Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness Continues Remote Pre-Production

The entertainment industry has seen productions freeze as COVID-19 has spread across the globe. Some of the biggest productions going at the moment, from Warner Bros. The Batman and The Matrix 4 to Paramount’s Mission: Impossible 7 to Marvel’s Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings have shut down. As of now, with the situation around the world so fluid, there is no expectation that productions can start up again until at least mid-May, with a strong possibility that this date will end up being pushed back. Much depends on when state governments deem it is safe to lift their bans on gatherings of 10 or more people, and film productions are, among many other things, large gatherings of people working closely together.

Yet there are plenty of films that were only beginning pre-production that are working remotely to keep their productions on track so that when they can begin production, they’ll be ready. Variety reports that one of those productions, Marvel’s Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, is not only plowing ahead by remotely working on pre-production, but they are also (as of now) still slated to begin filming in June.

The Doctor Strange sequel will of course only start production if it’s safe. With beloved Spider-Man director Sam Raimi now at the helm, he is leading the charge on a film that has a more complex release strategy than most. The film sees Avengers alum Elizabeth Olsen co-starring alongside Benedict Cumberbatch. Olsen, who has played the Scarlet Witch in three Avengers films, is also starring alongside Paul Bettany in Marvel’s Disney+ series WandaVision. That series ties directly into the events in Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, both of which exist in the painstakingly planned Marvel Cinematic Universe. With WandaVision slated to be released on Disney+ later this year, there is no doubt that Marvel is keen to keep their Doctor Strange sequel on schedule best they can, safety permitted. When you’re making a Marvel film, you’re working closely together  (albeit remotely) with all the other productions that are a part of the studio’s massive, impressively well-oiled Marvel Cinematic Universe.

As of now, Doctor Strange and the Multiverse of Madness is supposed to hit theaters on May 7, 2021.

Featured image: Marvel Studios’ AVENGERS: INFINITY WAR. L to R: Doctor Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch) and Wong (Benedict Wong). Photo: Film Frame. ©Marvel Studios 2018

Here’s more of our coverage on how COVID-19 is affecting the entertainment industry, and how the entertainment industry is trying to do their part to help:

The Walking Dead & Better Call Saul Director Bronwen Hughes Talks Drama, Real & Imagined

Costume Designers Guild to Sew Masks for Hospitals

The below-the-line talent who will be hit the hardest.

Read Christopher Nolan’s Passionate Piece on the Importance of Movie Theaters

How studios and celebrities are using their massive platforms to spread crucial information about COVID-19.

How cinematographer Kira Kelly shot Netflix’s Self Made and is responding to her sudden furlough.

Amy Adams & Jennifer Garner Team Up to Help Kids Affected by COVID-19

Featured image: Chris Evans (left), Ana de Armas (center) and director Rian J

All The Recent Releases You Can Watch Now

We’ve been covering the effects that COVID-19 has had on the entertainment industry. These stories have included news about production shutdowns to delayed premieres, from interviews with filmmakers on current and stalled projects to how the industry is helping citizens and the healthcare industry alike.

Another novel scenario that the global pandemic has created, another one on the positive end of the spectrum, is that studios are making their recent releases available on digital platforms early. To that end, here’s a non-comprehensive list of what you can watch, now, while you’re doing your part and staying home:

Trolls World Tour – April 10

A good one for families, director Walt Dohrn’s Trolls World Tour was supposed to premiere theaters on April 10, but now it’ll be available on-demand on the same day.

The Call of the Wild – March 27

The Harrison Ford-led originally hit theaters on February 21. Get a dose of the great outdoors from your couch, available tomorrow.

Downhill – March 27

This remake of the excellent Swedish film Force Majeure, starring Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Will Ferrell, will be available tomorrow. It originally hit theaters on February 14.

Birds of Prey – March 24 (available for rent on April 7)

Director Cathy Yan’s exuberant Birds of Prey is available on multiple platforms, including Amazon, FandangoNOW, iTunes, PlayStation, Vudu, and Xbox, and you can rent it starting April 7. It originally hit theaters on February 7. This is a great film to get your mind off the real world and on a vision of Gotham you’ve never seen before, with a fantastic Margot Robbie lead a really fun ensemble cast.

Just Mercy – March 24

Destin Daniel Cretton’s great adaptation of Bryan Stevenson’s book, with standout performances from Michael B. Jordan and Jamie Foxx, is available to rent now.

The Gentlemen – March 24

We talked to costume designer Michael Wilkinson about the furious finery in Guy Ritchie’s latest. The film hit theaters on January 24 and is now available for digital purchase.

The Way Back – March 24

This sports drama starring Ben Affleck hit theaters on March 6. It’s now available on VOD. We could all use a little sports right now!

Bloodshot – March 24

If you’re looking for a shot of adrenalin while you stay at home, Bloodshot, starring Vin Diesel is now available.

Onward – March 20

Pixar’s latest hit theaters on March 6, then had the super quick turnaround to digital, manna for parents and Pixar lovers everywhere, available now.

The Invisible Man – March 20

It feels like another lifetime ago when director Leigh Whannel’s The Invisible Man hit theaters on February 28. This excellent reboot, starring Elisabeth Moss, is available for purchase now.

Emma – March 20

Director Autumn de Wilde’s Jane Austen adaptation originally hit theaters on February 21. Now you can get your Austen fix in this very funny, beautifully made adaptation right now.

Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker – March 13

The last and final film in the Skywalker Saga is available on digital platforms. We suggest you check out the documentary, The Skywalker Legacy, after you re-watch the film.

Featured image: Caption: MARGOT ROBBIE as Harley Quinn from Warner Bros. Pictures’ “BIRDS OF PREY (AND THE FANTABULOUS EMANCIPATION OF ONE HARLEY QUINN),” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures/ & © DC Comics

Here’s more of our coverage on how COVID-19 is affecting the entertainment industry, and how the entertainment industry is trying to do their part to help:

The Walking Dead & Better Call Saul Director Bronwen Hughes Talks Drama, Real & Imagined

Costume Designers Guild to Sew Masks for Hospitals

The below-the-line talent who will be hit the hardest.

Read Christopher Nolan’s Passionate Piece on the Importance of Movie Theaters

How studios and celebrities are using their massive platforms to spread crucial information about COVID-19.

How cinematographer Kira Kelly shot Netflix’s Self Made and is responding to her sudden furlough.

Amy Adams & Jennifer Garner Team Up to Help Kids Affected by COVID-19

Star Trek: Picard Director Hanelle Culpepper Makes History (And a Home in Space)

With news of rising numbers of COVID-19 infections and the economic fallout the disease destined to come with it, everyone is looking for watch lists for some quality home entertainment. Highly recommended by critics and viewers alike is CBS All Access’s Star Trek: Picardwhich has been the most-watched original series to date for the streaming service. The first three episodes of the series were helmed by director Hanelle Culpepper, whose credits range from superhero action adventures to thrillers, from juicy genre films to character-driven dramas. Culpepper has directed episodes of Parenthood, Criminal Minds, The Flash, Gotham, Star Trek: Discovery, and NOS4A2.

The first season of Star Trek: Picard is ending with a bang, and the streaming service has released a well-timed and exciting announcement through Picard himself, Patrick Stewart. The Credits spoke to Culpepper about her work on the show, how things are going with her new projects, and why Star Trek: Picard is perfect viewing in these stressful times.

For Culpepper, directing the first episodes of Star Trek: Picard would have a huge impact on the longterm visual palette of the show, as well as a number of other elements. It put the director in a position responsible for its success or failure. She explains, “Doing a pilot is so exciting for a director because we decide things like what the Romulans look like, what they wear, and how they fight, as well as what the Borg look like, and so much more. A million choices like those are part of the long-term visual palette for the show.” Culpepper also had a hand in crafting character and story. I was able to help choose the cast and work with them to develop their characters. I also developed the camera language, movement, and color palette. These decisions were driven by the character of Picard and the story we’re telling. What you will see is how the color and camera language start to shift as Picard sets off on his journey, and ultimately returns to space instead of feeling trapped on Earth.”

Culpepper is the first woman to helm a pilot in the 53-year history of the Star Trek franchise. Whether the show was rejected or embraced by Star Trek fans would reflect on her. She needn’t have worried. The pilot episode got a score of 100% on Rotten Tomatoes, with the whole season receiving an 89% approval rating.

How much is the director’s aesthetic in evidence? She offers examples. “That’s a hard one to answer, as my aesthetic is all over it, but I’ll mention a few places with some of my favorite shots. When Picard is in the bedroom and first wakes up, the volumetric lighting and shooting through foreground glass is something I love to do. Also, in the interview scene, as the interview got more intense, I made the ‘dirty over,’ which is an over-the-shoulder shot that includes a piece of the person’s shoulder, which is more intense and literally crowding Picard into a smaller part of the scene. I also switched to a close and wide lens to add to the discomfort.” Lastly, she mentions a fan favorite, when Data is painting in the vineyard. “I love using available sun flares, they really add to the surreal nature of the scene.”

Culpepper says that the skills she found most useful working on Star Trek: Picard included her relationship with actors and her experience in both VFX and stunt action. She believes every production expands her knowledge base. “Every time you direct, you learn more and you learn something new. What was also quite useful is my ability to collaborate with the showrunner and writers to translate what they want to our department heads.” 

The dedicated fans and great press Star Trek: Picard has gotten has opened even more doors for Culpepper in terms of new projects. Also helpful has been her inclusion in the ReFrame Rise Directors Program, a customized two-year sponsorship that provides high-level endorsement and support for experienced female directors who are poised to lead studio features and high-profile television shows. “It’s been invaluable to tap the guidance of the high-level executives that work with me. I was able to show them my pitches, and get excellent feedback and suggestions, which I took into meetings that helped me land 1000 Miles and Kung Fu. They connect me with people I want to meet, will make calls to endorse me, and are cheerleaders who motivate and inspire me.”

