B.V. Lawson's Blog, page 165

March 27, 2018

Author R&R with Charles Salzberg

CharlesSalzbergCharles Salzberg is a novelist, journalist, and acclaimed writing instructor. He is the author of the Henry Swann detective series, including Swann’s Last Song which was nominated for a Shamus Award for Best First PI Novel and Devil in the Hole, which was named one of the best crime novels of 2013 by Suspense magazine. He has taught writing at Sarah Lawrence College, Hunter College, the Writer’s Voice, and the New York Writers Workshop, where he is a Founding Member. His writing has appeared in the New York Times Book Review, Los Angeles Times, Esquire, New York Magazine, and GQ. He lives in New York City.



Second Story ManIn Salzberg's critically-acclaimed literary thriller Devil in the Hole, detective Charlie Floyd was obsessed with catching an abominable murderer. In the sequel, Second Story Man, Floyd is not-so comfortably settled into being recently retired when he's abruptly drawn back into the game by Cuban-born Miami police detective Manny Perez, who is on a mission to catch a notoriously elusive thief. Working together as an unlikely team, Perez and Floyd act on a rumor that Hoyt is about to depart the wealthy homes of Florida to begin a string of robberies in the northeast. Confident they are hot on their prey's trail, the two detectives embark on their quest only to have Hoyt elude their grasp time and time again.



Salzberg stops by In Reference to Murder today to take some Author R&R about researching and writing the book:


 


Unlike most of my novels, Second Story Man began with research as opposed to beginning with a character or plot. In the past, I’ve relied heavily on interviews with experts, which is where my experience as a magazine journalist kicks in. For instance, for Swann Dives In, which takes place in the world of rare books, I interviewed a rare book dealer. But this time around, I found it more useful to rely on the Internet for my research.


Years ago, I read an article in The New Yorker about a burglar named Blane Nordahl. Nordahl was a master at his chosen trade: breaking into the homes of the very wealthy and stealing only their valuable silver. No plated trays for him. Only the good stuff, especially if it had a provenance, like something made by Paul Revere. Nordahl was acknowledged as one of if not the best in the business, and with good reason. He rarely left forensic “footprints,and in a long career the clever, athletic thief racked up a number of memorable heists, including, as I recall, Ivana Trump’s silver. The article also told the tale of the lawmen who were obsessed with bringing him to justice.


The first step in my research was finding and rereading that article. By the time I finished, an idea for a novel begin to take form.


For some time, I’ve been fascinated (and disturbed) by Americans’ need to be the best and to win, often at all costs. Perhaps, I thought, I can base create a master burglar and use him to examine this obsession with winning.


I knew very little about breaking and entering (this is a good thing, right?) so I began to research the subject, using Google to find newspaper and magazine articles. Along the way, I read about a fellow named Alan Golder, another master burglar, but with a twist. He only hit at dinner time, when he knew his victims would be home (along with all of their valuables) and most likely having dinner downstairs, while their jewelry and other items of value, sat upstairs, unguarded. Like Nordahl, Golder was also a master at what he did, also making him extremely difficult to catch.


As a result of my research, I was able to create Francis Hoyt, a very loose combination of Nordahl and Golder, adding, of course, a healthy dose of imagination (the character’s backstory and actions are completely made up).


I needed someone to pursue Hoyt, someone just as obsessed with “winning.” Here, I cheated a little by “borrowing” two characters from a previous novel, Devil in the Hole, which was based on a true crime: a man named John List who murdered his three children, wife, mother and the family dog and disappeared into thin air. For that novel, most of my research centered around the actual crime, especially how the bodies were found, since several weeks passed before anyone knew they were dead and List was on the lam. This led to going back to my own earlier novel to research the two other characters, Charlie Floyd and Manny Perez. Floyd was a major character, a cocky Connecticut State investigator, while Manny Perez, a Cuban-American Miami police detective, was so minor he only appears briefly in one chapter of the book. These two men, I decided, would team up to bring down Hoyt. I reread Devil, so I could make sure Floyd would be consistent with his earlier self (for the new novel, I had him as recently retired from his job), while with Perez, I had a little more leeway, since very little was known about him.


Once I had my three major characters, I set out to research the art of burglary. Using articles I found on the web, I learned how to bypass alarm systems (if someone checks my browser history they could make a pretty good case tagging me as a burglar in training), as well as other handy burglary tips. I also used a book called, 400 Things Cops Know, paying special attention to the things pertaining to breaking and entering.


The novel takes place primarily in and around Miami, Florida, as well as in Connecticut, New Jersey and New York. Obviously, being a native New Yorker, I didn’t need much help there. Ditto with New Jersey and to a lesser extent Connecticut, since I fictionalized Floyd’s hometown of Sedgewick. But still, I needed help with specific places. For instance, the opening scene takes place at the Fountainbleu Hotel, where I’d briefly visited once in my early 20s, but I needed to check it out on the web to get a good picture of what the hotel was like now. And then, on his bus journey from Miami to New York—you’ll have to read the book to find out why a bus rather than a plane, train or car—Hoyt stops in Charleston, S. C., a place I’ve never been. And so, back to the web, where I found maps and descriptions of the city—and even watched a news feature on Charleston, so I could fix in my mind how parts of the city and area looked. I also checked on local bus routes, since Hoyt makes a “special” tour of the city before he continues his trip north.


 


You can find out more about Charles Salzberg and Second Story Man via his website or Down & Out Books, or follow him on Facebook, Twitter, and Goodreads. Second Story Man is available via all major bookstores in both print and ebook formats.


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Published on March 27, 2018 06:30

March 26, 2018

Media Murder for Monday

OntheairIt's Monday again, folks, which means it's time for your weekly crime drama roundup:



MOVIES


Birth of a Nation filmmaker Nate Parker is attached to direct Black & Blue, a feature inspired by the life of decorated LAPD detective Ralph Waddy and based on a script originally penned by Jim McGrath. Black & Blue will revolve around Ralph Waddy’s life, a true hero at the LAPD, during what was the most racially charged period in the city’s history as it dealt with the Watts riots, Robert Kennedy’s assassination at the Ambassador Hotel, the rise of the Black Panthers, the capture of the Skid Row Slasher, and the Manson Murders (which Waddy connected to Charles Manson and his followers). 




The production company Studio 8 has acquired the action/thriller Champion about two American brothers, wrongly sentenced to prison in Thailand, who are then forced to compete in Thai boxing for a chance to win their freedom. No director has been attached to the project just yet.




