logo
#

Latest news with #TinaFey

Kristen Bell, Tina Fey, Bridget Everett, and the best of our Emmy Comedy Actress interviews
Kristen Bell, Tina Fey, Bridget Everett, and the best of our Emmy Comedy Actress interviews

Yahoo

time14 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Kristen Bell, Tina Fey, Bridget Everett, and the best of our Emmy Comedy Actress interviews

Over the past two months of Emmy campaigning, Gold Derby has spoken with several contenders in all categories. Now with voting underway ahead of the July 15 unveiling of the nominees, we have compiled nine interviews for stars vying for Best Comedy Actress, including: Kristen Bell (Nobody Wants This), Bridget Everett (Somebody Somewhere), Tina Fey (The Four Seasons), Kate Hudson (Running Point), Margo Martindale (The Sticky), Wendi McLendon-Covey (St. Denis Medical), Melissa Rauch (Night Court), Natasha Rothwell (How to Die Alone), and Allison Tolman (St. Denis Medical). Read on for highlights from each interviews and links to watch our full video Q&As. More from GoldDerby 'Hope for the best, prepare for the worst': 'Overcompensating' breakout Wally Baram on making her acting debut, defiling prop toilet The case of Leslie Abramson vs. Marcia Clark: Ari Graynor and Sarah Paulson on 'defending' their characters In Pixar's 'Elio,' Easter eggs are literally written in the stars - will you be able to spot them all? Created by Erin Foster and inspired by her marriage, the show follows the interfaith romance between Joanne (Bell), an agnostic podcaster, and "hot rabbi" Noah (Adam Brody). "What I liked so much about the dynamic was I was able to see clearly Joanne was a child and Noah was an adult until they switch," Bell tells us. "But initially, Joanne is messy and can't really commit or doesn't know how to hold things down together. And Noah has all these adult attributes, like stability that she gravitates towards. And she wants that. She just doesn't know how to get it." Watch our complete interview with Kristen Bell. In the HBO Max comedy series, Everett plays Sam, a true Kansan on the surface, but, beneath it all, struggles to fit the hometown mold. Grappling with loss and acceptance, she discovers herself and a community of outsiders who don't fit in but don't give up. "Sam is just trying to learn to exist in these new parameters," Everett says. "You get a little bit older, people start coupling up, and if you're not one — a party of three is just a little different. That's life, so you just acclimate." Watch our complete interview with Bridget Everett. Fey is the star, producer, and writer of the Netflix comedy, which is a remake of the original 1981 film from star, director, and writer Alan Alda. 'It was a really conscious effort to work in a different tone,' Fey says. 'We wanted to evoke the tone of the original movie. At the same time, we knew we were doing eight episodes for streaming, so we felt like we needed just enough story energy to feel like we were cliff-hangering and pulling people one episode to the next. It was a challenge for all of us to be restrained about where we put jokes. The few other characters we meet can't be too absurd. We have to stay grounded, stay tethered. And that's the goal — if we were to strip some things away, would we be able to hold tinier emotional moments and small behaviors as subtler jokes.' Watch our complete video interview with Tina Fey. In the Netflix series, Hudson stars as Isla Gordon, a fictionalized version of L.A. Lakers owner Jeanie Buss. "Jeanie's approach, which was actually kind of surprising to all of us, was, 'Go, have fun, enjoy it, I'm hands-off.' She just was all trust. It was a great lesson," says Hudson. "When you give trust, we all want to honor what it is that she gifted us, which was this awesome place to tell amazing stories in so many different ways about family, about women, about high stakes sports. That allowed me to be able to create Isla and not do Jeanie. It isn't a biopic. It really allowed it to take on a life of its own, which gives us freedom in comedy to separate it from the insanely high stakes world that Jeanie lives in." Read our complete interview with Kate Hudson. The Emmy-winning star of Justified and The Americans spoke to Gold Derby about her star turn on Prime Video's The Sticky, a dark comedy about an unlikely, bumbling trio who team up to pull off a maple syrup heist. "I love acting no matter how you throw it at me," she says. "But it was an honor to lead the tone of a show, meaning not the tone of the story, but the tone of the atmosphere of the group that, everybody's kind to each other and supportive." Martindale has long been called a "character actor," but that label has no meaning for her. "Acting is character acting. You think Meryl Streep's not a character actress? She's a character actress." Watch our complete interview with Margo Martindale. The veteran sitcom star plays hospital administrator Joyce on the NBC/Peacock mockumentary comedy series. 'In my mind, she became an administrator because she got tired of being told how to practice medicine,' McLendon-Covey says of the backstory she created for her character. But now, instead of battling with insurance companies over patient care, all she does now is 'beg for money all day. ... It's the delicious line I get to walk.' Watch our complete interview with Wendi McLendon-Covey. Rauch plays Judge Abby Stone on NBC's reboot also starring John Larroquette. The first scenes during the pilot, which were shot shortly after they met in person for the first time, had a real "electricity in the air," she says. And she's been picking up nuggets of wisdom ever since — down to the way Larroquette fills in the space between when the punchline lands and the audience stops laughing. "It's otherworldly," she says. "It's sort of like riding a wave and coming to the end of it. I love it so much, getting to watch him do it. … I'm constantly just taking notes from everyone." Watch our complete interview with Melissa Rauch. Rothwell created the series, in which she plays broke, single, plus-size JFK Airport worker Mel, who is deciding she wants more out of life after nearly choking to death remains a tough pill to swallow. "That show is the most vulnerable thing I've ever put in the world, and it remains the thing that I'm the most proud of," she tells us. "And it is definitely the product of 20 years of therapy, being able to say a lot of those things out loud. That scene in particular. … I went to school for theater. It's like, let's just treat the third act like a one act play. Let's just be in it. Let's just hear this conversation. Let's see these two people talk and say the things that have gone unsaid their entire lives, and that requires room to breathe." Watch our complete interview with Natasha Rothwell. The Emmy nominee talked to Gold Derby about playing supervising nurse Alex in the NBC/Peacock comedy series, a mom with two children at home who struggles with setting work-life boundaries. 'It can be lonely to be the straight man in a comedy like this because you're not the one who gets the big moments or the big jokes or the big set pieces,' the actress says. But the role does have its unique attributes, too. 'I really feel a kinship with the audience and I really feel like the responsibility and the honor of being their touchstone. … The joy of Alex for me is that she's really aware of how all of this is coming off and she's really aware of the fact that she's being observed at all times.' Watch our complete interview with Allison Tolman. Best of GoldDerby Adam Brody, Seth Rogen, Jason Segel, and the best of our Emmy Comedy Actor interviews 'It was wonderful to be on that ride': Christian Slater talks his beloved roles, from cult classics ('Heathers,' 'True Romance') to TV hits ('Mr. Robot,' 'Dexter: Original Sin') Sam Rockwell on Frank's 'White Lotus' backstory, Woody Harrelson's influence, and going all in on 'this arc of Buddhist to Bad Lieutenant' Click here to read the full article.