Kung Fu, which is a reimagining of the 70s television cult classic, had just begun production on the pilot with Culpepper as director when COVID-19 required halting work on the show. Still, she’s very excited about this new take on Kung Fu. “I feel the world needs this show right now. My lead, Olivia Liang, who plays Nicky, is amazing and connects with you immediately. It’s wonderful to do this retelling with a Chinese woman at the lead and to see women doing these awesome kung fu moves.  In addition to cool action sequences, Kung Fu has a lot of heart, and I think fans will also love Nicky’s completely relatable emotional journey and her tricky relationship with her family.”

Culpepper will also be helming the film 1000 Miles, which is based on the true story of William and Ellen Craft, an enslaved couple that escaped to freedom by traveling from Georgia to Boston, with Ellen posing as a white male slave owner, and her husband as her slave. The director explains how she got involved with the project. “It came about because I directed an episode of Sorry For Your Loss for Big Beach‘s television side last summer. The episode turned out very well, and everyone was thrilled with it. So Big Beach’s TV side told their feature side about me, and that’s how I was approached about 1000 Miles. The story grabbed me immediately, and I could clearly see how I wanted to direct it. Developing the look book and pitch was one of the easier ones I’ve done because it was so clear to me. Then I got a few key notes from my ReFrame sponsors, and here we are!”

With the season finale of Star Trek: Picard now in the books, fans are already clamoring for season two. Still, there are many viewers staying home or sheltering in place who have not yet had the chance to see the series. They might benefit from the escapism, strong character development, and nostalgic comfort the show offers. This is why the news that viewers can watch Star Trek: Picard and all its shows for free with the code GIFT, now through April 23rd, is so great. Joining Starfleet seems like a pretty great move right about now.

Culpepper, who, like most members of the Hollywood community, is hunkered down at home, expresses gratitude for the decision to make Picard available to all. I thank CBS All Access for offering their service for free for a month.  I know there are many who want to see Picard, so I’m thrilled they will now have the opportunity, and hopefully, they will get a little bit of enjoyment during these crazy times.

For CBS All Access for free through April 23rd, go here and use the code GIFT.

Featured image: Handle Culpepper and Patrick Stewart. Photo Cr: Trae Patton/CBS ©2018 CBS Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 

Here’s more of our coverage on how COVID-19 is affecting the entertainment industry, and how the entertainment industry is trying to do their part to help:

The Walking Dead & Better Call Saul Director Bronwen Hughes Talks Drama, Real & Imagined

Costume Designers Guild to Sew Masks for Hospitals

The below-the-line talent who will be hit the hardest.

Read Christopher Nolan’s Passionate Piece on the Importance of Movie Theaters

How studios and celebrities are using their massive platforms to spread crucial information about COVID-19.

How cinematographer Kira Kelly shot Netflix’s Self Made and is responding to her sudden furlough.

Amy Adams & Jennifer Garner Team Up to Help Kids Affected by COVID-19

Featured image: Chris Evans (left), Ana de Armas (center) and director Rian J

Watch the Trailer for Solar Opposites From Rick and Morty Co-Creator

We could all use a laugh in these dire times, and there have been few shows on TV that so reliably elicit actual LOLs than Rick and Morty. So, the news that Rick and Morty co-creator Justin Roiland and writer Mike McMahan have a new animated series coming to Hulu is manna from outer space. Behold the first teaser for Solar Opposites, Roiland and McMahan’s alien comedy. The voice cast is bonkers, the conceit allows Roiland and McMahan to embrace their inner sci-fi lunatics, and the whole, gleefully cosmic shebang is available on Hulu on May 8.

Speaking of the voice cast, let’s have a look, shall we? Roiland himself is joined by comedian Mary Mack, Silicon Valley’s Thomas Middleditch, and The Goldbergs’ Sean Giambrone in the main cast. Then there’s the huge list of actors who will be offering their voice acting chops in cameos; Christina Hendricks, Tiffany Hadish, Ken Marino, Jon Barinholtz, and Alfred Molina to name just five.

Here’s the official synopsis:

Co-created by Justin Roiland (Rick & Morty) and Mike McMahan (ex writer’s assistant on Rick & Morty), Solar Opposites centers around a team of four aliens who escape their exploding home world only to crash land into a move-in ready home in suburban America. They are evenly split on whether Earth is awful or awesome. Korvo (Justin Roiland) and Yumyulack (Sean Giambrone) only see the pollution, crass consumerism, and human frailty while Terry (Thomas Middleditch) and Jesse (Mary Mack) love humans and all their TV, junk food and fun stuff. Their mission: protect the Pupa, a living super computer that will one day evolve into its true form, consume them and terraform the Earth.

Check out the teaser here:

Featured image: ‘Solar Opposites.’ Courtesy Hulu

For our coverage on how COVID-19 is affecting the entertainment industry, and how the entertainment industry is trying to do their part to help:

The Walking Dead & Better Call Saul Director Bronwen Hughes Talks Drama, Real & Imagined

Costume Designers Guild to Sew Masks for Hospitals

The below-the-line talent who will be hit the hardest.

Read Christopher Nolan’s Passionate Piece on the Importance of Movie Theaters

How studios and celebrities are using their massive platforms to spread crucial information about COVID-19.

More on how filmmakers, like cinematographer Kira Kelly, are responding to their sudden furlough.

Amy Adams & Jennifer Garner Team Up to Help Kids Affected by COVID-19

The Walking Dead & Better Call Saul Director Bronwen Hughes Talks Drama, Real & Imagined

“For the two months leading up to this moment, I was writing. I was already leading an isolation style life,” says writer/director Bronwen Hughes. Her usually intense TV directing schedule had this lull so she could complete a screenplay for a feature (a spy thriller she’s sending off to a major studio, she’d say no more), and then the world changed.

“Well, every physical shoot I’ve had or have, booked or about to book, was wiped off the map,” she said about the impact of COVID-19 and the subsequent production shutdown the pandemic has caused. “They said we were postponed in the early days, but we kinda knew even then. The kind of work we do, generally, there is no such thing as paid sick days for a shoot that hasn’t begun yet. That’s what freelance work is about.”

Hughes has done a lot of freelance work in the past year before the novel coronavirus wreaked havoc on the entertainment industry and every other industry in the world. Her current job concerns are more broadly for everyone who works in the entertainment industry and who can’t afford a massive stoppage of work without help. “What I think about are all the working people, which includes freelance work, whose livelihoods are wiped out right now. They need help.”

Hughes started working in film, but her TV career has not only proven steady, but it’s also been creatively fulfilling in ways she probably couldn’t have dreamed when she started out. It helped that she joined Vince Gilligan and directed the sixth episode of the first season of a little show called Breaking Bad. Since then, she’s directed some excellent drama series, including The Good Doctor, Berlin Station, and most recently, Gilligan’s Breaking Bad follow-up Better Call Saul and the juggernaut zombie series The Walking Dead (which has just delayed its season finale due to the novel coronavirus.)

“The great joy of television is that every month if I’m fully employed, I’ll get to try something completely different from the last round. That’s so invigorating, it’s such a fantastic playground to draw on my entire vocabulary,” Hughes says. “My job is to determine what the story needs, what kind of visceral emotion is the goal, and figure out what film language I need to communicate that. Framing choices, camera operating style, the pace of the performance, the lighting, what not to show you, what I have to show you, all of these choices in film language are what my daily decision making is based on.”

Better Call Saul and The Walking Dead are, obviously, drastically different shows. The former focuses on the lovable, morally flexible lawyer Jimmy McGill (Bob Odenkirk) before he became the fully crooked Saul Goodman in Breaking Bad. The latter is nominally about zombies—but really, more to the point, about what people become after their world is rendered unrecognizable by a plague.

“Starting with Better Call Saul, that is a very specific tone,” Hughes says. “In fact, that’s the most specific aspect to the Vince Gilligan and Peter Gould (a director on Saul and Breaking Bad) universe. I did the first season of Breaking Bad, and we worked to find this buoyant, wild ride between the great fun and the boldness, to locate the true stakes and the true danger that lies on the other side of the coin. That’s what we’re doing here. To find that tone is a tightrope. If you go too comedic, then it ends up becoming a broad comedy, and nobody worries about the character. If you go too dark, then the audience is in a state of dread and can’t really enjoy the wild ride. So you’re in this tightrope walk to find the light and the dark.”

BTS, Bob Odenkirk as Jimmy McGill, Director Bronwen Hughes- Better Call Saul _ Season 5, Episode 1 – Photo Credit: Warrick Page/AMC/Sony Pictures Television

For The Walking Dead, a state of dread is the standard operating procedure for the poor souls trying to hack their way through the zombie apocalypse. After directing Better Call Saul, Hughes traded Jimmy McGill’s offbeat world for the swamps of Georgia. “I’m traipsing through the snakes, scorpions and biting flies to shoot The Walking Dead, and this particular episode came with a very specific goal from showrunner Angela Kang; to find this sense of dread in the tension of what will happen when Beta (played by Ryan Hurst) penetrates the walls of Alexandria.”

Hughes created a poster-worthy moment, per Kang’s brief, when a hand bursts out of a grave. She built the episode around this startling, iconic zombie image. “That was the briefing that informed the rest of my entire job, to find these strong images and making sure they resonated. Things like Beta sitting in a meditative guru pose surrounded by the newly killed townspeople as he waits for them to reanimate into walkers,” Hughes says. “Or finding the dead bodies on the road, and we pan above them and find the pools of blood in the dirt. It’s a graphic image and you get the entire story in one frame. We weren’t shying away from these classic horror images.”

