Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Olivia Carolyn Pope is a fictional character created by Shonda Rhimes for the political drama television series Scandal. [1] This character also played a small role in the series How to Get Away with Murder on its 4th season produced by Shonda Rhimes where she plays a crisis manager who helped Annalise get her class-action case heard by the Supreme Court. [2]
The episode was well received by television critics, with many praising show creator Shonda Rhimes for the way in which she integrated Olivia Pope's decision to have an abortion into the episode. Ben Philippe at The A.V. Club wrote an essay about the abortion, praising it for making the show "actually political". [3]
According to the show's costume designer, Lyn Paolo, the success of Olivia Pope's wardrobe was based on "this idea of having [her character] wear such soft, feminine colors in a man's world". [41] In 2014, Washington and Paolo won the Influencer Award at the 2014 Ace Fashion Awards for Olivia Pope's stylish clothes on the show. [42]
His television work includes his role as Eli Pope, Olivia Pope's father, in Scandal, for which he won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series in 2014, [2] and the role of Henry Deacon on the TV series Eureka. In 2019, Morton narrated the Audible program, The Water Dancer, by Ta-Nehisi Coates.
BIAS, Kara Tenae, Gwen Stefani, Tanner Massey. Monday night was the Live Shows on The Voice with the Top 12 bringing their A-game in hopes of making it through because Tuesday night's results show ...
This man happened, the lead kidnapper that - at least for now - has bested Olivia Pope. Now Rhimes did warn us before the episode aired. She told the Hollywood Reporter , "Olivia Pope is never ...
The Playoffs continued on Monday night on Season 26 of The Voice with the final five members of Team Snoop Dogg and Team Reba McEntire battling it out for the only two spots in the Live Shows for ...
[3] USA Today 's Anika Reed praised the series in its entirety, not just the final episode, commenting the show "put a black woman as the lead of a primetime drama for the first time since 1974, with [Kerry] Washington as D.C. fixer Olivia Pope. The show arguably changed the makeup of the television landscape and created a space for shows with ...