UK production company Working Title (The Darkest Hour) has optioned the slasher satire My Sister, The Serial Killer with a view to turning the upcoming book into a feature. The debut novel of Nigerian writer Oyinkan Braithwaite follows a Nigerian woman whose younger sister has an inconvenient habit of killing her boyfriends. The darkly comedic story, buzzed-about in publishing circles, was previously snapped up by U.S. publisher Doubleday as part of a significant five-figure advance and is set to hit shelves stateside later this year




It was recently reported that Bill Skarsgard and Maika Monroe would team for filmmaker Dan Berk and Robert Olsen's thriller Villains, playing amateur criminals who get more than they bargain for when they meet a couple homeowners with a disturbing secret. This past week, the project's producers announced that Emmy-winning actor Kyra Sedgwick and Jeffrey Donovan from Burn Notice have also been cast as the homeowners, who will do anything to keep their secret.




Actor Michael Landes has been cast in the next installment in the Olympus Has Fallen film series, Angel Has Fallen, which has Gerard Butler returning as Secret Service Agent Mike Banning as well as Morgan Freeman as President Trumbull. Landes will play Sam Wilcox, the Chief of Staff to President Trumbull in the Ric Roman Waugh-directed sequel. This time, Banning is framed for the attempted assassination of the President and must elude his own agency and the FBI as he tries to uncover the real threat.




Craig Di Francia (Power) will appear in Martin Scorsese’s Netflix film The Irishman starring Robert De Niro as Frank "The Irishman" Sheeran, a reputed hitman suspected of involvement in the 1975 disappearance of the Teamsters leader. The pic is based on Charles Brandt’s novel, I Heard You Paint Houses, which Steve Zaillian adapted for the screen. No word on a release date yet for the project that also includes Al Pacino, Joe Pesci, and Harvey Keitel in the stellar cast.




STXfilms and Lakeshore Entertainment have set a release date of September 7 for the Jennifer Garner action-thriller Peppermint, which is the weekend following the Labor Day stretch. Directed by Pierre Morel (Taken, The Gunman), Peppermint tells the story of young mother Riley North (Garner) who awakens from a coma after her husband and daughter are killed in a brutal attack on the family. When the system frustratingly shields the murderers from justice, Riley sets out to transform herself from citizen to urban guerilla as she methodically delivers her personal brand of justice.




Hunter Killer has also gotten its release date of October 26. The Donovan Marsh-directed action thriller stars Gerard Butler, Gary Oldman, and Michael Nyqvist in the story of an untested American submarine captain who teams with Navy SEALs to rescue the Russian president, who has been kidnapped by a rogue general.




A trailer was released for David Robert Mitchell's contemporary fever-dream thriller, Under The Silver Lake, which stars Andrew Garfield in the neo-noir story of a man searching for the truth behind the mysterious crimes, murders, and disappearances in his L.A. neighborhood. 




The Warner Archive Collection has released new restorations in 1080p transfers of Paul Newman starring as P.I. Lew Harper in the movies Harper (1966) and The Drowning Pool (1975), based on Ross Macdonald's novels featuring hardboiled P.I. Lew Archer. Virginia-Pilot contributor Kay Reynolds profiled the new color-rich restorations.




TELEVISION/STREAMING SERVICES


The BBC has ordered four new dramas for BBC One, including the spy surveillance thriller The Capture, the brainchild of writer-director Ben Chanan (Cyberbully). The project begins with the unjust arrest of an innocent man and escalates into a multi-layered conspiracy of manipulated evidence, and has been described as "research based but with huge flair in its storytelling. The Capture shines a light on surveillance culture and asks what happens in a world where we can no longer trust the evidence in front of us."




Trainspotting's Kelly Macdonald is set to star in another BBC One project, the legal drama The Victim, created by The Man In The High Castle writer Rob Williams. Macdonald will play Anna Dean, a Scottish mother whose nine-year old boy was murdered fifteen years ago by a 13 year old. Years later, having campaigned to be told of the killer’s new identity, she is accused of revealing his new name online. James Harkness plays Craig Myers, who is attacked after Macdonald’s Dean accuses him of being the child killer, while John Hannah (Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency) plays D.I. Steven Grover, the detective in charge of the case. 




Another new BBC program, Elizabeth Is Missing, combines a mystery plot line with a tough look at a woman’s struggle with dementia. When her best friend Elizabeth goes missing, Maud is convinced that something terrible has happened and sets out to solve the mystery. But with her dementia worsening, Maud’s search takes on a poignant urgency. Based on the best-selling novel by Emma Healey, the drama is written by Andrea Gibb (Swallows And Amazons) and made by STV Productions.




Amazon Prime Video has booked the Mexican crime drama Falco, a remake of German procedural The Last Cop. The 15-part series will star Michel Brown and is directed and showrun by El Chapo’s Ernesto Contreras. The drama, which is set in 1994, follows a policeman with a promising future and a young family who must rebuild his life in 2018 after he wakes up from a 24-year coma after being shot in the line of duty.




Former Major Crimes star Kearran Giovanni has landed a lead role opposite Derek Luke, Jeri Ryan, and Paula Newsome in NBC’s drama pilot, Suspicion. Based on the book by Joseph Finder and directed by Brad Anderson, Suspicion is described as a Hitchcockian thriller about how far one man will go to save the people he loves. After Danny Goldman (Luke) accepts a handshake loan from his new friend and millionaire neighbor, he gets a visit from the FBI and learns that the decision is one he will regret for the rest of his life. Coerced to work as an informant for the FBI to earn back his freedom, Danny is forced to infiltrate a world of violence and corruption while trying to protect his family. Giovanni will play Lucy Fletcher, a psychotherapist.




Stephen Hill (Law & Order: SVU) is set as a series regular opposite Jay Hernandez and Perdita Weeks in CBS’ Magnum P.I. pilot, the reboot of the classic 1980s Tom Selleck series. The show will feature the same central quartet of characters as the original, but instead of four guys, it consists of three men and a woman, with Jonathan Higgins reconceived as Juliet Higgins (Weeks). Hill will play Theodore "TC" Calvin, a former Marine Corps chopper pilot and one of Magnum’s group of loyal friends who bonded when they were all POWs in Iraq.




Another fan favorite recurring character from The Good Wife is returning to the CBS legal drama’s sequel series on CBS All Access. Mike Colter is set for a guest arc on the upcoming second season of The Good Fight, reprising his role as Lemond Bishop, a powerful Chicago drug lord who was a controversial major client of Lockhart/Gardner. He first appeared toward the end of the first season and quickly grew into a major recurring character, appearing in 21 episodes of the series’ first six seasons. Bishop’s Good Wife story left off with him in prison; it will now be picked up on The Good Fight, which stars The Good Wife’s Christine Baranski and Cush Jumbo.




CBS has set the finale dates for some of your favorite shows including its many crime dramas.




Meanwhile, USA Network announced premiere dates for summer series including Queen of the South (June 21), which tells the powerful story of Teresa Mendoza (Alice Braga), a woman who is forced to run from the Mexican cartel and seek refuge in America, and Shooter (June 21), which follows the journey of Bob Lee Swagger (Ryan Phillippe), a highly decorated veteran who must confront a nemesis from his past in order to return to a life of normalcy.




PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO


Meet the Thriller Author podcast host Alan Petersen welcomed David Banner, an author living in the Coastal Southeast who "spends way too much time playing catch on the sand with his Airedale terrier." Banner is the author of the Dangerous Waters thriller series set in the Gulf Coast of Florida.




Spybrary spoke with Joyce Wayne about her spy novel Last Night of the World, which isn't set in the usual spy-centric settings of Berlin, DC, London or Moscow but rather in Ottawa, Canada, and how it's based on true events and real people.




The Crimetime podcast had reviews of "lying" crime fiction as well a profile of the Lucifer television series.




THEATER


The rarely-seen Love From A Stranger, by Agatha Christie, is coming to The Marlowe Theatre in Canberbury with a run from Tuesday April 3 to Saturday April 7. The story tells of Cecily Harrington's whirlwind romance with a handsome and charming stranger. Swept her off her feet, she recklessly abandons her old life to settle in the remote and blissful surroundings of a country cottage. However, Nigel Lawrence, her newfound love, is not all that he seems. This edge-of-your-seat drama has been rediscovered in a new production by Lucy Bailey and adapted by Frank Vosper, drawing on both Agatha Christie's short story "Philomel Cottage," and Christie's own recently discovered stage adaptation of the same short story, The Stranger.  




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Published on March 26, 2018 06:00

March 24, 2018

Quote of the Week

Writer Taught Mind to Misbehave


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Published on March 24, 2018 06:30

March 23, 2018

FFB: Black Caesar's Clan

Albert-TerhuneAlbert Payson Terhune (1872–1942) had several careers, eventually settling into journalism and writing. He and his wife also bred collies at their Sunnybank Kennels in  New Jersey, and Terhune based most of his writing in the 1920s and 30s on dogs. His first published works were short stories in magazines about his collie Lad, and he collected a dozen stories into the novel Lad: A Dog. That 1919 work has been reprinted over 80 times and was made into a feature film in 1962.



Although not known for writing mysteries, he did pen the novel Black Caesar's Clan: A Florida Mystery Story, published in 1922. The title comes from the 18th century African pirate Black Caesar, who raided ships around the Florida Keys and served as a chief lieutenant for Captain Blackbeard. One of the only surviving crew from Lieutenant Robert Maynard's attack on Blackbeard in 1718, Caesar established a base on Elliot Key.



Terhune's novel is set in and around what is now known as Caesar's Creek, where the descendants of Caesar and his crew chase off treasure hunters looking for Caesar's lost fortune. It was part of a wave of treasure-hunting fiction around the Great Depression, when desperate times called for desperate measures. The plot starts off with a fight between Gavin Brice and a beachcomber over a homeless collie (yes, this wouldn't be a Terhune novel without a collie).



Gavin Brice at first appears to be a down-on-his-luck transplant to Florida looking for work. However, he has a hidden agenda for "accidentally" getting himself attached to the shady Rodney Hade and his employee Milo Standish (defending him from an attack with his 'jui-jutsu' skills), in their hideaway plantation. Brice is close to succeeding in his quest until the innocent but beguiling Claire, Milo's younger sister, makes him question the secrets he's been hiding.



Terhune infuses his tale with quite a bit of humor, including this statement by Brice to a young woman who pulled a gun on him in a case of mistaken identity:



"Oh, please don't feel sorry for that!" he begged. "It wasn't really as deadly as you made it seem. That is an old style revolver, you see, vintage of 1880 or thereabouts, I should say. Not a self-cocker. And, you'll notice it isn't cocked. So, even if you had stuck to your lethal threat and had pulled the trigger ever so hard, I'd still be more or less alive. You'll excuse me for mentioning it," he ended in apology, noting her crestfallen air. "Any novice in the art of slaying might have done the same thing. Shooting people is an accomplishment that improves with practice."



Terhune apparently was conflicted about the mystery genre, as indicated in his Foreword where he talks about "mystery and romance and thrills to be found lurking among the keys and back of the mangrove-swamps and along the mystic reaches of sunset shoreline," but then adds, "Understand, please, that this book is rank melodrama. It has scant literary quality. It is not planned to edify. Its only mission is to entertain you and—if you belong to the action-loving majority—to give you an occasional thrill."



Terhune is sometimes criticized by contemporary critics for his racist depictions of minorities and "half-breeds." In Black Caesar, Brice even refers to his former Japanese martial arts instructor as "monkey faced." But Terhune was a product of his time, and still has many fans of his dog-based stories, while Sunnybank, the estate he shared with his wife and Lad and all the other Collies he raised and trained, is now a state literary monument attracting thousands of visitors each year.


            
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Published on March 23, 2018 02:00

March 22, 2018

Mystery Melange

Book Art by Wim Botha


Colin O'Sullivan's debut novel Killarney Blues (Foreign Novel) and Franz Bartelt's The 'Hôtel du Grand Cerf (French Novel) were awarded the 2018 Prix Mystère de la critique in France. The award was established in 1972 by the magazine Mystère, making it one of the oldest French awards for a detective novel, and continues to be awarded each year by its founder, Georges Rieben and a jury of reviewers.




The British Book Awards unveiled the nominees for 2018, including those in the Crime & Thriller category: J P Delaney's The Girl Before; Lee Child’s The Midnight Line; Jane Harper’s The Dry; Sarah Pinborough’s Behind Her Eyes; Mick Herron’s Spook Street; and Erin Kelly’s He Said/She Said.




The Independent Book Publishers Association (IBPA) unveiled nods for their annual Ben Franklin Awards for best novels of the past year, including Mystery/Suspense: Death on West End Road: A Hamptons Murder Mystery by Carrie Doyle; Full Service Blonde: A Copper Black Mystery by Megan Edwards; The Old Cape Hollywood Secret by Barbara Eppich Struna; and The Ploy by Marilyn Jax.




Foreword Reviews also announced the Foreword Indie Awards finalists in various categories, including Best Thriller/Suspense and Best Mystery.




Editors Sandra Ruttan and Brien Lindenmuth, formerly of Spinetingler Magazine, are starting up a brand-new publication titled Toe Six Press. They will be accepting submissions soon for short crime fiction, and in the meantime, they have some Author Snapshots up on the website.




Open Road Integrated Media has acquired U.S. ebook rights to 27 titles by the iconic British journalist-novelist Graham Greene (1904-1991), whose works have never before been published in ebook format in the States. The first three are among Graham’s most recognized works: The Quiet American, The Power and the Glory, and The End of the Affair. On April 10, The Heart of the Matter, Brighton Rock, Travels With My Aunt, and other titles will be released, with more than 15 titles to be added during the year.