Back to the real world, I asked Hughes what she thinks about the images we’re all seeing on our TV and computer screens now, images that often seem like they’re coming from a TV series or a movie; an empty Times Square; Los Angeles without any traffic; the images of exhausted nurses and doctors pleading for supplies.

“I think visually, you’re seeing these real-life images that visual effects teams are usually in charge of producing, like an empty New York City,” she says. “The other parallel, the one I hope we pay attention to, is that most of the writing of these post-apocalyptic stories deal with how people come together to thrive and survive, or, decide that dividing and conquering is the way to go. Those are the cautionary tales in the arts that we should be thinking hard about right now. How do you get through this? How you find common ground?”

Featured image: Norman Reedus as Daryl Dixon and director Bronwen Hughes on the set of The Walking Dead, Season 10, Episode 10 – Photo Credit: Jackson Lee Davis/AMC

Patty Jenkins & Gal Gadot Share New Wonder Woman 1984 Animated Poster & Words of Hope

The production and premiere delays due to the spread of COVID-19 have been unprecedented, but that, of course, doesn’t mean that we’ll never be seeing these films. What we are dealing with is a tremendous amount of uncertainty; the novel coronavirus does not have a finale date, so nobody knows for sure just when we’ll have this under control and it will be safe for all of us, including the studios, filmmakers, their casts and crew, and theater owners and employees can go back to work. Yet that day will come. With that in mind, the two driving forces behind Wonder Woman, co-writer/director Patty Jenkins and star Gal Gadot, have taken to Twitter to share words of encouragement and a new animated poster. Their input comes after Warner Bros. announced that they’ve pushed back Wonder Woman 1984 from June 5 to August 14, joining a ton of other major releases in delaying their premiere, from Marvel’s Black Widow to the 25th Bond installment No Time to Die. 

Check out the new poster, and Gadot’s hope for a brighter future, here:

Jenkins’s Tweet preached the power of cinema (writer/director Christoper Nolan agrees) and to look ahead to August when, hopefully, people can once again come together in a theater to watch WW84:

Here’s more of our coverage on how COVID-19 is affecting the entertainment industry, and how the entertainment industry is trying to do their part to help:

The below-the-line talent who will be hit the hardest.

How studios and celebrities are using their massive platforms to spread crucial information about COVID-19.

How filmmakers, like cinematographer Kira Kelly, are responding to their sudden furlough.

Amy Adams & Jennifer Garner Team Up to Help Kids Affected by COVID-19

Rian Johnson & Edgar Wright Share Their Favorite Musicals & Comedies

While we all deal with the massive changes that the spread of COVID-19 has thrust upon our daily lives, there has been no shortage of watch lists to get us through our socially distanced reality. Initially, most of these lists were focused on films and television series that touched upon pandemics, epidemics, and the post-apocalyptic. You could find Steven Soderbergh’s Contagion and Wolfgang Peterson’s Outbreak and Danny Boyle’s 28 Days Later on many of them. For television series, Craig Mazin’s recent, incredibly riveting Chernobyl has been mentioned time and time again as the best possible crash course in government malfeasance and everyday heroism following a disaster.

Sensing a need for the opposite kind of viewing experience, filmmakers have jumped in to offer viewing options that take us away from thoughts of contagion, social spread, and society on the brink of collapse. The Guardians of the Galaxy writer/director James Gunn offered his blessedly pandemic-free list of must-see movies. Our own Desson Thomson, a former film critic for the Washington Post, gave us his own suggestions for watching away the hours. And now, the irrefutably talented Edgar Wright (Baby Driver) and Rian Johnson (The Last Jedi) have offered their own lists, which are focused on comedies and 70s musicals, respectively.

These two auteurs (and movie obsessives) have a lot of wisdom to impart, and their lists are robust and revealing. Most of their suggestions are available on one streaming service or another, but you’ll have to do some searching. You probably haven’t seen Donkey Skin (on Johnson’s list) or Sons of the Desert (on Wright’s list), but you can bet they’re worth watching. You couldn’t ask for two more knowledgeable film lovers to give you a big, fast list of titles to select from. For Edgar Wright’s 100 favorite comedies, click here. For Rian Johnson’s favorite 70s musicals, click here.

Here’s more of our coverage on how COVID-19 is affecting the entertainment industry, and how the entertainment industry is trying to do their part to help:

The below-the-line talent who will be hit the hardest.

How studios and celebrities are using their massive platforms to spread crucial information about COVID-19.

How filmmakers, like cinematographer Kira Kelly, are responding to their sudden furlough.

Amy Adams & Jennifer Garner Team Up to Help Kids Affected by COVID-19

Featured image: Chris Evans (left), Ana de Armas (center) and director Rian Johnson on the set of Knives Out. Photo credits: Claire Folger. Courtesy Lionsgate

Costume Designers Guild to Sew Masks for Hospitals

With critical medical supplies in short supply, the Costume Designers Guild is currently rallying its members to step into the breach to help sew masks for hospitals dealing with the spread of COVID-19. Salvador Perez, president of the Costume Designers Guild, told Variety, “We are organizing all our members from local 892 and local 705 costumers who can sew, to manufacture masks for hospitals. It will be good to keep busy and help the community.” This followed a conference call with the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, who had Tweeted their readiness last Friday:

The Costume Designers Guild joins a growing number of people and productions from the entertainment industry pitching in to help outfit hospitals and healthcare professionals working on the front lines of the pandemic. Medical shows like ABC’s Grey’s Anatomy,The Good Doctor, and Station 19, as well as Fox’s The Resident, have all turned over items in their wardrobes, including the crucial N95 masks, to hospitals.

Station 19 showrunner Krista Vernoff told Refinery 29:

“At Station 19, we were lucky enough to have about 300 of the coveted N95 masks which we donated to our local fire station. They were tremendously grateful. At Grey’s Anatomy, we have a back stock of gowns and gloves which we are donating as well. We are all overwhelmed with gratitude for our healthcare workers during this incredibly difficult time, and in addition to these donations, we are doing our part to help them by staying home.”

Many other guilds are stepping up, too. Variety reports that Cathy Repola, Motion Picture Editors Guild national executive director, sent a letter to members saying, “If any of you sew or want to volunteer to deliver the masks (without violating the social distancing guidelines), please let us know and we will put you in touch with those coordinating. Another option is working with the MPTF residents. They are isolated in their rooms without any group activities or meals.”

Here’s more of our coverage on how COVID-19 is affecting the entertainment industry, and how the entertainment industry is trying to do their part to help:

The below-the-line talent who will be hit the hardest.

How studios and celebrities are using their massive platforms to spread crucial information about COVID-19.

How filmmakers, like cinematographer Kira Kelly, are responding to their sudden furlough.

Amy Adams & Jennifer Garner Team Up to Help Kids Affected by COVID-19

Featured image: BTS: Meg March (Emma Watson), Costume Designer Jacqueline Durran Director/Writer Greta Gerwig on the set of Columbia Pictures’ LITTLE WOMEN.” Courtesy Sony Pictures.

Silent Sunday Nights Host Jacqueline Stewart’s Easy Going Film Expertise

Jacqueline Stewart is a film scholar, researcher, author and archivist. But when she gets before the cameras as the host of Silent Sunday Nights on Turner Classic Movies (TCM), she’s once again a kid watching movies late into the night with her aunt Constance.

“I was obsessed with Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers movies as a kid. They always seemed to be on TV the week between Christmas and New Year’s Eve, late at night. I was totally captivated not just by the dancing but by the set design and costumes. I was intrigued by the rhythm and the banter between the characters,” says Stewart, who grew up in Chicago.

“My aunt Constance loved movies; she was born in the 1920s and grew up going to see all the classics. She was a night owl so the two of us would be the only ones awake in the house and she’d talk to me about her love for Lauren Bacall, Bette Davis, Joan Crawford. Her enthusiasm rubbed off on me,” says Stewart. “I’ve come to appreciate that more and more. This was an African American woman who was growing up in the ‘30s and ‘40s. Life was not easy. The movies were certainly a place for escape but I appreciate how women could feel a real identification with stories about other women. There was an emotional connection my aunt was making that was valuable to her. I think about that a lot when presenting these films.” Stewart is the first black host in TCM’s 25-year history.

Considering we’re all pretty much currently confined to our houses and apartments due to the spread of COVID-19, film lovers could hardly do better than Stewart’s late-night show, which airs on Sunday nights at midnight, E.T. Stewart’s expertise and down to earth manner make it easier for new and younger audiences to appreciate and understand what’s perhaps one of the more challenging forms of classic cinema: the silent film. During her programs, she provides both seasoned cinephiles and newbies with background information and lively historical context to silents that range from early comedies from Buster Keaton and pioneer Mabel Normand to Robert Flaherty’s Nanook of the North (1922) about the harsh life of an Eskimo and his family, which airs March 29. “What I love about the silent era is that it’s an incredible mix of styles because it is a period of really dynamic experimentation with this medium,” she says.

“The TCM team has been incredibly welcoming and encouraging to me, someone who does not come from a performing background. What I love is that I get to be a professor but in a much bigger classroom.” She adds that TCM has always aimed to make audiences feel at home — the sets are like stylish living rooms  — so viewers feel that they are among friends and not in a lecture hall.

“It’s a way for the host to mirror the love we have for the films with the viewers’ love for them. There is something intimate about the connection and sharing this love of cinema,” says Stewart, a professor in the Department of Cinema and Media Studies at the University of Chicago, specializing in the history of African American cinema from the silent era to present.