Seth Meyers: ‘SNL' Boss Already Knows Who Will Replace Him
Seth Meyers: ‘SNL' Boss Already Knows Who Will Replace Him

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Seth Meyers: ‘SNL' Boss Already Knows Who Will Replace Him

Seth Meyers thinks Lorne Michaels already knows who will succeed him at Saturday Night Live. 'I do believe he has already talked to himself about who it's going to be,' Meyers said on Sunday's Talk Easy With Sam Fragoso podcast. 'And that person doesn't know.' Michaels kicked off rumors that he would be stepping down and choosing a replacement amid the show's 50th anniversary celebrations. Meyers is a popular choice for the job, though he's previously said he isn't gunning for it. 'It's certainly possible' Michaels could tap him, however, he said Sunday. 'It's so flattering,' Meyers said, stressing that he doesn't think 'anyone can replace Lorne,' but added, 'I don't want people to think that I don't feel esteem when I hear it.' Michaels, who created SNL in 1975, previous said that another of show's former head writers, Tina Fey, could 'easily' replace him as boss, but has otherwise stayed mum on the topic. Meyers, meanwhile, has been adamant that talk about Michaels' replacement was premature, despite the SNL boss' comments about 'figuring out' what he'll do after the show's 50th anniversary. The Late Night host said last March, 'I think this is a false narrative that Lorne is going anywhere. I think it made sense for Lorne, who's got a flare for the dramatic, to say, 'I think I'll be done at 50.' But now, it's not like Lorne's got something else he wants to do more than this.' That said, Michaels is known for springing big news on people as if they are already on the same page, and the conversation with his successor would likely go the same way, Meyers said. 'When I got Late Night, he called me and I remember getting off the phone and thinking, 'Was that a follow-up?'' Meyers joked. 'It was a follow-up conversation to a conversation we hadn't had, where he immediately was like, 'So look, I think you'll be good at it. It'll take time.' And I was like, what's going on?'

