Cameron Monaghan is confirmed to reprise his role as Gotham’s Jerome Valeska, during Season 3 of Fox’s DC Comics-based drama.
The Shameless vet first teased his encore via Twitter with a tell-tale, laugh-filled audio clip.
pic.twitter.com/Kc7uYV5rUe
— Cameron Monaghan (@cameronmonaghan) September 15, 2016
Gotham showrunner John Stephen said at the TCA summer press tour that during Season 3, “The cult of the Joker, which we started at the beginning of [Season 2],” upon Jerome’s seeming death, “is going to extend and deepen and change a little bit this year, where you have these sort of underground movements that...
The Shameless vet first teased his encore via Twitter with a tell-tale, laugh-filled audio clip.
pic.twitter.com/Kc7uYV5rUe
— Cameron Monaghan (@cameronmonaghan) September 15, 2016
Gotham showrunner John Stephen said at the TCA summer press tour that during Season 3, “The cult of the Joker, which we started at the beginning of [Season 2],” upon Jerome’s seeming death, “is going to extend and deepen and change a little bit this year, where you have these sort of underground movements that...
- 9/15/2016
- TVLine.com
Oh, to catch Bud Greenspan's eye and then turn up in one of his Olympic documentaries. For many athletes, from the famous to the obscure, the honor ranked just behind winning a medal.
The filmmaker, whose riveting tales soared as triumphantly as the men and women he chronicled for more than six decades, died Saturday at his home in New York City of complications from Parkinson's disease, companion Nancy Beffa said. He was 84.
"Bud was a storyteller first and foremost. He never lost his sense of wonder and he never wavered in the stories he wanted to tell, nor how he told them," she said through a family friend. "No schmalzy music, no fog machines, none of that. He wanted to show why athletes endured what they did and how they accomplished what so few people ever do."
As a 21-year-old radio reporter, Greenspan filed his first Olympic story...
The filmmaker, whose riveting tales soared as triumphantly as the men and women he chronicled for more than six decades, died Saturday at his home in New York City of complications from Parkinson's disease, companion Nancy Beffa said. He was 84.
"Bud was a storyteller first and foremost. He never lost his sense of wonder and he never wavered in the stories he wanted to tell, nor how he told them," she said through a family friend. "No schmalzy music, no fog machines, none of that. He wanted to show why athletes endured what they did and how they accomplished what so few people ever do."
As a 21-year-old radio reporter, Greenspan filed his first Olympic story...
- 12/27/2010
- by AP
- Huffington Post
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