‘Damage Control’: Stephen considers himself a player…
A bit more info about Damage Control and Stephen…
Ian-related text in red.
Thanks to the staff at AfterEllen for this exciting info!!
Pilot Pirate: “Damage Control” and “Grace”
Welcome back to the Pilot Pirate, where we preview the latest scripts looking for a home on the 2011-12 primetime TV schedule. Each week, we read and preview some of the projects interest to the AfterEllen.com community, breaking down scripts to help you, the optimistic TV fan anxiously awaiting the next Modern Family or Glee, keep up with the onslaught of pilots in contention.
A reminder: These are early stage scripts that are likely to be revised and, in some cases, drastically change before filming, and only some of which will make it to the airwaves.
This week: Damage Control and Grace
Pilot: Damage Control (drama)
Writers: Shonda Rhimes (Grey’s Anatomy, Private Practice)
Network: ABC
Logline: Drama revolving around the life and work of a professional fixer and her dysfunctional staff. Based on the career of crisis management consultant Judy Smith, who serves as a co-executive producer.
Cast: Kerry Washington, Columbus Short, Henry Ian Cusick, Katie Lowes, Guillermo Diaz, Tony Goldwyn, Darby Stanchfield, Jeff Perry
Executive producers: Shonda Rhimes, Betsy Beers
Director: Paul McGuigan
Kerry Washington

The characters:
Olivia Price, the main problem-solver (Kerry Washington)
Harrison Jones, attorney (Columbus Short)
Quinn Rielly (Katie Lowes)
Stephen, a litigator with a girlfriend (Henry Ian Cusick)
Abby, an investigator with the hots for Stephen (Darby Stanchfield)
Huck, the lone paralegal and expert hacker (Guillermo Diaz)
Cyrus, the president’s chief of staff (Jeff Perry)
Mellie Grant, the first lady (Bellamy Young)
Fitzgerald Grant, the president of the United States (Tony Goldwyn)
One of the things that makes Shonda Rhimes so good is that her characters are flawed with heart underneath; it’s what gets us tuning in every week. And Rhimes, with Damage Control, is at it again — this time abandoning the medical genre that has served her so well in favor of a legal drama that’s not totally legal.
While Damage Control may sound like another legal thriller, it isn’t. In fact, the script doesn’t have a single scene set in a courtroom. What it does have, however, is a team of lawyers — self-professed gladiators in suits who will go above and beyond to handle any crisis for their clients, including going above, beyond and around the law.
There are office politics — and romances. And there’s Rhimes’ quick-paced writing with a woman at the center of everything. This is Olivia Price (Kerry Washington) of Price and Associates, whose clients seek her out when they’re in a sticky situation — like covered in blood and having bolted from the scene of a murder, as it happens to be in the pilot. Or a young White House staffer spreading rumors that she’s having an affair with the president, which hints at what’s to come for Olivia and company should Damage Control get picked up to series.
What makes Olivia different from Meredith Grey is that she’s all business — the rare moments when she shows signs of compassion and heart are so foreign it almost seems out of character. But the potential for more of Olivia’s personal life — she’s single and has the president on speed dial despite no longer being the White House “fixer” — is there.
Olivia’s supporting staff hint at the office politics: they eat, sleep and breathe crisis when they’re on the clock for a client. They also may eat and sleep together considering Stephen (Lost’s Henry Ian Cusick) considers himself a player and office investigator Abby routinely needs pep talks to avoid sleeping with him. Then comes the new girl, Quinn (Katie Lowes), who Harrison (Columbus Short) already has eyes for. Yeah, we know, sounds very Grey’s. But it works.
Special bonus: Out actor Guillermo Diaz (Weeds’ drug trafficker Guillermo Garcia Gomez) co-stars as Huck, the paralegal with hacking skills.
Pilot Pirate outlook: More Good Wife than Grey’s, only with a more intense and less mysterious Kalinda at its center.
Ian and Annie at opening of Annie’s show
Congratulations to Annie Cusick Wood on her latest endeavor!
Annie is co-director and a contributing playwright for Hawaii Theatre for Youth’s latest show,
Opening night was last Friday, April 1st, and it was a sold-out show.
Here’s a pic of Ian and Annie at the afterparty…thanks to the photog for it:
Here’s an article about the show:
Honolulu Theatre for Youth Season Finale Asks Where Do Things Go? 4/1
Honolulu Theatre for Youth’s 2010-11 “Season of Science” wraps with the product of a fascinating stage experiment: how will some of Hawaii’s most creative and scientific minds respond when asked, “Where do things go?”
The extraordinary result is the world premiere production Where Do Things Go?, an interwoven series of vignettes about everything from water, trash and fossil fuels to medicine, hoarding and even the great Pacific garbage patch. The play opens at Tenney Theatre Friday, April 1 at 7:30 p.m., then plays Saturdays, April 2, 9, 16, 23, 30 and May 7 at 4:30 p.m. (Earth Day is April 22.) It is ideal for ages 4 and up.
The set and costumes have been created out of 100 percent recycled materials, all from previous shows in HTY’s 2010-11 season.
Artistic Director Eric Johnson said, “Previous generations asked, ‘What cool things can we make?’ The question for the next generation is ‘What are we going to do with all the stuff that got made?’ I hope this show sparks the imaginations of young people in this most basic of questions, for the future of the planet depends on their creative and complete engagement in this issue.”
Contributors are playwrights Alvin Chan, Marion Lyman Mersereau, Sean T.C. O’Malley, Susan Stanton, Annie Cusick Wood and Hope Villanueva, composer Max Louie and choreographer Yukie Shiroma.
Single tickets are $16 for adults, and $8 for youth (18 and under) and seniors (over 60). (HTY also performs for schoolchildren during the week; to date, a record-breaking 20,000 schoolchildren are slated to see the show as part of their curriculum.)
Three major partners have joined with HTY to bring Where Do Things Go? to the stage. The Hawaii State Department of Health environmental programs; the City & County of Honolulu Department of Environmental Services; and Blue Planet Foundation have all helped to underwrite the production, as well as contribute to content. Corporate sponsor is Alternate Energy Hawaii, a solar energy company.
Where Do Things Go? is directed by HTY Artistic Director Eric Johnson, assistant director Annie Cusick Wood and musical director Max Louie (who also performs in the show) and features actors Nina Buck, Moses Goods, Maile Holck, Junior Tesoro and Max Louie. Set, lighting and props designer is H. Bart McGeehon; costume designer is Sandra Payne.
For more information, to receive a season brochure, order tickets to a show or learn more about HTY’s educational programming call 839-9885. Tickets may also be ordered online at www.htyweb.org.
Honolulu Theatre for Youth is Hawaii’s non-profit professional theatre company providing theatre and drama education programs that make a difference in the lives of Hawaii’s young people and families. Founded in 1955, HTY is recognized the world over as one of America’s most honored theatres.







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