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Wednesday is an American supernatural mystery comedy [2] television series based on the character Wednesday Addams by Charles Addams.Created by Alfred Gough and Miles Millar, it stars Jenna Ortega as the titular character, with Gwendoline Christie, Riki Lindhome, Jamie McShane, Hunter Doohan, Percy Hynes White, Emma Myers, Joy Sunday, Georgie Farmer, Naomi J. Ogawa, Christina Ricci, and Moosa ...
She is introduced to her new school and her roommate, Enid Sinclair. In "Chapter I: Wednesday's Child Is Full of Woe", she is almost killed by Rowan Laslow and soon after witnesses him being murdered. She wins the Poe Cup race with Enid and finds the Nightshade Library in "Chapter II: Woe Is the Loneliest Number".
Emma Myers (born April 2, 2002 [1]) is an American actress.She began her career as a child actress in 2010 when she appeared in The Glades. [1] She gained recognition for starring in the comedy horror series Wednesday (2022–present), and has since starred in the comedy film Family Switch (2023), and the mystery series A Good Girl's Guide to Murder (2024).
[2] Tom Conroy from Media Life Magazine noted that "On soap operas, sometimes a perfectly nice regular character will suddenly turn into a villain. Viewers are rarely alerted to the change beforehand." [3] Shelley Fralic of the Winnipeg Free Press described the "first-class villain" of soap as: "Ruthless magnate. Serial groom.
If last week’s explosive Apple TV+Severance episode helped answer our season one finale questions and ground us in the outside world, this week’s episode three is all about teasing the theme ...
This is a clever callback to season 1, when we first learned that Lumon spreads mythic (and ludicrous) propaganda between separate severed departments so that they remain distrustful and afraid of ...
Katie Rife of The A.V. Club gave the episode a "B+" grade and wrote, "Overall, 'Brain Scramblies' was a nicely balanced episode that made time for both overarching plot and random silliness, digging further into a thematic element I really enjoyed when they explored it in season one: The nuances of the vampires' relationship with humans." [5]
The 2 x 90′ instalment, created for television and executive produced by Refn and Matthew Read of Moonage, follows the success of the first series, which saw its premiere become CBBC’s top ...