Girls


Girls Information

Girls is an American television series that premiered on HBO on April 15, 2012. Created by and starring Lena Dunham, Girls is a comedy-drama following a close group of twenty-somethings living in New York City. The show's premise and major aspects of the main character were inspired by some of 26-year-old Dunham's real-life experiences. On January 25, 2013, HBO renewed the series for a third season, which will consist of 12 episodes.

Series synopsis

Aspiring writer Hannah gets a shock when her parents visit from East Lansing, Michigan and announce they will no longer financially support her as they have done since her graduation from Oberlin College two years prior. Left to her own devices in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, she and her friends navigate their twenties, "one mistake at a time." Allison Williams, Jemima Kirke, Zosia Mamet, Adam Driver and Alex Karpovsky co-star as Hannah's circle of friends.

Production

Lena Dunham's 2010 second feature, Tiny Furniture"?which she wrote, directed and starred in"?received positive reviews at festivals as well as awards attention, including Best Narrative Feature at South by Southwest and Best First Screenplay at the 2010 Independent Spirit Awards. The independent film's success earned her the opportunity to collaborate with Judd Apatow for an HBO pilot. Apatow said he was drawn to Dunham's imagination and added that Girls would provide men with an insight into "realistic females".

Some of the struggles facing Dunham's character Hannah"?including being cut off financially from her parents, becoming a writer and making bad decisions"?are inspired by Dunham's real-life experiences. The show's unique and eclectic look is achieved by shopping at a number of vintage boutiques in New York, including Brooklyn Flea and Geminola owned by the mother of Jemima Kirke.

Dunham said Girls reflects a part of the population not portrayed in the 1998 HBO series Sex and the City. "Gossip Girl was teens duking it out on the Upper East Side and Sex and the City was women who figured out work and friends and now want to nail family life. There was this whole in between space that hadn't really been addressed," she said. The pilot intentionally references Sex and the City as producers wanted to make it clear that the driving force behind Girls is that the characters were inspired by the former HBO series and moved to New York to pursue their dreams. Dunham herself says she "revere[s] that show just as much as any girl of my generation."

As executive producer, Dunham and Jennifer Konner are both showrunners of the series while Dunham is also the head writer. Apatow is also executive producer, under his Apatow Productions label. Dunham wrote or co-wrote all ten episodes of the first season and directed five, including the pilot. Season one was filmed between April and August 2011 and consisted of 10 episodes.

Season Two premiered on Sunday, January 13, 2013 at 9PM on HBO and also consists of 10 episodes.

Cast

Main

  • Lena Dunham as Hannah Horvath: an aspiring writer in her mid-twenties living in Greenpoint, Brooklyn whose parents cut her off financially. She unintentionally quits her unpaid internship after her request to be paid is denied. After a failed attempt at working in a clerical job at a law office, she takes a job at the coffee shop Ray manages.
  • Allison Williams as Marnie Michaels: Hannah's best friend and, at the start of season 1, roommate. Along with Jessa, Charlie and Elijah, Marnie was a classmate of Hannah's at Oberlin College. She is a responsible and serious art gallery assistant. During a majority of the first season, Marnie struggles with whether or not to end her relationship with her college boyfriend Charlie. After he breaks up with her, she vows to get him back, but her intentions are not clear. When they do reconcile and have make-up sex, she then tells him that she wants to break up. Marnie then discovers that Charlie already has another girlfriend only two weeks after they broke up, which makes her feel depressed and unsure of herself. After having an emotional fight with Hannah, she moves out of their apartment to temporarily stay with Jessa and Shoshanna. In the episode "Weirdos Need Girlfriends Too", Marnie reveals that she lost her virginity to her first boyfriend at fourteen, and has subsequently been a serial dater ever since. In the second season premiere, she gets laid off after her art gallery downsizes, and has to take a hostess job in order to support herself.
  • Jemima Kirke as Jessa Johansson: Bohemian and an unpredictable world-traveler, she is newly back to New York City where she becomes roommates with her cousin Shoshanna in Nolita. In the pilot, Jessa reveals that she is pregnant. She plans on having an abortion, but ends up getting her period the day of her appointment. She takes a job as a babysitter for two young girls, but is fired when the father develops feelings for her.
  • Zosia Mamet as Shoshanna Shapiro: Jessa's bubbly and innocent American cousin, 21 years old, who's a student at New York University. Shoshanna is an avid fan of the Sex & the City franchise, and keeps a poster from the first movie in her apartment. Her "biggest baggage" is that she is a virgin. She does however lose her virginity to Ray in the season one finale. They have since begun dating.
  • Adam Driver as Adam Sackler: Hannah's aloof lover, part-time carpenter, and actor. Adam is usually seen in his apartment where he and Hannah have sex, but their relationship deepens over the course of the first season. Like Hannah, Adam is very defensive when it comes to his personal feelings. In the season one finale, he offers to move in to Hannah's apartment but then breaks up with her after he says he loves her, and she doesn't respond.
  • Alex Karpovsky as Ray Ploshansky (Season 2, recurring previously): Charlie's friend. He manages a coffee shop, where he later gives Hannah a job. Ray is very protective of Charlie, and initially refuses to help Marnie get back together with him. He helps take care of Shoshanna after she accidentally smokes crack at a rave, and develops feelings for her. After Jessa's wedding, Shoshanna loses her virginity with Ray at the end of the first season finale. By the beginning of the second season, Ray and Shoshanna have begun dating, but Ray feels insecure in the relationship. Particularly for their vast age difference (Ray is twelve years older than Shoshanna), and that he is actually homeless when he's not staying at Shoshanna's place.