An insider's guide to food and fun in Atlantic City this summer
An insider's guide to food and fun in Atlantic City this summer

New York Post

time11-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Post

An insider's guide to food and fun in Atlantic City this summer

Nobody will mistake two nights in Atlantic City for a week in Las Vegas. But if you live in New York, have a gambling jones to satisfy, want to party on the beach, take in a show or two and would rather drive for a couple hours than fly for just under six, AC is a good bet. And the entertainment is decent enough to build a weekend around. Highlights on the summer calendar include Tina Fey and Amy Poehler at Ocean Casino Resort on June 21, David Lee Roth at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino on Aug. 8, and Black Keys at the Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa on Aug. 9. More regularly, every Wednesday through Sunday, you can check out a bawdy variety show called 'the Hook' at Caesars Atlantic City Resort. There are jugglers who strip down to their jockstraps, a woman who does freaky things inside a balloon and an emcee who never seems to run out of smutty jokes. It's old-fashioned casino entertainment with good taste gone to hell — and the crowd loves it. 5 Take in dazzling bawdy variety shows like 'the Hook' at Caesars Atlantic City Resort. Jody Hartley A recent trip down to the Garden State's gambling hub begins with checking into the appropriately named Ocean, where floor-to-ceiling windows look out on the Atlantic. It's something that Vegas, even at its most derivative, cannot replicate. Other good options for lodging: Borgata, which is as Vegas-y as Atlantic City gets, the Hard Rock if you want to recall your inner Eddie Van Halen and the Nobu Hotel, which occupies floors 42 to 44 of Caesars and aims to do for Jersey Shore overnighting what the sushi master did for raw fish. First thing in the morning, a leg-stretching stroll down the boardwalk — passing the giant observation wheel, at the old Steel Pier where horses once dove into the water, and more taffy stands than you can count — followed by a quick sit-down at a blackjack table are called for. It's worth noting that during the early hours, limits tend to be the lowest of the day. That said, as the minimum bets rise, it's time for brunch. Destination: Cardinal, which is the reigning non-casino gem of Atlantic City. Shimmering lights illuminate the bar and décor inside is farmhouse cool, Williamsburg styler. Fittingly, paintings of cardinals abound. Tasty offerings — which can be eaten outside, accompanied by live acoustic music — include Korean duck wings, house-made veggie burgers and a New England Benedict with smoked salmon. For something more along the lines of elevated bar food, Tennessee Avenue Beer Hall spins up burgers, pizza and kimchi fried chicken sandwiches. Taps line the length of one wall — Big Sal's IPA is named for the managing partner — and games of cornhole get competitive juices flowing in the yard. For cheesesteaks, a local delicacy, White House Subs is king. 5 Ocean features big-name DJs. Courtesy of Ocean Casino Resort Upcoming at Ocean are two offerings from celebrity restaurateur Stephen Starr. Chez Frites will be a bistro-style eatery where Paris-worthy steak frites promises to rule as a specialty. Next door, breakfast and lunch views are likely to get elevated in every sense of the word at Sunny's, which will serve comfort-food with a shimmering 11-story-high view of the Atlantic Ocean. 5 Not to mention rooms with stellar views. Courtesy of Ocean Casino Resort When the sun is shining, HQ2 Beachclub at Ocean has big name DJs on the roster. This summer, revelers will wade into the pool to the sounds of Tiësto and Steve Aoki. On cloudy or cold afternoons, the MGM Tower at Borgata's 21-and-up indoor pool is the place to be. And there are always rides via tram on the freshly launched Boardwalk Tours, helmed by local legend Mike 'AC Mike' Lopez. While slowly motoring down the Boardwalk — trams top out at 5 miles per hour — he'll loop you in on the latest AC dish plus the true history of Nucky Johnson (fictionalized by Steve Buscemi, as Nucky Thompson in 'Boardwalk Empire') as well as local nightlife rogue Paul 'Skinny' D'Amato. 5 No one can pamper quite like the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Atlantic City. Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Atlantic City If you're a guy in need of grooming, have Mike's side kick and top-notch driver Freddy Isaac drop you off at newly opened Hammer and Nails (the classic face treatment there will erase worry lines that might have popped during a bad run at the tables). Ladies (and men for that matter) can hit up Rock Spa and Salon at the Hard Rock for topnotch pampering. Either way, be sure to ask Freddy for a White House tip: His favorite sub, which involves a cheeseburger, mayonnaise and hot peppers. Non casino dinners are well handled by the Italian red sauce spot Angelo's and the Vietnamese mainstay Little Saigon. Staying in house tonight, we're enjoying perfectly medium-rare ribeye at Ocean Steak. The wine selection takes up an entire side of the restaurant, the double smoked bacon appetizer is a crowd pleaser and remember to order Jersey creamed corn on the side. This haven of hearty fare also happens to be conveniently close to Fanatics Sportsbook, the Michael Rubin brainchild that opened last September and ranks among the best place in town for watching games. Giant high-def monitors cover the walls, an enthusiastic crowd piles in and betting opportunities abound. Bottle service is available upstairs (though it's no charge down below). 5 This boardwalk empire is loaded with top casinos like Borgata. Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa As the hour nears midnight, it's time for a binge of casino gambling at Borgata. In the casino's brand new high-limit, baccarat-dominant, gaming quarters, the action is heavy and the energy level is pumped. Gamblers shout 'Monkey! Monkey!' when calling for 10-value cards while high-rollers discreetly do their thing in private gambling dens. We ante up for a bit of baccarat — playing Banker results in a lower house edge — before heading over to pai gow poker. A woman at the table, with a tiny plastic duck on top of her chips, seems unable to lose. Unfortunately, not possessing the duck or the luck, there is only one reasonable option: slip out the back of the baccarat room and into Noodles, the attached Asian food restaurant. Yes, a giant dinner was eaten mere hours ago. But the soup dumplings and Asian barbecue beckon. They are worth making room for. With dinner number-two digesting, and gambling spirits buoyed, it's either off to one of AC's happening nightclubs — including Premiere in the Borgata, HQ2 in Ocean and Pool After Dark at Harrah's Resort – or else poker at the Borgata's well-appointed card room. In the spirit of AC being a gambling town, a decision is made with the flip of a coin. Poker wins. So, it's shuffle-up-and-deal until breakfast, when it's time to chow down once more and start all over again.

