Sugar Editorial Picks
Mar 25, 2009 -
I'm still catching up on the first season of In Treatment on DVD, but that doesn't make me any less excited for this first glimpse of season two, which will start April 5 on HBO.
This season's schedule for the show, which stars Gabriel Byrne as a therapist, is a little more forgiving. Instead of airing five nights a week, two of the half-hour episodes will play on Sundays with three more — including Paul's session with his own therapist, Gina (Dianne Wiest) — on Mondays.
- 6 Comments
Sep 05, 2008 -
This first trailer for a new thriller called Passengers starring Anne Hathaway and directed by Rodrigo García (who wrote episodes of In Treatment and has directed shows including Six Feet Under) is puzzling for several reasons. For one thing I haven't heard all that much about it, even though it opens next month. For another, it's difficult to understand what specifically this is about.
- 8 Comments
Jun 23, 2008 -
Nine weeks of therapy wasn't enough for HBO. The network has decided to renew In Treatment for a second season.
The show, which stars Gabriel Byrne as a therapist, is one of the more unusual programs to appear on HBO in recent years.
- 9 Comments
Nov 02, 2007 -
I'm excited about In Treatment, the forthcoming HBO show starring Gabriel Byrne as a psychotherapist who is in therapy himself — but it's going to take over my life. See, HBO recently released its schedule for the show, and it's ... intense.
- 9 Comments
Sep 06, 2007 -
- The totally awesome Dianne Wiest has joined the cast of "The Return of Jezebel James", playing the mother of Coco (Lauren Ambrose) and Sarah (Parker Posey). That's three awesome ladies on one screen, especially given Wiest's particular skill at playing the crazy mother. Here's hoping the show itself can match up.
- Speaking of awesome, multi-time Emmy winner Marlo Thomas — aka "That Girl" — will guest-star on "Ugly Betty" as a jewelry company owner with a weakness for younger men, including one Daniel Meade.
- 6 Comments
Mar 16, 2007 -
Say what you will about Woody Allen and his sordid relationship history, but the man knows how to cast female actors in great roles. Witness Dianne Wiest in Bullets Over Broadway, Mia Farrow in Hannah and Her Sisters, and — of course — Diane Keaton in Annie Hall. Perhaps not coincidentally, those are also some of my favorite Woody Allen movies.
- 8 Comments
Other Search Results
Sep 20, 2009 -
Yet another shocker: Cherry Jones is the winner of the Emmy for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama! She beat out Hope Davis, Rose Byrne, Dianne Wiest, Sandra Oh, and Chandra Wilson.
So far my Emmy predictions haven't exactly been spot on, and I totally didn't see this coming.
- 16 Comments