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HBO's Steve Carell Comedy Series Adds Annie Mumolo

HBO's Steve Carell Comedy Series Adds Annie Mumolo

Yahoo20-06-2025

EXCLUSIVE: Annie Mumolo (Barb and Star Go to Vista Del Mar) has joined HBO's untitled comedy series from Bill Lawrence and Matt Tarses as a recurring. She joins a cast let by series regulars Steve Carell, Charly Clive, Phil Dunster, Danielle Deadwyler, John C. McGinley and Lauren Tsai.
Set on a college campus, the single-camera comedy centers on an author's (Carell) complicated relationship with his daughter, Katie (Clive).
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The first of 10 half-hour episodes was written by Lawrence and Tarses. Lawrence executive produces the series with Jeff Ingold and Liza Katzer of Doozer Productions. The comedy is produced by Doozer in association with Warner Bros Television, where Lawrence's Doozer banner and Tarses are under overall deals.
Mumolo, an Oscar nominee for co-writing Bridesmaids, was a series regular on NBC's About a Boy and guest starred on the final season of HBO's Curb Your Enthusiasm. Most recently, she was seen in the Amazon feature The Idea of You opposite Anne Hathaway. Mumolo is repped by UTA, Thruline Entertainment and Jackoway Austen Tyerman.
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This is the only celebrity who has a dish named after her at Nobu
This is the only celebrity who has a dish named after her at Nobu

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

This is the only celebrity who has a dish named after her at Nobu

She's so nice — this dish was named twice. Cindy Crawford is the one celebrity who has ever been honored with a menu item at the famed sushi hotspot Nobu. Chef Nobu Matsuhisa affectionately renamed kakiage — a Japanese tempura dish — 'Cindy Rice' after the supermodel, who was a regular at Matsuhisa, his first restaurant in Los Angeles, which opened in 1987. 'One day, at lunchtime she came and said, 'Make me anything,'' the celebrity chef told The Post ahead of the nationwide release of his documentary 'Nobu' on July 4. 'I used to do photoshoots in LA all the time, and I wanted Nobu always for lunch, but . . . if I didn't have a chance to eat right away . . . I wanted something that could maybe sit for one hour or two hours,' she explained in the film, which was directed by Matt Tyrnauer. 3 Chef Nobu Matsuhisa, who got his start as a dishwasher and delivery boy in Tokyo, now has an empire of 56 restaurants and 45 hotels around the world. Courtesy of Nobu Soon after the entree was crowned Cindy Rice, Crawford requested her namesake dish at the New York location of Nobu. The staff was baffled. 'The New York people didn't know . . . So the manager called me and asked, 'What's Cindy Rice?'' Matsuhisa, 76, recalled, laughing. The famed cook — who got his start as a teen-aged dishwasher and delivery boy in Tokyo — said his first A-list customer was Robert De Niro, even though he didn't know it then. The Oscar-winner was so impressed with the food, he approached Matsuhisa about opening a restaurant with him in New York. 'I did not know what he did. Never saw his movies,' Matsuhisa confessed. 3 Cindy Crawford and her husband Rande Gerber, pictured here leaving Nobu Mailbu, are featured in the documentary 'Nobu,' which will be released nationwide on July 4. / The actor is now a partner at Nobu — an empire of 56 restaurants and 45 hotels everywhere from Malibu and Maui to Budapest and the Bahamas. It was De Niro's idea to name the eatery Nobu. 'He said, 'Matsuhisa is too long. How about your first name, Nobu?'' Matsuhisa explained. 'He's a great idea man.' The first Nobu opened in Tribeca in 1994. That location closed in 2017, but there are still two in Manhattan — Nobu Downtown in FiDi and Nobu Fifty Seven in Midtown West. This year, the brand will be debuting its first hotel in Manhattan — in the Plaza Athenee hotel on the Upper East Side, which closed during the pandemic. 3 Matsuhisa called Robert De Niro, a partner at Nobu, 'a great idea man.' Dave Allocca/Starpix / Shutterstock Matsuhisa has since welcomed a who's who of celeb customers, including Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce, David and Victoria Beckham, and Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez, who made their debut as a couple by kissing outside its New York location in 2002. (And when they got back together in 2021, their first public smooch was at Nobu Malibu.) With all his brushes with fame in his nearly 60-year career, Matsuhisa didn't hesitate to name his favorite customer — Princess Diana, whom he cooked for in Nobu's London Old Park Lane location in 1997, just months before her death. 'I was really nervous . . . She said to me, 'Chef Nobu, I read about your history.' I was so surprised and impressed. And then I cooked for her . . . tempura, black cod. She liked it,' he fondly remembered.