TCM host Jacqueline Stewart photographed on the TCM set on Tuesday & Wednesday, August 20-21, 2019 in Atlanta, Ga. Photo by John Nowak

She is also a three-term appointee to the National Film Preservation Board (NFPB), which advises the Librarian of Congress on policy. She also Chairs the NFPB Diversity Task Force working to ensure the films chosen for the National Film Registry reflect diversity and inclusion.

TCM has always been committed to showing silent films and Stewart says she “works with the team to think about a mix of films. I make suggestions. It’s almost like creating a syllabus.” Besides classics and historically important movies, she promises “to bring to the table some unexpected things. This spring we’ll be showing The Jazz Singer [from 1927] which we think of as the first sound film. But most of it operates as a silent film with intertitles then moments of music and dialogue in synchronized sound. To air this film on Sunday nights shows the transition from silent to sound filmmaking and how radical that was.”

“I’m so glad you mentioned ‘Nanook,’ for example,” she continues, “because that’s a film I’ve been interested to show on TCM because it’s so important in terms of the history of filmmaking and the origins of documentary and ethnographic film. It was made for movie audiences and shown in theaters. It helps us to see how many different kinds of cinematic storytelling were being developed in cinema’s first decades and we have so few moments in the current media landscape to pause and appreciate what these previous generations of filmmaking were like.” In the months ahead, she’s enthusiastic about introducing TCM viewers to The Scar of Shame (1927) which she describes as “a race movie by the Colored Players of Philadelphia and one of the most aesthetically ambitious and accomplished films of the race film movement.”

Stewart’s enthusiasm comes from the deep passion for movies that she shares with TCM’s loyal audience. “I’ve been watching TCM for years and years and it has always been an important place for me to see films. It’s so exciting for me to add my expertise to that,” she says. “I hear the most encouraging, positive responses from TCM viewers because they love gaining deeper knowledge about the films they love.”

Featured image: Jacqueline Stewart. Courtesy TCM.

Read Christopher Nolan’s Passionate Piece on the Importance of Movie Theaters

You could hardly ask for a more passionate advocate for the importance of movie theaters than writer/director Christopher Nolan. The auteur of such epic, must-see-it-in-the-theater films like Inception, Interstellar, and, of course, The Dark Knight trilogy penned a passionate plea for the importance of movie theaters in the Washington Post as we face theater and production closures due to the spread of COVID-19. Nolan has long been an advocate for the movie theater experience. His upcoming film, the mysterious Tenetwas once again shot in part using IMAX cameras, was revealed in a six-and-a-half-minute mind-blowing sequence before IMAX screenings of The Rise of Skywalker. This sequence once again reinforced how Nolan crafts his films specifically to be experienced on the biggest screens possible.

With the spread of COVID-19 across the globe and the shuttering of movie theaters and movie and TV productions, Nolan’s op-ed for the Post gets at the heart of why movie theaters matter to society as a whole. Theaters are crucial not only as places strangers can gather to take part in a shared cultural experience (remember those days?) but also to all the people whose livelihoods depend on them.

“When people think about movies, their minds first go to the stars, the studios, the glamour. But the movie business is about everybody: the people working the concession stands, running the equipment, taking tickets, booking movies, selling advertising and cleaning bathrooms in local theaters,” Nolan writes. “Regular people, many paid hourly wages rather than a salary, earn a living running the most affordable and democratic of our community gathering places.”

There is a tremendous amount of uncertainty in the world right now. How long with the novel coronavirus lay waste to our collective health and well-being? What will the damage to the economy be? What will life look like after the pandemic has finally abated? We have no clear answers at present, which is why we’ll take a little clarity where we can. Nolan’s thoughtful piece on the importance of theaters doubles as a passionate plea to keep theaters and the people who work in them in the minds of officials who will be making major decisions in the days and weeks ahead.

“In this time of unprecedented challenge and uncertainty, it’s vital to acknowledge the prompt and responsible decisions made by all kinds of companies across our country that have closed their doors in full knowledge of the damage they are doing to their businesses,” Nolan writes. “Our nation’s incredible network of movie theaters is one of these industries, and as Congress considers applications for assistance from all sorts of affected businesses, I hope that people are seeing our exhibition community for what it really is: a vital part of social life, providing jobs for many and entertainment for all. These are places of joyful mingling where workers serve up stories and treats to the crowds that come to enjoy an evening out with friends and family. As a filmmaker, my work can never be complete without those workers and the audiences they welcome.”

Read Nolan’s full piece here.

Here’s more of our coverage on how COVID-19 is affecting the entertainment industry, and how the entertainment industry is trying to do their part to help:

The below-the-talent who will be hit the hardest.

How studios and celebrities are using their massive platforms to spread crucial information about COVID-19.

How filmmakers, like cinematographer Kira Kelly, are responding to their sudden furlough.

Amy Adams & Jennifer Garner Team Up to Help Kids Affected by COVID-19

Featured image: SANTA BARBARA, CA – FEBRUARY 06: Director Christopher Nolan speaks onstage at the Outstanding Directors Award Sponsored by The Hollywood Reporter during The 33rd Santa Barbara International Film Festival at Arlington Theatre on February 6, 2018 in Santa Barbara, California. (Photo by Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for SBIFF)

How Costume Designer Jeriana San Juan Helped Shape HBO’s The Plot Against America

These are trying times. When The Wire creator David Simon and his longtime collaborator Ed Burns set out to adapt the late, legendary novelist Philip Roth’s terrifyingly prescient 2005 novel “The Plot Against America,” they were doing so in a pre-pandemic world. At first, Simon and his team were “merely” adapting a novel that seemed, with eerie clairvoyance, to peer around the bend of time into our present day. The book envisions a truculent presidential candidate rising to power on an America First platform, and a populace riven between those who believe his platform is at long last what the country needs, and the people who will suffer if that platform is fulfilled. Reading the book before COVID-19 was scary enough.

Roth’s novel, and the adaptation it has inspired, is set in an alternate version of the country in 1940, with heroic aviator Charles Lindbergh—also a rabid isolationist—besting FDR in the presidential election. Lindbergh not only believes that America should stay out of World War II, he says, in a famous (and very real) radio address he made in Des Moines that among the people pressing the country towards war were “the Jewish race.” In’s Roth terrifying vision, this clarion call of nativism and anti-Semitism launches Lindy into the Oval Office.

Fast-forward to the present. Simon and Burns’ adaptation of The Plot Against America debuted on HBO on March 16 during a crisis that even the visionary Roth might have been startled by. While the story at the heart of the book and the series retains its timeliness—it centers on the Levin family living in Newark, New Jersey, and how the election of Lindbergh throws their lives into chaos—the series now unfolds during a global pandemic. I spoke to the series costume designer Jeriana San Juan via email before the novel coronavirus had become the new, undeniable reality for Americans. I then reached out to her once the pandemic wreaked havoc on the health and economy of the United States to find out how she’s dealing with both the pandemic and its effect on the entertainment industry.

Tell me about the initial conversations you had with David Simon and the rest of the team about the adaptation?

In my initial conversations with David and our directors Minkie Spiro and Tommy Schlamme, I posed several questions about if we would be telling this story from the same point of view as the novel. So much in the story in Roth’s book is colored from the perspective of Philp, who is the youngest child in the central family. Our initial conversations were also centered around keeping the story relevant to an audience today. Our conversations also centered around embracing authenticity and imperfection with this family in order to keep them accessible to an American audience. We wanted to bring the viewer in and pull them up a seat at Shabbat dinner. 

L-r: Caleb Malis, Azhy Robertson, Morgan Spector, Zoe Kazan. Photograph by Michele K. Short/HBO
L-r: Caleb Malis, Azhy Robertson, Morgan Spector, Zoe Kazan. Photograph by Michele K. Short/HBO

How did your clothes help tell the story of an America suddenly enthrall to a nativist like Lindbergh? What kind of notes by the show’s creators?

In telling this alternate history it was important to refresh my own understanding of the real history. So much of American fashion of the period was driven by the war effort. The lack of rubber for shoes in order to conserve our resources to make tires or manufacture machine parts, the lack of silk for hosiery because we were cut off from the silk producers of the east, the introduction of fabrics like rayon, and the lessening availability of wool which was being used to manufacture uniforms. Shorter hemlines for women and the slim-fitting trousers for men in order to conserve fabric and cut smaller pattern pieces from a single piece of cloth. It was an interesting journey to contrast some of those truths in our alternate history. Therefore I used silk a great deal in Evelyn’s clothing and lingerie, which was uncommon for the time. I took classical early 1940’s silhouettes and interpreted them in fabrics that were untraditional for the time. 

Winona Ryder is Evelyn in 'The Plot Against America.' Photograph by Michele K. Short/HBO
Winona Ryder is Evelyn Finkel in ‘The Plot Against America.’ Photograph by Michele K. Short/HBO

How much did you rely on Roth’s book, and how much of your work was based on period research? 

I used some elements from the book, like the way Roth describes his mother’s affinity for the color green. We adjusted that to blue because blue suited Zoe Kazan’s eyes so well. Then we used it exactly as Roth describes in his book, in the wallpaper, in the color she chooses for her robe, in the flowers that decorate her summer hat. Those little notions help us understand the character through unspoken language. Clearly, this woman loves that color and chooses things that go with it or feature it in her home and her wardrobe. 

Zoe Kazan is Elizabeth Levin. Photograph by Michele K. Short/HBO
Zoe Kazan is Elizabeth Levin. Photograph by Michele K. Short/HBO

Did you rely on archival photos of the real people, like Lindbergh, Roosevelt, Henry Ford, etc., for their looks?

