• More
Back to PopWatch Main
Complete Archive

Bits and Bobs (Vol. 10): Brand Hugh Fall TV

Sep 2, 2008, 12:28 PM | by Aubry D’Arminio

Categories: Bits and Bobs, British things, DVD/Video

Westwickomarafriel_l Dedicated Whovians know the rumors. Last week, the tabloid News of the World reported that two of next year’s Doctor Whos will be set in the States with a “big name” American companion. It’s nothing new: The Doc’s already had a San Francisco foray (in 1996’s DW movie) and a Yank lackey (Peri Brown, played by Englander Nicola Bryant). But it does up the ante on the show’s current cross-cultural possibilities and has me wondering: With these episodes also rumored to be David Tennant’s last, could we be in store for an American Doctor? (If so, my vote’s for Love Soup’s Michael Landes, already a veteran of U.K. TV.)

It’s only a thought — and not a completely crazy one. Just consider the scores of Brits that grace U.S. telly. We’re way past Hugh Laurie pretending to shock Emmy viewers with his English accent. At least seventeen Irish and British actors star in Fall’s major shows. That’s despite Scotsman Kevin McKidd and Londoner Michelle Ryan taking such enormous belly flops last season with Journeyman and Bionic Woman. (McKidd may return stateside for a Grey’s Anatomy stint, but Ryan’s gone home to portray a sorceress on BBC’s Merlin). And, of course, I’ve got my favorites — i.e. those thesps and series I’m dying to see. After the jump, a list and a sampling of each actor’s best homegrown work.

The Newbies:
1. Stephen Moyer. Watch him: as a troubled vampire in HBO’s True Blood (debuts September 7th). Then check him out: opposite Rashida Jones in NY-LON. (U.K. DVD only).
2. Rufus Sewell. Watch him: channel a mystery-solving scientist on CBS’ Eleventh Hour (October 9th). Then check him out: in Andrew Davies’ adaptation of Middlemarch.
3. Charlie Hunnam. Watch him: portray a biker in a law-bending motorcycle gang on FX’s Sons of Anarchy (September 3rd). Then check him out: on the U.K. Queer as Folk.
4. Jaime Murray. Watch her: play a modern day Aphrodite on The CW’s Valentine (September 21st). Then check her out: as a narcoleptic secretary on Love Soup. (U.K. DVD only)
5. Jason O’Mara. Watch him: Fill John Simm’s very large platforms in ABC’s remake of Life on Mars (debuts October 9th). Then check him out: on season two of Monarch of the Glen.

The Returns:
1. Ed Westwick. You know him: as caddish Chuck on The CW’s Gossip Girl (premiered September 1st).  See him: play the bully older brother in Son of Rambow
2. Ashley Jensen. You know her: as seamstress Christina on ABC’s Ugly Betty (September 25th). See her: as Ricky Gervais’ sidekick in Extras and Patrick Stewart’s bodyguard in the British Eleventh Hour.
3. Damian Lewis. You know him: as NBC’s Zen detective on Life (September 29th). See him: portray evil Soames Forsyte in The Forsyte Saga and To Let.
4. Jonny Lee Miller. You know him: as a lawyer with psychic visions on ABC’s Eli Stone (October 14th). See him: in Trainspotting or The Canterbury Tales (U.K. DVD only).
5. Anna Friel. You know her: as love interest Chuck on ABC’s Pushing Daisies (October 1st). See her: play Dickens’ Bella Wilfer in Our Mutual Friend.

Honorable Mention: ER’s Parminder Nagra (I love her in the King Lear update Second Generation) and The Mentalist’s Owain Yeoman (it's about time the Kitchen Confidential costar gets a U.S. show that sticks).

Did I miss anyone? Whom are you most excited to see? What other British or Irish actor would you like to watch on American TV?

