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Freakshow
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Forum Icon Join Date: Feb 01, 2008
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"Sleepy Hollow" Created an “Us Against Her” Environment for Star Nicole Beharie, "Burn It Down" Book Claims
by Abbey White June 6, 2023 The set of Fox’s "Sleepy Hollow" had “grueling” working conditions, confusion and “creative floundering” among its leadership, and disparate treatment between its white male and Black female lead, according to Burn It Down. The Hollywood exposé from Maureen Ryan, which hit shelves on Tuesday, alleges that Nicole Beharie and Tom Mison — who played detective Abbie Mills and Ichabod Crane, — “did not want to have a whole lot to do with each other,” according to one source who worked on the show, allegedly resulting in Mison’s character’s famous “courtly” bow, because the co-stars did not want to hug each other. That also allegedly translated to their onscreen narratives, according to showrunner Clifton Campbell, who told Ryan that Mison and Beharie “believed that the relationship between the characters should not evolve into a romantic relationship,” despite fan calls for one. (Neither Beharie nor Mison commented for the book.) Burn It Down also claims that following alleged conflict between co-creator and director Len Wiseman and Beharie while filming the pilot, actress Lyndie Greenwood — who portrayed Beharie’s sister, Jenny Mills — was brought on as a potential replacement for the actress. Across one chapter of the book Ryan details how the show fell apart, and allegedly created a hostile work environment for one of its stars amid creative mismanagement tensions and turnover between producers, creators, showrunners and Fox executives. Part of that, the book alleges, was driven by the happenings within the writers room, which Ryan notes had three people of color in season one, but had returned for season two with an all-white male team outside a “sole woman of color.” When speaking to TV’s Top 5 about the book, Ryan said it was uncovering the misconduct and bias in her "Sleepy Hollow" reporting, which she said “gives necessary and important context” to the trajectory of one of its star’s careers, that made her want to publish the book. “If there’s a thing that causes me to want to burn things down, it’s when people leave the industry or are essentially forced out of the industry or forced into, essentially, career hiatuses,” she told podcast co-hosts Lesley Goldberg and Daniel Fienberg. “Not due to a pattern of serious misconduct or serious unprofessionalism or serious transgressions of any kind but because they feared for their mental health, their physical well-being, their safety, and their overall quality of life was terrible.” https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv...wn-1235508051/ |
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https://twitter.com/THR/status/16661...5Es1_&ref_url=
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