Don’t forget to Watch live panel Joe Weisberg,Joel Fields, Keri Russell at 7:20pmE/4:20P
Latest from E Online – September 17 2013
Tyson: You guys never give up The Americans spoilers. What gives?
We’re not ones to just “give it up” on the first question. But since we happened to have stumbled across some juicy info, we’ll spill. The Americans is looking to cast a new recurring character in season two, and this guy sounds an awful lot like a new love interest for Elizabeth. Charming, smart, politically savvy…he’s right in her wheelhouse.
Source: http://uk.eonline.com
Photoshoots Update
Thanks to my friend Claudia I added some old photoshoots to gallery.
GALLERY LINKS:
– Photoshoots 2007 – Lucky
– Photoshoots 2007 – Entertainment Weekly
– Photoshoots 2007 – California Style
AUSTENLAND: Interview with Keri Russell
Keri Russell Does Not Miss Her ‘Felicity’ Hair
Backstage Outtakes
Keri Russell’s Adorable Way of Staying Connected to Her Daughter
Candids – September 4
Keri chats on her phone as she heads out in Soho in New York City.
GALLERY LINKS:
– Candids September 4, 2013
The Americans at the Paley Fest
The Americans
Friday, October 4, 2013
6:30 pm ET
New York
In Person
Joe Weisberg
Joel Fields
Keri Russell
Matthew Rhys
Noah Emmerich
Moderator: Matt Zoller Seitz, TV Critic, NYMag.com
Even in the age of the conflicted hero, FX’s The Americans is impressively bold: the series stars Keri Russell and Matthew Rhys as—get this—a pair of undercover Soviet agents, clandestinely plying their trade while posing as travel agents in suburban Washington, D.C., during the Reagan eighties. Recipient of the Television Critics Association Award for Outstanding New Program, The Americans was created by Joe Weisberg—himself a former CIA agent. The series crackles with all the suspense inherent in the genre, but as fellow executive producer/showrunner Joel Fields says, “The Americans is at its core a marriage story; international relations is just an allegory for human relations.” Elizabeth and Philip navigate not only their own marriage—arranged by the KGB—but also relationships with their two young children, based completely on lies since neither of them knows anything about their parents’ true identities. Meanwhile, Elizabeth and Philip constantly sneak out in service of the motherland, committing acts so treacherous that we, as viewers, are confronted with “TV’s deepest moral dilemma since The Sopranos,” as the St. Louis Post Dispatch sees it. Complicating matters even further: FBI Agent Stan Beeman (Noah Emmerich), ostensibly the good guy, who just so happens to be the Jennings’s next-door neighbor, is engaging in questionable behavior of his own—possibly about to get much worse.
Source: http://www.paleycenter.org