Santa Fe New Mexican

Celebritys­coop

- BY JAY BOBBIN

Michael Douglas has certainly done his share of movie work, encompassi­ng Oscar wins on both sides of the camera, but he’s also not averse to returning to the home screen.

The son of fellow Hollywood icon Kirk Douglas (“Spartacus,” 1960), Michael had made some films before he largely built his fame on the 1970s ABC police drama “The Streets of San Francisco,” and his honors have included Academy Awards for producing “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” (1975) and acting in “Wall Street” (1987). Now, he’s back to series work by depicting the life and achievemen­ts of Benjamin Franklin in the Apple TV+ series “Franklin,” which is streaming new episodes each Friday; he is also an executive producer of the biographic­al drama.

If it seemed that movies would have Douglas’s services exclusivel­y after he left “The Streets of San Francisco” (for which he was Emmy-nominated three times) a year before its run ended, he demonstrat­ed otherwise by hosting NBC’s “Saturday Night Live” in 1984 and also appearing in specials. He also executive produced a mid-1980s ABC series based on the movie “Starman” (he was an executive producer of the film as well) and guest-starred on NBC’s “Will & Grace.” On top of all that, he also took his first role as Benjamin Franklin in the 2003 PBS series “Freedom: A History of US.”

However, Douglas’s major return to TV was the 2013 HBO project “Behind the Candelabra,” for which he won a Primetime Emmy, a Golden Globe and a Screen Actors Guild Award (among other accolades) for his portrayal of the entertaine­r Liberace. After that, Douglas tackled a series role again in the Netflix comedy-drama show “The Kominsky Method,” casting him as an actor-turned-acting coach. He earned

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