NBC SETS DEBUTS FOR NEW DRAMAS ‘ALLEGIANCE, ‘A.D,’ AND ‘ODYSSEY,’ EVENT SERIES ‘THE SLAP’ AND NEW COMEDY ‘ONE BIG HAPPY’
Previous Summer Series “The Night Shift” and “Undateable” Receive Season Two Premiere Dates as Balanced Lineup Shifts Into Midseason
UNIVERSAL CITY, Calif. — Dec. 12, 2014 — NBC has announced premiere dates for its burgeoning midseason schedule — dramas “The Blacklist,” “Allegiance, “Night Shift,” “A.D.” and “Odyssey,” event series “The Slap,” and comedies “One Big Happy” and “Undateable.”
As previously announced, Emmy Award winner James Spader and “The Blacklist” will return to the NBC schedule on Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 1, immediately following the game. The series then shifts to its new timeslot beginning Thursday, Feb. 5 at 9 p.m.
“The Blacklist” will serve as a lead-in to the new spy thriller “Allegiance” from writer-director George Nolfi (“The Adjustment Bureau”). “Allegiance” will air Thursdays at 10 p.m. beginning Feb. 5.
The eight-episode event series “The Slap,” written by Pulitzer Prize finalist Jon Robin Baitz and executive produced by the team of Walter F. Parkes and Laurie MacDonald (“Gladiator,” “Men in Black”) and director Lisa Cholodenko (“The Kids Are All Right,” “Olive Kitteridge”), will air Thursdays at 8 p.m. beginning Feb. 12. The series stars Peter Sarsgaard, Uma Thurman, Thandie Newton and Zachary Quinto.
“The Night Shift,” the #1 new show among the Big 4 networks last summer in the 18-49 demo and total viewers, returns to NBC on Monday, Feb. 23 at 10 p.m. following the two-hour season premiere of “The Voice.”
“The Night Shift” — about the courageous and irreverent men and women at San Antonio Memorial Hospital — stars Eoin Macken, Ken Leung, Jill Flint, Robert Bailey Jr., Jeananne Goossen, JR Lemon, Brendan Fehr and Freddy Rodriguez. Gabe Sachs and Jeff Judah are executive producers.
Also moving from summer to midseason is the hit comedy “Undateable,” from executive producers Bill Lawrence, Adam Sztykiel and Jeff Ingold. “Undateable” — about a group of friends who are close to finding a relationship but just need a little help — will begin its second season on Tuesday, March 17 at 9 p.m. following “The Voice.”
“Undateable” was tied for the highest-rated summer comedy on the Big 4 networks in the past seven years and was the most-watched NBC summer comedy in 10 years. The series stars Chris D'Elia, Brent Morin, Ron Funches, Rick Glassman, David Fynn, Bianca Kajlich and Bridgit Mendler.
NBC’s new comedy “One Big Happy” — from writer Liz Feldman and executive producer Ellen DeGeneres — launches Tuesday, March 17 at 9:30 p.m., immediately following “Undateable.”
“Marry Me” and “About a Boy” will return later in the season.
On Easter Sunday, April 5, at 9 and 10 p.m., respectively, NBC will debut two of its highly anticipated dramas — “A.D.” and “Odyssey.”
“The Super Bowl gives us a great opportunity on a promotional level to reset the table for midseason. ‘The Blacklist,’ which will premiere with a new episode on Super Bowl Sunday and then move to Thursday nights later that week, is a big priority. That will give us the chance to create a first-class night of drama with the addition of both ‘Allegiance’ at 10 p.m. and our 8 p.m. event series ‘The Slap,’ which has an incredible cast and is a terrific way to start the night,” said Robert Greenblatt, Chairman, NBC Entertainment. “We also think very highly of two extraordinary dramas set to launch on Easter Sunday, both of which are events in their own right: ‘A.D.’ and ‘Odyssey.’”
