Ads 468x60px

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

An Exciting 'Development' For John Krasinski

John Krasinski is heading to "Arrested Development!"

According to Entertainment Weekly, the "Office" star, who says goodbye to Jim Halpert this May, will appear in the new season on Netflix, which is set to debut on May 26.

EW had no further details about Krasinski's role on "Arrested Development," but reports the cameo is tucked into one of the new 15 episodes.

Representatives for Netflix and Krasinski did not immediately reply to The Huffington Post's request for comment.

Krasinski joins a long list of "Arrested Development" guest stars for the new season on Netflix: Mae Whitman, James Lipton, Ben Stiller, Liza Minnelli, Carl Weathers, Henry Winkler, Scott Baio and Jeff Garlin are returning to the revived comedy, and new faces Seth Rogen, Kristen Wiig, Conan O’Brien, Andy Richter, Isla Fisher, John Slattery, Ben Schwartz, Terry Crews and the guys of "Workaholics" will also appear. Plus, "Arrested" narrator and executive producer Ron Howard will show his face for the second time ever on the series (the first was in the Season 3 finale).

The new season of "Arrested Development" debuts on Netflix on Sunday, May 26 at midnight.

Loading Slideshow

Played by: Henry Winkler Winkler actually made us forget the Fonz with his performance as the Bluth's memorably incompetent lawyer, whose attempts to give the family legal advice were hindered by the fact that he appeared to know nothing about the law. Maybe Zuckerkorn was so cheerfully unhelpful because he was more focused on his mysterious personal life, which involved rest stops, prostitutes and predilections that sounded, shall we say, unconventional. The show's Fonzie references had him giving a familiar "Ayyy!" in the mirror before combing his hair and, at one point, referencing an infamous "Happy Days" scene by jumping over a shark.  

Played by: Scott Baio  This Bluth family lawyer appeared to be a slightly more competent than Barry Zuckerkorn, but you'd think an ethical attorney would not represent one Bluth spouse while dating another, as happened when he worked on Tobias and Lindsay's divorce. Most notable for the slogan in his low-budget TV ads ("Why should you go to jail for a crime someone else noticed?") and for his web site, the Bob Loblaw Law Blog. 

Played by: Ed Begley Jr.  This hairless land magnate (whose misplaced eyebrows were a dependable source of hilarity) was the Bluth Company's frequent antagonist, and the forthright way in which he conducted business stood in contrast to the Bluth's frequent ethical lapses. The families' frienemy status went back years -- Michael always had a crush on his daughter, Sally (Christine Taylor), but he could never quite close that deal. 

Played by: Liza Minnelli The vertigo-challenged retiree was Buster's paramour for a while, despite his fear of (and attraction to) older women and her problems staying upright. Minnelli's game, energetic performance as Lucille was a lot of fun, and her rivalry with Lucille 1 was especially delicious. 

Played by: Ben Stiller  GOB's magician idol was every bit as douchey as you'd expect him to be, and if we have any complaints about the character, it's that Stiller's schedule didn't allow him to stop by the Gothic Castle that often. No doubt true Tony Wonder fans own his stupendous magic video, "Use Your Allusion."

Played by: Judy Greer "Take a look at these!" You might recall Kitty Sanchez as an unstable former Bluth Company employee who was prone to showing off her breast implants, and that just about describes her particular brand of freaky insanity. But don't forget her infamous drink-off with Lucille at Senor Tadpoles, her creepy affair with GOB and her devious attempts to extort the Bluth family and steal George's sperm (timeless wisdom from George: "Never promise crazy a baby"). Would any of it have turned out differently if the producers of the "Girls with Low Self-Esteem" video series hadn't rejected a pre-implant Kitty? 

Played by: Justin Lee George and Lucille's attempt to adopt a child came at an inopportune time: He arrived in the midst of the government's prosecution of George Bluth's various crimes. Still, Annyong was soon one of the family (much to Buster's chagrin), and though he went missing for much of Season 2, George found him living inside the walls of Lucille's condo in Season 3. Most memorable quote: "Annyong!"

Played by: Justin Grant Wade This popular jock was the object of Maeby's affections for quite some time, until she found out that GOB was his father and thus Steve Holt! was her cousin. (George Michael, despite his jealousy, was torn about informing Maeby of this fact, given that he himself had a crush on his cousin.) In the show's third season, he and GOB explored their father-son relationship, and even Michael got pulled into the Steve Holt! cult when he trained for a triathalon with him. Steve's exhortation to a weary Michael: "There's no 'I' in win!" 

