Chattanooga Times Free Press

Cumming adds color to ‘Prodigal Son’

- BY KEVIN MCDONOUGH Contact Kevin McDonough at kevin .tvguy@gmail.com.

Alan Cumming joins “Prodigal Son” (9 p.m., Fox, TV-14) for a two-episode story arc and appears to have a blast doing so. He portrays the impossibly vain Interpol sleuth Simon Hoxley. He’s known the world over as “The Mind Sleuth.” That’s also the title of his best-selling book.

His hair upswept and his gestures theatrical, Simon is full of himself, an act meant to intimidate all of the other mere detectives in the room. It’s fun to see Cumming tearing up the scenery. He was previously cast on the CBS police series “Instinct,” based on a book by James Patterson. While the show touted his character as network television’s first openly gay male detective married to another man, Cumming seemed uncharacte­ristically buttoned-down in the part.

In “Prodigal Son,” he plays off his role as the decadent, witty and ultimately frightenin­g host in “Cabaret.”

› The documentar­y “Our Towns” (9 p.m., HBO, TV-14) follows husbandand-wife journalist­s James and Deborah Fallows on a 100,000-mile trip to see what makes American communitie­s, small cities and towns tick. After writing in and about China for Atlantic magazine for decades, they decided to apply the same approach to their own country.

Their study, conducted between the end of the Great Recession and the beginning of the pandemic, still found many communitie­s animated by a sense of civic engagement.

As the economy has shifted to allow many to work “anywhere,” many have moved to richer coastal cities, but many more have remained in their hometowns or have moved to smaller communitie­s that give them the sense of a hometown.”

While “Our Towns” has the sense of a broad-brush survey, it fills a void left by television’s consistent view of America. When the Fallows invited local leaders to explain why their towns deserved to be celebrated, they received responses from more than 1,000 communitie­s. A sign both of local pride and a sense of media neglect and condescens­ion.

› In cooperatio­n with ProPublica, “Frontline” (10 p.m., PBS, check local listings) has spent three years investigat­ing far-right militia movements and extremist organizati­ons. The 90-minute documentar­y “American Insurrecti­on” shows how from the 2017 march in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, to the violent assault on the Capitol on Jan. 6, such groups were emboldened and encouraged by President Trump and took their cues from the White House.

› Anya Taylor-Joy (“Queen’s Gambit”) stars in the 2020 romance “Emma” (9 p.m., HBO Signature), the latest adaptation of Jane Austen’s 1815 novel.

OTHER HIGHLIGHTS

› A case hits close to home on “The Resident” (8 p.m., Fox, TV-14).

› Actor John Lithgow and journalist Maria Hinojosa discover ancestors both recent and far removed on “Finding Your Roots With Henry Louis Gates, Jr.” (8 p.m., PBS, TV-PG, check local listings).

› Four-leaf clovers loom large in the 2021 romance “As Luck Would Have It” (8 p.m., Hallmark, repeat, TV-G), about an American lass looking for love on the Emerald Isle.

› An abduction story has a dark backdrop on “FBI” (9 p.m., CBS, R, TV-14).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States