Added NBC President Jennifer Salke: “On the comedy front, we have two strong multi-cam series with blue-chip producers that we are going to put behind ‘The Voice’ on Tuesdays in March — Bill Lawrence's ‘Undateable,’ which was a nice success for us, and Ellen DeGeneres’ ‘One Big Happy.’”
NEW SERIES SYNOPSES
“Allegiance” (Thursday, Feb. 5, 10 p.m.)
Alex O’Connor (Gavin Stenhouse, “Person Of Interest”), a young idealistic CIA analyst specializing in Russian affairs, learns a shocking secret and his close-knit, affluent family is about to be split apart when its revealed that his parents, Mark (Scott Cohen, “Necessary Roughness”) and Katya (Hope Davis, “The Newsroom,” “In Treatment”) are covert Russian spies deactivated decades ago. But today the Kremlin has re-enlisted them into service as they plan a terrorist operation inside the U.S. border that will bring America to its knees. Years ago, Russian-born Katya was tasked by the KGB to recruit American businessman Mark O’Connor as a spy — and the two fell in love. A deal was struck: As long as Katya remained an asset for Russia, and it was agreed that her services could be called on in the future, she would be allowed to marry Mark and move to America. After years in America building a happy life and without word from Moscow, they thought they had escaped. Now it seems that the new Mother Russia has one more mission — turning Alex into a spy. For these anguished parents, The Choice is clear: Betray their country or risk their family.
George Nolfi, John Glenn, Rashad Raisani, Avi Nir, Ron Leshem, Amit Cohen, Giyora Yahalom and Yona Weisenthal serve as executive producers.
“The Slap” (Thursday, Feb. 12, 8 p.m.)
Meet Hector: a public servant, husband, father and valued friend on the cusp of his 40th. Meet Aisha: Hector’s beautiful and intelligent wife who is planning his birthday party filled with friends and his very boisterous Greek family. Sounds like the makings of a great day, right? Wrong. As Hector tries to navigate family politics, Awkward friendships and the young woman he is dangerously captivated by, the built-up tension explodes when Hector’s hotheaded cousin slaps another couple’s misbehaving child. Everyone is understandably stunned, and the party abruptly ends with the child’s parents vowing legal action. But what the hosts and guests don’t know is that this moment will ignite a chain of events that will uncover long-buried secrets within this group of friends and family ... and vigorously challenge the core values of everyone involved.
The series stars Peter Sarsgaard, Uma Thurman, Thandie Newton, Melissa George, Zachary Quinto and Thomas Sadoski.
The series is executive produced by writer Jon Robin Baitz, the team of Walter F. Parkes and Laurie MacDonald, director Lisa Cholodenko, Tony Ayres, Helen Bowden, Michael McMahon and Chris Oliver-Taylor
“One Big Happy” (Tuesday, March 17, 9:30 p.m.)
Best friends Lizzy (Elisha Cuthbert, “Happy Endings”) and Luke (Nick Zano, “2 Broke Girls”) are like family. As kids, they saw each other’s parents go through divorce and have ever since formed an inseparable bond. Now, all grown up and still single, they’ve decided to start a family of their own, but in a non-traditional way. Lizzy, who is a lesbian, wants to raise a child with Luke by her side. Then one night, Luke falls for Prudence (Kelly Brook, “Smallville”), a free-spirited British girl who’s due to go back to England in a matter of days. Then, just as Lizzy discovers that she’s actually pregnant, Luke announces that he and Prudence have gotten married and in an instant — a different kind of family is born.
The cast also includes Brandon Mychal Smith, Rebecca Corry and Chris Williams.
Liz Feldman, Ellen DeGeneres, Jeff Kleeman and director Scott Ellis (pilot) serve as executive producers.
“A.D.” (Sunday, April 5, 9 p.m.)
