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HOLLYWOOD—This week’s Gold Standard goes to three players on television. Two are daytime staples and one a primetime star. Katherine Kelly Lang who portrays Brooke on “B&B” is our leading lady choice this week. Peter Bergman who portrays Jack Abbott on “Y&R” is our second daytime pick. Then we round it off with British star James Frain, who portrays Lord Thomas Cromwell on Showtime’s international mega hit, “The Tudors.” The week these stars all shined had them all facing betrayals. None more fun than Brooke Logan’s feeling of betrayal yet again by her nemesis of decades Stephanie with her the Queen’s second installment of “The Logan Chronicles.” This series has become a big hit on the Internet and has even raised ad sales and subscriptions of Spencer Publication’s magazine Eye On Fashion. While Stephanie touted her wealth even during this tough economic times, ex-husband Eric Forrester is fibbing to bill collectors saying, “The check is in the mail.”
Katherine Kelly Lang is one of those actresses so beautiful that she’s rarely given the credit for her depth of dramatic acting as she can produce. Lang’s feelings of betrayal not only by her constant bickering mother-in-law, but also from her husband who sides with Mommie Dearest most of the time, causes her to take a dramatic turn to the right and she does not overplay her shock and amazement. She obviously reads her scripts and knows that even though “B&B” is known for it’s over the top storylines, that Bradley Bell wants his stars to play it straight. She did play it straight, but with bewilderment to fans who say every week, how did she pull that off? What does Peter Bergman play best? The multifaceted star is known best when his character of Jack is enraged. Last week Jack found out that his brother Billy slept with Jack’s wife Sharon and may be the father of her unborn child. Jack may also be the father and Sharon’s ex husband Nick is also a potential candidate. But even though it sounds like the Abbott family belongs on The Maury Povich or Jerry Springer Show, nothing could be farther from the truth. What heartbreak Jack felt and Bergman conveyed when Jack told Phyllis that Sharon and Nicolas were both lying to the two of them. Jack’s desperation comes at a price. Surely the citizens of Genoa City know that with Jack’s tears, blood also comes. Who will pay the price for Billy and Sharon’s betrayal of Jack? Thankfully with Maria Arena Bell helming the show, we’ll find out soon. And lastly, on Showtime, “The Tudors” rein as king of the ratings. For good reason too. This series which chronicles the life of Henry the VIII, maybe England’s most tyrannical and yet interesting monarch, showed us this week Henry’s true selfish ambition takes no prisoners. When Thomas Cromwell’s friends and the King’s men all betrayed him James Frain poured out an emotional performance like no other. This man has been underplaying the role intentionally, because Cromwell was not just the King’s trusted ally, but a disciplined politician who navigated the evil traps set for him by his King and his King’s friends. While at the last moments of his life, like all loyal patriots, which Cromwell was, he asked the people of London to continue to honor and obey their King. While hearing the cheers of Catholics screaming, “kill him, off with his head” he looked over at his enemies, the Duke of Suffolk, The Bishop of Canterbury, Lord Thomas Seymour and Sir Francis, all the men who set him up and framed him for treason against His Majesty. But Cromwell instead of looking at them with anger stared almost saying, you may be next. He then looked past all the cheering mob screaming for him to die and saw his only son, who had just become a father himself. He lastly looked up at the executioner and prayed that he would be killed with one strike by the ax. Immediately it dawned on Cromwell that the executioner was indeed drunk. He cringed almost in horror of knowing his death would not go easy. Frain’s reactions were amazing. They were the signs of a man in distress at his final moments and he played them all to the hilt. Television is struggling for viewers. These three shows seem to be the best of what television can be. |
