Английская Википедия:Call Me Kat

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Call Me Kat is an American television sitcom largely based on the British sitcom Miranda by Miranda Hart that aired on Fox from January 3, 2021, to May 4, 2023. The series stars Mayim Bialik as Kat, and includes Cheyenne Jackson, Kyla Pratt, Julian Gant, and Swoosie Kurtz. Leslie Jordan was also featured until his death on October 24, 2022. The series was developed by Darlene Hunt. In May 2023, the show was canceled after three seasons.

Premise

Call Me Kat follows a 39-year-old single woman named Kat, "who struggles every day against society and her mother to prove that you cannot have everything you want – and still be happy".[1] After leaving her job as a professor at the University of Louisville,[2] she spends the money her parents set aside for her wedding to open a cat café in Louisville.[1][3]

Cast

Main

  • Mayim Bialik as Kat,[4] a 39-year-old single woman who runs a cat café in Louisville and struggles to find a balance between her fulfilling new career and her constant sense of loneliness. She always breaks the fourth wall in the series.
  • Swoosie Kurtz as Sheila,[4] Kat's overbearing mother who cannot understand why her daughter chooses to be single and constantly tries to get her to meet new men
  • Leslie Jordan as Phil,[4] a newly single gay man who works as the head baker at Kat's café. It was later revealed that he was actually named Philliam. As stated, his name was supposed to be William but his father was really drunk when he named him. After Jordan's death during production of season three, Phil was written out of the show by marrying Jalen and moving to Tahiti with him.
  • Kyla Pratt as Randi,[4] a waitress at the café who becomes Kat's business partner in the third season
  • Julian Gant as Carter,[4] the owner of The Middle C, a piano bar next to Kat's café, and Randi's boyfriend
  • Cheyenne Jackson as Max,[4] Kat's friend and former college love interest who works at Carter's bar after returning home from years of traveling abroad
  • Christopher Rivas as Oscar (seasons 2–3; recurring season 1), a package delivery man and briefly Kat's fiancé

Recurring

  • Tim Bagley as Wyatt, a regular customer at Kat's café
  • Lamorne Morris as Daniel (season 1), a customer at Kat's café who refuses to tip on social and political grounds and also had a relationship with Randi
  • Vanessa Lachey as Tara Barnett (season 1), Kat's best friend since childhood who is married with three kids
  • Schuyler Helford as Brigitte (season 1, guest season 3), Max's ex-girlfriend
  • Andy Favreau as Nick (season 2), owner of a sandwich shop near Kat's café who becomes Kat's landlord
  • Laura Bell Bundy as Nicole (season 2), Max's girlfriend
  • John Griffin as Jalen/Queen Dicktoria (season 3), a drag performer and Phil's love interest
  • Jack McBrayer as Gideon (season 3), an Amish baker that Kat hires to replace Phil
  • Jay Linzy as Darren (season 3; guest season 2), Carter's cousin that ends up working at Carter's bar The Middle C
  • Margie Mays as Zoey (season 3)
  • David Anthony Higgins as Jeff (season 3)

Guests

  • Chad Doreck as Kyle ("Gym")
  • Joey Lawrence as himself ("Call Me Kerfuffled")
  • Jenna von Oÿ as herself ("Call Me Kerfuffled")
  • Michael Stoyanov as himself ("Call Me Kerfuffled")
  • Robin Thicke as himself ("Call Me Flatch")
  • Chelsea Holmes as Kelly Mallet ("Call Me Flatch")
  • Sam Straley as Lloyd "Shrub" Mallet ("Call Me Flatch")
  • Ted Wass as Harley, Kat's deceased father ("Call Me Shellfish", "Call Me Dame Booty Clench")
  • Ken Jennings as himself ("Call Me Ken Jennings")
  • Parker Young as Donor 457/Brian ("Call Me Donor Four-Five-Seven")
  • Kevin Sussman as Zac ("Call Me Donor Four-Five-Seven", "Call Me Chrismukkah")
  • George Takei as himself ("Call Me Chrismukkah")
  • Vicki Lawrence as Lurlene 'Mama' Crumpler, Phil's mother who shows up at Kat's café to replace him as a baker while he is out of town ("Call Me Philliam")
  • Dolly Parton as herself pre-recorded ("Call Me Philliam")
  • Margaret Cho as Val, a snobby cat lover Kat competes against at the Pretty Kitty Cat show ("Call Me Pretty Kitty")
  • Russell Dickerson as himself ("Call Me A Donut Wall")

Episodes

Series overview

Шаблон:Series overview

Season 1 (2021)

Шаблон:Episode table

Season 2 (2022)

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Season 3 (2022–23)