SNL: We Pick the 15 Funniest Sketches of Season 50 — Watch Video
SNL: We Pick the 15 Funniest Sketches of Season 50 — Watch Video

Yahoo

time07-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

SNL: We Pick the 15 Funniest Sketches of Season 50 — Watch Video

Saturday Night Live's landmark 50th season has come and gone… and as usual, it left us with plenty of big laughs. NBC's sketch comedy institution wrapped up Season 50 last month, bringing back lots of familiar faces along the way, with cameos from legendary alumni like Adam Sandler and Tina Fey. But SNL delivered some instant-classic sketches this season, too — maybe even ones we'll still be talking about 50 years from now. (We'll probably have to explain to our grandchildren who or what Moo Deng was, though.) More from TVLine #OneChicago: Find Out Which Stars Are Set to Return This Fall - Plus, Fire, Med and P.D. Episode Counts Revealed Outlander's Jamie and Claire Get Goofy in Bed and Other Season 7 Bloopers - Watch Exclusive Reel AGT Just Brought Back Two Acts for Redemption in Season 20 - and One Got a Golden Buzzer! (Watch) We're celebrating the end of another SNL season — and a half-century of Studio 8H greatness — by looking back at the funniest Season 50 sketches, from uproarious live moments to pre-taped short films to Weekend Update characters we hope to see a lot more of in future seasons. Our favorite sketches include stellar work from hosts like Ariana Grande, John Mulaney and… Lady Gaga? Who knew she was a comedy powerhouse? (Note: In the interest of fairness, we left off any sketches from February's live SNL50 anniversary special — although those were fantastic, too. Click here for a full rundown.) Read on to see which Season 50 sketches made the cut — press PLAY on the photo that accompanies each entry to watch the sketch in full — and be sure to hit the comments below and let us know if we left off any of your favorites. This short film is a real emotional roller coaster, telling the tale of a cute monkey that was sent into outer space at the dawn of the Space Race — and might not make it back home. The Mad Men-era period detail is exquisite here, and Beppo's story actually becomes genuinely poignant at times. (We're rooting for you, Beppo!) But John Mulaney and company make sure to weave lots of absurd humor into the mix, even when things go dark. (And zero forever.) Ariana Grande really showed off her vocal range in this goofy trip back to the Italian Renaissance, playing a young boy who has an incredibly high singing voice… thanks to an involuntary castration. (Poor Antonio.) The sight gag of Grande's haunted face is priceless, and SNL greats Maya Rudolph and Andy Samberg even pop in to explain the castration process in broad Italian accents: 'We never cut. We just-a twist!' Weekend Update anchors Colin Jost and Michael Che's annual joke swap is always a good time, where they write incredibly offensive jokes for each other to read on air without seeing them first. They really outdo themselves here, though, with Jost comparing his wife Scarlett Johansson's, um, private area to Costco roast beef — with a shocked Johansson watching live backstage. She did eventually get an apology from Che… penned by Jost, of course. Yes, Shane Gillis bombed hard with his controversial monologue — and his episode earned a 'F' grade from TVLine readers — but we did find a silver lining in this commercial parody, where Gillis hawks a tried-and-true medication for men facing anxiety and depression: Just down a couple beers! His confidence goes through the roof, and he uses the wonder drug to cope with everything from 'winter' to 'museum.' (Watch it here.) No frills or cameos here: This is just a good old-fashioned hilarious sketch, led by new featured player Ashley Padilla as a wife who tells embarrassingly horrible jokes at a company dinner. (Or just one embarrassingly horrible joke, really. Over and over again.) Padilla's magnificently over-the-top delivery won our hearts immediately. She better be back next season, Lorne. SNL pays tribute to a cultural staple with this fake ad for every older woman's favorite accessory: little red glasses! (They say, 'I teach Philosophy of Dance, and I eat tapas every night.') Lady Gaga's Noo Yawk accent is fantastically on point here, and the heightening rises to absurd levels: 'I have a Celestial Seasonings credit card!' Two keys to making a great SNL sketch: (1) Give Kenan