One of the most important parts of my process is the research I do leading into a project. I use the research to create mood boards for each character. For the characters in the story which are pulled directly from history, like Lindbergh, his wife Ann Morrow Lindbergh, Henry Ford, or Walter Winchell, I did exhaustive research pulling from books and all published historical and archival materials with photos of them. This will help influence the clothes a great deal in order to help pull off the illusion for an audience. I will also use this research to help disguise some differences between our cast and the famous figure. This is a trick I learned many years ago from my experience at Saturday Night Live

Ben Cole is Charles Lindbergh and John Turturro is Rabbi Lionel Bengelsdorf in 'The Plot Against America.' Photograph by Michele K. Short/HBO
Ben Cole is Charles Lindbergh and John Turturro is Rabbi Lionel Bengelsdorf in ‘The Plot Against America.’ Photograph by Michele K. Short/HBO

How do you go about your period research? And how much of it was specific to Newark, NJ in the late 30s and early 40s? 

For this project, it was important to keep the clothes as related to the real population as possible. We wanted this family to feel natural and realistic so I went to places like the Jewish Historical Society, and the New Jersey Historical society who helped guide me through some historical yearbooks, photographs from religious gatherings, vintage family photos, etcetera. 

I also went to places like the New York Public Library which is one of my favorite places in the city. I went to the Dorot Jewish Division at the library to access any material they had publishing photographs of suburban and blue-collar Jewish families at the time. I also reference photojournalistic style photography of the time through the works of Helen Levitt and Todd Webb, Garry Winogrand, and more. In addition to that, I did research in order to set a vocabulary for the fashion at the time through the archives at Conde Nast, who have Vogue and Harper’s Bazar magazines dating back to the early 1900s. 

L-r: Caleb Malis, Azhy Robertson, Morgan Spector, Zoe Kazan. Photograph by Michele K. Short/HBO
L-r: Caleb Malis, Azhy Robertson, Morgan Spector, Zoe Kazan. Photograph by Michele K. Short/HBO

So red is an important color in this show? 

Minkie Spiro, our director for the first three episodes, was very careful to introduce red sparingly and allow the color to permeate through the story in the way that xenophobia, nationalism, and socialism does. When we first see Lionel Bengelsdorf (John Turturro) in the sanctuary of his synagogue, he is wearing a custom woven Tallit prayer shawl. I had a small line of red woven into this shawl. This is untraditional for a Tallit but served our story in a unique way. Later on in the story, he wears a suit with thin red stripes in the pinstripe of the wool. After that, he wears the Tallit in service again, but as he is more in line with the xenophobic administration the red in the prayer shawl is more prevalent.

John Turturro. Photo: Michele K. Short/HBO
John Turturro. Photo: Michele K. Short/HBO

What other TV series or films, if any, were touchstones for you?

The period films that I referenced for this project were primarily as a reference for Winona Ryder’s character of Evelyn. The character fashion herself after Barbara Stanwyck, and Winona and I had great fun finding moments from Mrs. Stanwyk’s films of the late 1930s and early 1940s that the character might interpret in her own wardrobe. The Lady Eve or Remember the Night were both great sources of research for her wardrobe. I also referenced Norman Rockwell’s work for the Saturday Evening Post. There is a special book that was published of the photos that he staged of people in real clothes in order to paint them, and those photographs were extremely valuable to me in recreating some classic, nostalgic Americana in the striped T-shirts for the young boys, or the cut of the apron or the housedress on Zoe Kazan who plays their mother. 

L-r: Azhy Robertson, Caleb Malis. Photograph by Michele K. Short/HBO
L-r: Azhy Robertson, Caleb Malis. Photograph by Michele K. Short/HBO

What was it like working on this series in general, considering our current, heightened political moment?

Filming this politically motivated story during an especially stressful political time in our world was a challenge. It wasn’t long after the incident in Charlottesville when we were on set filming a scene where the Levin family is being targeted with hostility by a Lindbergh supporter. I found myself getting teary-eyed behind the monitor. You see the anger, discomfort, shame, and pride play out on all of the Levin family’s faces, and at that moment I felt connected with the young boys as a first-generation American myself. The father, played by Morgan Spector, turns the scene on a dime, putting a positive spin on the experience to help retain dignity and positivity for his family, and my heart just ached. I remember Minkie Spiro reaching out to me at that moment, and we squeezed each other’s hands, knowing we were creating something special. 

Let’s address the most pressing issue for everyone right now. How is COVID-19 affecting your work?

I’m designing a new miniseries for Netflix called Halston, which is a biopic covering the life and career of the fashion designer played by Ewan McGregor. I was in the midst of fittings and designing when I got the news about a mandated hiatus for two weeks. So we suddenly stopped work and all rushed to tidy up and consolidate, pack things away, knowing that the two-week mark was one that might be changed pending how bad the pandemic would get. It’s an odd and unrecognizable time in our country and I think this industry is facing the same challenges that so many others are. It will be hard for us all. 

Has this changed the way you look at your work in general?

The work that I do as a creative in the film and television business requires me to be physically near people and touching many things; fabrics, collaborating with costume builders, I’m in fittings with actors, working directly with directors in a cramped video village behind the monitors, working with assistants handling textiles and vintage clothing, etcetera. I think this experience has heightened my understanding of how important the tactile creative process is. When designing on a television series timeline, the creative process is so much about designing in real-time, as fabric swatches are coming in, thumbing through reference books while playing with trims on a dress form. It’s very much the way I work. I hope that this human connection is not lost.  

As far as how this is affecting the economics of our business, I know that this will be a difficult challenge as we face the hurdle of cancellations and suspensions of work for so many people. But, I look forward to getting through this time and getting back to work again soon with a more conscientious practice of sanitizing regularly. 

Here’s more of our coverage on how COVID-19 is affecting the entertainment industry, and how the entertainment industry is trying to do their part to help:

The below-the-line-talent who will be hit the hardest.

How studios and celebrities are using their massive platforms to spread crucial information about COVID-19.

How filmmakers, like cinematographer Kira Kelly, are responding to their sudden furlough.

Amy Adams & Jennifer Garner Team Up to Help Kids Affected by COVID-19

Featured image: John Turturro is Rabbi Lionel Bengelsdorf in ‘The Plot Against America.’ Photo by Michele K. Short/HBO

Our In-House Former Movie Critic Submits An Epic Watch List for Trying Times

For reasons entirely to do with this crazy life we’re all living right now, I find myself revisiting the final scene of the great Three Days of the Condor. You know, the Robert Redford thriller that came out, like, before electricity. In the movie, Redford’s a CIA analyst who knows too much, and the CIA is hunting him down. In this climactic scene, he informs an adversary, played by Cliff Robertson, that he has a gun in his coat pocket and that he needs to walk with him for a little bit.

“Which way?” asks Robertson.

“West,” says Redford. “Slowly. Stay in front of me about three or four steps.”

I immediately hit PAUSE.

“Make that six feet, fella!” I silently yell at my iPad. Remembering the eerie scenes of a practically empty Times Square we’ve all been seeing on CNN, I also feel compelled to urge all the New Yorker extras in the background to go home – now.

It’s a strange state of affairs to be forced to stay home. This lockdown of our usual freedoms has not only made us home hostages but has put an COVID-obsessive filter on everything.

As we watch shows and movies on our various home screens, it suddenly seems like characters are being wanton, selfish and reckless. What are they doing standing so close to each other? Did they get a test before they kissed? Why didn’t they wipe every available surface in their house before they went to bed? Or perhaps we are looking at those dramas with wistfulness. How nice to be in social gatherings! To have a meal in a restaurant! Will we ever be able to do that again?

With so much crazy time on our hands, we are also sharing in a fever-dream frenzy. Our collective curation of videos, memes, Instagram shares and so forth, include everything from those wonderful Italians singing to one another across the piazza to people washing their hands to A Little Bit Alexis from the TV show Schitt’s Creek.

When I saw a video of British popstar Brandon Flowers washing his hands and singing to his own hit song, Mr. Brightside, I shared that with a friend and diehard Flowers fan. She responded that she’d already seen it on Instagram “because, of course, I follow him!!!”

“How are you holding up in these strange times?” Emailed my friend. “Miss your face.”

The COVID-19 New Normal has come to this.

Of course, we are all negotiating our personal ways through this, individually and collectively, as we attempt as a global community to keep ourselves corralled. And that includes curating our own entertainment, which has now become its own round-the-clock task.

As a former movie critic for more than 20 years for the Washington Post, and a regular moviegoer and television watcher for the past 12, I’ve taken the liberty of sharing a representative curation of my own. This is just a random sampling of films and TV dramas I’ve enjoyed in recent years, and it’s meant as no more than a trigger for you, either to watch them or curate your own choices. Many of these you may already have seen, but with more time available than you may be getting for a lifetime, these are worth a second look too.

I thought we could start by addressing the post-apocalyptic theme head-on.

The Post-Apocalypse, Couchside.

Many folks seem to be flocking to stream dramas with post-apocalyptic themes, from Contagion to I Am Legend to World War Z. But if there is one television series that may be the best way to process what we are going through, it’s Craig Mazin’s HBO series Chernobyl. While it retells the horrifying chain of events that led to the world’s worst nuclear disaster in 1986, its real story is about our response to the unthinkable. Its heroism is marked by how quickly we surrender to the truth instead of clinging to false security.

