Baltimore Sun

Celebritie­s share TV shows, movies on winter watchlists

- By Hilary Fox

During recent interviews, writers asked celebritie­s promoting their own projects in Europe what they planned to watch this winter season. Here’s a selection of their answers.

Lucas Bravo and Darren Star (“Emily in Paris”):

“I just have so many shows to catch up on. I have fantasies of what I will watch, but I don’t really ever get to them, you know. Like, I never really got to see ‘The Sopranos’ the way I should have,” Star, the creator of “Emily in Paris,” said.

Does catching up on other television shows feel like work, though?

“Not when they’re that old,” Star said. “I don’t mind going back and watching the old shows because then I’m not sort of thinking about them in that present moment.”

Bravo, the actor who plays chef Gabriel on the Netflix show, put in another vote for “The Sopranos” and added “Twin Peaks” to his list — but there’s another show up first.

“I’m watching ‘Tokyo Vice’ right now — such a spectacula­r show,” the actor said. “The way Japan is filmed, it made me want to be there. It’s very immersive, very good.”

Martin Clunes (“Doc Martin”):

Clunes, who has played the titular fishout-of-water-and-intorural-Cornwall doctor on the ITV show since 2004, chose “Ghosts.”

“I love ‘Ghosts.’ I absolutely love ‘Ghosts,’ just because they’re all so good, and they all dig each other so much that they all kind of thrive, don’t they?” he said of the BBC sitcom about a couple who inherits an old house haunted by some quirky characters.

A U.S. adaptation is aired by CBS.

“They’re all so clever,” Clunes said of the U.K. show’s cast. “I’ve worked with a couple of them. Well, we had Mathew Baynton down. He had his finger chopped off in an early ‘Doc Martin.’ ”

William Abadie and Lucien Laviscount (“Emily in Paris”):

The “Emily in Paris” actors turn to the environmen­t for their winter watches.

“I love nature documentar­ies. I’ve been a vegan for a couple of years,” said Abadie, who plays perfumer and PR client Antoine.

Documentar­ies about nutrition and global warming also catch his fancy. “I just them put them on a loop, and I listen, try to understand the data, how it’s explained and all that.”

Laviscount, who plays Emily’s love interest, Alfie, chases a “similar vibe” and said he was into “anything inspiratio­n, inspiring stuff.”

“I need to kind of keep that going, especially through the winter months, so inspiratio­nal kind of adventure shows I’m into,” he said.

A show he’s hooked on at the moment? “Wednesday.”

Douglas Hodge and Blake Harrison (“I Hate Suzie Too”):

“I suppose I watch quite a lot of horror with my wife, as it gets dark,” Hodge said.

The three-part “I Hate Suzie” follow-up on Sky revolves around a former child star played by Billie Piper. Hodge plays her ex-husband while Harrison plays Suzie’s rival contestant on a dance competitio­n show-withinthe-show.

Harrison, on the other hand, is “trying to indoctrina­te my daughter into (J.R.R.) Tolkien’s world,” despite his wife’s distaste.

“I went through a period where me and my brother would get together around every Christmast­ime and, in one day, watch all three extended editions of ‘The Lord of the Rings’ — it would be like a 12-and-abit-hour marathon,” he explained. “Obviously

I’ve got kids now, so that doesn’t happen as much, although I’m just starting to introduce my daughter to ‘Fellowship of the Ring.’ She’s slowly getting — and she’s sort of into it.”

 ?? SCOTT GARFITT/INVISION 2022 ?? Actor Lucas Bravo, who plays Gabriel on “Emily in Paris,” has been watching “Tokyo Vice.”
SCOTT GARFITT/INVISION 2022 Actor Lucas Bravo, who plays Gabriel on “Emily in Paris,” has been watching “Tokyo Vice.”

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