robin wright
- Robin Wright gets a SAG Award nomination for the final season of 'House of Cards'
- What critics and viewers are saying about the sixth (and final) season of 'House of Cards.'
- Season Six of 'House of Cards' drops today. Here are five storylines to watch.
- Paul Blart, Mall Cop, for president? Apparently, in someone’s universe, this sounds like a good idea.
- The popular political drama “House of Cards” has been picked up by Neflix for a sixth season, the director of the Maryland Film Office confirmed Wednesday.
- There were several productions with Baltimore ties that received Emmy nominations Thursday, including "House of Cards," "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks," and "The Wizard of Lies."
- “House of Cards,” the Maryland-made Netflix political drama that was shut out in Golden Globes nominations this week, picked up a couple today from the Screen
- “House of Cards” has a question for the Hollywood Foreign Press Association: Where's the love?
- Things went smoothly for the shooting of "House of Cards" scenes on South Main Street in downtown Bel Air Friday night, as spectators gathered around, hoping to see some of the show's stars.
- Outside of Claire Underwood (Robin Wright), the women of "House of Cards" have generally been no match for the ambition, guile and mendacity of Francis J. Underwood (Kevin Spacey). But that looks as if it might be changing in Season 4, which arrives at 3 a.m. Friday on Netflix. Most major additions to the cast this cycle are women, and many of the actors who play them come with the kind of resumes and talent that put them in a league with Wright, if not Spacey.
- Robin Wright picked up a Golden Globes nomination for her work in "House of Cards."
- "House of Cards," the Maryland-made Netflix political drama, picked up three major SAG nominations.
- Wright told Sergio Vitale, Aldo's co-owner, that she came to the restaurant and ordered the dish after hearing the show's crew members rave about it.
- It¿s another big year in Emmy nominations for Maryland-made House of Cards and Veep. Once again, both series came up big yesterday in the most prestigious categories announced.
- Kevin Spacey won the Screen Actors Guild Award as outstanding actor in a drama series Sunday.
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- Kevin Spacey, Robin Wright return as Frank and Claire Underwood
- Fans of Netflix's original series House of Cards may know that Kevin Spacey, who plays Francis Underwood and his wife Claire, played by Robin Wright, enjoy their fair share of cabernet sauvignon. What they may not know is during the second season, the award-winning show chose to use a local winery to supply the wine.
- David Zurawik: It's time for the Emmy Awards again, and I am excited and angry.
- All kinds of impressive numbers were flying around last week in the wake of Emmy nominees being announced. HBO ran up an industry-leading 99 nominations overall with 19 for its gory and glorious ¿Game of Thrones¿ alone.
- They came by the hundreds, from near and far, hoping to get their few seconds of fame on the small screen. The "House of Cards" open casting call for extras needed in Season III of the Netflix political thriller starring Kevin Spacey drew a huge crowd of hopefuls to downtown Bel Air on a sunny Saturday morning.
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- In 'House of Cards,' Kevin Spacey, Beau Willimon bring power of live theater to screen like no series in TV history.
- Netflix production had led TV series with four nominations coming into evening
- Baltimore-made "Veep" and "House of Cards," and stars Julia- Louis-Dreyfus and Kevin Spacey came up big in Golden Globe nominations announced Thursday.
- The second season of "House of Cards," the Baltimore-made political drama starring Kevin Spacey, will debut Feb. 14, Netflix announced today.
- There's bad journalism, and then, there is bad online, show-biz journalism, which is in a class by itself when it comes to laziness, lack of fact-checking and flatout hack-ocity (I know that's not a word, but it speaks to my anger at the moment).
- At Emmy Awards, celebrities with ties to Maryland among the best-dressed.
- Wins for Jeff Daniels, Claire Danes edge out Kevin Spacey, Robin Wright
- When the Maryland workers building the sets for "House of Cards" started sawing and hammering the offices and homes of characters like Francis and Claire Underwood 20 months ago in Harford County, most of them were thinking only of earning a steady paycheck, not being part of TV history.
- Jodie Foster is in Baltimore looking at locations for an episode of "House of Cards" that she is set to direct for Season 2 of the political drama starring Kevin Spacey and Robin Wright.
- Ever since "House of Cards" started filming in Harford County, I got that same feeling of a possible celebrity sighting afoot.
- The Netflix show "House of Cards" will keep making its presence felt in Harford County, as a Bel Air town official announced a filming was set for the Liriodendron area on Tuesday afternoon.
- For all the hype and all the "next big things" that have flashed across the screen and died small, it really does feel like the revolution in TV viewing has arrived.
- I saw it with my own eyes -- Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley standing centerstage Tuesday in the Oval Office.
- Only three years ago, Baltimore and Maryland were all but out of the TV and film production business. After the glory years of "Homicide," "The Corner," "The Wire" and tens of millions of HBO dollars spent here on Maryland crews and materials, state funding for incentives had ended, and Hollywood had left Baltimore in its rear view mirror for what looked like good.
- Two-time Oscar winner enjoyed being bad as the new best actor in a TV series that isn't on television.
- Check out the trailer of the new Netflix series "House of Cards" and in it you'll see the fictional President of the United States and his two children. In real life, the children are Forest Hill residents Kyle and Kirsten Johnson. "They're not huge parts," as Kirsten, a sophomore at Bel Air High, says, but "we can definitely see ourselves."
- "House of Cards" is at Mount Vernon's Peabody Institute this week where the producers are expected to film one of the biggest scenes in the first 13 episodes of the series.
- "House of Cards" is coming to another major Baltimore institution, Mount Vernon's Peabody Institute, where it is expected to film one of the biggest scenes in the first 13 episodes of the series. The Netflix production, which stars Kevin Spacey and Robin Wright, will be at Peabody starting Tuesday.
- Original Netflix series 'House of Cards' an economic stimulus for Harford and Baltimore
- Baltimore native will direct and executive produce political comedy
- All the jobs, money and excitement that Hollywood has brought to Maryland during the last year could soon disappear amid all the finger-pointing and blame-gaming over the budget impasse in Annapolis.
- What's going on within a five-acre area of production offices and massive warehouses turned soundstages in Joppa is a new game altogether. The makers of the $100 million Netflix political thriller "House of Cards" are virtually building their own Washington.