Toronto Star

Here’s what the fall TV season has in store

A slew of new creations in the golden age of television await final word from viewers

- LYNN ELBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BEVERLY HILLS, CALIF.— The stardust has settled from the just-ended Television Critics Associatio­n’s annual summer meeting, revealing a lot, if not everything, about the 2017-18 TV season.

With a posh hotel as staging centre, a two-week parade of actors, producers and executives dished in Q&A sessions about their projects and TV in general.

Should we be excited about what’s in store for the next chapter of the current golden age of TV, as brought to us by cable, streaming platforms and, on rare occasion, broadcast networks (read: This Is Us)? The players and concepts tell the tale, absent the final word from the most influentia­l critics of all, the viewers. New faces

In ABC’s The Mayor (coming to CTV), Brandon Micheal Hall plays a young rapper whose run for mayor is intended solely to garner publicity for his music, but then he’s elected. Hall won the role after a series of auditions and a screen test, proving he could hold his own with TV veterans Yvette Nicole Brown ( Community), who plays his mother, and Lea Michele ( Glee, Scream Queens) as his campaign manager.

Alice Englert is working for her real-life mom, Oscar-winning filmmaker Jane Campion ( The Piano), and opposite powerhouse actors Elisabeth Moss and Nicole Kidman in Top of the Lake: China Girl, SundanceTV’s followup to Top of the Lake. Kidman warmly vouched for Englert, whom she’s known from birth, saying she handles her role “beautifull­y” and noting the ingrained ease and affection they share.

Iain Armitage, who stars as the title character in CBS’s The Big Bang Theory prequel Young Sheldon (coming to CTV), is eat-him-with-a-spoon cute and so poised that it’s easy to see why producers are banking on the 9-year-old. Asked about his favourite shows, he politely said he doesn’t watch much TV and spends most of his time reading, playing — not video games — and being around people. He’s already got a role in a buzzy movie, The Glass Castle. Old faces

Will and Grace (coming to Global) and Larry David are returning to TV after absences of various lengths. Will & Grace stars Debra Messing, Eric McCormack, Sean Hayes and Megan Mullally, who reunited last year for a video supporting their presidenti­al candidate of choice (hint: she lost), decided to keep the fun going and advance the 1998 to 2006 sitcom’s groundbrea­king treatment of sexuality. NBC has already ordered a second season.

David, whose last Curb Your Enthusiasm aired new episodes in 2011 on HBO, explained why he’s back as “TV Larry” in matching “real Larry” blunt fashion: “I was missing it (the show) and I was missing these idiots,” he said, indicating his co-stars, including Jeff Garlin and Susie Essman. The charm is intact!

Freddie Highmore, 25, is undeniably fresh-faced. But he’s a veteran actor, from last decade’s Finding Neverland and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory to his recent TV work on Bates Motel as Norman “Psycho” Bates in his formative years. With The Good Doctor (coming to CTV), Highmore has the chance to plumb new depths of his talent as a surgeon with autism and savant syndrome, which prove both a gift and a challenge. Missing faces

Streaming platforms Amazon and Netflix go their own way with publicity as well as content.

They skipped the TV critics’ meeting networks and cable outlets rely on as a promotiona­l opportunit­y.

Speaking of broadcast, which includes ABC, NBC, CBS and Fox, it appears largely intent on avoiding the creative vibrancy and daring of cable and streaming as exemplifie­d by the likes of FX’s Atlanta, Netflix’s Master of None and Amazon’s Transparen­t. Instead, networks are mostly bringing forth a multiplex-style crop of comic book-based series, rote procedural­s and reboots of Roseanne (coming to CTV), Dynasty and, yes, Will & Grace. Will audiences and sponsors keep buying it?

People of colour and especially women continue to find it hard to break into the top ranks of CBS stardom, and this fall isn’t making much of a dent with shows including SEAL Team starring David Boreanaz and sitcom 9JKL with Mark Feuerstein. Network executives said they tried, with six shows in developmen­t starring women that didn’t turn out as expected. They chalked it up to the “cycle of business.” Recycling is more like it. How about a fresh approach from the ground up, including writers and directors?

 ?? CHRIS PIZZELLO/INVISION/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Iain Armitage, left, is drawing raves from producers for Young Sheldon, CBS’s prequel to The Big Bang Theory, with the show’s narrator, Jim Parsons.
CHRIS PIZZELLO/INVISION/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Iain Armitage, left, is drawing raves from producers for Young Sheldon, CBS’s prequel to The Big Bang Theory, with the show’s narrator, Jim Parsons.
 ?? MARK METCALFE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Actress Alice Englert, left, filmmaker Jane Campion and Nicole Kidman at the premiere of Top of the Lake: China Girl.
MARK METCALFE/GETTY IMAGES Actress Alice Englert, left, filmmaker Jane Campion and Nicole Kidman at the premiere of Top of the Lake: China Girl.
 ?? FREDERICK M. BROWN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Freddie Highmore stars as an autistic surgeon in The Good Doctor.
FREDERICK M. BROWN/GETTY IMAGES Freddie Highmore stars as an autistic surgeon in The Good Doctor.

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