Recurring

  • Christopher Abbott as Charlie Dattolo: Marnie's ex-boyfriend, with whom she became increasingly bored. In the episode "Hard Being Easy", Marnie attempts to find Charlie in order for him to take her back, but has difficulty since she has never been to his apartment. It's revealed via flashback that he and Marnie first met at a college party when Marnie had a bad reaction to marijuana brownies. He breaks up with Marnie after discovering that she views him as needy and desperate through entries in Hannah's journal. After briefly getting back together, Marnie is then the one to end their relationship. In "Welcome to Bushwick a.k.a. The Crackcident", Charlie already has a new girlfriend named Audrey. He and Marnie run into each other at Jessa's surprise wedding, and seem to be on friendlier terms. He and Ray occasionally do gigs as a two-person band called Questionable Goods (whose first appearance is in the episode, "Hannah's Diary").
  • Andrew Rannells as Elijah Krantz: Hannah's ex-boyfriend from college who reveals to her that he is gay. He also apparently made out with Marnie once while they were in college and slept with her in the season 2 premiere. He becomes Hannah's new roommate at the end of the first season finale but gets kicked out when Hannah finds out about Elijah and Marnie's sexual encounter.
  • Richard Masur as Rich Glatter: Hannah's boss at the law firm, who makes unwanted sexual advances toward her and her female co-workers.
  • Becky Ann Baker and Peter Scolari as Loreen and Tad Horvath: Hannah's parents, professors who live in East Lansing, MI. They cut her off in the pilot episode so that way she can be more focused on her writing. She later visits them for their 30th anniversary, but does not share her recent financial problems to them.
  • Kathryn Hahn and James LeGros as Katherine and Jeff Lavoyt: The parents of two young girls that Jessa babysat. Katherine is a documentary filmmaker, and Jeff is unemployed. Jeff develops a romantic interest in Jessa, which she eventually stops. She is fired, but is later visited by Katherine who offers her job back. Despite deciding not to see each other again, they have a heart-to-heart over Jeff and Jessa's inability to grow up.
  • Chris O'Dowd as Thomas-John, an affluent venture capitalist. After an earlier unpleasant encounter with Jessa and Marnie, he ends up marrying Jessa in a surprise ceremony at the end of the first season. They break up after an unpleasant dinner with Thomas's parents.
  • Donald Glover as Sandy: Hannah's Republican ex-boyfriend whom she started dating after Adam. Elijah has a dislike for Sandy due to his conservative political beliefs, a subject that eventually ends his relationship with Hannah.
  • Jorma Taccone as Booth Jonathan: The conceptual artist that Marnie meets at her art gallery job. When Booth and Marnie first meet, he promises her that they will eventually have sex and says "I might scare you a little. Because I am a man, and I know how to do things." Marnie runs into Booth in Season 2 at her new job as a hostess; he takes her back to his studio/apartment to show her his artwork and the two have sex. The things he knew how to do did not, in fact, include providing pleasure.
Many of Dunham's co-stars are daughters of famous names in the entertainment and media industry. Jemima Kirke, a high school friend of Dunham who also appeared in Tiny Furniture, is the daughter of Bad Company drummer Simon Kirke. Zosia Mamet is the daughter of playwright David Mamet and actress Lindsay Crouse, granddaughter of playwright Russel Crouse and great-granddaughter of writer and educator John Erskine. Allison Williams is the daughter of NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams.

