bobodenkirk
Olivia Scott Welch, who plays Julie Devereaux in the hit TV show Lucky Hank, discussed working with the cast and series star, Bob Odenkirk, in her new exclusive uInterview. “Ten years from now I think I’ll remember working on the show as a whole. It’s like one of the best things I’ve ever done in my life and I think will be forever and it was the best like group of people I’ve ever been around,” she told uInterview exclusively at the SXSW premiere of the series. The actress specifically remembers how almost every night she and the whole cast would get dinner. “Everybody loved each other so mu...
uInterview.com
Paul Lieberstein and Aaron Zelman developed Lucky Hank, in which Bob Odenkirk stars as the midlife crisis-bound English Professor Hank Devereaux. At the 2023 South By Southwest festival, in an exclusive interview with uInterview, Lieberstein, who you might recognize as Toby from The Office, discussed what it was like working on two office-based shows. “I love the office scenario,” he began. “I love writing it and so when I got here, you know, these are very different characters, they’re very educated and driven and they want more for their lives so it’s a very different set of people. People a...
uInterview.com
Bob Odenkirk stars in Lucky Hank as the midlife crisis-bound English Professor Hank Devereaux. In an exclusive interview with uInterview at South By Southwest in Austin, Texas, Odenkirk discussed his most memorable scenes from the show. “All scenes in the show,” he laughed. “Two that are in the pilot: one where I run – I won’t tell you where it is – but I tore my leg muscle terribly, which shows my age, and the second one was the great scene where Suzanne Cryer as Gracie hits me with her spiral notebook and it lodges in my nose and tears a hole in it.” Odenkirk also revealed whether he was mor...
uInterview.com
The 28th Critics’ Choice Awards took place in Los Angeles on Sunday night. Chelsea Handler hosted the ceremony, which honored the year’s best films and television. Everything Everywhere All At Once was the most nominated film at 14, and Abbott Elementary led television nominations with six total. After the Golden Globes last week, the show offered another clue to how the upcoming Academy Awards will shape up. Everything Everywhere All At Once won Best Picture, Best Supporting Actor (Ke Huy Quan), Best Director (Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert), Best Original Screenplay and Best Editing. Bette...
uInterview.com
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