Episode 1.01 - Pilot - Promotional Photos
New Featurette - Meet Pernell Walker aka Thunder Thighs
New Featurette - James Franco & Maggie Gyllenhaal on the Business of Sex
New Featurette - James Franco Talks Recreating New York in the '70s
Trailer 2
Key Art
Trailer
Press Release
JAMES FRANCO AND MAGGIE GYLLENHAAL STAR IN HBO DRAMA SERIES THE DEUCE, CREATED BY DAVID SIMON AND GEORGE PELECANOS, DEBUTING SEPT. 10
THE DEUCE chronicles that moment in time when sex went from being a back-alley, brown-paper-bag commodity to a billion-dollar universal in American life, a moment when ground zero for the earliest pioneers in the flesh trade was the midtown heart of the nation’s largest city, New York’s Times Square.
Titled after the local slang for New York’s fabled 42nd Street and starring James Franco and Maggie Gyllenhaal, THE DEUCE begins its eight-episode season SUNDAY, SEPT. 10 (9:00-10:20 p.m. ET/PT), followed by other episodes subsequent Sundays at the same time. The show was created by George Pelecanos and David Simon; George Pelecanos, David Simon, Nina K. Noble and James Franco executive produce.
THE DEUCE follows the rise of the porn culture in New York from the early 1970s through the mid-1980s, exploring the rough-and-tumble world of the sex trade from the moment when both a liberalizing cultural revolution in American sexuality and new legal definitions of obscenity created a billion-dollar industry that is now an elemental component of the American cultural landscape. Beginning in 1971, the show follows a cast of barkeeps, prostitutes, pimps, police and nightlife denizens as they swirl through a world of sex, crime, high times and violence and the porn business begins its climb from Mafia-backed massage parlors and film labs to legitimacy and cultural permanence.
“For America, flesh as a legal commodity begins in New York City, but it travels everywhere into the national life,” says Simon. “The fact is, we don’t sell a luxury car, blue jeans or bottle of beer anymore without a certain amount of pornographic thought attached.”
While THE DEUCE is structured as a fictional narrative, it results from research by producer Marc Henry Johnson, who chronicled the rise and fall of the sex industry and The Deuce demimonde through the lives of a pair of real-life twins who eventually became Mob fronts for the Gambino family in midtown, rising to some prominence in their own right. Those tales – provided by a brother who passed away a few brief months before THE DEUCE began filming its pilot – form one essential strand in the narrative, augmented by additional research and subsequent interviews with other surviving participants who consulted on the scripts.
Says Pelecanos, “Times Square in the 1970s is now chiefly remembered as the ground zero of decadence and depravity, but what’s often left out of the picture is that, for many, it was a hotbed of experimentation, adventure and sexual liberation. The music, the outlandish outfits, the beautiful cars made in Detroit and particularly the decade’s time-capsule, shot-in-New York films [“Mean Streets,” “The French Connection,” “Black Caesar”] were a great inspiration for us when we were designing the look and feel of our debut season of THE DEUCE.”
In addition to their work on “The Wire,” creators David Simon and George Pelecanos also collaborated on HBO’s New Orleans drama “Treme.” Simon is an author, journalist and producer whose other works for HBO include “The Corner,” “Generation Kill” and “Show Me a Hero.” Pelecanos is the author of 20 critically acclaimed novels, including “The Double” and “The Turnaround,” as well as a screenwriter and film producer. He served as a writer and co-producer on HBO’s “The Pacific.”
Also writing for the series are three other acclaimed novelists, co-executive producer Richard Price, Megan Abbott and Lisa Lutz. An accomplished screenwriter as well, Price (“Lush Life,” “Clockers”) wrote and executive produced HBO’s “The Night Of” and previously worked with Simon and Pelecanos on “The Wire.” Abbott is the author of nine books, including “Dare Me,” “The Fever” and “You Will Know Me.” Lutz is the author of nine novels, including “The Passenger,” “How to Start a Fire,” the Spellman series of novels and “Heads You Lose,” co-authored with David Hayward.
