El Dorado News-Times

hollywood Q&A

- By Adam Thomlison TV Media Have a question? Email us at questions@tvtabloid.com.

Q: Why do I know the guy who played Bill, Eve’s boss/mentor, in the first few episodes of “Killing Eve”? He looks so familiar.

A: You may be having trouble placing him because he’s a bit out of context on “Killing Eve” — David Haig is not known as a spy-action guy.

He is, however, known as a top-notch straight man, bringing a reminder of what normal people are like into worlds full of whimsical weirdos. In that sense, he’s playing to type in “Killing Eve,” which also stars Sandra Oh (“Grey’s Anatomy”) and Jodie Comer (“Doctor Foster: A Woman Scorned”).

If context is the issue, try picturing him standing next to Hugh Grant and you’ll probably remember why you know him.

Haig’s best-known roles (to North Americans, anyway) are his films with Hugh Grant, starting with the greatest one, the genre-redefining 1994 romantic comedy “Four Weddings and a Funeral.” Haig played Bernard, a character introduced as a guest at the first wedding and the groom at the second.

Eight years later, he reunited with Grant for another romcom, “Two Weeks Notice” (2002), playing Grant’s unpleasant older brother. In 2016, he joined Grant yet again for the comedy “Florence Foster Jenkins,” as the titular Florence’s vocal coach (who helps enable her fantasy of becoming an opera singer despite knowing she has no talent).

Q: “Home Town” is one of my favorite shows on HGTV. They just picked a town in Alabama to renovate. I would like to know the criteria for why it was chosen? My home town applied and it sure would have been wonderful to have been selected.

A: Erin and Ben Napier, hosts of HGTV’s “Home Town,” recently announced the site/subject of their new “special event” spinoff, “Home Town Takeover.” The town of Wetumpka, Alabama, population: 8,278, will get a similar treatment to what the Napiers have given to their own home town of Laurel, Mississipp­i, but they’ll be doing the whole town at once rather than one house at a time.

Wetumpka was selected through what HGTV called a “casting call of sorts” — people across America were asked to make a case for why their town deserved a full makeover.

Just like with a casting call for actors, the producers had specific traits they needed, but they were also obviously looking for that indefinabl­e quality that makes someone (in this case, somewhere) shine on camera.

As for the specific traits, the town needed to have no more than 40,000 residents and at least one aspect that makes it special (for example, “distinctiv­e features like vintage period architectu­re, special destinatio­ns or a classic main street”).

But it seems they were also looking for community support. HGTV said one of the reasons Wetumpka was selected was because its submission “showcased the community’s collective desire to champion revitaliza­tion.”

Lastly, like all good TV producers, they were looking for a story. They wanted to know “why” the town deserved an oncamera makeover.

Wetumpka has all of that in spades. It has the main street, the architectu­re, the natural beauty of a river (and the natural curiosity of a meteor crater) and a story of struggle due to “shuttered businesses, young people leaving, highway diversions and negative impacts from natural disasters.”

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