Шаблон:Episode table

Production

Development

On September 19, 2019, it was announced that Fox had given a series commitment, based on the British sitcom Miranda by Miranda Hart. The working title at this stage was Carla.[1][5] The series was to be executive produced by Mayim Bialik and Darlene Hunt through Sad Clown Productions, Jim Parsons (Bialik's former co-star on The Big Bang Theory) and Todd Spiewak through That's Wonderful Productions, and Angie Stephenson and the original series creator and star Miranda Hart through BBC Studios. That's Wonderful Productions' Eric Norsoph, and Sad Clown Productions' Mackenzie Gabriel-Vaught would serve as producers.[1] Production companies named were Fox Entertainment and Warner Bros. Television.[6] On February 12, 2020, it was announced that the series title had been changed from Carla to Call Me Kat.[7] On May 11, 2020, it was announced that Fox had ordered the pilot to series.[6] The series premiered on January 3, 2021.[8] On May 10, 2021, the show was renewed for a second season.[9] On June 16, 2021, Alissa Neubauer joined the series as the showrunner for the second season to replace Hunt.[10] On May 16, 2022, the show was renewed for a third season.[11][12] On June 9, 2022, Jim Patterson and Maria Ferrari were announced as the new showrunners for the third season, replacing Neubauer.[13] On May 5, 2023, the show was canceled after three seasons.[14]

During the show's development, Hunt decided to set the show in Louisville, near her hometown of Lebanon Junction, Kentucky, telling Kirby Yates of Louisville's daily newspaper, The Courier-Journal, "Louisville just felt right." In the same interview, Hunt told Yates that Bialik approved of the setting: "She had been to Louisville recently and loved the city and told me she felt it was really unique and special. I gave her the option to set it in her hometown of San Diego, but she doubled down on Louisville." Hunt is not the only Louisville-area native involved in the series' production; a co-executive producer and writer, Amy Hubbs, is from Elizabethtown, Kentucky. Hunt noted that she and Hubbs had "a big debate" over Kat's allegiance in the KentuckyLouisville college rivalry, noting that "I grew up a big U of L fan, and Amy was a huge UK fan." Hunt chose not to reveal Kat's allegiance before the series premiere, but confirmed that the chosen university sent several items to be used in decorating the character's home.[2]

According to Yates, the series is "chock full of Louisville references", with the first three episodes alone making multiple references to Louisville cultural touchstones and locations such as the UK–U of L rivalry, bourbon, the Brown Hotel, Churchill Downs, and Muhammad Ali. Yates added, "Although none of the show is actually filmed in Louisville, the show's art department works off photographs to recreate the references in Louisville on a production stage in Los Angeles." Hunt further added, "It does feel really special to be able to make so many shoutouts to people, places and things around Louisville and to be able to honor them in the show. A new hometown pride is coming out in me, so it's very special."[2]

Bialik confirmed that the show is filmed on a closed set without a studio audience due to COVID-19; a laugh track is added during post-production.[15]

Casting

Upon series commitment, Bialik was also cast to star in the series.[1] In February 2020, Swoosie Kurtz and Kyla Pratt had joined the cast in starring roles.[7][16] On March 6, 2020, Cheyenne Jackson was cast in a starring role.[17] On April 2, 2020, it was announced that Leslie Jordan joined the main cast.[18] On April 28, 2020, it was reported that Julian Gant joined the cast as a series regular.[19] In April 2022, it was reported Ted Wass and Bialik, who both starred in the sitcom Blossom as father-and-daughter, would reunite in the second season's finale, playing father-and-daughter.[20]

Hunt added local color in casting of minor roles.Шаблон:Clarify She told Yates, "I cast one woman who mentioned she was from Louisville when she auditioned because her character works at a hotel, and I needed her to say 'Welcome to Louisville!' Anyone from Louisville knows how hard it is to get people from somewhere else to say that correctly!" The woman cast for that role grew up near Seneca Park in Louisville.[2]

On October 24, 2022, Leslie Jordan was killed in a car crash,[21] and it was announced that production on the series had paused indefinitely in the wake of his death.[22] Jordan had completed work on eight episodes of season three prior to his death, but did not complete his work on the ninth episode. The October 27 episode "Call Me Uncle Dad" included a tribute to him.[23][24]

Animal safety

In an interview, Bialik said the cats used in filming are neither drugged nor tethered. Several trainers are on-set to supervise the cats.[25]

Filming

Call Me Kat was filmed at Warner Bros. Studios in Burbank, California, but it is set in Louisville, Kentucky.

Broadcast

Call Me Kat premiered on January 3, 2021, at 8/7c on Fox. On January 7, 2021, the series moved to Thursdays at 9/8c, its regular Thursday timeslot, alongside Last Man Standing.[26] It can also be seen on CTV in Canada.[27] The second season premiered on January 9, 2022.[28] The third season premiered on September 29, 2022.[29] The series finale aired on May 4, 2023.

Reception

Critical response

The first season has received mostly negative reviews from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes, it holds an approval rating of 27% based on 15 critic reviews, with an average rating of 5.1/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "More gimmick than sitcom, Call Me Kat buries a charming Mayim Bialik in a sandbox of toothless jokes and shallow characterizations."[30] On Metacritic, season one has a weighted average score of 41 out of 100, based on 10 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[31]

Ratings

Overall

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Season 1

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Season 2

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Season 3

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Accolades

The series was nominated for Outstanding Cinematography For A Multi-Camera Series at the 73rd Primetime Emmy Awards.[32] and for Outstanding Multi-Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series at the 74th Primetime Emmy Awards

Notes

Шаблон:Notelist

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Wikiquote