Additional writing credits on the series include Will Ralston (“Treme”), Chris Yakaitis (“Treme”) and Marc Henry Johnson.
The cast includes: James Franco (Oscar® nominee for “127 Hours”) as identical twin brothers Vincent and Frankie Martino; Maggie Gyllenhaal (Oscar® nominee for “Crazy Heart”) as self-made prostitute Candy; Gary Carr (“Downton Abbey”) as pimp C.C.; Margarita Levieva (“The Blacklist”) as college student-turned-barmaid Abigail “Abby” Parker; Lawrence Gilliard, Jr. (HBO’s “The Wire”) as police officer Chris Alston; Dominique Fishback (HBO’s “Show Me a Hero”) as prostitute Darlene; Emily Meade (HBO’s “The Leftovers”) as 20-year-old prostitute Lori; Gbenga Akinnagbe (“The Good Wife”) as pimp Larry Brown; Chris Bauer (HBO’s “The Wire”) as Bobby Dwyer, a construction foreman and brother-in-law of the Martinos; Chris Coy (CINEMAX’s “Banshee”) as bartender Paul Hendrickson; Natalie Paul (HBO’s “Show Me a Hero”) as reporter Sandra Washington; and Michael Rispoli (HBO’s “The Sopranos”) as mafia captain Rudy Pipilo.
Vincent Martino (James Franco) is a successful and astute barman with a knack for promotion who finds himself – with increasing reluctance – in the center of the city sex trade after he attracts the interest of a well-connected mob player, Rudy Pipilo (Michael Rispoli). A Gambino captain, Rudy represents that New York family’s financial interests in the midtown sex business. After Abby Parker (Margarita Levieva) drops out of NYU, she and Vincent begin a relationship that ultimately challenges them both. Vince’s identical twin brother Frankie is Vincent’s freewheeling, free-spirited counterpart, who gets by on his brother’s support, but is increasingly drawn toward Pipilo’s business interests.
Candy (Maggie Gyllenhaal) works as an independent prostitute, refusing to work under any of the multitude of street pimps who control much of the trade along Eighth and Ninth Avenues. She has a son who lives with her parents in the suburbs, but her ambition and intelligence – as well as a weariness with street life – lead her to the emerging porn business, where she sees potential for herself and, perhaps, her fellow streetwalkers.
Darlene (Dominique Fishback), a young but street-smart woman from North Carolina, uses her savvy to manage her volatile pimp, Larry Brown (Gbenga Akinnagbe), while Lori (Emily Meade), a 20-year-old fresh off a Greyhound from Minnesota, is taken into the fold of dapper pimp C.C. (Gary Carr) immediately upon her arrival at Port Authority. C.C. is equally capable of charm and brutality in managing his prostitutes, while Larry Brown controls his stable – Darlene, Loretta (Sepideh Moafi) and Barbara (Kayla Foster) – largely through intimidation.
Chris Alston (Lawrence Gilliard, Jr.) is a cop on the midtown beat who questions his superiors’ methods, if not the entire premise of trying to police the sex trade amid a culture of unrelenting demand for sex and institutional corruption within the New York Police Department. When told to stop policing a particular swath of his precinct, just west of Times Square, Alston starts a quiet inquiry that brings him together with Sandra Washington (Natalie Paul), an aspiring reporter who is probing the sex industry.
Meanwhile, bartender Paul (Chris Coy), inherited by Vincent Martino as he takes over a Mob-backed midtown bar, traverses the early years of the increasingly open post-Stonewall culture of gay New York, all with an eye to running a nightspot of his own. All these storylines merge as some of the streetwalkers, excited by the prospect and promise of stardom, find new work amid the rapid acceleration in pornographic production in New York.
Michelle MacLaren (“Breaking Bad,” HBO’s “Game of Thrones”), an executive producer on the pilot, directs the first and last episodes of the season. Star and executive producer James Franco also directs two episodes.
“James directed two well-crafted episodes while simultaneously playing twin brothers – no small feat,” says executive producer Nina K. Noble. “He took the concept of cloning one’s self to a whole new level.”
