Colin Farrell, Julianne Moore, and Andrew Scott Enter the Emmys Race

Colin Farrell, Julianne Moore, and Andrew Scott Enter the Emmys Race

Though the dearth of content resulting from the actor and writer strikes—along with the end of a number of popular, award-winning shows—have made for a more muted Emmy season, April (the month when many Emmy hopefuls debut) is not without its glossy prestige TV. On this week’s Little Gold Men, hosts David Canfield and Richard Lawson are joined by VF Hollywood editor Hillary Busis to discuss three new series, all debuting this week, that put big names in the hunt for awards.

On Netflix, the hotly anticipated series Ripley (based on Patricia Highsmith’s novel The Talented Mr. Ripley) puts Sherlock breakout Andrew Scott back in the villain seat, after some time spent in the world of sensitive gay drama and as TV’s most famously hot priest. Creator Steve Zaillian takes a more restrained approach to the material than did Anthony Minghella in his brilliant 1999 film adaptation, but the show has its own kind of heat—in an economical, buttoned-up way.

Going more classically broad, Julianne Moore tears into her material on Mary & George—a Starz series about the courtly drama of early 1600s England, when gay King James I rather openly kept the company of handsome young noblemen. His favorite was George Villiers, who used his royal connection to rise in political ranks and land a dukedom. Moore plays George’s scheming mother, a role that requires the right calibration of camp and genuine mettle. Ever an adaptable actor, she finds that balance. But is the show perhaps a little too frothy (and, maybe, too gay) to find favor with the Television Academy?

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