Posts with tag Angie Harmon
Posted Jun 16th 2008 5:20PM by Kristin Sample
Filed under: Celebrities, Casting, Reality-Free

Emmy and Grammy award winner Harry Connick, Jr. will star in the
Lifetime original movie called Living Proof. The movie, currently being filmed in Connick's hometown of New Orleans, is produced by Renee Zellweger, Craig Zadan and Neil Meron who all worked on
Chicago together. The film is about Dr. Dennis Slamon, the UCLA doctor who developed a drug for breast cancer.
Living Proof tells the true story of this doctor's struggle to keep the drug trials going and save the lives of thousands of women.
Harry Connick, Jr. is joined by Amanda Bynes (
Hairspray), Angie Harmon (
Women's Murder Club), Swoosie Kurtz (
Pushing Daisies), Bernadette Peters (
Boston Legal), Jennifer Coolidge (
American Pie), Regina King (
Ray), Tammy Blanchard (
Life with Judy Garland: Me and my Shadows), John Benjamin Hickey (
Flags of Our Fathers), Paula Cale (
Providence) and Trudie Styler (
Empire).
The film will air in October as Lifetime's centerpiece for the network's annual awareness campaign
Stop Breast Cancer for Life.Posted Apr 1st 2008 8:42AM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Industry, Programming, Boston Legal
I bet you thought Women's Murder Club was gone for good (if you were even thinking about it, that is). Nope, it's coming back.
The Angie Harmon drama series about a group of women in San Francisco who solve crimes is coming back to the ABC schedule on Tuesday, April 29, at 10pm. I know, you're thinking, wait a second, that's Boston Legal's time slot! Yup, it certainly is. That show is going to move to Wednesdays at 10pm starting the next day, April 30 (the show will run in its regular time slot when it returns from the strike hiatus on April 8 and then move to Wednesdays on the 30th).
Continue reading Boston Legal moving to Wednesdays
Posted Feb 24th 2008 2:01PM by Allison Waldman
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, Law and Order, Pickups and Renewals, Ratings, Lipstick Jungle

The fate of ABC's
Women's Murder Club has been determined...at least for the rest of this season. After a shake-up in the production team early this month which resulted in co-creators/producers Elizabeth Craft and Sarah Fain, as well and exec-producer R. Scott Gemmill, all being dispatched, Robert Nathan (
Law and Order) has been named showrunner.
Nathan will produce three more original episodes this season to be aired as early as April. This is good news for fans of the
femme detective series based on crime novelist James Pattersons' bestsellers. The hour drama premiered last October to generally poor reviews, but did well enough in the Nielsens to encourage ABC that they might have a hit on their hands. As the week's passed, the ratings dipped. The ten episodes that aired averaged a 6.1 rating/11 share; 38th place overall. Not gangbusters, but pretty good.
Continue reading Three new Women's Murder Clubs to come
Posted Jul 25th 2007 11:38PM by Michael Maloney
Filed under: TCA Press Tour, Casting

We TV Critics are dead on our feet now that we're in the last two days of a near-three week press tour at the Beverly Hilton, but that hasn't stopped us from getting dish from actors and producers here to hawk their fall ABC series.
On stage to promote Cashmere Mafia (a series about four women living life in New York City) creator Darren Star was asked about his other program about four women that call the Big Apple home. Star says: "There's a [film] script. It's in the form of pre-production."
Continue reading The day with ABC: New shows, Hope, Faith, and Sex - TCA report
Posted Apr 29th 2006 12:12PM by Richard Keller
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, NBC, Talent, Law and Order
If there is
any one show that can claim long-running success with a ever-changing cast of characters, it's NBC's Law &
Order. For example, during its 16-year run (which will become 17 years starting next fall), the
Assistant District Attorney's second-chair slot, which actor Richard Brooks left back in 1993, has been filled
by five individuals: Jill Hennessy, Carey Lowell, Angie Harmon, Elisabeth Rohm (who departed earlier
this last season) and Annie Parisse as current ADA Alexandra Borgia. Doctor Who didn't even
regenerate this much in so little time!
Well, it looks like Parisee may be heading out the door this season, according to Zap2it. Of
course, NBC is keeping mum about this rumored departure in order to maximize its ratings during May sweeps. The
only mention of the final episode involves Borgia's boss, ADA Jack McCoy (Sam Waterson), who risks everything in order
to nab two vicious criminals.
Parisee's Borgia replaced Rohm's Serena Southerlyn earlier this season when she was let go from the DA's office. In
a bit of a departure from the L&O formula, which rarely steeps into a character's background, Southerlyn
asked if she was let go because she was a lesbian. Who would replace Borgia? Well, if Conviction isn't
renewed, there will be a whole mess of new ADA's to choose from. Maybe McCoy can team up with Alexandra Cabot
(Stephanie March).