Longtime Simon, Pelecanos and Noble collaborators Ernest Dickerson, Uta Briesewitz, Alex Hall and Roxann Dawson also direct episodes of THE DEUCE.
Episodes include:
Episode #1: “Pilot”
Debut date: SUNDAY, SEPT. 10 (9:00-10:25 p.m. ET/PT)
Twin brothers Vincent (James Franco) and Frankie Martino (James Franco) – one a double-shifting bartender with two kids and a wayward wife in Brooklyn, the second an insouciant gambler with piling mob debts – navigate their way through the rough-and-tumble world of 1971 Times Square.
While Vincent plots ways to improve his situation and pay off his brother’s debt, he crosses paths with other midtown denizens – including veteran hookers Candy (Maggie Gyllenhaal) and Ashley (Jamie Neumann), young streetwalkers Darlene (Dominique Fishback) and Lori (Emily Meade), and smooth-talking pimps C.C. (Gary Carr), Larry (Gbenga Akinnagbe) and Rodney (Cliff Smith/Method Man) – as they ply their trades under the not-so-watchful eye of the NYPD. Meanwhile, when NYU student Abby (Margarita Levieva) is enlisted by friends to buy amphetamines on the street, she ends up in the Times Square precinct, an unlikely starting point for making a bold change to her privileged life.
Written by George Pelecanos & David Simon; directed by Michelle MacLaren.
Episode #2: “Show and Prove”
Debut date: SUNDAY, SEPT. 17 (9:00-10:00 p.m.)
With his marriage failing, Vincent (James Franco) moves into a seedy Times Square hotel and, fueled by his success drawing customers to a struggling Korean bar, contemplates a tempting offer from mob capo Rudy Pipilo (Michael Rispoli). Meanwhile, Vincent and Frankie’s (James Franco) brother-in law, Bobby (Chris Bauer), a Brooklyn construction foreman, eyes Vincent’s new connections as a way to better his own lot.
Reluctantly agreeing to pinch-hit for a friend in a pornographic short, Candy (Maggie Gyllenhaal) ends up being intrigued by the filmmaking process. C.C. (Gary Carr) shows Lori (Emily Meade) the advantages of having a pimp, while Larry (Gbenga Akinnagbe) is unsettled by Darlene’s (Dominique Fishback) interest in literature – and by Sandra Washington (Natalie Paul), a reporter. Police officers Chris Alston (Lawrence Gilliard, Jr.) and Danny Flanagan (Don Harvey) are joined by detectives Grossman (Brian Muller) and Haddix (Ralph Macchio) for a routine hooker round-up, as well as a raid of an adult porn shop whose peep shows cross the line.
Written by Richard Price & George Pelecanos; directed by Ernest Dickerson.
Episode #3: “The Principle Is All”
Debut date: SUNDAY, SEPT. 24 (9:00-10:00 p.m.)
Putting the finishing touches on his new bar, Vincent (James Franco) is blindsided by the sudden appearance of an unexpected partner, causing Frankie (James Franco) to blow a gasket. Rudy (Michael Rispoli) buys into a rival’s plan to reconfigure The Deuce, hopefully with the support of an ambitious mayor. Candy (Maggie Gyllenhaal) eyes an entrée into the filmmaking business; Abby (Margarita Levieva) languishes in her new job; Darlene (Dominique Fishback) works overtime to compensate Larry (Gbenga Akinnagbe); C.C. (Gary Carr) tasks Lori (Emily Meade) to play the “long game”; Bobby (Chris Bauer) pays a price for his recent stress at work. Big Mike (Mustafa Shakir), a menacing drifter, proves useful to Vincent as the Hi-Hat finally opens.
Written by David Simon & Richard Price; directed by James Franco.
Episode #4: “I See Money”
Debut date: SUNDAY, OCT. 1 (9:00-10:00 p.m.)
Story by George Pelecanos and Lisa Lutz; teleplay by Lisa Lutz; directed by Alex Hall.