Thompson a crazy character to play, and (2) let him cook. Here, he plays rock'n'roll legend Little Richard, who repeatedly pops up on a cheesy '90s family sitcom for some reason. We're not asking too many questions; we'll just enjoy Thompson letting out joyous 'woooo's and delivering the immortal line: 'I'm sorry that your goddamn dog died.' Who is Lord Gaga? Why, he's Lady Gaga's husband, of course! Mikey Day brings the perfect air of snooty pomposity to this Weekend Update character, who is the heir to a vast textile empire and condescendingly applauds his wife's little 'hobby' in the arts. ('If only it all paid, eh?') But the joke goes to another level when Lord Gaga mocks the very idea of a man being outearned by his wife… while Colin Jost (husband to Scarlett Johansson) just sits there and seethes. Season 50's cameo cavalcade peaked in this cold open, with Martin Short getting inducted into SNL's vaunted Five-Timers Club by a glitzy parade of A-list luminaries led by Tom Hanks and Paul Rudd. The sheer star wattage here is almost overwhelming, but they bring the jokes, too, including Kristen Wiig's weird sexual energy and a delightful reunion of 30 Rock stars Tina Fey and Alec Baldwin. For SNL junkies, this is a real Christmas gift. This glorious Weekend Update character, with Bowen Yang playing the cute baby hippo that became a viral sensation, offers both high and low comedy. On one hand, we get a painfully pretentious Moo Deng complaining about his sudden fame, a la Chappell Roan. ('I will not be making an endorsement in this year's election.') And on the other, we get Yang in a hippo suit trying to drink water from a hose fired right at his face. Truly the best of both worlds. Walton Goggins turns the sleaze factor up to 11 for this riotous sketch, playing a wildly flirty waiter entertaining a pair of middle-aged moms at a Mother's Day brunch — and annoying their sons. Goggins sells it with his suggestively unbuttoned shirt and his smooth Southern drawl, hitting on the ladies with outrageous lines like when he told the sons: 'You got to spend nine months inside your mama, I'm just trying to get 20 minutes.' (Watch it here.) Here, host Jon Hamm and Bowen Yang play a gay couple who bring their new baby to a get-together — only their friends gently point out that they didn't have a baby a day ago. Hamm and Yang treat their friends' very reasonable questions about where the baby came from as wildly offensive homophobic slurs. ('People think they can ask gay people anything! It's not OK!') Plus, we kind of love Hamm and Yang's chemistry as a couple. We 'ship them! Hear us out! Andy Samberg and his Lonely Island pals make a triumphant return to SNL with this absolute banger, with Samberg and Akiva Schaffer pitching a stuffy business boardroom on their new innovation: a sushi glory hole. ('Instead of strange d—k, you'd be getting a snack.') Now we're not saying we'd kneel down in a dirty bathroom stall just to enjoy some high-end raw fish… but the song is pretty convincing. Michael Longfellow is deliciously sadistic as the host of this game show sketch, which simply asks contestants to correctly name a person. John Mulaney plays a sanctimonious contestant who claims to be an expert on politics… but can't even name Hillary Clinton's VP pick Tim Kaine when he's standing right in front of him. (Kaine is a very good sport about it, too.) And when the host challenges Mulaney's contestant to remember the name of a single one of the Black victims of police violence he had once tweeted out with the hashtag #RememberTheirNames, calling him 'pal of mine' in the process? Chef's kiss. (Watch it here.) SNL's repetitive Trump parodies got tiresome by the end of Season 50, but they thankfully find a new twist on it here by satirizing the HBO hit The White Lotus and putting Donald Trump and his family on an ill-fated trip to Thailand. Scarlett Johansson reprises her role as Ivanka Trump, Chloe Fineman's impression of Parker Posey (sorry, Melania Trump) is perfectly spot-on, and Jon Hamm delivers a pretty nifty RFK Jr. to boot. (We'll just ignore the cheap swipe taken at Aimee Lou Wood's teeth.) Best of TVLine Young Sheldon Easter Eggs: Every Nod to The Big Bang Theory (and Every Future Reveal) Across 7 Seasons Weirdest TV Crossovers: Always Sunny Meets Abbott, Family Guy vs. Simpsons, Nine-Nine Recruits New Girl and More ER Turns 30: See the Original County General Crew, Then and Now