Following the eye-opening success of “The Bible” miniseries on History, the 12-hour miniseries “A.D.” — from Mark Burnett and Roma Downey — will look at the lives that were instantly altered following the death of Christ. His disciples, mother Mary and key political religious leaders at the time saw their world turned upside down and their lives forever altered. Beginning at the fateful moment of the Crucifixion and the Resurrection, part two of the Greatest Story Ever Told will focus on the disciples who had to go forward and disseminate the teachings of Christ to a world dominated by political unrest, starting a whole new religion that would dramatically reshape the history of the world.
“A.D.” stars Greta Scaachi as Mother Mary, Richard Coyle as Caiaphus, Vincent Regan as Pilate, Adam Levy as Peter, Chipo Chung as Mary Magdalene and Juan Pablo Di Pace as Jesus.
Mark Burnett, Roma Downey and Richard Bedser serve as executive producers.
“Odyssey” (Sunday, April 5, 10 p.m.)
In this “Traffic”-like action drama, an international conspiracy explodes when three strangers’ lives unexpectedly collide — a female soldier, a corporate lawyer and a political activist. After a team of American soldiers battles Jihadists in North Africa, they’re shocked to find that one of the men they killed is Al Qaeda’s top man. Sgt. Odelle Ballard (Anna Friel, “Pushing Daisies”) — a soldier, mother, wife and the unit’s only female member — discovers computer files that suggest a major U.S. corporation is funding the Jihadists. But before she can tell anyone, her team is attacked and left for dead. News is reported that the unit was wiped out, but the truth is that Odelle survived and is the only witness to her unit’s assassination by U.S. Special Forces. In New York, former U.S. Attorney Peter Decker (Peter Facinelli, “Nurse Jackie”) is working on a merger deal for the same company that was funneling money to the Jihadists. Meanwhile, Harrison Walters (Jake Robinson, “The Carrie Diaries”), a political activist and trust fund kid, meets a hacker who claims to have unearthed a massive military-industrial conspiracy. And he’s right: He’s stumbled onto the cover-up that began with Odelle and will soon be out in the open and everyone’s lives will be in danger. The only way they’ll ever save their country, their families and themselves is by joining forces and exposing the people behind it.
Writers Adam Armus and Kay Foster, and writer-director Peter Horton serve as executive producers with Simon Maxwell, Mikkel Bondesen, Henrik Bastin and Kristen Campo.
MIDSEASON PREMIERE DATES
· “The Blacklist,” Sunday, Feb. 1 following the Super Bowl. Moves to Thursday, Feb. 5 at 9 p.m.
· “Allegiance,” Thursday, Feb. 5 at 10 p.m.
· “The Slap,” Thursday, Feb. 12 at 8 p.m.
· “The Night Shift, Monday, Feb. 23 at 10 p.m.
· “Undateable,” Tuesday, March 17 at 9 p.m.
· “One Big Happy,” Tuesday, March 17 at 9:30 p.m.
· “A.D.,” Sunday, April 5 at 9 p.m.
· “Odyssey,” Sunday, April 5 at 10 p.m.
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Awesome schedule. Good job NBC.
ReplyDeleteOdyssey, Anna Friel is back :) I'm excited for the show but I don't like it's time slot.
ReplyDeleteFinally! Here come the schedules!
ReplyDelete...now someone kick The CW so they send theirs out already :)
I didn't think NBC would move Undateable and Night Shift to mid-season.
ReplyDeleteMr. Robinson is missing from schedule.
What about The Whispers?
ReplyDeleteABC, not NBC
ReplyDeleteUgh, that's such an ugly time slot for Odyssey. It's Crisis all over again. And the pilot is really good, they should have given it a better spot on the schedule like Mondays after The Voice.
ReplyDeleteThat's on ABC but it's also missing a date, too. :(
ReplyDeleteWhy are they bringing in summer shows in the post-voice slot?
ReplyDeleteThe Slap will flop @8
It's a miniseries so it's supposed to act as a schedule filler. I just hope that it doesn't bring Te Blacklist down.
ReplyDeletethats the worry
ReplyDeleteSo...defacto cancellation announcements for Marry Me and About A Boy I'm guessing?