Episode #5: “What Kind of Bad?”
Debut date: SUNDAY, OCT. 8 (9:00-10:00 p.m.)
Story by Richard Price; teleplay by Will Ralston & Chris Yakaitis; directed by Uta Briesewitz.
Episode #6: “Why Me?”
Debut date: SUNDAY, OCT. 15 (9:00-10:00 p.m.)
Story by Richard Price and Marc Henry Johnson; teleplay by Marc Henry Johnson; directed by Roxann Dawson.
Episode #7: “Au Reservoir”
Debut date: SUNDAY, OCT. 22 (9:00-10:00 p.m.)
Story by David Simon and Megan Abbott; teleplay by Megan Abbott; directed by James Franco.
Episode #8: “My Name Is Ruby”
Debut date: SUNDAY, OCT. 29 (9:00-10:10 p.m.)
Written by David Simon & George Pelecanos; directed by Michelle MacLaren.
The series will also be available on HBO NOW, HBO GO, HBO On Demand and affiliate portals.
THE DEUCE was created by David Simon and George Pelecanos; executive producers, David Simon, George Pelecanos, Nina K. Noble, James Franco; co-executive producer, Richard Price; producers, Marc Henry Johnson, Maggie Gyllenhaal.
THE DEUCE chronicles that moment in time when sex went from being a back-alley, brown-paper-bag commodity to a billion-dollar universal in American life, a moment when ground zero for the earliest pioneers in the flesh trade was the midtown heart of the nation’s largest city, New York’s Times Square.
Titled after the local slang for New York’s fabled 42nd Street and starring James Franco and Maggie Gyllenhaal, THE DEUCE begins its eight-episode season SUNDAY, SEPT. 10 (9:00-10:20 p.m. ET/PT), followed by other episodes subsequent Sundays at the same time. The show was created by George Pelecanos and David Simon; George Pelecanos, David Simon, Nina K. Noble and James Franco executive produce.
THE DEUCE follows the rise of the porn culture in New York from the early 1970s through the mid-1980s, exploring the rough-and-tumble world of the sex trade from the moment when both a liberalizing cultural revolution in American sexuality and new legal definitions of obscenity created a billion-dollar industry that is now an elemental component of the American cultural landscape. Beginning in 1971, the show follows a cast of barkeeps, prostitutes, pimps, police and nightlife denizens as they swirl through a world of sex, crime, high times and violence and the porn business begins its climb from Mafia-backed massage parlors and film labs to legitimacy and cultural permanence.
“For America, flesh as a legal commodity begins in New York City, but it travels everywhere into the national life,” says Simon. “The fact is, we don’t sell a luxury car, blue jeans or bottle of beer anymore without a certain amount of pornographic thought attached.”
While THE DEUCE is structured as a fictional narrative, it results from research by producer Marc Henry Johnson, who chronicled the rise and fall of the sex industry and The Deuce demimonde through the lives of a pair of real-life twins who eventually became Mob fronts for the Gambino family in midtown, rising to some prominence in their own right. Those tales – provided by a brother who passed away a few brief months before THE DEUCE began filming its pilot – form one essential strand in the narrative, augmented by additional research and subsequent interviews with other surviving participants who consulted on the scripts.
Says Pelecanos, “Times Square in the 1970s is now chiefly remembered as the ground zero of decadence and depravity, but what’s often left out of the picture is that, for many, it was a hotbed of experimentation, adventure and sexual liberation. The music, the outlandish outfits, the beautiful cars made in Detroit and particularly the decade’s time-capsule, shot-in-New York films [“Mean Streets,” “The French Connection,” “Black Caesar”] were a great inspiration for us when we were designing the look and feel of our debut season of THE DEUCE.”
In addition to their work on “The Wire,” creators David Simon and George Pelecanos also collaborated on HBO’s New Orleans drama “Treme.” Simon is an author, journalist and producer whose other works for HBO include “The Corner,” “Generation Kill” and “Show Me a Hero.” Pelecanos is the author of 20 critically acclaimed novels, including “The Double” and “The Turnaround,” as well as a screenwriter and film producer. He served as a writer and co-producer on HBO’s “The Pacific.”
