Showing posts with label Starz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Starz. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 30, 2016

Neil Gaiman's American Gods (the Series) Includes ISU Alum Yetide Badaki

Casting news has been coming quickly for the TV adaptation of Neil Gaiman's American Gods, a 2001 fantasy novel that won both the Hugo and Nebula Awards in the Best Novel category.

This month, Gaiman released a 10th anniversary mass market paperback edition with a different cover, one that includes the additional material he added for the actual 10th anniversary back in 2011.

In 2014, Gaiman told fans that HBO was developing American Gods as a possible series, and in 2015, it was announced that the project was moving to Starz, with Gaiman himself writing some of the scripts and Bryan Fuller and Michael Green as "creators." As details have leaked, it appears that the first season, the one filming now, covers the first third of the book, leaving the rest of the book for future seasons. Some elements of Gaiman's Anansi Boys will also be incorporated into the series.

Gaiman's book uses fantasy and mythology from different parts of the world, with characters who reflect African, Celtic, Egyptian, Germanic, Hindu, Native American, Old Norse, Slavic and other mythological traditions to tell a story about modern gods mixed with ancient ones. The new gods have arisen from the American obsession with celebrity and technological "magic," while the old ones, deities and spirits who were either already part of the Americas before Columbus or came to it with the immigrants who believed in them, are fading away. An ex-con named Shadow Moon becomes the center of the war between the gods of the past and the present, with a mysterious man named Mr. Wednesday, who happens to be the corporeal form of the Norse god Odin, as his tricky, untrustworthy guide.

Yetide Badaki
Casting details have been trickling out for some time, with stars like Ian McShane (Mr. Wednesday) and Gillian Anderson (Media) among those announced. The big news for alumni from Illinois State University's Department of Theatre is that Yetide Badaki, who appeared in several ISU shows and at the Illinois Shakespeare Festival when she was a student, has been cast as Bilquis, a voracious goddess of love by way of the Bible's Queen of Sheba. Bilquis and her method of, well, dispatch ("vagenda of manocide," indeed) were one of the most notorious bits in Gaiman's book.

At ISU, Badaki played Abigail Williams, the young woman who hatches the witchcraft plot in The Crucible, in a 2002 production at Westhoff Theatre that looked like it was being performed inside the bones of a giant whale, as well as Thyona, the bride who hatches the homicide plot in Charles Mee's Big Love, Natella in Brecht's The Caucasian Chalk Circle, Nurse Ratched in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and the title role in Electra.

She also played the Player Queen in Hamlet and Hymen in As You Like It at the Illinois Shakespeare Festival. In Chicago, she had roles with Steppenwolf, Victory Gardens and Writers Theatre and was nominated for a Joseph Jefferson Award for her performance in I Have Before Me a Remarkable Document Given to Me by a Young Lady From Rwanda at Victory Gardens in 2006.

American Gods is scheduled to premiere in early 2017 on the Starz network. Here's the cast as announced so far:

Ricky Whittle as Shadow
Ian McShane as Mr. Wednesday
Omid Abtahi as Salim
Gillian Anderson as Media
Yetide Badaki as Bilquis
Demore Barnes as Mr. Ibis
Corbin Bernsen as Vulcan
Emily Browning as Laura Moon
Kristin Chenoweth as Easter
Dane Cook as Robbie
Crispin Glover as Mr. World
Orlando Jones as Mr. Nancy
Mousa Kraish as the Jinn
Bruce Langley as Technical Boy
Cloris Leachman as Zorya Vechernyaya
Chris Obi as Mr. Jacquel
Melissa Roxburgh as Zorya Polunochnaya
Pablo Schreiber as Mad Sweeney
Peter Stormare as Czernobog
Jonathan Tucker as Low Key Lyesmith

You'll see several of these characters, including Badaki's Bilquis, in the trailer released for Comic Con. She's the one sitting up in bed looking sultry.


For more content, visit the Starz American Gods page.

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Bad News for BOSS, Good News for James Vincent Meredith

The Starz TV series Boss, starring Kelsey Grammer as a powerful (and powerfully unstable) mayor of Chicago, has been canceled. Boss enjoyed two seasons of political and personal intrigue for the mayor before Starz pulled the plug. Entertainment Weekly reports that Starz has made the move in order to free up some room for four series coming next year, including new series DaVinci's Demons and The White Queen, season two of Magic City, and the final season of Spartacus: War of the Damned. Another new Starz series, Black Sails, will bow in 2012.

Although Boss won't get a season three, Deadline is reporting that there's a possibility producer Lionsgate will make a movie to wrap up the storylines left hanging at the end of season two.

James Vincent Meredith
It's no surprise that James Vincent Meredith, the U of I and Station Theatre alum and Steppenwolf ensemble member who played Alderman Ross, a political foe of Grammer's Mayor Kane, will be keeping busy even without Boss. It was announced earlier this month that Meredith has been added to the Chicago cast of the eagerly awaited musical The Book of Mormon in the role of Mafala Hatimbi, played by Michael Potts in the original Broadway cast.

Meredith was in Superior Donuts on Broadway and The Tempest, The Crucible, Clybourne Park and The March in Chicago. He did Six Degrees of Separation at the Station in Urbana before leaving to begin his professional career.

If you're interested in seeing Meredith in The Book of Mormon, click here for ticket information. Performances begin December 12, 2012, and will run at least through June 2, 2013. So far, sales have been brisk, and Broadway in Chicago says your best bet for decent seats is to go for Tuesday or Wednesday performances.