Jeffery Deaver will be headlining a series of workshops for the Mystery Writers of America titled "Writing Commercial Fiction." In each case, the award-winning author will lead groups in a morning session and will be joined in an afternoon session (on publishing options and a Q&A) with a panel of other authors. Coming up next is Newton, Massachusetts, where the New England Chapter of MWA will host the workshop on March 24, and then the Rocky Mountain Chapter will sponsor the event in Denver on April 7.




If you're a writer who wants to attend a conference but has a hard time traveling, the Writers Digest University is offering its annual mystery/thriller online workshop April 6-8. Participants will spend the weekend learning techniques for honing their craft from bestselling authors and then pitch their novel via query letter to a literary agent specifically looking for material in the mystery or thriller genre.




The 2018 Bay Area Book Festival on April 28th and 29th in Berkeley, California, will include panels of interest to mystery readers, several sponsored by Mystery Writers of America, Northern California Chapter. Among the highlights will be Catherine Coulter being interviewed by Laurie R. King; a panel titled "Insider, Outsider: Do PIs or Cops Do It Better?" with Cara Black, Candice Fox, Matt Goldman, and Rachel Howzell Hall, moderated by Bill Petrocelli; and "Women Plot the Crime" with Sara Blaedel, Anne Holt, and Yrsa Sigurdardóttir, moderated by Cara Black. There will also be a Noir at the Bar event on the 28th. (HT to Mystery Fanfare)




It’s March Madness season, and Writers' Digest got in on the action, writing style, with "Literary Lunacy: Vote in a March Madness Bracket for Book Lovers."




Ruth Downie is the author of a series of mysteries featuring Roman Army medic and reluctant sleuth, Gaius Petreius Ruso, including the newly released Memento Mori. Downie applied the Page 69 Test to Memento Mori and reported the results.




This week's crime poem at the 5-2 is "Dogs to the Chain" by John Patrick Robbins.




The annual Malice Domestic conference is coming up April 28-29, and The Stiletto Gang posted interviews with all of the nominees for the Agatha Award for Best First Novel.




In other Q&A roundup items, the Mystery People's Matthew Turbeville interviewed Bob Kolker about his true-crime book Lost Girls; Crime Fiction Lover chatted with Robert Goddard, whose crime novels across the UK and around the world, including his latest and 27th book, Panic Room, a contemporary thriller based in Cornwall; and Writers Who Kill blogger E.B. Davis spoke with Shawn Reilly Simmons as they discussed Simmons' Murder On The Rocks, the fifth Red Carpet Catering Mystery


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Published on March 22, 2018 06:30

March 19, 2018

Media Murder for Monday

OntheairMOVIES


Amma Asante has been set to direct the upcoming film adaptation of David E. Hoffman’s drama thriller The Billion Dollar Spy, which tells the true story of a man who became the Pentagon’s most valuable spy during the last years of the Cold War. Hoffman is a Pulitzer prize winning journalist and contributing editor to The Washington Post, who won the Pulitzer in 2010 for his book about the arms race The Dead Hand: The Untold Story of the Cold War Arms Race and Its Dangerous Legacy. The film adaptation, scripted by Ben August (Remember) will be produced by Walden Media and Akiva Goldsman. 




Four-time Oscar nominee Ridley Scott is in talks to direct 20th Century Fox’s spy thriller Queen & Country, based on the award-winning graphic novel by Greg Rucka that follows a British female intelligence agent used as bait to lure the mastermind behind a terrorist attack in London out of hiding. Queen & Country: Operation Broken Ground won the 2002 Eisner Award for Best New Series.




French actress/director Melanie Laurent is putting her Gallic spin on the feature adaptation of Nic Pizzolatto’s noir novel Galveston. The project follows Roy (played by Ben Foster), a New Orleans ex-con who is intended to go down in a set-up by his kingpin Stan (Beau Bridges); however, he comes up the survivor with some valuable documents in hand alongside call girl Raquel (Elle Fanning). They flee Louisiana and wind up in the latter’s hometown of Galveston, where he plots his revenge as he is slowly dying.




Ian McKellen and Helen Mirren have been cast in The Good Liar, a Bill Condon-directed thriller set up at New Line Cinema to be adapted from Nicholas Searle’s debut novel. The pic reunites McKellen and Condon from their collaborations on Gods and Monsters and Mr. Holmes. Jeffrey Hatcher wrote the script, which is about career con artist Roy Courtnay (McKellen), who can hardly believe his luck when he meets well-to-do widow Betty McLeish (Mirren) online. As Betty opens her home and life to him, Roy is surprised to find himself caring about her, turning what should be a cut-and-dry swindle into the most treacherous tightrope walk of his life.




The Josh Trank written and directed Al Capone biopic, Fonzo, is boosting its cast with the addition of Matt Dillon (Wayward Pines), Linda Cardellini (Bloodline), Kyle MacLachlan (Twin Peaks), and Katherine Narducci (The Sopranos, HBO’s Wizard Of Lies). They join previously announced Tom Hardy as the title character of iconic Chicago gangster Al Capone, who sees dementia rot his mind after a long incarceration as his past becomes present as harrowing memories of his violent and brutal origins melt into his waking life. Cardellini will play Capone’s long-suffering wife Mae; Dillon is his closest friend Johnny; MacLachlan plays his doctor Karlock; Narducci plays Rosie, one of his sisters.




Oscar-nominated actor Chazz Palminteri has signed on for the indie film Vault, joining Theo Rossi, Clive Standen, and Samira Wiley, and Don Johnson in Verdi Productions’ crime drama directed by Tom DeNucci. Inspired by true events, the pic is about a group of small-time criminals, who in 1975 attempt to pull off the biggest heist in American history, stealing more than $30 million from the mafia. Palminteri will play Raymond Patriarca in the film, which is slated to begin filming this month in Rhode Island.




Abi Morgan, the playwright and screenwriter whose big-screen credits include The Iron Lady, Shame and most recently Suffragette, has been set to adapt Tangerine, the upcoming Christine Mangan debut psychological thriller novel (due March 28) that Imperative Entertainment scored rights to in November 2016. The drama is set against the simmering political climate of 1950s Morocco and follows two female characters, once inseparable roommates, who after an unexpected encounter in Tangier attempt to rekindle their friendship only to find their dark, tangled backstory reemerges, and quickly devolves from obsession to madness. 




20th Century Fox has chosen Scott Frank to rewrite The Force, the adaptation of the bestselling NYPD corrupt cop thriller novel by Don Winslow. James Mangold has been developing to direct, and this reunites him with Frank after they shared a Best Original Screenplay Oscar nomination with Michael Green for Logan, Hugh Jackman’s farewell to his signature X-Men character Wolverine. The book tells the story of a corrupt detective in the NYPD’s most elite crime-fighting unit, Sgt. Denny Malone, who is forced to choose between his family, his partners and his life.




