News

At Broadway’s Studio 54, Jean Smart takes a break from winning Emmy Awards as a sharply dissatisfied comedian on “Hacks” to ...
Jamie Wax's new play treads all-too-familiar territory, but Emmy winner Smart ("Hacks") elevates the material and makes ...
Jean Smart says returning to Broadway after 25 years for Jamie Wax's new play, 'Call Me Izzy' was 'very scary' for the ...
The biggest challenge Jean Smart faces here is to overcome the fundamental familiarity of a moralistic script that gives us a ...
For star Jean Smart, the personal iconography wasn’t just geographic: she shares a key scene opposite Carol Burnett playing herself, commiserating with Deborah as only two trailblazing female ...
In “Call Me Izzy” and “Angry Alan,” patriarchy is a rigged game that everyone is losing. NEW YORK — A dramatic faceoff of ...
Jean Smart is pushing back on preconceived notions ... the two are at odds over the show itself as personal conflicts between them spill over into the workplace. Co-creator Lucia Aniello told ...
After a focus group decides that Deborah Vance (Jean Smart) isn’t relatable enough ... ready to push into her personal space and shake her down. “KB’s not doing your show,” he says bluntly ...
When last we left our fateful antiheroes Deborah Vance (Jean Smart) and Ava Daniels (Hannah ... Deborah and Ava’s fractured working and personal relationship is further examined.
For star Jean Smart, the personal iconography wasn't just geographic: she shares a key scene opposite Carol Burnett playing herself, commiserating with Deborah as only two trailblazing female ...