Also writing for the series are three other acclaimed novelists, co-executive producer Richard Price, Megan Abbott and Lisa Lutz. An accomplished screenwriter as well, Price (“Lush Life,” “Clockers”) wrote and executive produced HBO’s “The Night Of” and previously worked with Simon and Pelecanos on “The Wire.” Abbott is the author of nine books, including “Dare Me,” “The Fever” and “You Will Know Me.” Lutz is the author of nine novels, including “The Passenger,” “How to Start a Fire,” the Spellman series of novels and “Heads You Lose,” co-authored with David Hayward.
Additional writing credits on the series include Will Ralston (“Treme”), Chris Yakaitis (“Treme”) and Marc Henry Johnson.
The cast includes: James Franco (Oscar® nominee for “127 Hours”) as identical twin brothers Vincent and Frankie Martino; Maggie Gyllenhaal (Oscar® nominee for “Crazy Heart”) as self-made prostitute Candy; Gary Carr (“Downton Abbey”) as pimp C.C.; Margarita Levieva (“The Blacklist”) as college student-turned-barmaid Abigail “Abby” Parker; Lawrence Gilliard, Jr. (HBO’s “The Wire”) as police officer Chris Alston; Dominique Fishback (HBO’s “Show Me a Hero”) as prostitute Darlene; Emily Meade (HBO’s “The Leftovers”) as 20-year-old prostitute Lori; Gbenga Akinnagbe (“The Good Wife”) as pimp Larry Brown; Chris Bauer (HBO’s “The Wire”) as Bobby Dwyer, a construction foreman and brother-in-law of the Martinos; Chris Coy (CINEMAX’s “Banshee”) as bartender Paul Hendrickson; Natalie Paul (HBO’s “Show Me a Hero”) as reporter Sandra Washington; and Michael Rispoli (HBO’s “The Sopranos”) as mafia captain Rudy Pipilo.
Vincent Martino (James Franco) is a successful and astute barman with a knack for promotion who finds himself – with increasing reluctance – in the center of the city sex trade after he attracts the interest of a well-connected mob player, Rudy Pipilo (Michael Rispoli). A Gambino captain, Rudy represents that New York family’s financial interests in the midtown sex business. After Abby Parker (Margarita Levieva) drops out of NYU, she and Vincent begin a relationship that ultimately challenges them both. Vince’s identical twin brother Frankie is Vincent’s freewheeling, free-spirited counterpart, who gets by on his brother’s support, but is increasingly drawn toward Pipilo’s business interests.
Candy (Maggie Gyllenhaal) works as an independent prostitute, refusing to work under any of the multitude of street pimps who control much of the trade along Eighth and Ninth Avenues. She has a son who lives with her parents in the suburbs, but her ambition and intelligence – as well as a weariness with street life – lead her to the emerging porn business, where she sees potential for herself and, perhaps, her fellow streetwalkers.
Darlene (Dominique Fishback), a young but street-smart woman from North Carolina, uses her savvy to manage her volatile pimp, Larry Brown (Gbenga Akinnagbe), while Lori (Emily Meade), a 20-year-old fresh off a Greyhound from Minnesota, is taken into the fold of dapper pimp C.C. (Gary Carr) immediately upon her arrival at Port Authority. C.C. is equally capable of charm and brutality in managing his prostitutes, while Larry Brown controls his stable – Darlene, Loretta (Sepideh Moafi) and Barbara (Kayla Foster) – largely through intimidation.
Chris Alston (Lawrence Gilliard, Jr.) is a cop on the midtown beat who questions his superiors’ methods, if not the entire premise of trying to police the sex trade amid a culture of unrelenting demand for sex and institutional corruption within the New York Police Department. When told to stop policing a particular swath of his precinct, just west of Times Square, Alston starts a quiet inquiry that brings him together with Sandra Washington (Natalie Paul), an aspiring reporter who is probing the sex industry.