Life During Wartime

While the real Chernobyl incident was taking place, film director John Boorman was shooting a movie that was part autobiography about his childhood experiences during the Blitz in World War II. The result is his 1987 film Hope and Glory, a lovely story that turns the apocalypse into a mere backdrop to showcase the resilience and indefatigable good spirit of human beings. There are so many scenes to savor: A group of schoolchildren forced to recite multiplication tables in gas masks. A handsome German flier who falls from the sky, landing before a gathering of curious Brits. And a memorable mom (Sarah Miles) who wonders if a can of jam found on the beach might have been poisoned by the enemy. “They know we’re mad on jam,” she says.

Tricksters

It’s always a pleasure to watch lovable rascals, who use their natural abilities to get their way out of trouble.

In Better Call Saul, AMC’s spinoff and prequel to its own hugely successful Breaking Bad, Bob Odenkirk plays the eponymous criminal lawyer for hire who’ll stop at almost nothing to represent his clients. Which is a good thing considering he gets caught up in the dangerous underworld of drug trafficking. He’s something of a Bugs Bunny in plainclothes, a trickster who always finds a roundabout way to win. His relationship with girlfriend and fellow attorney Kim Wexler (Rhea Seehorn) is modernized screwball deadpan comedy at its best.

Actor Julia Garner is all trouble, edgy charm and bouncing curls, in Netflix’s Ozark. As Ruth Langmore, a 19-year-old woman, she doesn’t let living in a trailer with her family get in the way of her ambitions. The New York Times described her character well, saying she is “routinely smacking down — literally, strategically or rhetorically — derisive men who mistake her delicate features and springy curls for weakness.” Of course, the series itself, starring Jason Bateman and Laura Linney, and now starting its third season, is terrific.

This will sound weird, but then these are weird times. Consider this as much warning as a recommendation. On one level, A24’s Uncut Gems is the most infuriating and anxiety-provoking movie in a long time. I watched a cluster of people walk out of a screening, shaking their heads. Why? Because the central character, played by Adam Sandler, is so devoid of our sympathy. But Sandler’s portrayal of a gambling addict obsessed with making the big score at any cost, with any number of false promises made along the way, is his best screen performance since 2002’s Punch-Drunk Love.   

The Insiders

Taking the idea of us all being stuck indoors, these three dramas make powerful stories of central characters who, in very different ways, work from the inside.

Thomas Cromwell, as depicted in BBC’s Wolf Hall, is King Henry VII’s master manipulator. Think Robert Duvall’s magnificent consiglieri character in The Godfather, except in a Tudor doublet. As the one who helps the king steer his way out of that tricky annulment imbroglio with Catherine of Aragon and the Pope, among many things, Mark Rylance produces my personal favorite male performance in a television series of all time.

Claire Foy, who plays Ann Boleyn in Wolf Hall (a great performance there too), plays perhaps the ultimate royal insider in BBC’s The Crown. This is a very difficult role to break open: a monarch who has been raised to only present her ceremonial best to people. But inside that seemingly undaunted exterior, Foy provides a full palette of universal human emotions from base jealousy to inspiringly unconditional love.

The Lives of Others, which won the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film for 2006, is something of a Cold War companion piece to Francis Ford Coppola’s brilliant The Conversation. Set in the former East Germany, it’s about a STASI secret service agent who is assigned to electronically eavesdrop on a playwright and actress who are under suspicion for being potentially disloyal. But he must come to terms with an unpalatable truth: that two people who should be subversives, just aren’t so. As a political ideologue who is transformed into a compassionate human being, his situation becomes, to put things mildly, existentially awkward.

The Ensembles

Since we can’t gather in social clusters the way we love to do, this is a great opportunity to vicariously enjoy networks of characters as they blend, bicker and banter. Of course, there are many great examples of this, from TV’s The Wire, Deadwood and Big Little Lies to movies like Pulp Fiction, Magnolia and Inglourious Basterds. (See what I did there? That’s six bonus recommendations.)

There is no finer ensemble-auteur (yes, we get to make up new hyphenates in the brave new world) than Aaron Sorkin, whose list of credits include the West Wing, A Few Good Men, and scriptwriting credit for The Social Network. In his TV series The Newsroom, Jeff Daniels presides as a verbosely sage TV news anchor, surrounded by a rich tapestry of other characters who enter and exit this bustling, deadline-manic world with Sorkin’s quintessentially funny and insightful-on-the-fly dialogue. For my money, the scene-stealer par excellence is Olivia Munn. As a socially inept economic news presenter, her rapid-fire rejoinders had me all but standing up and applauding.

A South Korean movie. With subtitles. Winning what you might call the Oscar grand slam: Academy Awards for Best Original Screenplay and Directing, and for Best International Feature Film and Best Picture. There’s a reason for all the success surrounding Parasite. Bong Joon-ho’s movie about a destitute Korean family that works together to milk maximum advantage out of a wealthy family isn’t just a searing and timely meditation on socioeconomic injustice. It’s a visit with richly drawn and unforgettable characters who are caught in unexpected circumstances. This “comedy without clowns and tragedy without villains,” as Bong described his film, is one of the most startlingly original takes on family life you may ever see.

So, as you sit at home in your onesomes, twosomes or strategically selected moresomes, maybe you’ll be inspired to watch these recommended dramas, or simply get your own curator’s mojo on.

Happy programming and decision making, and may the force be with you!

For more on our COVID-19 related coverage, read this piece about how the pandemic is effecting below-the-line filmmakers. Or see how the entertainment industry is coming together by being apart, and sharing crucial information on their platforms. Or hear from cinematographer Kira Kelly about her new show, Netflix’s Self Made, and how the novel coronavirus has affected her upcoming projects.

Featured image: Julia Garner in ‘OZARK.’ Photo by Steve Dietl/Netflix.

Grey’s Anatomy Donating Gloves & Gowns to Fight COVID-19

With the rapid spread of COVID-19, people all across the globe are trying to do their part. This includes people with symptoms who are self-quarantining, the tens of millions of folks practicing social distancing, and the efforts of individuals and charities alike to lending a helping hand—in whatever way they can—to support people in even greater need. As we all learn how to live under novel, legitimately terrifying circumstances, no industry or group of people are working harder than our healthcare providers. That’s why the news that Grey’s Anatomy is joining other medical shows and chipping in to help is so welcome. Grey’s will donate gloves and gowns that are usually part of their wardrobe department to help doctors and nurses battling the virus.

Grey’s Anatomy‘s spinoff Station 19 has already donated supplies. Here’s what showrunner Krista Vernoff told Refinery 29:

“At Station 19, we were lucky enough to have about 300 of the coveted N95 masks which we donated to our local fire station. They were tremendously grateful. At Grey’s Anatomy, we have a back stock of gowns and gloves which we are donating as well. We are all overwhelmed with gratitude for our healthcare workers during this incredibly difficult time, and in addition to these donations, we are doing our part to help them by staying home.”

The lack of medical supplies has become one of the defining through-lines of recent weeks, and Grey’s Anatomy and Station 19 join other medical shows, like Fox’s The Resident (they donated gloves, masks, and gowns) and ABC’s The Good Doctor (they’re donating supplies to local hospitals in Vancouver, where the show is set) in trying to offer what they can to help.

After The Resident sent supplies to Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta, Dr. Karen Law, a rheumatologist there, shared this on Instagram:

View this post on Instagram

“Look for the helpers. You will always find people who are helping.” . To the entire team @theresidentonfox, thank you for this incredibly generous donation of #PPE from your set, including gowns, masks, gloves, and all the things our healthcare workers need to provide safe care for our community during #COVID19. . Yesterday, I had a serious discussion with the residents about how, though supplies are low, a magical shipment of masks is unlikely to arrive. And yet, a magical shipment of masks DID arrive, in the form of this very generous gesture. This kind of community support means so much to our #frontlineproviders who are making many sacrifices to staff our hospitals and care for our community. . Thank you, @theresidentonfox and @foxtv for being helpers. We needed this kind of good news today. . PS: Sorry it’s not a great pic, but the focus was not on the photo at the time. Similarly, the team @theresidentonfox are good citizens doing good deeds and not looking for a shout out. Though I encourage all to support The Resident and the great team behind the show and to pay their good deed forward any way you can. . #Hurstlife #residentlife #emoryIMresidents #lookforthehelpers #gratitude

A post shared by klaw (@karen.ll.law) on

Here’s more of our coverage on how COVID-19 is affecting the entertainment industry, and how the entertainment industry is trying to do their part to help:

The below-the-talent who will be hit the hardest.

How studios and celebrities are using their massive platforms to spread crucial information about COVID-19.

How filmmakers, like cinematographer Kira Kelly, are responding to their sudden furlough.

Amy Adams & Jennifer Garner Team Up to Help Kids Affected by COVID-19

Featured image: Ellen Pompeo is doctor Meredith Grey on ‘Grey’s Anatomy.’ Courtesy ABC.

DP Kira Kelly on Lensing Netflix’s Self Made Followed by a Sudden COVID-19 Furlough

Self Made, Netflix’s four-episode biopic on Madam C.J. Walker (Octavia Spencer), the businesswoman, philanthropist, and first female American self-made millionaire, traces Madam C.J.’s late 19th-century rise from washerwoman to the successful founder of a haircare empire staffed by and made for African-American women. The production contrasts vibrant, colorful historic sets and costumes with a contemporary soundtrack, for an immersively satisfying period series that feels completely modern.

Octavia Spencer in 'Self Made.' Photo by David Lee/Netflix
Octavia Spencer in ‘Self Made.’ Photo by David Lee/Netflix

“Even before I got the job, the showrunners were very clear that they did not want a monochromatic, sepia-colored period piece,” said Kira Kelly (Queen Sugar, The Red Line), Self Made’s cinematographer. We spoke with the DP shortly after she’d unexpectedly returned home from another Toronto-based project, the eerily apropos Y: The Last Man, a new series about a mysterious global virus. The show’s prep team arrived in the city on a Monday and were sent home the following Friday. “We have this two-week hiatus, I guess like everybody else, but at this point, I don’t even know how realistic the two weeks are,” Kelly noted. Across the film and television industry, projects are being shelved or put on indefinite pause as part of the attempt to flatten the coronavirus’s curve.