ReplyDeleteThey didn't mention Fridays, Constantine will probably finish in February. Are they just gonna let it go into reruns until Hannibal is ready?
Really surprised they are moving their summer hits to mid-season, not sure how that is gonna work out. I hardly watch NBC these days though I'm interested in Odyssey even if I'm not sure it will be a good fit for network TV.
ReplyDeleteBut...but...WHERE'S HANNIBAL?! :( That's the show I'm most looking forward to its return and it's not on the schedule. Ugh, I just really hope it will still have its Friday 10 pm slot
ReplyDeleteWhat about Hannibal?
ReplyDeleteBryan fuller tweeted that it is coming in may 2 months ago.
ReplyDeleteCw won't release it until tuesady afternoon,after seeing JtV's mid-season finale and HoD's premiere numbers.
ReplyDeleteThey are putting The Night Shift on Monday's at 10? I'm laughing so hard. All I can see is their stupid, promo artwork from last summer.
ReplyDeleteOdyssey is DOA.
ReplyDeleteThey didn't put the schedule out for Friday. Hannibal will be back in May.
ReplyDeleteQuite possible. Maybe they even wait to see how The100 will do without Arrow.
ReplyDeleteOn which network will Aquarius air? That new show with C. Holt?
ReplyDeleteYa,i forgot that.
ReplyDeleteNBC or ITV in UK.
ReplyDeleteI really want to know where Aquarius will end up.
ReplyDeleteSo not yet on the schedule or did I miss something?
ReplyDeletenope not been scheduled in yet.
ReplyDelete2 The Blacklist episodes in less than a week? Yay! :D
ReplyDeleteSo just because it has a "stupid" artwork, does it mean it won't do well after The Blacklist? I don't if you watched, but the first season of The Night Shift was amazing. Way more than anyone was expecting.
ReplyDeleteMr Robinson still doesn't have any episodes shot as they changed to multicam at the last minute after more re-casts and showrunner changes. Hannibal not ready until April/May. Aquarius has been shooting for ages and had been pencilled in for Mondays (according to the ad-rates breakdown), so perhaps footage is disappointing? State of Affairs has room to air all 13 eps by the time Night Shift returns.
ReplyDeleteThe Allegiance pilot was pretty good but Odyssey was outstanding. Really looking forward to both of those shows. Awesome to have The Night Shift coming back a bit earlier as it was surprisingly good early this year.
ReplyDeleteOverall moving The Night Shift to Monday 10pm is a better move than airing Aquarius there.
ReplyDeleteThe Night Shift is a procedural that will easily build into a utility player for NBC long-term.
Aquarius is the perfect flashy show that probably should have gotten the Thursday 8pm slot, but I'm thinking it wouldn't have been ready.
Wow! Never saw coming that The Nightshift and Undeatable would get post The Voice timeslots. NBC must really trust them and have little faith on its upcoming dramas.
ReplyDeleteI'm a little sad that Odyssey gets such a bad timeslot, so I hope A.D gets good ratings so it can prop it up
I really enjoyed Undateable this year so I hope it does well.
ReplyDeleteIt will have Sunday's best lead-in. How is it DOA?
ReplyDeleteOdyssey has a great timeslot.
ReplyDeleteA.D. will be pulling mid-high 2s, just like how The Bible did on History Channel. With that lead in A.D. only needs to achieve mid 1s to win it's timeslot.
The Vikings on History Channel premiered with a 2.0 (on HISTORY CHANNEL no less) after the premier of The Bible.
and Aquarius?
ReplyDeleteI did watch it. Mainly because of Eoin and Brendan. I was a huge fan of Merlin and Roswell. Not even my love for them makes this show likeable for me. Not a thing about it. I think putting it on Mondays at 10, where fans are expecting TB style drama, is a mistake.
ReplyDeleteA long hiatus for About a Boy? That's probably the final nail in the coffin for that show.
ReplyDelete