emperor and were now prepared to forswear it and repledge your loyalty to the United States.
My parents were outraged by that, insulted by it, and they answered no to those two questions. And they were now classified as ‘no nos’ and were transferred from Rohwer, the Arkansas camp, to a high security camp called the Segregation of Disloyals camp in Northern California, right by the Oregon border. This was another outrageous overreaction to innocent people.
[…] We had a 10-episode series and we needed to hold an audience for 10 weeks. The cliffhangers at the end of each are very powerfully written, and the ghost stories come into that. I won’t tell you what they are but tune in and you will not be able to resist tuning in for the next episode.”
Alexander Woo: “I think it’s as important for a viewer to feel how powerful it is. When you have George Takei telling you that story, you really feel how emotionally traumatic that experience is. And I think we use the genre strategically and respectfully in order to really bring out the emotional experience of it, so you don’t feel like you’re sitting at home, like, ‘Well, that happened 75 years ago. Thank goodness immigrants have nothing to worry about today.’
You want to get a little bit in the skin of those people.”
Cristina Rodlo, Derek Mio and Shingo Usami in ‘The Terror: Infamy’ (Photo by Ed Araquel / AMC)
Did you have any moments while filming The Terror: Infamy that deeply impacted you?
Derek Mio: “My personal connection to the story, just like George my grandfather was in the internment camps as well. He actually grew up in Terminal Island where our series starts out.
It was a very special project for me, personally. It was remarkable how when I was reading the pilot and other scenes, they were similar to my own grandfather’s actual stories.
But yeah, there were many, many moments on set that were emotionally impactful. In the pilot there’s a scene where some of the members get taken away like they did…like my grandfather. His father – my great grandfather – actually got taken away. When we shot that it was very powerful, probably the most emotional experience I’ve ever had acting.”
Cristina Rodlo: “To me it was just the same. Being Latina and what’s happening right now at the border, every single scene I would feel connected to it.
It’s amazing how we are repeating history, and I think one of the most important things about this show is that many people don’t know this happened. We need to tell them that this happened. The only way to change history is knowing history. We need to be aware of what we have done and we need to change it – and we need to change it now. So that’s why for me every single scene was like, ‘Okay, I’m very lucky to be telling this story because we’re saying something and we’re saying something good.’”