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Freakshow
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Forum Icon Join Date: Feb 01, 2008
Location: Brooklyn, NY
Posts: 57,005
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"Up All Night" to do One Multi-Camera Ep.
"Up All Night" to do 1 Multi-Camera Episode
by NELLIE ANDREEVA Tuesday February 12, 2013 We will get a glimpse of what a multi-camera "Up All Night" would look like after all. I have learned that NBC plans to film one multi-camera episode of the sophomore comedy without star Christina Applegate, who departed the series on Friday. I hear the episode will be directed by master multi-camera helmer James Burrows, who is doing three pilots this season. When NBC in October decided to turn softly rated single-camera comedy "Up All Night" into multi-camera, the network ordered five episodes to be shot in front of a live audience. That order has now been cut to one. It is unclear whether Applegate will be replaced; there had been rumors that NBC was eying other actresses, including "Friends" alumna Lisa Kudrow. The future of "Up All Night" is still up in the air while co-stars Will Arnett and Maya Rudolph are getting pilot offers. NBC had no comment. The multi-camera version of "Up All Night" is being shepherded by Linda Wallem, the show’s third showrunner following Jon Pollack and Tucker Cawley. Creator/Executive Producer Emily Spivey left the show last month. At TCA last month, NBC Entertainment president Jennifer Salke called the multi-camera revamp “a bit of an experiment”, but “we think it’s really one worth taking.” In its original incarnation, "Up All Night" was a family comedy about new parents played by Applegate and Arnett, which was inspired by Spivey’s real-life experiences going back to work soon after giving birth. The workplace element was expanded and switched from a PR firm to an Oprah-like talk show when Rudolph was cast as Applegate’s boss, and there has been speculation that the series will shift even further in that direction when it becomes multi-camera. http://www.deadline.com/2013/02/up-a...amera-episode/ |
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#2 |
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Member
Frequent Poster
Join Date: Oct 23, 2010
Posts: 221
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They totally murdered this show. TV business sometimes can be disgusting!
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#3 |
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Member
Frequent Poster
Join Date: Oct 23, 2010
Posts: 221
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Apparently it might already be over!
Is NBC’s ‘Up All Night’ Experiment Over? http://www.deadline.com/2013/02/is-n...periment-over/ It looks like we may have already seen the final episode of NBC’s comedy series Up All Night. The network’s plans to revamp the modestly rated single-camera sophomore as a multi-camera were dealt a major blow late last week when star Christina Applegate departed the project. After originally planning five multi-camera episodes to close out the season, NBC early this week trimmed that scenario to one episode, without Applegate, to be helmed by uber multi-camera director James Burrows. Now I hear that episode is being scrapped too. Sources point to problems with the talent — I hear at least one of Up All Night‘s two remaining stars, Will Arnett and Maya Rudolph, told the network they were uncomfortable going forward with the series which, in addition to Applegate, recently lost its creator, Emily Spivey. The talk about a possible replacement for Applegate (Lisa Kudrow was a name that emerged early on) never went anywhere. But as crucial for the demise of the show if not even more so were problems with the concept. When production on the single-camera version was shut down after 11 episodes the first week of November, it was supposed to be for a three-month hiatus, followed by the taping of five multi-camera episodes. But as speculation swirled last month about what the new Up All Night might look like, NBC had not settled on a concept yet. As of mid-February, the show’s writing team is still working on scripts and the concept is still being tinkered with. With The Office, Parks & Recreation and Community performing the best among NBC’s comedies and at least two, The Office and 30 Rock, departing this season, the rumor was that Up All Night, originally a show about parenting, would transform into a workplace comedy. The show’s search for a new identity certainly was not helped by the heavy behind-the-scenes turnover. Linda Wallem, who oversees the multi-camera version, is Up All Night’s third showrunner following Jon Pollack and Tucker Cawley. Up All Night creator/executive producer Spivey left the show last month. While I hear Up All Night is not officially dead and NBC is still mulling potential scenarios while holding the cast, the hopes of continuing it are fading quickly. In a sign that the show is likely over, I hear NBC offered Rudolph a part in one of its highest-profile pilots for next year, the Victor Fresco comedy starring Sean Hayes, which is directed by Burrows. It is one of four muti-camera pilots Burrows is directing this season, along with three at CBS (Friends With Better Lives and untitled Greg Garcia and Tad Quill). Arnett too has been getting a ton of interest for pilots over the past week, mostly from ABC and CBS as well as cable networks. |
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