william h macy-related stories
Posted Oct 15th 2009 8:08PM by Jason Hughes
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, Casting, Reality-Free

Since January 2004, the UK's
Shameless has been bringing to life the story of a drunken working-class father and his nine children. Snippets of this long-running hit; going into its seventh season; have aired in the US on BBC America and Sundance. And for five years, it's been in development hell.
The show has been tied to NBC, with Woody Harrelson in consideration for the lead role of Frank Gallagher, and more recently at HBO. Now, finally, original creator Paul Abbott and John Wells Prod. have
signed a deal to bring Shameless to Showtime with William H. Macy in the lead.
Continue reading Willam H. Macy is getting Shameless for Showtime
Posted Aug 3rd 2007 5:20PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, Pickups and Renewals
I told you back in May that William H. Macy had written and would star in a new series for TNT called Family Man. TNT has just given the greenlight to the pilot.
The quirky drama would focus on Macy's character, an upstanding citizen who also happens to be the leader of a group of burglars. The plot is revealed in "flash forward" mode with Macy's character, Todd Becker, imprisoned in the future. Along with his cohorts, Becker steals from major corporations and gives to charity. Ah, that's nice.
Continue reading Macy's Family Man picked up by TNT
Posted May 16th 2007 10:02AM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, Celebrities, Pickups and Renewals
William H. Macy is set to star in the TNT series Family Man.
This is the third TNT project Macy has been involved with, having already co-written (with writing partner Steven Schachter) the Emmy-winning Door to Door and The Wool Cap.
Family Man, which Macy also wrote with Schachter, focuses on the life of a man who gives to charity but also steals from major corporations. According to Variety, the series is told in "flash forward" fashion in which we see Macy imprisoned in the future. Sounds like kind of a modern take on the Robin Hood story to me.
There's no word yet on when the series will air.
Posted Jul 19th 2006 9:05PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, Celebrities, TNT
(S01E03) Writers are the most shameless, self-centered bastards in the world. We lie, we seduce, we'll steal your soul. Anything to look good on the page. -Sam Landry
I thought I had read every story from Nightmares and Dreamscapes, and I might have, but nothing about "Umney's Last Case" was familiar when I read it just recently. Nevertheless, it's not a bad story, and it's also very "meta" as the college kids like to say.
In the story, as in the TV adaptation, we begin in the 1930s where a grizzled private eye named Clyde Umney is leading a storybook life that he'll soon learn is more "storybook" than he realizes. He wields snappy dialogue with the precision of a trapeze artist, and always knows just what to say to get what he wants, at one point managing to turn two women to jelly in his office one after the other.
Continue reading Nightmares and Dreamscapes: Umney's Last Case
Posted Jan 9th 2006 1:45PM by Ryan j Budke
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, FOX, OpEd, The Simpsons, Animation

So let's get
it out of the way right off the bat -- Wiiliam H. Macy and "Smokin" Joe Frazier are not even in consideration
to be Homer's father in this episode, it's only Michael York. The other two are in the episode alright, but in other
funny cameos. The "mystery" of Homer's past has been done a couple of times, in a couple of different ways,
so this episode wasn't necessarily an "original" idea, but it was still pretty funny nonetheless. I think I
may have finally put my finger on what's been missing from the show the past couple of years, and why it's suddenly
funny again, but I'll get to that in the recap, for now -- On with the show!
Continue reading The Simpsons: Homer's Paternity Coot