Meanwhile, bartender Paul (Chris Coy), inherited by Vincent Martino as he takes over a Mob-backed midtown bar, traverses the early years of the increasingly open post-Stonewall culture of gay New York, all with an eye to running a nightspot of his own. All these storylines merge as some of the streetwalkers, excited by the prospect and promise of stardom, find new work amid the rapid acceleration in pornographic production in New York.
Michelle MacLaren (“Breaking Bad,” HBO’s “Game of Thrones”), an executive producer on the pilot, directs the first and last episodes of the season. Star and executive producer James Franco also directs two episodes.
“James directed two well-crafted episodes while simultaneously playing twin brothers – no small feat,” says executive producer Nina K. Noble. “He took the concept of cloning one’s self to a whole new level.”
Longtime Simon, Pelecanos and Noble collaborators Ernest Dickerson, Uta Briesewitz, Alex Hall and Roxann Dawson also direct episodes of THE DEUCE.
Episodes include:
Episode #1: “Pilot”
Debut date: SUNDAY, SEPT. 10 (9:00-10:25 p.m. ET/PT)
Twin brothers Vincent (James Franco) and Frankie Martino (James Franco) – one a double-shifting bartender with two kids and a wayward wife in Brooklyn, the second an insouciant gambler with piling mob debts – navigate their way through the rough-and-tumble world of 1971 Times Square.
While Vincent plots ways to improve his situation and pay off his brother’s debt, he crosses paths with other midtown denizens – including veteran hookers Candy (Maggie Gyllenhaal) and Ashley (Jamie Neumann), young streetwalkers Darlene (Dominique Fishback) and Lori (Emily Meade), and smooth-talking pimps C.C. (Gary Carr), Larry (Gbenga Akinnagbe) and Rodney (Cliff Smith/Method Man) – as they ply their trades under the not-so-watchful eye of the NYPD. Meanwhile, when NYU student Abby (Margarita Levieva) is enlisted by friends to buy amphetamines on the street, she ends up in the Times Square precinct, an unlikely starting point for making a bold change to her privileged life.
Written by George Pelecanos & David Simon; directed by Michelle MacLaren.
Episode #2: “Show and Prove”
Debut date: SUNDAY, SEPT. 17 (9:00-10:00 p.m.)
With his marriage failing, Vincent (James Franco) moves into a seedy Times Square hotel and, fueled by his success drawing customers to a struggling Korean bar, contemplates a tempting offer from mob capo Rudy Pipilo (Michael Rispoli). Meanwhile, Vincent and Frankie’s (James Franco) brother-in law, Bobby (Chris Bauer), a Brooklyn construction foreman, eyes Vincent’s new connections as a way to better his own lot.
Reluctantly agreeing to pinch-hit for a friend in a pornographic short, Candy (Maggie Gyllenhaal) ends up being intrigued by the filmmaking process. C.C. (Gary Carr) shows Lori (Emily Meade) the advantages of having a pimp, while Larry (Gbenga Akinnagbe) is unsettled by Darlene’s (Dominique Fishback) interest in literature – and by Sandra Washington (Natalie Paul), a reporter. Police officers Chris Alston (Lawrence Gilliard, Jr.) and Danny Flanagan (Don Harvey) are joined by detectives Grossman (Brian Muller) and Haddix (Ralph Macchio) for a routine hooker round-up, as well as a raid of an adult porn shop whose peep shows cross the line.
Written by Richard Price & George Pelecanos; directed by Ernest Dickerson.
Episode #3: “The Principle Is All”
Debut date: SUNDAY, SEPT. 24 (9:00-10:00 p.m.)