Is this the best movie of the 21st century? 500 Hollywood power players think so.
Is this the best movie of the 21st century? 500 Hollywood power players think so.

USA Today

time12 hours ago

  • USA Today

Is this the best movie of the 21st century? 500 Hollywood power players think so.

The people have spoken, and the best movie released since Jan. 1, 2000, has been chosen. And by people, we mean the 500 or so actors, directors, writers and other Hollywood power players The New York Times surveyed for its 100 best movies of the 21st century ranking, which came out with its top 20 on June 27. The likes of Pamela Anderson, Nicholas Sparks, Stephen King, Simu Liu, Sofia Coppola, Danielle Brooks, Brian Cox, Ava DuVernay, Molly Ringwald, Rachel Zegler and Mel Brooks had their say — and yes, you can even see each of their top 10 picks, Letterboxd style. Oscar-winning director Coppola apparently took a shining to the 2004 Pixar classic (and fellow Oscar winner) "The Incredibles," while Julianne Moore admitted she's not above a raunchy comedy like "Superbad" and "The 40-Year-Old Virgin." And Sparks isn't only watching soppy romances; he's also enjoying dramas like "Inception" and "Gladiator." Undeserved Oscar winners – and the ones that should have won What's the best movie released since 2000? None other than Bong Joon Ho's "Parasite," which in 2020 became the first ever non-English film to earn the best picture Oscar, ranked as the No. 1 highest-voted film in the NYT's survey. And no wonder, because it earned an eye-boggling 99% "fresh" rating from nearly 500 film reviews on Rotten Tomatoes. In 2019, USA TODAY's film critic Brian Truitt was close to giving the social commentary thriller full marks (he ended up giving three and a half of four stars). The Korean film "is expertly paced with its reveals, never falls apart (even when it descends into bloody chaos) and also features outstanding acting performances," he noted in his review. In case anyone was wondering, director Bong did not include any of his own films (which includes the recent "Mickey 17" as well as 2017's "Okja" and 2013's "Snowpiercer) in his top nine ranking. New on streaming: From 'Minecraft' to 'KPop Demon Hunters,' what to watch right now The top 20 films since 2000 The top 20 highest-voted films were as follows:

Katherine LaNasa was always cast in 'sexual' roles. She's happy to ditch makeup on 'The Pitt.'
Katherine LaNasa was always cast in 'sexual' roles. She's happy to ditch makeup on 'The Pitt.'

Yahoo

time12 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Katherine LaNasa was always cast in 'sexual' roles. She's happy to ditch makeup on 'The Pitt.'

