Hugh Grant explains the âbig fussâ he made before signing on to âThe Undoingâ
Hello! Iâm Yvonne Villarreal and welcome to another edition of the companion newsletter to âThe Envelope: The Podcast,â where my cohost, Mark Olsen, and I are bringing you highlights from each weekâs episode throughout awards season.
Most news from last week got buried, understandably, by the insurrection at the Capitol. So you might have missed the announcement that the 63rd Grammy Awards, which was scheduled to take place Jan. 31 in Los Angeles, has been postponed because of concerns over the spread of COVID-19. The ceremony will now take place March 14.
Another shift to the awards season calendar as the pandemic rages, the date change also put the Grammys in direct conflict with the SAG Awards â a move over which SAG-AFTRA said it was âextremely disappointed.â On Wednesday, the SAG Awards ceremony, which is typically held in January and televised on TBS and TNT, was moved to a new date, April 4.
Who can even keep track of time or dates anymore in this ongoing Groundhog Day weâre living? As Glenn Whipp noted in his post on the double booking, the March 14 date also coincides with the NCAA basketball tournamentâs Selection Sunday. And that matters because CBS airs both the tournament and the Grammys. (Hear Glenn talk about the challenges of enjoying film and TV at a fraught moment for the country â and his hopes to do so fully again one day soon â in this weekâs awards minute.)
At this point, itâs probably best to start penciling everything in between all the doomscrolling.
From the Oscars to the Emmys.
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Hugh Grant, our guest on this weekâs episode of âThe Envelopeâ podcast, left viewers stunned last fall with his performance as an accused murderer in HBOâs whodunit psychological thriller âThe Undoing.â After leaning into darker territory with roles in âAn English Scandal,â âThe Gentleman,â and, yes, âPaddington 2,â the actor who has made a career of playing charming characters in your favorite rom-com managed to deliver quite the epic Mr. Wrong performance.
In the six-part series, which also stars Nicole Kidman, Grant plays Jonathan Fraser, the unfaithful and charmingly roguish pediatric oncologist who is suspected of killing the mother of a student who attends the same elite private school as his son.
If you havenât seen the series yet, but plan to, we wonât spoil the ending for you here. (Fair warning: All bets are off on the podcast itself!) But itâs safe to say the series, which is based on Jean Hanff Korelitzâs suspenseful 2014 novel âYou Should Have Known,â left viewers guessing in the lead-up to its finale. Grant knows the feeling. He wanted to know the ending before signing on to the project.
âIt was an amazing offer, on paper,â Grant said. âI knew I was going to do it, but I like to make a big fuss first. And in a way, it was legitimate because they only had one script. And I needed to know how it ended. In particular, I needed to know, âAm I guilty or not?ââ
Thanks for reading/listening/subscribing. We have lots more to come, including conversations with Radha Blank for âThe Forty-Year-Old Version,â Christina Applegate and Linda Cardellini for âDead to Meâ and Lee Isaac Chung for âMinari.â
Listen to the podcast here and subscribe to âThe Envelope: The Podcastâ on Apple Podcasts or your podcast app of choice.
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From the Oscars to the Emmys.
Get the Envelope newsletter for exclusive awards season coverage, behind-the-scenes stories from the Envelope podcast and columnist Glenn Whippâs must-read analysis.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.