Harry Shum Jr. and Shiloh Fernandez have signed on for key supporting roles in the Mike Gan written and directed thriller Plume, joining previously announced cast Josh Hutcherson, Suki Waterhouse, and Tilda Cobham-Hervey. The film follows a lonely, unstable gas station attendant Melinda (Cobham-Hervey), tired of being overshadowed by her more confident, outgoing co-worker Sheila (Waterhouse). When the gas station is held at gunpoint by Billy (Hutcherson), a desperate man in need of quick cash, Melinda finds an opportunity to make a connection with the robber, regardless of who gets hurt. Shum Jr. will play Officer Liu, a wholesome local police officer subject to the obsessive affections of Melinda. Fernandez plays Perry, Sheila’s boyfriend who finds himself unwittingly enmeshed in Melinda’s dangerous games.




Will Sasso has booked a role in Boss Level, the action thriller starring Mel Gibson and Frank Grillo from writer-director Joe Carnahan. The film follows a retired Special Forces veteran (Grillo) who is trapped in a never-ending loop resulting in his death. To end his suffering, he must figure out who is responsible and stop them. Gibson is Col. Clive Ventor, the powerful head of a shadowy program. Sasso will play Brett, Ventor’s confident, arrogant and a touch sadistic second-in-command.




TELEVISION


Epix will air the eight-episode espionage drama Deep State in the U.S. The project stars Mark Strong (Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy) and Game of Thrones' Joe Dempsie, and is described as a "grounded, visceral thriller, moving between the deeply personal story of a family man fighting to escape his past and the violent, dark excesses of government and global corporate power."




Nicole Kidman is reuniting with Big Little Lies showrunner David E. Kelley for another HBO limited series. The actress is set to star in and executive produce The Undoing, an adaptation of the novel You Should Have Known by Jean Hanff Korelitz that follows Grace Sachs, a successful therapist who’s on the brink of publishing her first book when a chasm opens in her life: a violent death, a missing husband and, in the place of a man Grace thought she knew, only a chain of terrible revelations.




Frequency's Peyton List has been tapped as the female lead opposite Joseph Morgan in Fox’s untitled drama pilot based on the best-selling book Gone Baby Gone by Dennis Lehane. Laysla De Oliveira also has been cast as a series regular in the project, from 20th Century Fox TV and Miramax, which was behind the 2007 movie adaptation directed by Ben Affleck. Written by Black Sails co-creator Robert Levine and directed by Phillip Noyce, the untitled project centers on private detectives Patrick Kenzie (Joseph Morgan) and Angela Gennaro (List) who, armed with their wits, their street knowledge and an undeniable chemistry, right wrongs the law can’t in the working-class Boston borough of Dorchester. 




Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje (Ten Days in the Valley) is set for a lead role opposite Robin Tunney and Adam Rayner in the ABC drama pilot, The Fix. Described as "part legal thriller, part confessional, and part revenge fantasy," The Fix is written by Marcia Clark, Elizabeth Craft, and Sarah Fain and directed by Larysa Kondracki. After losing the biggest case of her career and being shredded by the media, former prosecutor Maya Travis (Tunney) has left Los Angeles for a quiet life in rural Oregon. Eight years after her devastating defeat, the murderer strikes again, forcing Maya to return to L.A. to confront him one more time. Akinnuoye-Agbaje will play Steven "Sevvy" Johnson, a charismatic Oscar-winning actor who was accused of murdering his wife and another woman. 




Soon-to-be-former Grey’s Anatomy cast member Sarah Drew has been tapped as co-lead Cagney in CBS’ Cagney & Lacey drama pilot, with Blindspot alum Michelle Hurd already cast as fellow co-lead Lacey in the reboot of the iconic 1980s police procedural. Written by Bridget Carpenter and directed by Rosemary Rodriguez, the new Cagney & Lacey will follow the two female police detectives and friends who keep the streets of Los Angeles safe. 




Former Rookie Blue star Missy Peregrym will lead the cast of F.B.I., Dick Wolf’s upcoming 13-episode CBS drama series that chronicles the inner workings of the New York office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Peregrym will play the female lead, FBI Special Agent Maggie Bell, who engages immediately and commits deeply to the people she works with and is protecting. Maggie came to New York with conviction – and is working incredibly hard not to let a recent personal tragedy derail her new life, personally or professionally. 




Damnation's Sarah Jones is set as a female lead in the CBS drama pilot L.A. Confidential, based on James Ellroy’s classic noir novel that follows three homicide detectives, a female reporter (Alana Arenas), and a Hollywood actress (Jones) whose paths intersect as the detectives pursue a sadistic serial killer among the secrets and lies of gritty, glamorous 1950s Los Angeles. Jones’s Lynn is a sharp Veronica Lake-like beauty, an aspiring Hollywood actress – and not one to compromise her principles. When she finds a best friend brutally murdered and Jack Vincennes (Walton Goggins) unexpectedly at the scene before she’s had time to call the police, Lynn knows she has something on the LAPD detective – and decides to use it to help solve the horrible crime. The role of Lynn was played by Kim Basinger in the 1997 movie L.A. Confidential, earning her an Oscar.




Happy Endings alum Zachary Knighton is set as a lead playing Rick Wright, opposite star Jay Hernandez and Perdita Weeks, in CBS’ Magnum P.I. pilot. Directed by Justin Lin, the reboot of the classic 1980s Tom Selleck series follows Thomas Magnum (Hernandez), a decorated ex-Navy SEAL who, upon returning home from Afghanistan, repurposes his military skills to become a private investigator. With help from fellow vets Theodore "TC" Calvin and Orville "Rick" Wright, as well as that of disavowed former MI-6 agent Juliet Higgins (Weeks), Magnum takes on the cases no one else will, helping those who have no one else to turn to.




Former Wings star Steven Weber is set for a key series regular role opposite Kylie Bunbury, along with Lisseth Chavez (The Fosters) and Dennis Oh (NCIS: New Orleans) in Get Christie Love, ABC’s reboot drama pilot. The new Get Christie Love is an action-packed, music-driven drama that centers on Christie Love (Bunbury), an African American female CIA agent who leads an elite ops unit. Weber will play Steve, Christie’s law school teacher a decade ago, and now serves as her mentor and day-to-day confidant. 




Good news for fans of Netflix's The Sinner a second season is on the way. Picked up from the USA Network, the first season (adapted from a book by German writer Petra Hammesfahr) followed Jessica Biel, playing Cora Tannetti, a mother and wife who was raised in an incredibly religious family who commits a murder for what appears to be no reason. The second season would follow Detective Harry Ambrose (Bill Pullman) who is called back to his hometown in distant rural New York to assess a disturbing new crime: an 11-year-old boy's horrific double-homicide and his seemingly inexplicable motive. As Ambrose comes to realize there's nothing ordinary about the boy or where he came from, his investigation leads him straight into the hidden darkness of his hometown and pitting him against those who'll stop at nothing to protect its secrets.




PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO


The Joined Up podcast welcomed psychological thriller writer, Sam Carrington, to talk about her work and how her background in UK's prison service as an Offending Behavior Facilitator informs her writing.




Gillian Flynn shared details on Windy City Live about her next novel and an HBO series she's working on with Amy Adams.




Two Crime Writers and a Microphone host Luca Veste was joined by bestselling crime writer Angela Clarke to talk about book releases, the Staunch prize, infamous people and what they were reading, and much more, including special guest Katerina Diamond.




Suspense Radio welcomed Laura Childs, to talk about the latest in her Tea Shop Mystery series, and also Dennis Palumbo, discussing the fifth book in his Daniel Rinaldi mystery series.




Writer Types chatted with authors Alison Gaylin, Owen Laukkanen, Peter Swanson, and Dharma Keller, and the weekly "Unpanel" featured contributors to the anthology "novel in stories," Night of the Flood.




Book Riot's Read or Dead podcast hosts Rincey and Katie flailed over the potential of new Gillian Flynn books, discusssed the new Obama/Biden buddy mystery, and talked about some great mystery comics.




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Published on March 19, 2018 06:30

March 17, 2018

Quote of the Week

Who could not be happy


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Published on March 17, 2018 06:30

March 16, 2018

FFB: The Crimson Blind

The-Crimson-Blind3Frederick Merrick White (1859-1935) was an English author who wrote a number of novels and short stories under the name Fred M. White, including the six "Doom of London" science fiction stories about various catastrophes that afflict the British capital. Although he apparently didn't start publishing his work until the age of 43, over the next 30+ years, he wrote approximately 90 novels and short-story collections and is considered by some to be a pioneer of spy stories.



In 1905's The Crimson Blind, set primarily in the coastal city of Brighton, bestselling detective novelist David Steel finds himself in dire financial straits. He's contacted by a mysterious young woman who tells him she will pay his debt in exchange for helping her concoct a plan to get out of a sticky situation. After a late-night meeting to seal the deal, with the woman's identity kept hidden from Steel, the author returns to his home to find it's been broken into, and a near-dead man has been left bleeding on the floor of his conservatory.



The police suspect Steel, thanks to an incriminating cigarette case that points to Steel as the culprit. As Steel battles to clear his name, he falls in with Dr. Hatherly Bell, "a small, misshapen figure, with the face of a Byron—Apollo on the bust of a Satyr," a man possessed of marvelous intellectual powers and a secret past, who also happens to have a personal connection to the mysterious woman and offers to help Steel.



The investigation soon leads to the benevolent millionaire philanthropist Gilead Gates and his right-hand man, the villainous Reginald Henson, who aspires to become a member of Parliament. The myriad subplots and plot twists involve a faked death, a missing ring, blackmail, dog attacks, a decaying country estate and a stolen Rembrandt. White pens some passages of evocative writing, such as the opening lines:




David Steel dropped his eyes from the mirror and shuddered as a man who sees his own soul bared for the first time. And yet the mirror was in itself a thing of artistic beauty—engraved Florentine glass in a frame of deep old Flemish oak. The novelist had purchased it in Bruges, and now it stood as a joy and a thing of beauty against the full red wall over the fireplace. And Steel had glanced at himself therein and seen murder in his eyes.



He dropped into a chair with a groan for his own helplessness. Men have done that kind of thing before when the cartridges are all gone and the bayonets are twisted and broken and the brown waves of the foe come snarling over the breastworks. And then they die doggedly with the stones in their hands, and cursing the tardy supports that brought this black shame upon them.



Overall, The Crimson Blind is a decent and entertaining Victorian mystery, which just happens to be available free via Project Gutenberg.


            
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Published on March 16, 2018 02:00

March 15, 2018

Mystery Melange

4 Leaf Clover 4 St Patrick's Day Shamrock Book Art



This Saturday is St. Patrick's Day, and Mystery Fanfare has a roundup of all St. Patty's related crime fiction for you.




Mystery Fest Key West (set for June 22-24) has announced a call for entries for this year’s Whodunit Mystery Writing Competition. The winner will claim a book-publishing contract with Absolutely Amazing eBooks, free Mystery Fest Key West 2018 registration, airfare, hotel accommodations for two nights, meals and a Whodunit Award trophy to be presented at the 5th Annual Mystery Fest Key West, set for June 22-24 in Key West, Florida. But you'll need to hurry - the submission deadline is no later than April 15, 2018.




Via Janet Rudolph and her Mystery Fanfare blog, I learned of the deaths of three bright lights in the crime fiction community, two of whom passed away on the same day: Kate Wilhelm, who wrote the Barbara Holloway legal mystery series and Constance Leidl and Charlie Meiklejohn private eye/psychologist series, as well as various short stories and standalone mystery/suspense novels (Wilhelm was married to Damon Francis Knight, an American science fiction author whose story "To Serve Man" became an iconic adaptation for The Twilight Zone); Peter Temple, who became the first Australian writer to win the British Crime Writers’ Gold Dagger Award and is perhaps best-known for his Jack Irish novels (adapted for television with Guy Pearce as the titular lead); and Robert S. Levinson, creator of the Neil Gulliver and Stevie Marriner series of mystery-thrillers and also a Shamus award nominee and prolific short-story writer who won an Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine Readers Award winner three consecutive years.




Sad news also from Spinetingler Magazine: although they'd recently resurrected the print 'zine after being online-only for some time, the recent resignation of founder Sandra Ruttan means the publication will cease sometime this spring. We certainly wish all those involved the best and thank them for years of service to the crime fiction community.




Writing for the Washington Post, Sarah Weinman profiled a new biography, A Mysterious Life by Laura Thompson, and the book's take on Agatha Christie’s life, which rivaled the immortal mysteries she created.




The Guardian featured Belfast's No Alibis bookstore, which specializes in mystery and detective fiction.




When Emma Hardy and Grace Harrison noticed the trend of true-crime podcasts and TV series, while working for a magazine publisher in London, they hatched the idea for a periodical on the subject. The result is the quarterly Foul Play, which proposes to "satiate our fascination with real life murders without resorting to sensationalism."




Although print books still rein supreme in general, a new survey by the Pew Research Center finds that one in five Americans have listened to an audiobook, and one in four have read an ebook.




Here's something for your Bucket List: plan on visits to the "10 Most Famous Bookstores in the World."




Are these "23 of the Oldest Words Ever Spoken"?




This week's crime poem at the 5-2 is "Poor Afrikka Hardy Did Not Die in Vain" by Joseph S. Pete.




