Tyler Perry Sets Meagan Good, Taylor Polidore & Five Others To Star In Prime Video Pic ‘Divorce In The Black

Just a day after announcing Black, White, & Blue as his first film under a four-picture deal with Amazon inked back in November, Tyler Perry has named Divorce in the Black as his second. Starring in the pic, which Perry will direct and produce from his script, are Meagan Good (Harlem), Taylor Polidore (Snowfall), Cory Hardrict (All American: Homecoming), Joseph Lee Anderson (Young Rock), Shannon Wallace (City on a Hill), Richard Lawson (For Colored Girls) and Debbi Morgan (Power Book II: Ghost).

The film follows Ava, a young bank professional who is devastated when her husband Dallas abandons a marriage she is determined to fight for. But then fate intervenes, revealing Dallas’ wicked deeds that have trashed their marriage, and once upon a time sabotaged Ava’s destiny to be loved by her true soulmate. 

‘Dynasty’ & ‘The Dressmaker’ Star James Mackay Signs With Elevate Entertainment

In a competitive situation, Australian actor James Mackay has signed with Elevate Entertainment.

Mackay made his feature film debut in Guillermo del Toro’s Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark (2010) starring alongside Katie Holmes and Guy Pearce. On the television side, Mackay starred as Steven Carrington in the CW series Dynasty, now streaming on Netflix.

Vinnie Jones Fronts Farming Show for Discovery+

Ex footballer and Hollywood ‘hardman’ Vinnie Jones is to front a new series for discovery+; Vinnie Jones: The Wild Life (w/t).

The series will see Vinnie and his farming family “build, bond and banter as they look to the future of the estate, establishing new conservation methods and the reintroduction of species and building habitats to attract new wildlife.”

Freevee’s ‘Clean Slate’ Adds D.K. Uzoukwu As Series Regular

D.K. Uzoukwu, Telma Hopkins, Jay Wilkison and Norah Murphy have joined the cast of Amazon Freevee’s Clean Slate as series regulars. They join previously announced stars Laverne Cox and George Wallace.

Uzoukwu will play Louis, a closeted gay choir director at the local church who the older female congregants insist on trying to fix up. He’s a close childhood friend of Desiree, and the only person who gives her a genuinely heartfelt welcome home.

REASON RESCUE PUPPY ALWAYS 'FULL OF PAINT' MELTS HEARTS ONLINE

Sara Carstens, a content creator and performer with a multi-million user following, has long been an advocate for the betterment of animals. A recent sign for Elevate, Sara is already making waves and is set to star in ongoing social media productions for Visions Captured and SDI. She has recently been cast as the lead of the feature film “To The End”, an upcoming film from Take Care Productions being directed by Kevin Cooper (“Second Hand Lions”).

REACHER SEASON 2: EVERYTHING WE KNOW SO FAR

Deadline then revealed more cast members, including Serinda Swan (Marvel’s Inhumans), Ferdinand Kingsley (The Sandman), and Rory Cochrane (CSI: Miami). Swan will play special investigator Karla Dixon, Kingsley will play undercover mercenary A.M., and Cochrane will play private defense contractor security head Shane Langston.

1923'S SEBASTIAN ROCHÉ DOESN'T TAKE THE CRUELTY OF HIS CHARACTER LIGHTLY

"1923" stars Harrison Ford and Helen Mirren as Jacob and Cara Dutton, the former of whom serves as the Montana Commissioner of Agriculture. Villains and dreamers alike populate the world of "1923," and one such villain is Father Renaud, played by Sebastian Roché. Renaud operates the brutal residential school that is a site of mental torment and physical abuse for Native American girls


‘MAYOR OF KINGSTOWN’ CO-CREATOR HUGH DILLON ON FIGHTER JEREMY RENNER AND AN “UNCOMPROMISING” SEASON 2

Mayor of Kingstown co-creator Hugh Dillon first pitched the Paramount+ series to his fellow co-creator Taylor Sheridan when the latter was his acting coach in 2008. Dillon starred on CBS’ Flashpoint for five seasons, and Sheridan coached him throughout all 75 episodes. The duo became fast friends in the process, prompting Dillon to bring up the idea for Kingstown, based on his own experiences in Canada’s “penitentiary city” of Kingston.