Here’s your anglophile calendar for the week:
Tuesday (September 2nd): The Inspector Lynley Mysteries: Series 6, Inspector Lewis: Series 1, and Ballet Shoes (with Emma Watson and Marc Warren) drop on DVD. Russell Brand hits Leno at 11:35pm on NBC.
Wednesday: Bones goes to London at 8pm on Fox.
Thursday: Blur bassist and former cocaine addict Alex James sees the coke industry firsthand in the unmissable Cocaine Diaries: Alex James in Colombia on BBC America at 9pm.
Friday: BBC America’s Star Stories spoofs Catherine Zeta-Jones and Michael Douglas at 9:20pm. 
Saturday: TCM airs Charles Laughton’s U.S. thriller Night of the Hunter at 8pm.
Sunday: At 9pm, watch Russell Brand host MTV's Video Music Awards, while recording the premiere of The Life and Times of Vivienne Vyle on Sundance.

layle Mon, Sep 8, 2008 at 12:18 AM EST

Where is anybody finding DVDs for NY-LON? I've looked high and low and the only place I could find for purchase was at 4 on Demand.

Lisa Thu, Sep 4, 2008 at 01:06 AM EST

I'll just stick with the best thanks.....HUGH LAURIE, of course!!
FINGERS CROSSED FOR THAT EMMY FINALLY THIS YEAR!!

WE LOVE YOU, HUGH!!!

Rodney Solomon Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 06:08 PM EST

Yeah, BBC America's love fest with non-scripted shows has to end. I rather have Spooks/MI5 back and newer shows such as New Tricks, The Fixer, Midnight Man and Criminal Justice. Who really wants to see "Transvesite Mums" or what ever rubish they are digging up.

Jonas Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 11:52 AM EST

Dear Aubry D’Arminio,
Any chance you can interview current BBC America head honcho Garth Ancier? I think it would be interesting to hear WHY BBC America has tossed all crime dramas out the window and replaced them with reality television and Shockumentaries. Am I the only one who is kind of disappointed about that?

Bee Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 11:24 AM EST

Oh Damian Lewis. I love me some mean Soames.

Jonas Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 09:56 AM EST

Speaking of Hustle, a new series is being filmed. I hope AMC will continue with it.

Emery Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 09:16 AM EST

Also, re: Jaime Murray -- check her out in and Hustle and season 2 of Dexter as well!

Emery Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 09:11 AM EST

Olivia Williams: Watch her on Joss Whedon's Dollhouse. Then check her out as Jane Austen on Miss Austen Regrets. She's been around awhile (Rushmore, The Sixth Sense, the last X-Men movie), and she deserves a little more recognition than she's gotten so far.

Jonas Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 06:27 AM EST

To Weezy.
I doubt Anthony Head be on Little Britain USA. The prime ministers assistant Sebastian will be in this version of Little Britain in the capacity ofhis new job as the British ambasador to the USA.
Anthony Head will be in the new BBC drama Merlin (together with Michelle Ryan), a series that has been picked up by NBC this fall.

Weezy Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 12:00 AM EST

Will Anthony Head be on Little Britain USA?

css Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 11:21 PM EST

Agree w/ Snarf - Anthony Stewart Head!

Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 10:31 PM EST

Can there be a woman Doctor?

rebecca Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 09:46 PM EST

Jo: Jack Harkness may speak with an American accent, but it's a little hard to assign him a nationality when he was actually born in the 51st century on another planet. LOL. (And as you say, really the actor who plays him isn't American either.)

Anyway, an American Doctor? Um, no thank you.

Rodney Solomon Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 09:34 PM EST

Linus Roache(Executive A.D.A. Michael Cutter) in Law & Order is mancunian. Law & Order and Without A Trace are quite high profile shows and they both have Brits on them.

Ragna Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 05:57 PM EST

I'd love to see Chiwetel Ejiofor on an American TV show, even for a small guest star stint. He was really good as The Operative in "Serenity," and I bet he'd only pick an interesting role if he were to land on TV here in the States.

Cornwall Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 05:39 PM EST

To Stef: Scottish is British.

Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 05:38 PM EST

To Steph:

Scotland is part of Britain - therefore David Tennant is British too and has a British passport. Just like Hugh Laurie is from England, and is English and British.

Snarf Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 05:24 PM EST

Anthony Stewart Head in - well just about anything. Because he rocks.

Stef Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 05:21 PM EST

David Tennant is Scottish, not British. I do hope that he stays around as long as possible, he is highly entertaining.

Perry Lucas Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 04:49 PM EST

I think the category titles pertain to the shows themselves, not the actors' work experience.