Kira Kelly filming 'Self Made.' Photo by David Lee/Netflix
Kira Kelly filming ‘Self Made.’ Photo by David Lee/Netflix

As for projects that wrapped well before COVID-19’s arrival, Kelly’s work on Self Made is light and luminous—the cinematographer found inspiration in contemporary cultural references like Beyoncé’s Lemonade and the movie Annihilation while working closely with production designer Britt Doughty and the costume team to comb through historical references, where they found a surprisingly rich palette to draw from.

“People were using a lot more color than we do today. A lot of jewel tones, emeralds, sapphires. We were able to build a lot of that color, patterns, wallpaper into the sets. It was the same with the wardrobe department, making sure we had a lot of color popping in the outfits,” said Kelly.

L-r: Tiffany Haddish, Octavia Spencer in 'Self Made.' Photo by Amanda Matlovich/Netflix.
L-r: Tiffany Haddish, Octavia Spencer in ‘Self Made.’ Photo by Amanda Matlovich/Netflix.

To highlight these elements, the cinematographer deployed soft, neutral lighting that also feels true to the period, which spans the turn of the century through the Jazz Age. The series’ actors’ faces almost seem to glow, which was not unintended. “I think that for me, when you’re shooting black skin, what’s beautiful about it is that there’s a reflective quality. You can really play with whatever lights and colors you have on set,” Kelly explained. “We’d use really large diffusions that we’d put light through, so we could have that reflected in the faces, and just change the angle depending on which part of the cheeks we’d want to highlight.”

With the series period-mixing elements established and shooting taking place primarily on locations in and around Toronto, the challenge lay in maintaining a sense of accuracy in lighting while working around pre-existing structures. “When we first start in Madam C.J.’s apartment where she’s a washerwoman, she didn’t have electricity, and so it was a lot of working with lanterns, putting out LED lights and oil lamps,” Kelly explained. “We had an amazing props department that helped us hide a lot of stuff.”

Octavia Spencer in 'Self Made.' Photo by Amanda Matlovich/Netflix.
Octavia Spencer in ‘Self Made.’ Photo by Amanda Matlovich/Netflix.

As Madam C.J. (born and also known as Sarah Breedlove) grows her business around a hair growth product called Glossine, she moves with daughter Lelia (Tiffany Haddish, in her most dramatic role yet) and husband C.J. (Blair Underwood) to Indianapolis, into an elegant home that serves as the family’s base, salon, and factory. The production found a turn-of-the-century home in Hamilton, outside Toronto, where Kelly designed a lighting scheme to ensure a sense of the family digs being lit from the outside, despite Sarah’s upgrade to electricity. “Even in that time when you first had electricity, you’re probably not trying to burn it all day, you know?” she pointed out. Maintaining a sense of natural light by day and leaning into lanterns at night, there’s a distinction between daytime face-offs with Addie Munroe (Carmen Ejogo), Sarah’s hair industry inspiration-turned-nemesis, and evening gatherings among family and friends (in one particularly historic scene, a party “watches” a Jack Johnson boxing match through a ticker tape machine).

While Self Made straightforwardly depicts the major events of Sarah’s professional life—being rejected and then harassed by Addie, concocting her own product, struggling to find investors, making a risky move to New York—her inner voice as she faces these challenges is told through interstitial moments distinct to each of the series’ four episodes, a “stylized look into what’s happening in Madam C.J.’s brain,” said Kelly. In the first episode, Sarah is in direct confrontation with Addie, with the two women facing off in a vintage boxing ring. “The second one is more dream-like, where she’s imagining what her salon is going to be like. In three and four, they become more surreal, in a way,” said Kelly, with Sarah first surrounded and almost trapped by her Walker salesgirls on bicycles, and in the final episode, recalling impressionistic, rural memories of her parents, who were sharecroppers. Even though each of these imagined peeks into Sarah’s mind are different in tone and color, all are a visually otherworldly departure from Sarah’s grounded day-to-day concerns. Kelly filmed the series with Panavision T-series lenses, but for the interstitials, switched to “a bunch of weird lenses,” she joked. The results are countervailing approaches that balance out to inventively recreate Madam C.J.’s remarkable rags-to-riches story.

Self Made is available for streaming today, March 20, on Netflix.

Featured image: Kira Kelly filming ‘Self Made.’ Photo by Amanda Matlovich/Netflix.

New iPhone-Filmed Conan Episodes Will Return on March 30

We’ll take all the good news we can get at this point. We all know that with the spread of COVID-19, productions are shutting down throughout the entertainment industry. That has included every late-night talk show. Late night hosts are still producing content, mind you, often in an effort to help viewers understand the importance of social distancing and to offer a little levity in this time of crisis. Now we’ve got the very welcome news that one late-night host, Conan O’Brien, is returning to the air on March 30, and he’ll be producing full, brand new episodes of Conan on TBS. O’Brien and his team will be doing this without an audience, of course, and will be shooting the episodes on an iPhone. Guests will appear on the show via Skype.

Variety broke the story that O’Brien, the longest-tenured of the current late night hosts, will be coming back with full shows. O’Brien’s longtime executive producer Jeff Ross told Variety’s Brian Steinberg: “[O’Brien] likes to work. He likes to make stuff – as we all do. We are in the business of making content and this what we do. The idea that we can’t do it is a little frustrating. We have a staff that wants to work, that doesn’t want to not get paid, and you just want to keep the business going.”

O’Brien offered this brief but funny hand-washing tutorial on St. Patrick’s Day:

Late night hosts have a unique ability to comfort, calm, and inform huge swaths of people in times of crisis. O’Brien and his fellow hosts Stephen Colbert, Samantha Bee, Jimmy Fallon, James Corden, and Seth Meyers have the kind of reach (and chops) to do a lot of good. Their return, in whatever form they make themselves available to their viewers, will be very welcome. The fact that O’Brien and his team are going to pull off doing his usual show in this very unusual format is a bit of good news in dire times.

Featured image: Conan O’Brien’s show ‘Conan’ will start broadcasting new episodes, all shot on an iPhone, March 30. Photo courtesy TBS.

Here’s James Gunn’s Blessedly Pandemic Movie-Free Quarantine Watch List

With so many people at home right now, doing their part to help flatten the curve of COVID-19 by social distancing, watch lists have flooded the internet. Many of these watch lists are focused, understandably, on films and TV shows that deal with pandemics and other world-changing catastrophes. One of the most cited films on these lists is Steven Soderbergh’s genuinely terrifying Contagion (now available on Hulu) from 2011. Written by Scott Z. Burns, who researched the film by going to the CDC and learning first-hand how they handle pandemics, Contagion is a deeply chilling thriller, and also a realistic glimpse at how healthcare professionals, government officials, and regular people try to deal with a global pandemic. If you want to see what it looks like when a government mishandles a disaster, you can’t do any better than Craig Mazin’s Chernobyl.

Yet you might be looking for precisely the opposite kind of film or series. To that end, Guardians of the Galaxy writer/director James Gunn has stepped into the breach. Gunn unleashed a very solid list of films you likely haven’t seen. Parasite co-writer and director Bong Joon Ho’s 2009 film Mother is on the list (it’s great, unsurprisingly), as is Werner Herzog’s bonkers The Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call – New Orleans.

Gunn’s selections aren’t quirky or consciously obscure; they’re just good films lots of folks haven’t seen.

Here’s the list, direct from Gunn’s Twitter feed:

The Below-the-Line Talent Who Make the Films & Shows we Love

With the spread of COVID-19 affecting the entertainment industry in unprecedented ways, below-the-line filmmakers are facing the prospect of weeks, or months, without income, some without health insurance or paid sick leave. These are the folks who make the films and television shows we love possible. They’re costume designers and assistant directors, gaffers, grips, and animators. They’re makeup artists and hairstylists, they’re art directors and location scouts, they’re the people who design the sets, tailor the clothes, block the shots, and perform the stunts. And when your favorite show or film has ended principal photography, their work is far from over. They design the sound, create the score, correct the color and edit the footage. Without them, there is no movie, there is no television series, and there is no entertainment industry.

To that end, we’d like to highlight some of these people whose work is the heart and soul of the industry we love. In these unprecedented times, as we all find ways to come together while being apart, let’s not lose sight of all the people whose livelihoods cannot withstand weeks or months of no work.

Casting Directors

People like Aisha Coley recently helped cast Ava DuVernay’s incredible Netflix series When They See Us. Casting directors are integral to our industry, and their work, often unheralded, is visible in every film and show we watch. For a series like When They See Us, which had a large ensemble cast, Coley’s work cannot be overstated. The show was ultimately nominated for 11 Emmys, including a win for Coley herself for casting the series. Yet we bet she’s just as happy that eight of those Emmy nominations were in the acting categories. Jharrel Jerome won an Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited Series, the youngest person ever to win this award. None of this happens without Coley’s vision.

“[Casting this series] took more looking… because we reached out to kids who didn’t have agents, and reached out regionally, in New York, Baltimore, maybe Boston, and Atlanta. We just happened to get to some kids who were really, really talented and had a maturity about them, really understood the subject matter, and were able to tackle it.

Costume Designers

What a character wears tells you a lot about their history and their state of mind, and it’s also one of the most visible, often memorable things about a production. In Birds of Prey, the look of Harley Quinn (Margot Robbie) and her band of female superheroes was a huge part of the movie’s appeal. Costume designer Erin Benach gave the bad girls of Gotham their look, starting with Robbie’s scene-stealing Harley.