As a teen ballet dancer turned actress with a list of credits (including Two and a Half Men and Big Love) as long as her arm, Katherine LaNasa has spent most of her life in the spotlight. But starring as emergency-room nurse Dana on the hit HBO Max medical drama The Pitt has launched the 58-year-old into a new level of fame. It's coming just at the right time, she says. 'I saw an [article] yesterday on GQ about these men that are finding success in their 50s — like Pedro Pascal, Colman Domingo and Walt Goggins — and how they already have a well-established self-identity,' LaNasa tells me during our conversation for Yahoo Life's Unapologetically series. 'It's really nice to feel really settled in myself and to have done what I do with very relatively little praise. So getting praise now, it's a nice ride. You see kids get that, and they start thinking they need to adopt some other jaded or cool persona. I already am my grown-up cool/uncool self. This is just career stability and nicer accommodations and clothing.' LaNasa has a lot of self-acceptance when it comes to the subject of aging, and her confidence is infectious. 'I was walking on the street in Atlanta, and [this guy said], 'Your dog almost walked into my dog,'' she recalls. 'I was like, 'Were you inconvenienced?' And he goes, 'You look old.' I said, 'I am old!' [But] I feel like I'm in really good shape; I feel really strong.' Having an 11-year-old daughter, with her husband, '90s heartthrob Grant Show of Melrose Place fame, also keeps her young. But motherhood is hardly a new experience; LaNasa was in her early 20s when she and then-husband Dennis Hopper (30 years her senior) welcomed their son Henry, who is now in his 30s. What has LaNasa learned from her relationships, and why is she happy to let go of playing sexual characters? Here's what she told me during our candid conversation on aging, catcalling and not wearing makeup on TV. I'd always wanted to work for [The Pitt executive producer] John Wells, and I thought, If I could get in front of [casting], if they ever see my tape, I have a feeling I know what they want. And it just worked out. [As for] the success — it's kind of like if you loved making coffee, and you made coffee for someone every day, and you put a beautiful heart on it or different designs every day, and you did that for 30 years or so, and that was your job, and you got paid well, and you liked [it], and then, one day someone looked at you and said, "This is such great coffee. I really love your coffee." That's kind of what it feels like. Getting approval and praise I didn't think was ever coming my way — that I wasn't looking for and I didn't really need — is all just a bonus, and it feels like a nice warm bath. It's very enjoyable. I always played such sexual characters, and I think I always identified myself so much with my sexuality. I thought that if I became less sexually desirable as I got older or if I felt less interested in sex, I would lose a big part of my identity, and it would be terrible. And I find that I just really don't care. You know, this thing about older women being invisible? I'll take a step back. I used to get catcalled all the time, and it's a relief, and it's nice [to not have to deal with that anymore]. I also think [now is] a time in life — if you can let go of this feminine ideal of our physical beauty — it's really a time in life for deeper things, to think about the meaning of your life, to think about your own mortality, to think about what kind of legacy you want to leave and who you are. I really appreciate this season of life. I also appreciate feeling really seasoned in my craft. So often that's the thing I like the most about a day. It's like, 'I really knew how to make that scene work. I knew how to get the guest star to speed up with me. And then I stopped for the camera just so, and I can handle a lot of camera moves, choreography, notes at once, and it feels really easy.' There's a lot of technical aspects about acting that people don't think about, and it's nice to feel at a certain point that you have some mastery over them. I think we are flipping the script on that. I have to say, I think there've been some really incredible, brave women out there that have always portrayed real women — you know, the Allison Janneys and the Patricia Arquettes. And then you get these sex symbols like Pamela Anderson going [on the red carpet] with like almost no makeup. John Wells is a maverick at putting real, complex, imperfect-looking women on television and celebrating them, way before it was cool. So to work for him, it just really feels like I'm getting to step into that. I have to tell you: To play a part like Dana and to wear no makeup, it was really very freeing. It's also really freeing working for a mostly female writing crew. Feeling like I don't have to live up to that ridiculous, feminine, sexual ideal has freed up my acting. And I think it's why the acting's good on the show. Women can feel like they can just relax into being themselves. Yeah, I love clothes and style in general. I used to have an interior design business, and I'm sort of an amateur interior designer now. I'm very visual. I also love ceramics. I feel like I'm in really good shape. Like, I feel really strong. I do yoga every day. I like mixing the hot yoga with the regular yoga. I play a little tiny bit of pickleball. I hike. I really appreciate that my body is still really strong — [something] you take for granted when you're young. I'm glad I can still do all this. The one thing that was really hard was [the doctors] wanting to give me a C-section right away. They wanted to plan a C-section. Because of my age, they were worried. I grew up in a family of doctors, so I'm used to just listening to the doctor. But I wanted to push back a lot. I didn't want to incise my body if I didn't have to. If I had needed one, I definitely would have, but I didn't want to plan for it months early just because I was 47. I had some kind of pre-preeclampsia signs. I went in for some testing, and they kept me in the hospital, and they induced labor with Pitocin. But then I didn't want to have an epidural, because I didn't want to slow [labor] down. I was worried about too many drugs. So I had a natural childbirth on Pitocin, and I don't recommend it. It was super hard. I feel really powerful because I got through that, but it was really, really intense. [And] I fortunately got a doctor who helped me advocate for what I wanted. Don't get married at 22! I think if you marry someone that is so far apart in age, at least for me, there wasn't a lot of intimacy in that. It's nice to have someone that you can grow with — more of a friend as opposed to them being the successful teacher one, and you being the student, less successful, more dependent one. I would opt now for a relationship with more equality. The thing we have between us really is our craft. He wants to audition for a musical, so I'm gonna help him with the choreography. I've helped him with the choreography before when he had to dance on Dynasty. He helps me with all my self-tapes. We have a very artistic home. We're always singing, or he plays the piano, and it's a very creative space. That's the thing I like most. We have the same aesthetic; we like the same things. We move a lot, and he really trusts how I'm going to put together a home. [Despite] my longevity in the business and what I've done and the people that I've worked with already, like Billy Bob Thornton and Will Ferrell and Jay Roach, I never really got that kind of name recognition. I'm hoping that The Pitt will sort of catapult me into getting to work with some more artists that I really want to work with. Slow down, trust your instincts, and say what you mean — [but] don't say it mean. I [also] wish I appreciated that my skin wasn't wrinkly. To all the 30-year-olds out there, wear all the crop tops, wear all the short shorts. Love yourself. Love your body. Enjoy your body. This conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

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