(L-r) Xavier Coy, Michael Lucas, Mithila Gupta, script coordinator Alisha Hnatjuk and Christine Bartlett.
Michael Lucas, who co-created Network 10’s Five Bedrooms with Christine Bartlett, reached out to emerging writer Xavier Coy last year after reading Coy’s play Not Even God Can Save Us.
Coy wrote the play while he was studying at the Actors Centre Australia. Lucas invited the Sydney-based Coy to go to Melbourne for note-taking at the end of the first season of Hoodlum Entertainment’s relationships dramedy.
The result: The producers hired Coy to write an episode of the second season, his first TV credit, alongside Lucas, Bartlett and Mithila Gupta.
Lucas was given a copy of the play, an upper-class satire set a reception after a church service, by his husband, director Adrian Chiarella, with whom Coy is collaborating on a short film, Slippery Slope.
“I read Xavier’s play when I was on holiday in Turkey,...
Michael Lucas, who co-created Network 10’s Five Bedrooms with Christine Bartlett, reached out to emerging writer Xavier Coy last year after reading Coy’s play Not Even God Can Save Us.
Coy wrote the play while he was studying at the Actors Centre Australia. Lucas invited the Sydney-based Coy to go to Melbourne for note-taking at the end of the first season of Hoodlum Entertainment’s relationships dramedy.
The result: The producers hired Coy to write an episode of the second season, his first TV credit, alongside Lucas, Bartlett and Mithila Gupta.
Lucas was given a copy of the play, an upper-class satire set a reception after a church service, by his husband, director Adrian Chiarella, with whom Coy is collaborating on a short film, Slippery Slope.
“I read Xavier’s play when I was on holiday in Turkey,...
- 3/8/2020
- by The IF Team
- IF.com.au
Gabriel Bergmoser Jan 4, 2019
Netflix's wraps up its strange, singular, excellent Lemony Snicket adaptation with A Series Of Unfortunate Events season 3...
This article comes from Den of Geek UK.
This review contains spoilers for A Series of Unfortunate Events season 3.
There were a lot of things that made the original A Series of Unfortunate Events books beloved, but a universally satisfying ending was not one of them. While The End is the strongest book from a theme and character perspective, it also frustrated due to a refusal to tie up any of the overarching mysteries that characterized the back half of the series. In retrospect this choice made sense; the Vfd conspiracy plot was always more of a metaphor for the incomprehensible and complex strangeness of adulthood than a mystery with tangible answers, but after all the expert teasing in the earlier books there was no way that confirmation of...
Netflix's wraps up its strange, singular, excellent Lemony Snicket adaptation with A Series Of Unfortunate Events season 3...
This article comes from Den of Geek UK.
This review contains spoilers for A Series of Unfortunate Events season 3.
There were a lot of things that made the original A Series of Unfortunate Events books beloved, but a universally satisfying ending was not one of them. While The End is the strongest book from a theme and character perspective, it also frustrated due to a refusal to tie up any of the overarching mysteries that characterized the back half of the series. In retrospect this choice made sense; the Vfd conspiracy plot was always more of a metaphor for the incomprehensible and complex strangeness of adulthood than a mystery with tangible answers, but after all the expert teasing in the earlier books there was no way that confirmation of...
- 1/4/2019
- Den of Geek
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.