Kramer returning to TV in first sitcom role since 'Seinfeld'
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Crazy Kramer is back! Controversial ?Seinfeld? actor Michael Richards has been cast in a new sitcom on TV Land, the network announced yesterday. Richards, 63, nearly dropped out of sight after Nov. 17, 2006, when he inexplicably launched a racist diatribe at the Laugh Factory in LA. Now, he?ll back in front of the camera, shooting TV Land?s ?Giant Baby,? alongside Kirstie Alley and Rhea Perlman. The pilot will be shot next week, the network said, and Richards will play a limo driver in the show. The role could become Richards? first steady gig since he played Cosmo Kramer ? the ?hipster doofus? who lived across the hall from Jerry Seinfeld ? in the iconic NBC sitcom, whose nine-season run ended in 1998.
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e of the main cast members from the hit NBC comedy "Seinfeld" will join veterans of another NBC hit, ?Cheers,? in a new pilot, Deadline.com reports. For Michael Richards, who played Kramer on ?Seinfeld,? the role marks what would be his first regular TV gig in more than a decade, the story reports. Richards will co-star with Kirstie Alley and Rhea Perlman of "Cheers" in the TV Land pilot "Giant Baby," the story notes. Gilles Marini is also joining the pilot in a guest star role, with the potential to become a recurring cast member. The project is about Madison "Maddie" Banks, played by Alley, a Broadway star whose life is changed when her long-lost son returns to reconnect with her. Richards will play Maddie's limo driver and Marini will portray her chef. Perlman will be her best friend and assistant. "The castings of Richards, Alley and Perlman are part of TV Land?s strategy to bring to its original shows some of the biggest sitcom stars of the past couple of decades," the piece points out.
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| ?Seinfeld's? Michael Richards to join Kirstie Alley for Pilot ?Giant Baby? |
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Michael Richards of ?Seinfeld? fame has signed on to appear opposite ?Dancing with the Stars alum, Kirstie Alley in her new upcoming series, ?Giant Baby? according to a report by TV Guide on Dec. 4.
| | Kirstie will star in ?Giant Baby? as Madison ?Maddie? Banks. She is an established Broadway star whose life goes topsy-turvy when her long lost son reappears. He is hoping to reconnect with her after his adoptive mother passed away. | | Richards fits into the scheme as Maddie? limo driver. Also joining Alley on the show will be her former ?Cheers? costar, Rhea Perlman in the role of Maddie?s best friend and assistant. Eric Peterson stars as Maddie?s son, Arlo. | | Richards has been away from television for more than ten years. His last series, ?The Michael Richards Show? had a brief run on NBC. He also appeared on ?Curb Your Enthusiasm briefly. | |
| thrice cross-examined by court officials, but refused to attest to any crimes on her husband's part, or to join her signature to his abandoning their family's lands in return for her dom. Finally she consented to the forfeiture upon the promise that Ulfeldt would be set . But she was betrayed, he was condemned and a writ was issued for his execution and the exile of their children. Once again he escaped, and joined his children abroad, although she was not at first told this and was compelled to watch as he was burned in effigy. She was never to see her husband again, and there is no evidence that he sought her dom or reunion with her prior to his death.For the next twenty-two years she remained in the custody of the Danish state, incarcerated without charge or trial in Copenhagen Castle's infamous Blue Tower (Danish, Bltrn). She lived under meagre and humiliating conditions for the daughter of a king, and was for years deprived of almost all comforts. During these years she perforce showed great stoicism and ingenuity. She wrote that her cell was small, filthy, foul, infested with fleas, and that the rats were so numerous and hungry that they ate her night candle as it burned. She learned to piece together pages for writing from the wrappers on the sugar that she was given, and to make ink for her fowl's quill by capturing the candle's smoke on a spoon. Slowly she adjusted to her plight, ceased longing for revenge or death, and developed a mordant humor. She studied the vermin who were her only companions, recording her observations and conjectures about their instincts. When she heard that her husband had died abroad, she marvelled that she felt only relief that he had finally eluded his persecutors.The few human interactions she was permitted were equally humiliating, when not dangerous. The tower warden was wont to visit her at night when he was drunk, and she was saved from his advances on one occasion only because he slumbered off in mid-embrace. Maid servants were sent to clean her cell and watch her from an outer room, sending reports on her words and pastimes to the Queen. But such women as worked in prisons were apt to be hard and insolent. Leonora Christina fended off harassment from one serving wench only by threatening to kill her with her bare hands.She only received less harsh treatment and more amenities following the death of Frederick III early in 1670. The new king, Christian V, sent his ministers to solicit his mother's consent to the prisoner. But, if Leonora Christina's account is to be believed, the Queen Dowager rejected their entreaties with rebuke.When a group of ladies of rank visited her incognito for their amusement one evening, she immediately recognized one of them as "Lady Augusta of Glucksburg", who had been wed in Copenhagen in June 1651 to her cousin Ernest Gnther, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Augustenburg). She deduced that the others were her nephew's Queen, Charlotte Amalie of Hesse-Kassel (or Hesse-Cassel), and his sister Anne Sophie, wife of the Electoral Prince Johan Georg of Saxony. They shed tears of pity once they saw her plight (except Augusta, whom Leonora Christina believed later reported the interview to the Queen Dowager). The Queen's mother, the Landgravine Hedwig of Hesse-Kassel, also paid her a clandestine visit while sojourning from Germany, and wagered with the King for the captive's liberation if the Queen's firstborn child was a son. But when the King's mother arrived for the prince's christening, she threatened to leave the court immediately unless Frederick reneged on his promise. The dowagers quarreled over the matter before the King, but the Blue Tower's gates remained shut.Eventually the King had Leonora Christina moved to more spacious quarters in the tower, installed a stove against the cold of Copenhagen winters, and commanded that her window be opened. The Queen loaned her silk worms, which Leonora Christina eventually returned in a casket on which were embroidered in silk a plea that "Leonora's bonds be loosed". She was now allowed pen and paper, and received a gift from her nephew of two hundred rix-dollars, most of which would be spent on foreign books. It was at this time that she began to write in earnest, intending that her children might one day read her words.Queen Dowager Sophie Amalie died in February 1685. On the morning of 19 May 1685 Leonora Christina was informed that a royal order had been issued by Chancellor Frederick von Ahlfeldt (he who had reluctantly escorted her into the Tower) for her release. But she refused the guard's offer to unlock her cell until, at 10 o'clock that night, denied a final private audience with the Queen and fetched by the daughter of her |
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Do You Own a Home ?
(http://spam-correio-nao-solicitado.blogspot.pt/2012/12/spam-email-do-you-own-home-then-you-can.html) |
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