In the Q&A roundup, Murder and Mayhem in Chicago conference co-founders Lori Rader-Day and Dana Kaye discussed Chicago’s Vibrant Crime Fiction Scene; Criminal Element quizzed Sebastian Rotell, author of Rip Crew; The Rap Sheet's Jeff Pierce chatted with author Max Allan Collins - 2018 marks the centennial of Mickey Spillane's birth, and Collins discussed his experiences continuing Spillane's Mike Hammer series; Richard Godwin took Paul D. Brazill's Short, Sharp Interview challenge about new sci fi dystopian thriller Android Love, Human Skin; Omnimystery News welcomed mystery author Leslie Karst to discuss her latest book to feature restaurateur Sally Solar, Death al Fresco; and the Jungle Red Writers' Ingrid Thoft chatted with Mike Lawson, winner of a Spotted Owl Award for the Best Mystery by a Pacific Northwest Writer, whose latest book, House Witness continues the adventure of Joe DeMarco, a fixer for a corrupt politician.


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Published on March 15, 2018 13:29

March 12, 2018

Media Murder for Monday

OntheairMonday greetings to all! Looks like it's time for another roundup of crime drama news:




MOVIES


David Chase is returning to the New Jersey turf of his iconic television creation, The Sopranos, with a prequel titled The Many Saints of Newark that's set in the era of the Newark riots in the '60s. Some of the beloved characters from the award-winning series will appear in the film, and although no stars have been announced yet, the time period could make room for Tony Soprano’s father, Giovanni "Johnny Boy," the former captain of the Soprano crew (played in flashbacks by Joseph Siravo), and a younger version of his wife Livia (played in the show’s first season by Nancy Marchand), and Tony’s uncle Junior, played by Dominic Chianese. Chase will serve as producer as well as co-writer, and he will be involved in selecting a director.




20th Century Fox has won the rights to Christian Cantrell’s short story "Epoch Index", hiring Justin Rhodes (writer of the upcoming Terminator reboot and remake of Fantastic Voyage) to adapt Cantrell’s story to the screen, and San Andreas director Brad Peyton to direct. Cantrell self-published "The Epoch Index" in 2010, generating interest from various studios for the story that follows CIA analyst Quinn Mitchell as he tracks down an assassin with victims that seem random - but each victim has a numbered tag attached to them.




Tom Shepherd has been hired to pen Matt Helm, a film adapted from Don Hamilton’s spy novel series that has been in the works at Paramount with Bradley Cooper attached to star. George Clooney, Grant Heslov, Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci are serving as executive producers, and Steven Spielberg is also involved in some form. There are 27 published Matt Helm novels that Hamilton wrote from the 1960s to the 1990s, with four of the books made into films starring Dean Martin. Hamilton’s original Helm character was a U.S. special agent/assassin during World War II who left the life to raise a family in Santa Fe but is forced to return to his former life.




eOne and Mark Gordon have tapped Oscar-nominated Ralph Fiennes and Matthew Good to join Keira Knightley and Matt Smith in the thriller Official Secrets, directed by Gavin Hood. The project tells the true story of British intelligence whistle-blower Katharine Gun (Knightley), who, during the immediate run-up to the 2003 Iraq invasion, leaked a top-secret NSA memo exposing a joint US.-U.K illegal spying operation against members of the UN Security Council.




Actor Don Johnson has been cast in director Tom DeNucci’s Vault, joining co-stars Theo Rossi, Clive Standen and Samira Wiley. Inspired by true events and written by DeNucci and B. Dolan, Vault follows a group of small-time Rhode Island criminals who in 1975 attempt to pull off the biggest heist in American history, stealing more than $30 million from the mafia.




Bill Skarsgård and Maika Monroe are set to star in Villains, a darkly comedic thriller to be directed by Dan Berk and Robert Olsen, based on their screenplay which made the Black List in 2016. Villains follows a pair of amateur criminals who, after breaking into a suburban home, stumble upon a dark secret and two sadistic homeowners who will do anything to keep it from getting out.




Robert Downey, Jr. recently told Entertainment Weekly that he has a slew of projects in the works, including the rumored Sherlock Holmes 3. Although falling short of an official announcement, it indicates the actor is still planning on doing another film in the franchise.




A trailer dropped for the upcoming latest installment in the Mission Impossible series, Mission: Impossible - Fallout, once again starring Tom Cruise in the lead role of U.S. government operative Ethan Hunt.




TELEVISION


Netflix has picked up the action-thriller Close from West End Films for streaming in the United States, the UK and Australia. Close is a female-led action-thriller starring Noomi Rapace (Prometheus) that was produced under West End’s female-based WeLove brand, which develops and produces female-specific content and promoting female talent. Vicky Jewson (Born of War) co-wrote the script with Rupert Whitaker and directed the film, in which Rapace plays a character based on Jacquie Davis, one of the world’s top female bodyguards, who's tasked with protecting a young heiress (Sophie Nelisse).




TNT has opted not to renew The Librarians for a fifth season, but fans can take heart in the fact that series executive producer Dean Devlin announced on Twitter that he will be launching an effort to find a new home for the adventure drama. The fourth season finale, and now the TNT series finale, aired February 7.




Law & Order's Jeremy Sisto is reuniting with Dick Wolf for a starring role opposite Zeeko Zaki in F.B.I., Wolf’s upcoming 13-episode CBS drama series that chronicles the inner workings of the New York office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Sisto will play FBI Assistant Special Agent in Charge, whose ability to relate and engage easily to subordinates and superiors makes him "good glue" and sets him up as the nerve center of the office.




Former CSI star Jorja Fox is returning to CBS and reuniting with former CSI executive producer Carol Mendelsogn for a starring role in the drama pilot Chiefs. Fox has been tapped as one of the three leads opposite Alana De La Garza and Aunjanue Ellis in the pilot that explores the professional and personal lives of three driven, successful but very different women (De La Garza, Ellis, Fox) who are each Chiefs of Police of their own precincts in L.A. County. Fox will play Vicky, the Santa Monica Chief of Police, a role which was reworked for her.




Khandi Alexander (Scandal) is set to co-star opposite Kylie Bunbury in ABC’s Get Christie Love reboot drama pilot inspired by the cult 1974 blaxploitation-themed TV movie and subsequent series. The new Get Christie Love centers on Christie Love (Bunbury), an African American female CIA agent who leads an elite ops unit. Also recently cast in the show is Juan Javier Cardenas (Snowfall), playing Jonas, the oldest member of the counterintelligence unit.




The Wire alum Wood Harris has been cast as a lead opposite Lynn Collins in ABC’s cop drama pilot The Mission. Written by Jason Richman and directed by Michael Offer, The Mission chronicles the colorful, complicated lives of cops on and off the beat as we follow them into harrowing, emotional and often humorous situations. It centers on Oriana "Ori" Cloverfield (Collins), who gave up a legal career to become a rookie cop — or so it seems. Harris plays Sgt. Frank Griffith aka Griff, Ori’s training officer, a veteran cop whose lackluster enthusiasm for the job rankles her. Also previously cast in the pilot are Aasif Mandvi, Kris Lofton, Josh Randall, Vannessa Vasquez and Alexander Karim.




