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GBH Drama

  • It’s rare that a family business isn’t a subject around the dinner table; and rarer still that parents don’t have career advice to offer their progeny.…
  • MASTERPIECE fans know and love Charlotte Riley for her role as resourceful reporter Holly Evans on "Press." But what they may not know is that, outside of acting, Riley is fighting for gender equality in the film industry.
  • The tea and the takes are back and sizzling as GBH's live drama aftershow returns. Co-hosts Jackie Bruleigh and Meghan Smith, in for Andrea Wolanin, serve…
  • Ready for Roadkill to end? Neither am I, but we must forge on. Frankly, I’m almost as upset as Iron Lady 2.0, who starts the season finale off with a bang.
  • Katie Leung plays a cocktail waitress with a deadly secret on MASTERPIECE’s new political thriller Roadkill. Harry Potter fans will recognize her from…
  • The tea and the takes are back and sizzling as GBH's live drama aftershow returns. Co-hosts Jackie Bruleigh and Andrea Wolanin serve up 30 minutes of…
  • Oh, were you hoping to find out the outcome of the various traffic collisions last week? Joke's on YOU because instead, we open this episode with the extremely badass Rose, who’s beginning her day at Sheffield Prison. Unfortunately for her, things are NOT GOOD. She returns from a shower to find her roommate Mystery Gal unconscious in bed, with a needle stuck in her arm. Thankfully, quick thinking Rose sends the guard for a defibrillator, but the panicked guard doesn’t actually know how to use it, which feels like a massive oversight (almost as much of an oversight as the guards not carrying naloxone, the drug that reverses opioid overdoses and would actually be pretty useful in this situation). Rose begins CPR and we cut away to the opening credits, and I’m just gonna say it: this really feels like a murder, not an overdose.
  • From stealing puppies to solving medical mysteries, Laurie has inhabited a wide range of wacky and mischievous characters. Here are my favorite Hugh Laurie roles.
  • Now, in terms of a hard first day on the job, Brit Bartlet sure drew the short straw. The newly appointed Minister of Justice is holding a presser outside the Sheffield Prison (which last week was the site of a riot AND his very awkward Maury Povich moment).
  • Hugh Laurie’s character is working a “President Bartlet from The West Wing, but make him conservative and whatever the Brits would say instead of folksy” angle, and I can’t tell if it’s smug or charming. Brit Bartlet starts the show by addressing a scrum of reporters: he’s just had a victory in the courts, where he was up against a newspaper which had reported that he exploited his government position to make money. His take: