[Warning: The below contains MAJOR spoilers for Finding Your Roots, Season 10, “In the Blood.”] There are always gems to uncover when it comes to PBS‘s Finding Your Roots, and in the latest episode “In the Blood,” Girls star and creator Lena Dunham discovered a rather funny family connection.
The Netflix rom-com series is Dunham's return to TV after 2018's "Camping" and Emmy-winning iconic series "Girls."
Christopher Abbott is done with “Girls,” even if the beloved show follows the six seasons and a movie track. The “Sanctuary” actor exclusively told IndieWire that he will not be reprising his iconic role of Charlie in the HBO series created by Lena Dunham at any point, not even for a charity table read.
Lena Dunham had “Girls.” Amy Schumer had “Trainwreck.” And now, Leah McKendrick has “Scrambled.” The filmmaker and star behind the dramedy “Scrambled”
The Last of Us star calls the writer-director-actor a “guiding light” who’s not afraid to “stand up and speak out for what she needs”
Flip through the slideshow for 25 films in which New York City is as much a character as any of the actors, from "The Godfather" to "Sex and the City."
After years as one of the most polarizing figures in entertainment, Lena Dunham is finally taking the win. Her fourth feature film, the Medieval-set teen
Who could have possibly anticipated that, nearly a decade ago when “Girls” creator and star Lena Dunham announced in an early episode of the ground-breaking HBO series that her Hannah Horvath might “be the voice of my generation.
Different century, same search for gender equality. Lena Dunham’s third feature film “Catherine Called Birdy” is set in a Medieval English village in 1290, where teenage Lady Catherine (Bella Ramsey) is assigned the task of finding a husband.
With this film centered on a 26-year-old virgin, the Girls creator continues to master the art of crafting painfully un-self-aware characters and exploring the sloppiness of life
Lena Dunham was in a whole league of her own as an aspiring tween star. The “Girls” creator and “A League of Their Own” enthusiast revealed that she met director Penny Marshall while auditioning for 2001 film “Riding in Cars With Boys.” Yet the audition soon went off the rails and didn’t warrant a callback.
[Editor’s note: The following story contains light spoilers for “Sharp Stick.”] There’s been a lot of panic lately about whether or not Gen Z is having enough sex.
The 2022 Toronto International Film Festival adds another world premiere in the mix: Lena Dunham’s medieval coming-of-age comedy “Catherine Called Birdy.” TIFF previously announced “Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery” and Steven Spielberg’s semi-autobiographical drama “The Fabelmans” to debut at the 47th edition of the festival this September.
“Sharp Stick” is here to beat the “inborn judgment and shame around female desire” out of a stigmatized culture. So says writer, director, and star Lena Dunham, who helms her sophomore feature that debuted at Sundance this year.
Lena Dunham’s latest film “Catherine, Called Birdy” has been in the works for 13 years — almost the exact age as the historical YA novel’s heroine. Dunham writes, directs, and executive produces the coming-of-age Prime Video film, adapted from Karen Cushman’s 1996 novel of the same name.
The writer-director-actor talks about her first feature film in 12 years, Sharp Stick , and the burdens of making semi-autobiographical work
Lena Dunham is under fire once again — this time for her third feature, “Sharp Stick.” Following the film’s 2022 Sundance premiere, autism activist Amy Gravino took to Twitter to allege that she was approached to be a consultant during production.
Over the course of six seasons, Lena Dunham’s HBO hit series “Girls” was beset by plenty of complaints and controversies, but aside from the steady stream of hot takes on a show about four shiftless white girls in NYC, there was always one problem too big, too true, and far too easy to ignore: These girls never changed.
These “Girls” have certainly grown up. During an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Emmy winner Lena Dunham hinted at the possibility of a “Girls”
Lineup and Pre-Festival Announcements and News Sundance 2022 Lineup: New Films from Lena Dunham, Amy Poehler, Jesse Eisenberg, and More How to Buy Tickets
Though this year’s Sundance Film Festival is going virtual-only for the second time in a row, that doesn’t mean there still isn’t plenty to be excited about.
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