Showrunner, playwright, and performer Rick Cleveland has signed with APA for representation, Variety has learned exclusively. Cleveland will continue to be represented by Rain as well as attorney Ken Richman at Hansen Jacobson Teller
Cleveland is a six-time Emmy nominee, winning the award for best writing for a drama series alongside Aaron Sorkin for the first season episode of “The West Wing” titled “In Excelsis Deo.” Cleveland was then nominated three times as part of the producing time on the hit HBO series “Six Feet Under” and again as part of the producing teams behind the Showtime series “Nurse Jackie” and the Netflix series “House of Cards.”
Cleveland has also worked on a number of other critically-acclaimed shows. Those include series like AMC’s “Mad Men,” Amazon’s “The Man in the High Castle,” the FX adult animated comedy “Archer,” TNT’s “Claws,” and Netflix’s “Insatiable.” He was also...
Cleveland is a six-time Emmy nominee, winning the award for best writing for a drama series alongside Aaron Sorkin for the first season episode of “The West Wing” titled “In Excelsis Deo.” Cleveland was then nominated three times as part of the producing time on the hit HBO series “Six Feet Under” and again as part of the producing teams behind the Showtime series “Nurse Jackie” and the Netflix series “House of Cards.”
Cleveland has also worked on a number of other critically-acclaimed shows. Those include series like AMC’s “Mad Men,” Amazon’s “The Man in the High Castle,” the FX adult animated comedy “Archer,” TNT’s “Claws,” and Netflix’s “Insatiable.” He was also...
- 8/18/2022
- by Joe Otterson
- Variety Film + TV
Reviewed by Kevin Scott, MoreHorror.com
Buck Wild (2013)
Directed by: Tyler Glodt
Written by: Matthew Albrecht, Tyler Glodt
Cast: Matthew Albrecht (Craig), Isaac Harrison (Lance), Dru Lockwood (Tom), Jarrod Pistilli (Jerry), Mark Ford (Billy Ray), Meg Cionni (Candy), Joe Stevens (Clyde)
One classic situation in horror (and other genre films for that matter) is the group of friends going into the wilderness to get away from it all. The only difference between horror and other genres is that instead of comic mishaps and talking about their feelings, someone is inevitably going to get killed, eaten by a monster or said former friends, or transformed into a hideous monster themselves. The great thing about “Buck Wild” is that all that stuff happens.
Craig, Lance, Tom, and Jerry are all headed to the Buck Wild Ranch on a deer hunting trip. Craig is the straight laced, buttoned down one with a ring...
Buck Wild (2013)
Directed by: Tyler Glodt
Written by: Matthew Albrecht, Tyler Glodt
Cast: Matthew Albrecht (Craig), Isaac Harrison (Lance), Dru Lockwood (Tom), Jarrod Pistilli (Jerry), Mark Ford (Billy Ray), Meg Cionni (Candy), Joe Stevens (Clyde)
One classic situation in horror (and other genre films for that matter) is the group of friends going into the wilderness to get away from it all. The only difference between horror and other genres is that instead of comic mishaps and talking about their feelings, someone is inevitably going to get killed, eaten by a monster or said former friends, or transformed into a hideous monster themselves. The great thing about “Buck Wild” is that all that stuff happens.
Craig, Lance, Tom, and Jerry are all headed to the Buck Wild Ranch on a deer hunting trip. Craig is the straight laced, buttoned down one with a ring...
- 5/31/2014
- by admin
- MoreHorror
It was judgment day for Julia and her new book. Bombshell's fate would be determined by "The Read-Through." A simple, yet crucial step to getting the show to Broadway.
After the journey that Julia and Peter went through to finish the new story, it was surprising to see that she wasn't nervous at all. At the same time, it was revealing that Peter gave her the confidence that she had been lacking for so long. The range of emotions that Julia went through - from excited about the new story... to resurfaced doubts about Peter's loyalty... to dreading the read-through - felt authentic.
It was as if I, the viewer, was experiencing the highs and lows with her. When the readers finished and the room was left silent, I waited with anticipation to hear the response. And, a glorious one Julia received.
Julia: Why isn't anyone saying anything? Is it that bad?...
After the journey that Julia and Peter went through to finish the new story, it was surprising to see that she wasn't nervous at all. At the same time, it was revealing that Peter gave her the confidence that she had been lacking for so long. The range of emotions that Julia went through - from excited about the new story... to resurfaced doubts about Peter's loyalty... to dreading the read-through - felt authentic.
It was as if I, the viewer, was experiencing the highs and lows with her. When the readers finished and the room was left silent, I waited with anticipation to hear the response. And, a glorious one Julia received.
Julia: Why isn't anyone saying anything? Is it that bad?...
- 3/6/2013
- by carla@tvfanatic.com (Carla Day)
- TVfanatic
"Harvest Festival" is just a fabulous episode of "Parks and Recreation," but even if it were only otherwise pedestrian, Ron's reaction to Li'l Sebastian in the opening minute of the show would have made it worthwhile.
I've seen the full episode three times now, and watched the opening scene above at least three more times, because Ron Freakin' Swanson laughing like a 9-year-old girl and clasping his hands together like a member of the Lollipop Guild is a comic gift that does not stop giving. The show had much more than that to recommend it, though.
From the Pawnee media's glee at and overreaction to hearing about the "curse" to Ann's post-breakup acting out to Jerry in the corn maze, "Harvest Festival" (the first episode filmed this fall, after the Amy Poehler-pregnancy run of six shot last spring) put a great cap on the first portion of the season.
I've seen the full episode three times now, and watched the opening scene above at least three more times, because Ron Freakin' Swanson laughing like a 9-year-old girl and clasping his hands together like a member of the Lollipop Guild is a comic gift that does not stop giving. The show had much more than that to recommend it, though.
From the Pawnee media's glee at and overreaction to hearing about the "curse" to Ann's post-breakup acting out to Jerry in the corn maze, "Harvest Festival" (the first episode filmed this fall, after the Amy Poehler-pregnancy run of six shot last spring) put a great cap on the first portion of the season.
- 3/18/2011
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Zap2It - From Inside the Box
Saul Rubinek had a major epiphany during the intermission—yes, intermission—of Murray Schisgal's play "Luv"—starring Eli Wallach, Anne Jackson, and Alan Arkin. At the time, Rubinek was a young Canadian actor visiting New York City. "People in the lobby were talking exactly like the people on stage," he recalls. "That had not yet happened in Canada. Theater was still being imported from America or Britain." Though Rubinek had no way of knowing that within a few years he'd be performing in homegrown Canadian theater, he was clearly drawn to the authenticity of indigenous plays. "I have nothing against imported art," he asserts, "but if that's all you're doing, it is decadent." Rubinek is refreshingly straightforward. Consider this: Though he is delighted to be playing Dr. Arthur "Artie" Nelson, the mysterious yet methodical Secret Service agent on Syfy's "Warehouse 13"—a program that evokes "The X-Files" with a...
- 7/16/2010
- backstage.com
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