“We really clued into all of Harley’s character traits, like the idea that she loves impracticality and has this inner child. Harley can take whatever she wants from the window of a store anywhere she is.”

Hair & Makeup Stylists

Their work is as visible as a costume or production designer, but they’ve got the added difficulty of often having to make last-second, sometimes take-by-take adjustments to make sure actors look the part. For the team who worked on Dolemite is My Name, co-department makeup head Vera Steimberg and co-department heads of hair, Carla Farmer and Stacey Morris, had their work cut out for them—the film charts the rise of the self-produced blaxploitation movie icon Rudy Ray Moore in the 1970s. This required these talented artists to focus not only on creating the real looks of Moore and his confreres but also recreate how they all looked in the actual Dolemite film.

“There so many good color palettes now, we can recreate any era. You don’t have to go to the makeup they had back in the day,” Steimberg told us.

Stunt Professionals

The men and women who make up the industry’s incredibly talented stunt performers are responsible for some of the most thrilling moments captured on camera. For stunt coordinator Kathy Jarvis, hanging out of helicopters on the set of 68 Whiskey is all in a day’s work.

“I liked that there was action in every episode and that the action drove the story. Some of it was comedic, some was introducing characters. As a stunt coordinator, it gave me a wide breadth of things that I could actually do. I was excited about that.”

We’ve been telling the stories of below-the-line filmmakers for 8 years and counting, and never before has it been more important to remind people how important they are to this industry we love, and how protecting them means protecting the films and shows we love.

Featured image: L-r: Hector Melgoza, Mehdi Merali, Kathy Jarvis, Umar Khan, James Carr Nelson, Trevor Morgan

Watch the First 10 Minutes of The Skywalker Legacy Documentary

We’ve all got way more time at home on our hands at the moment. While we practice social distancing responsibly, it’s nice to have as many entertainment options as possible. Disney has made the first 10-minutes of The Skywalker Legacy documentary available online, which we’ve embedded below for your viewing pleasure. This sneak peek comes on the heels of Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker becoming available for digital download yesterday, March 17.

The documentary will go behind-the-scenes of the making of the final film in the Skywalker Saga and will be available when The Rise of Skywalker‘s 4K Blu-ray and DVD become available on March 31. The clip gives us a glimpse of how the doc will situate J.J. Abrams’ film in the larger Star Wars canon, revealing some archival footage from the original trilogy. You’ll also get some great Harrison Ford ad-libbing, which is an extra bonus in this bonus material.

The clip has a really interesting opening—we see fans clamoring on the fringe of the Tatooine set during the filming of Return of the Jedi. These folks are living in a world in which a new Star Wars film comes out every three years. A New Hope bowed in 1977, The Empire Strikes Back in 1980, and The Return of the Jedi in 1983. They’re talking about George Lucas’s grand, 9-film plan, and they’re assuming these films will be completed with due haste.

We here in the (legitimately insane) future know what will actually happen; it’ll take 38-years for the epic Saga Skywalker to come to a close. And the film that finally closed it out is the main focus of The Skywalker Legacy. Interviews with cast and crew, new looks at the various droids, aliens, and far-flung locations, and a look at the sheer amount of painstaking effort and work that went into this film will be on display. Whatever your ultimate feelings on Abrams’ final film, the level of craft and commitment is clear in this clip, and will be much more vivid in the larger documentary.

Check out the clip here:

Here’s the official synopsis from Disney:

Sneak Peek of The Skywalker Legacy documentary. Bring home Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker on Digital 3/17 & Blu-ray 3/31!

Lucasfilm and director J.J. Abrams join forces once again to take viewers on an epic journey to a galaxy far, far away with Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, the riveting conclusion of the seminal Skywalker saga, where new legends will be born and the final battle for freedom is yet to come.

Featured image: Chewbacca (Joonas Suotamo), Poe (Oscar Isaac), Finn (John Boyega), Rey (Daisy Ridley) and C-3PO (Anthony Daniels) in STAR WARS: THE RISE OF SKYWALKER. Courtesy Lucasfilm/Walt Disney Studios.

Studios & Stars Offer Social Distancing Education & Entertainment

Comedians, musicians, actors, and film and television studios have begun stepping up to try and add a little levity, light, and a sense of much-needed solidarity as we all deal with COVID-19. Individuals and companies with massive platforms can do a lot of good by informing citizens about the best way to stay safe and keep others safe in these unprecedented times. With governments across the world urging citizens to practice social distancing and, in many cases, stay in their homes, these efforts mean a lot. We may be physically separated, but we’ve never needed each other more.

Whether it’s reading to children to raise money, sharing very funny videos about why social distancing is crucial, or the simple but important step celebrities are taking in revealing to the world that they have COVID-19 and what we all need to do to keep each other safe (looking at you, Tom Hanks, Rita Wilson, Idris Elba), we’re seeing a massive uptick in socially responsible information sharing from the entertainment community.

While all of our major film and TV studios are dealing with production shutdowns, delayed releases and movie theater closures, they’re not just fretting about their own bottom line. Studios will be sharing important information with the millions of people who follow their various social channels and use their platforms. These ads will focus on “social distancing, personal hygiene, and mental health in response to the COVID-19 pandemic,” CNBC‘s Megan Graham writes. “The idea is to get the U.S.′ largest media companies and digital platforms using their channels to get out consistent messaging across television, radio, social media, out-of-home and digital media. All of the new ads direct audiences to www.coronavirus.gov and appear during time or space that’s donated by the media.”

These campaigns will also include musicians and celebrities using studio platforms to showcase themselves at home, doing their part to be responsible as we attempt to flatten the curve of COVID-19’s spread. The Daily Show‘s Trevor Noah’s Tweet yesterday is a case in point:

Meanwhile, people with massive followings like Ariana Grande are doing a lot of good by telling their fans and followers what’s going on:

Humor is a great tool in times of turmoil. It’s a way to provide important information and give people a bit of levity in the process. Max Brooks and his legendary dad Mel shared social distancing information and managed to elicit a laugh (it always helps to name drop Carl Reiner and Dick Van Dyke):

The Terminator himself shared this video of him and some pals preaching the importance of listening to experts:

Keith Urban, alongside his wife Nicole Kidman, provided a free concert. Chris Martin of Coldplay did the same. John Legend will be performing live for audiences today at 1 pm PST on Instagram. The legendary, game-changing Wu-Tang Clan offered these helpful hints on how to take care of yourself and others:

All of these efforts can have a huge impact on the way people respond to this unfolding crisis. We may be socially distancing ourselves from another, but we’re all in this together.

Featured image: CHICAGO, IL – OCTOBER 16: Trevor Noah on The Daily Show Undesked Chicago 2017: Lets Do This Before It Gets Too Damn Cold Comedy Centrals The Daily Show with Trevor Noah taping Monday, October 16 through Thursday, October 19 from Chicagos The Athenaeum Theatre and airing nightly at 11:00 p.m. ET/PT, 10:00 p.m. CT on October 16, 2017 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Jeff Schear/Getty Images for Comedy Central)

Amy Adams & Jennifer Garner Team Up to Help Kids Affected by COVID-19

While all of us are trying to come together—mostly, and crucially, by staying apart—to help flatten the curve of the spread of COVID-19 and mitigate the damages, it’s nice to see those with a large platform doing their best to spread the word. There was Max Brooks’ hilarious and heartfelt message, alongside his dad, the legendary Mel Brooks, for people to keep their distance from one another.

Then there was Idris Elba’s equally heartfelt reveal that he has tested positive for COVID-19, and his plea for all of us to “stay at home and be pragmatic.”

There are more folks out there doing their best to help in any way they can. To that end, Amy Adams and her pal Jennifer Garner have joined forces to help children affected by the coronavirus, using the power of storytelling. Adams and Garner have a joint effort called Save With Stories, which works alongside No Kid Hungry and Save The Children. Adams joined Instagram just to announce this venture.

If you want to help out, you can text SAVE to 20222, and chip in $10 to those in need. To see how this would look, check out Adams’ Instagram story below. You can also follow @SaveWithStories to see which celebrities appear to read stories to kids for this great cause.

Here’s Adams’ Instagram Story:

View this post on Instagram

I’ve decided to finally join to shine a spotlight on kids across the country who need our help and support during this difficult time. My friend @jennifer.garner and I are launching @SAVEWITHSTORIES – a spot to watch your favorite celebrities read your favorite children’s books. We are galvanizing as a community to support a new fund for a combined effort between SAVE THE CHILDREN and Share Our Strength’s NO KID HUNGRY (and a big thank you to our founding publisher, Scholastic♥️). ⁣ ⁣ THIRTY MILLION CHILDREN in the United States rely on school for food. School closures will hit vulnerable communities hard and @savethechildren and @nokidhungry are on the ground and ready to serve. They just need our help! ⁣ ⁣ These funds will help us make sure that families know how to find meals when schools are closed, support mobile meal trucks, food banks and other community feeding programs, provide educational toys, books and worksheets, and support out-of-school-time programs to help kids make up for lost time in the classroom. ⁣ ⁣ If you can manage a one time gift of $10, please text SAVE to 20222. If another amount would work better for you, please visit our website—link in bio. There is no maximum and there is no minimum—together we will rise and together we can help. #SAVEWITHSTORIES

A post shared by Amy Adams (@amyadams) on

For more on the novel cornavirus, here is our story on how the virus is affecting below the line filmmakers and TV creators.

Featured image: Amy Adams in Arrival. Courtesy Paramount Pictures.