Sophie White: The Four Seasons may be bucking the trend, but it's hard not to be sucked into the vortex of anti-ageing
Sophie White: The Four Seasons may be bucking the trend, but it's hard not to be sucked into the vortex of anti-ageing

Irish Independent

time05-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Independent

Sophie White: The Four Seasons may be bucking the trend, but it's hard not to be sucked into the vortex of anti-ageing

A few nights ago, I started watching the new Tina Fey show on Netflix. It's called the The Four Seasons and is a remake of the hit 1981 Alan Alda film of the same name. The story centres around three couples who've been taking holidays together for years. I immediately loved the concept and the cast is exceptional. The show is gently funny and the story is fun and relatable but what is genuinely groundbreaking is that the actors boast actual signs of ageing. Most of the ensemble are bang in their mid-50s, Steve Carell is the oldest at 62 and it feels plausible – like they're still actors, they look verrrry good for mid-50s but the fact that we're getting to see some signs of ageing is pathetically exciting in the vast uncanny valley of frozen people on film and television. Still, for every Four Seasons, there's a bajillion other shows populated with veritable armies of doll-like 40 and 50-year-olds striving to look 25. Most of the time, however, the youth bestowed by lasers, injections and scalpels doesn't really look like youth exactly but something slightly off. It's as though it's the supermarket own-brand of youth. Also, this exhausting preservation of hotness is just so drearily boring.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store