Played by: Amy Poehler Poehler played the wife of her real-life husband, Will Arnett, in a few episodes that highlighted both the haste with which GOB tied the knot and the fact that he never actually slept with her the night they got hitched. One of the few fans of Dr. Funke's 100% Natural Good-Time Family Band Solution, she figured prominently in the infamous "loose seal" incident that deprived Buster of his hand, and when she was in the Army, she had an unfortunate tendency to pose for very questionable photos.

Playing himself, the "Predator" actor sold Tobias a series of worthless acting lessons, but the most valuable advice he offered consisted of lessons in being thrifty. Thanks to Weathers, "Arrested Development" fans no longer throw away bones after a meal -- they make a stew. There's still plenty of meat on that bone! 

Played by: James Lipton  The warden of George's prison was an artistic soul: He allowed Tobias to bunk in a cell to prepare for a tiny role as an inmate, and he later pitched Maeby on his script for "New Warden," a hilarious compendium of jail cliches that, in one episode, was acted out by little kids. Needless to say, a savvy executive like Maeby wasn't interested.

In a cast full of characters who are willing to say almost anything, Franklin, a puppet GOB used in his act, stood out. His song "It Ain't Easy Bein' White" wasn't the crossover hit GOB was hoping for, and in a tragic turn of events, he was accidentally dyed white. Before that, an angry Franklin delivered a stinging putdown to Lucille in the clip here. (I don't know who's more shocked by Franklin's outburst, Lucille or Buster.)

Played by: Zach Braff  The magnate at the heart of the Girls With Low Self-Esteem empire shared an unlikely secret with Tobias: They were both Never-Nudes, nudity-shunners who sported matching cut-offs beneath their clothes. There were quite a few notable actors (Martin Mull as Gene Parmesan, Malik Yoba as Ice, Jane Lynch as Cindi Lightballoon, Robb Corddry as Moses Taylor) whose roles on "AD" weren't large, but they made a strong impression anyway.

Played by: Mae Whitman Can't quite recall this character. Was her name Yam? Bland? Plant? Annabelle? In all seriousness, Mae Whitman is a terrific actress, but the show had a lot of fun with Michael's inability to remember anything about her or even that his son was dating her. Really? Her?

Played by: Steve Ryan This one-armed man was a constant menace during the Bluth children's childhood: George would employ Weatherman in grisly scenarios designed to teach the kids lessons ("And that's why we leave a note!"). He was central to the hilarious pot bust that took place at the Bluth's boat, and at one point in Season 3, he teamed up with the handless Buster to deliver an elaborate lesson to the Bluth brothers, after Buster ran into him at Weatherman's prosthetics shop. But I'll stop there, because I've learned my lesson: That's why we don't make lists of supporting characters! 

(function($) { $(function() {var $wrapper = $( '#hp-slideshow-wrapper-246380' );var $window = $( window );var loaded = false;var ready = function() {if ( loaded ) {return;}loaded = true;var modules, requests = 2;var render = function() {$wrapper.removeClass('hp-slideshow-wrapper-loading').slideshow( {modules : modules,include : ['css','slides','inline','arrows','thumbs','expand_base','leaderboard','expand_details','fullscreen','timer','tracking','touch','data_beacon']} );};var params = {"utm_hp_ref":"celebrity","ir":"Celebrity"};if (!params || params instanceof Array) params = { };params.v = 1;params._id_slideshow = '246380';params.entry_id = '3181080';$.ajax({ type : 'GET', url : '/_slideshows/published.php', data : params, success : function( data ) {$( '#slideshow_json_ac1c53b76bf34d88a91974e1b5a1f4a1' ).data( 'slideshow', data );if ( --requests 1 ? Array.prototype.slice.call( arguments, 1 ) : [ ];if ( --requests $wrapper.offset().top ){$window.unbind( 'scroll', windowScroll );ready();return true;}};var match = location.hash.match( /slide=[^&]*/i ), sid = 0, target;if ( match != null && match[0].split( 'slide=' )[1].match( /\d+/ ) ) {ready();}else if (!windowScroll()) {$window.bind( 'scroll', windowScroll );}});}(jQuery));Related on HuffPost:

Get Alerts jQuery(document).ready(Submissions.init); (function() { var l = document.createElement('script'); l.type = 'text/javascript'; l.async = true; l.src = "http://cdn.taboolasyndication.com/libtrc/thehuffingtonpost/loader.js"; var s = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(l,s); })(); window._taboola = window._taboola || []; _taboola.push({mode:'autosized-1r-organic',container:'taboola-autosized-1r-organic'}); _taboola.push({mode:'autosized-1r-sc',container:'taboola-autosized-1r-sc'}); _taboola.push({article:'auto'}); ClickTracker.type = 'from-partners';ClickTracker.vertical_id = 63;ClickTracker.sample = 10;

View the original article at Pop Eater

0 comments:

Post a Comment