Body of Proof star Jeri Ryan has been tapped for a leading role opposite Derek Luke and Paula Newsome in NBC’s drama pilot Suspicion. Based on the book by Joseph Finder and directed by Brad Anderson, Suspicion is described as a Hitchcockian thriller about how far one man will go to save the people he loves. After Danny Goodman (Luke) accepts a handshake loan from his new friend and millionaire neighbor, Tom Canter, he gets a visit from the FBI and learns that the decision is one he will regret for the rest of his life. Coerced to work as an informant for the FBI to earn back his freedom, Danny is forced to infiltrate a world of violence and corruption while trying to protect his family. Ryan will play Tom Canter’s wife, Celina.




Noah Wyle is returning to television in Red Line, which will focus on the racial issues surrounding police shootings, offering different perspectives on the aftermath of the shooting. Wyle will star as Daniel Calder, described as "a dedicated high school teacher who is mourning the loss of his innocent African-American husband," meaning there will also be an interesting LGBTQ component built in to the story.




Marc Blucas (Underground) has landed a series-regular role in ABC drama pilot The Fix, described as part legal thriller, part confessional and part revenge fantasy. After losing the biggest case of her career and being shredded by the media, former prosecutor Maya Travis has left Los Angeles for a quiet life in rural Oregon. Eight years after her devastating defeat, the murderer strikes again, forcing Maya to return to L.A. to confront him one more time. Blucas will play Riv, Maya’s (yet to be cast) partner on the farm in Oregon.




The West Wing alum Kathleen York and Derek Webster (NCIS: New Orleans) are set for key series-regular roles opposite Perry Mattfeld in the CW pilot In the Dark, from CBS TV Studios and Ben Stiller’s Red Hour Films. Written by Corinne Kingsbury and directed by The Big Sick helmer Michael Showalter, the show centers on Murphy (Mattfeld), a flawed and irreverent young woman who just happens to be blind and is the only "witness" to the murder of her drug-dealing friend, Tyson. York will play Murphy’s mother, Joy.




Peter Gallagher (Covert Affairs) has been tapped for a co-starring role opposite Bokeem Woodbine and Timothy Hutton in CBS’ legal drama pilot Main Justice. Written by Sascha Penn and inspired by the life and work of former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, Main Justice centers around Miles Blair (Woodbine), the recently sworn-in U.S. Attorney General. Gallagher will play President Whitbeck, The President of the United States, who feels good about newly sworn-in Attorney General, and is happy to finally have a real cop in the position. However, when Miles makes some unorthodox decisions that have far-reaching effects on the President’s domestic and international agendas, he begins to have some reservations about his pick for AG.




Emily Althaus (Orange Is the New Black) has booked a series-regular role opposite Charity Wakefield, Will Patton, Toby Kebbell and Jim Belushi in the ABC drama pilot Salvage from writer-producer Don Todd and ABC Studios. Salvage centers on ex-cop Jimmy Hill (Kebbell), who just wants to be left alone after moving back home to rural Florida. But when a local murder is linked to the sunken treasure of a lost Spanish galleon, he’s drawn into the investigation by an idealistic deputy and pitted against the powerful town patriarch, outside criminal agents and his own father. Althaus will play Missy Hill, Jimmy’s little sister who loves her brother to death and always meant to leave their town of Bel Grove, but has been too busy making poor decisions to get around to it.




Deadline reported that Michael Beach has joined ABC’s Holmes drama pilot, and Justin Johnson Cortez has joined Staties. Holmes explores the lives of five African-American sisters, all officers in the NYPD, with Beach playing Langston Graves, husband to one of the sisters, Sgt. Ella Kendrick Graves (Amirah Vann). Staties centers on a hard-charging NYPD detective (Annie Ilonzeh) who’s banished to the boonies after a high-profile mistake and is paired with a new partner, Oregon State Trooper Sam King (Andy Karl), with Cortez playing Richard Spruce, the cop in charge of a robbery at the River Run Tribal Gaming Casino.




HBO has set an April 6 return date for Season 6 of Vice, its Emmy-winning weekly news magazine that this season will include 35 episodes, a boost of five over last year. The new season will continue the series’ commitment to under-covered global stories with exclusive reports from Iraq, Russia, the Central African Republic and China. Domestic issues covered in the new season will include gun laws, immigration, economics, education, civil rights and "America’s place in the world."




PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO


USA Today's geek culture podcast, MotherShip, welcomed best-selling author and comic-book writer Brad Meltzer to chat about his newest thriller, The Escape Artist. And on that theme, he and the rest of the crew broke down their favorite pop-culture escapes from our increasingly crazy real world.




The Story Blender featured special guest Carter Wilson to discuss his latest chiller Mister Tender’s Girl, inspired by the Slender Man attacks.




Sarah M. Chen stopped by Authors on the Air Radio passes through the Corner to discuss The Night of the Flood, a "novel-in-stories" from Down & Out Books, which she co-edited with E.A. Aymar.




Crime Friction chatted with Naomi Hirahara whose final book with amateur sleuth Mas Arai, Hiroshima Boy, is out tomorrow.




Meet the Thriller Author's latest guest was Philip Donlay, a pilot who has combined his passion for flying and writing including his latest novel, Speed the Dawn, a breakneck thriller featuring pilot Donovan Nash.




The Writers Digest podcast spoke with James Scott Bell, a winner of the International Thriller Writers Award and the #1 bestselling author of Plot & Structure.




THEATER


MainStage Irving-Las Colinas is presenting a production of Agatha Christie's Witness for the Prosecution March 13-31. The story centers on Leonard Vole, who's on trial for the grisly murder of esteemed London socialite Emily French. While facing these vicious allegations, only one thing stands between Leonard and the end of a rope ... his wife. Will she come to his defense even though she is a witness for the prosecution?




The UK's Belgrade Theater in Coventry is presenting a psychological drama by the bestselling author of the Alex Rider series and the brain behind BBC shows Foyle’s War and New Blood. Anthony Horowitz's Mindgame tells the story of true crime writer Mark Styler and his efforts to gain an interview with a notorious serial killer. But in order to reach the man and claim his prize, he must first find a way to get past Dr. Farquhar (Michael Sherwin), the quixotic head of the Fairfields asylum where Easterman is being kept. The production runs from Wednesday, March 14 until Saturday, March 17.




Montville, New Jersey's Barn Theater is presenting the Alfred Hitchcock spoof, The 39 Steps, with performances through April 7. The entire cast consists of four actors, one who plays Richard Hannay, a man caught up in a web of international intrigue, while an actress plays three different women who enter Hannay’s life, and all the other characters are played by two people who take on series of rapid costume changes. Director Ron Mulligan describes it as "Monty Python meets Hitchcock meets Benny Hill and The Carol Burnett Show."


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Published on March 12, 2018 06:30