Putting the finishing touches on his new bar, Vincent (James Franco) is blindsided by the sudden appearance of an unexpected partner, causing Frankie (James Franco) to blow a gasket. Rudy (Michael Rispoli) buys into a rival’s plan to reconfigure The Deuce, hopefully with the support of an ambitious mayor. Candy (Maggie Gyllenhaal) eyes an entrée into the filmmaking business; Abby (Margarita Levieva) languishes in her new job; Darlene (Dominique Fishback) works overtime to compensate Larry (Gbenga Akinnagbe); C.C. (Gary Carr) tasks Lori (Emily Meade) to play the “long game”; Bobby (Chris Bauer) pays a price for his recent stress at work. Big Mike (Mustafa Shakir), a menacing drifter, proves useful to Vincent as the Hi-Hat finally opens.
Written by David Simon & Richard Price; directed by James Franco.
Episode #4: “I See Money”
Debut date: SUNDAY, OCT. 1 (9:00-10:00 p.m.)
Story by George Pelecanos and Lisa Lutz; teleplay by Lisa Lutz; directed by Alex Hall.
Episode #5: “What Kind of Bad?”
Debut date: SUNDAY, OCT. 8 (9:00-10:00 p.m.)
Story by Richard Price; teleplay by Will Ralston & Chris Yakaitis; directed by Uta Briesewitz.
Episode #6: “Why Me?”
Debut date: SUNDAY, OCT. 15 (9:00-10:00 p.m.)
Story by Richard Price and Marc Henry Johnson; teleplay by Marc Henry Johnson; directed by Roxann Dawson.
Episode #7: “Au Reservoir”
Debut date: SUNDAY, OCT. 22 (9:00-10:00 p.m.)
Story by David Simon and Megan Abbott; teleplay by Megan Abbott; directed by James Franco.
Episode #8: “My Name Is Ruby”
Debut date: SUNDAY, OCT. 29 (9:00-10:10 p.m.)
Written by David Simon & George Pelecanos; directed by Michelle MacLaren.
The series will also be available on HBO NOW, HBO GO, HBO On Demand and affiliate portals.
THE DEUCE was created by David Simon and George Pelecanos; executive producers, David Simon, George Pelecanos, Nina K. Noble, James Franco; co-executive producer, Richard Price; producers, Marc Henry Johnson, Maggie Gyllenhaal.
Source:
New 1 Minute Promo
Teaser Promo, Premiere Date & New Promotional Photos
HBO has confirmed the debut date for the drama series THE DEUCE, which will begin its eight-episode season SUNDAY, SEPT. 10 (9:00–10:00 p.m. ET/PT).
Created by George Pelecanos and David Simon and starring James Franco and Maggie Gyllenhaal, THE DEUCE follows the story of the legalization and subsequent rise of the porn industry in New York’s Times Square from the early 1970s through the mid-1980s, exploring the rough-and-tumble world at the pioneering moments of what would become the billion-dollar American sex industry. George Pelecanos, David Simon, James Franco and Nina K. Noble executive produce.
Created by George Pelecanos and David Simon and starring James Franco and Maggie Gyllenhaal, THE DEUCE follows the story of the legalization and subsequent rise of the porn industry in New York’s Times Square from the early 1970s through the mid-1980s, exploring the rough-and-tumble world at the pioneering moments of what would become the billion-dollar American sex industry. George Pelecanos, David Simon, James Franco and Nina K. Noble executive produce.
Source:
First Look Photos
Thanks to Who Shot J.R.? for the heads up.
On a Brooklyn soundstage made to look like your uncle’s favorite dive bar, James Franco is slinging Schlitz as Vincent, a hard-scrabble bartender in ’70s New York City. Across from him sits Will Seefried, a New York University grad student. He’s standing in as Frankie, Vincent’s ne’er-do-well twin and Franco’s other role on HBO’s The Deuce.
Debuting this summer, the new series from David Simon and George Pelecanos (The Wire, Treme) examines life in Times Square before M&M’s World and those over-aggressive Elmos invaded, when porn was a burgeoning business—and an attractive one to people like Franco’s mustachioed alter egos.
Debuting this summer, the new series from David Simon and George Pelecanos (The Wire, Treme) examines life in Times Square before M&M’s World and those over-aggressive Elmos invaded, when porn was a burgeoning business—and an attractive one to people like Franco’s mustachioed alter egos.
Source:
Streaming Options