RT Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 04:42 PM EST

Sense when is Jason O’Mara a newbie? He’s been gracing our American television sets for over five years. He made his debut on the wonderful HBO miniseries “Band of Brothers”. Then later in 2002 on the CBS series “The Agency”, which by the way was an excellent show. Jason is now starring in his own show which I am very excited to see, LIFE ON MARS. He’s an amazing actor with a slew of TV appearances including co-starring in the ABC series “In Justice” with Kyle Maclachlan. He also has THE sexiest Irish voice I’ve ever heard. GO JASON!!!

Rose Tyler Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 03:17 PM EST

The Doctor is British! That's all there is to it. Besides fans had enough trouble with Ecleston's "northern" accent so I really don't think that an American Doctor would go over well. I'm not even thrilled about two episodes set in America. Of course I'll watch anyway.

Mac Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 02:31 PM EST

Yea, now I have a reason to watch "sons of Anarchy"

Jonas Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 01:48 PM EST

Gosh, my spelling is HORRIBLE!!! I am very sorry. I did not explain details about Jamie Bamber good enough. He plays Major Lee "Apollo" Adama on Battlestar Galactica.

Jonas Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 01:46 PM EST

Marianne Jean-Baptiste who plays Vivian Johnsonin "Without a Trace" is from London (and teh shows main star Anthony LaPaglia is an Aussie...not the same as a Brit but British Commonwealth none the less), Jamie Bamber on Major Lee "Apollo" Adama is a Brit as well (Irish mother, Yank dad, raised in England but lives in Hollywood) currentl;y reciding in London to shoot Law & Order: London for ITV.

Melinda65 Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 01:20 PM EST

Charlie Hunnam isn't quite a newbie--he was in the canceled-too-soon "Undeclared", which premiered on Fox in the fall of 2001. And Owain Yeoman was the first terminator chasing John Connor last fall on The Sarah Connor Chronicles, but fell victim to metamorphosis.

I'm really looking forward to Kevin McKidd returning to TV (hopefully it's true) and if I had to choose one Brit actor that I'd like to see, it would be Ardal O'Hanlon.

Jo Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 01:09 PM EST

Doctor Who already has one major American recurring character (Jack Harkness) that's launched his own spin-off. And even that actor is Scottish by birth, if American by raising. I really can't see the BBC casting an American as the Doctor unless they were unbelievably convincing as a Brit. Doctor Who is more British than Bridget Jones, say I.

Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 01:05 PM EST

I think the likelihood of an American doctor is about as likely as snow in the Sahara. If it were any other show, I wouldn't be so sure, but Doctor who is seen by the British people, the people for whom the show is truly made, as quintessentially British. No way would they or Stephen Moffatt, the new show runner who happens to be another huge fan of Who, allow a non British doctor to show up. I mean there are Whovians who consider the whole Doctor in S.F. as anathema..... As for myself, I prefer the British Doctors. It would feel odd to have an American in the role, even if he could do a passable accent.

Roon Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 01:02 PM EST

Point taken.

Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 12:08 PM EST

To Roon: Swingtown isn't a fall show.

Roon Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 12:04 PM EST

How could leave out Jack Davenport of "Swingtown" on CBS and "Coupling" on the BBC?

cimagato Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 11:55 AM EST

Doctor Who fever spread through this household during the summer. We've been eating up eps from SciFi and BBCA like crazy. I think we'd actually cry if David Tennant left. I love the "Britishness" of the show and wouldn't be crazy about an American playing the Doctor--but fair is fair. As you pointed out so well, they're taking over our airwaves. Could this be related to Rene Z. playing their beloved Bridget Jones? If so, I think it's overkill. Do you think Stephen Fry be interested in playing House's valet from Tennessee?

Perry Lucas Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 11:44 AM EST

I've been a big Damian Lewis since watching him in Band of Brothers. Hopefully, his show will do well this year in the ratings and stick around for a bit.

advertisement

Add Your Comments

The rules: Keep it clean, and stay on the subject — or we may delete your comment. If you see inappropriate language, e-mail us. An asterisk (*) indicates a required field.



  • 1000 characters remaining
    • When you click on the "Post Comment" button above to submit your comments, you are indicating your acceptance of and are agreeing to the Terms of Service. You can also read our Privacy Policy.
Copyright ©2008 Entertainment Weekly and Time Inc. All rights reserved.