The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Hollywood Q&A

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A: It is, but with a pretty key difference: Diane Keaton wasn’t actually pregnant.

In “The Family Stone” (2005), Keaton plays the matriarch of a big family in New England. The plot revolves around her son, now a New York City hotshot, bringing his uptight new girlfriend home for Christmas to meet everyone.

The girlfriend (played by Sarah Jessica Parker) is a bit of a disaster, but she redeems herself by giving everyone a thoughtful gift: a framed, artfully shot photograph of the mother while she was pregnant with one of the children.

It’s a pretty real moment in a movie full of them, but it was made extra real by the fact that it was actually Keaton in the photograph. However, the director did have to make an addition for the sake of the film. The photo had to be doctored to make her look pregnant, which Keaton had never been (she’s adopted two children but never given birth).

A: They never kiss in any episode of the show, but that’s not to say they never kiss at all. You’re not likely to see the screen smooch, though, because none of the boxed sets or online streaming platforms kept the commercial­s.

“Gunsmoke” was sponsored for years by L&M Tobacco Company and, in those days, a TV show’s stars frequently appeared in the commercial­s that aired during the show (a tradition that carried over from the radio days). In one ad, Amanda Blake (who played Kitty) hands James Arness (Matt) a carton of L&M cigarettes as a Christmas present and plants a big kiss on his cheek. He looks at the screen and says, “That’s the way I like to get L&Ms, folks.”

Sure, they’re not in character (they’re in contempora­ry clothes and she calls him “Jim” in the ad), but it’s the closest we ever got.

For reasons of propriety — and for the sake of keeping some of the will-they-or-won’t-they dynamic alive (indeed, “Gunsmoke” helped create the will-they-or-won’t-they dynamic) — their romance is never openly acknowledg­ed on the show.

In an interview with United Press Internatio­nal midway through “Gunsmoke’s” legendary 20-year run, Arness said the show would never go beyond suggesting a relationsh­ip between the two: “You know, where do you go from there? They couldn’t be married. That would spoil the whole gag.”

Q:When“Bones”ended,what did Angela go on to do?

A: I’m going to go on the assumption that you mean Michaela Conlin, the actress who played Angela. But, for the record, Angela got her happily-ever-after with Hodgins and their baby.

For Conlin, on the other hand, the story continues. She’s been pretty busy since “Bones” ended in 2017, but she’s yet to find that sort of stability again.

Most notably, she had a recurring role on the hit Paramount series “Yellowston­e,” playing an antagonist­ic New York journalist. She also had a three-episode arc on the short-lived HBO drama “Here and Now” in 2018.

But what may prove to be her biggest post-”Bones” gig is yet to come. She has a part in the longdelaye­d road-trip comedy “Bad Trip.” The film stars Eric Andre (of “The Eric Andre Show” fame), but Conlin seems to have a pretty sizable role.

The film has been getting pretty decent buzz so far, which is good since people have had a lot of time to talk about it. It’s completed but had its original release date scrapped by the pandemic. It was then going to air on Amazon Prime, but that fell through and its rights were sold to Netflix. Netflix has yet to announce a release date.

I said that Conlin has yet to find “Bones”-level stability, but, of course, very few people ever do, and fewer still find it twice. “Bones” ran for a whopping 12 seasons on Fox, making it one of the longest-running scripted primetime shows of all time.

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