Episodes

See List of Girls episodes for more information

Reception

Critics lauded the show for its raw nature, humor, and refreshing tone. According to Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the first season of the series holds an average score of 87 based on 28 reviews, indicating "Universal acclaim". The website also lists the show as the highest-rated fictional debut series of 2012. The second season of the series holds an average of 84 based on 19 reviews, indicating ´´Universal acclaim´´.

James Poniewozik from Time reserved high praise for the series, calling it "raw, audacious, nuanced and richly, often excruciatingly funny." Tim Goodman of The Hollywood Reporter called Girls "one of the most original, spot-on, no-missed-steps series in recent memory." Reviewing the first three episodes at the 2012 SXSW Festival, he said the series conveys "real female friendships, the angst of emerging adulthood, nuanced relationships, sexuality, self-esteem, body image, intimacy in a tech-savvy world that promotes distance, the bloodlust of surviving New York on very little money and the modern parenting of entitled children, among many other things"?all laced together with humor and poignancy."

Despite many positive reviews, several critics criticized the characters themselves. Gawker's John Cook strongly criticised Girls, saying it was "a television program about the children of wealthy famous people and shitty music and Facebook and how hard it is to know who you are and Thought Catalog and sexually transmitted diseases and the exhaustion of ceaselessly dramatizing your own life while posing as someone who understands the fundamental emptiness and narcissism of that very self-dramatization." Renee Martin of Womanist-Musings.com described the show as being: "About a privileged group of vapid women whining about being forced to be even remotely responsible for themselves."

Following the season finale The Huffington Post TV critic Maureen Ryan positively reviewed the show, applauding Dunham's more realistic portrayal of women and their relationships than mainstream media tends to present. "Let's face it; The assumptions that media (and advertising) executives make about what and who consumers of different genders relate to and want to see are incredibly condescending...Relating to people who aren't exactly like us isn't a new thing. But to know that the healthy Girls audience is sticking with this kind of character"?a woman who behaves in unlikable ways at times"?is incredibly heartening. It upends a lot of conventional thinking that the television industry takes as a given."

The New York Times also applauded the series and said: "Girls may be the millennial generation's rebuttal to Sex and the City, but the first season was at times as cruelly insightful and bleakly funny as Louie on FX or Curb Your Enthusiasm on HBO."

Accolades

Year Award Category Nominee(s) Result Notes
2012 2nd Critics' Choice Television Award Best Comedy Series Girls
Best Actress in a Comedy Series Lena Dunham
28th Television Critics Association Awards Outstanding New Program Girls
Individual Achievement in Comedy Lena Dunham
64th Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Comedy Series Girls
Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series Lena Dunham Episode: "She Did"
Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series Lena Dunham Episode: "She Did"
Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series Lena Dunham Episode: "Pilot"
Outstanding Casting for a Comedy Series Jennifer Euston
Satellite Awards Television Series, Comedy or Musical Girls
Actress in a Series, Comedy or Musical Lena Dunham
65th Annual Writers Guild Of America Awards Comedy Series Series writer's
New Series Series writer's
Women's Image Network Awards Outstanding Film / Show Written by A Woman Lena Dunham
Outstanding Film / Show Directed by A Woman Lena Dunham
2013 70th Golden Globe Awards Best Television Series - Comedy or Musical Girls
Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series - Comedy or Musical Lena Dunham
65th Annual Directors Guild Of America Awards Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Comedy Series Lena Dunham Episode: "Pilot"
Art Directors Guild Awards Episode of a Half Hour Single-Camera Television Series Judy Becker Episode: "Pilot"

Controversy

The premiere of the pilot was also met with criticism regarding the all-white main cast in the otherwise culturally diverse setting of New York City (the only black actors in the pilot were a homeless man and a taxi driver, and the only Asian actress had the sole trait of being good at Photoshop). Lesley Arfin, a writer for the show, responded to the controversy with the comment: "What really bothered me most about Precious was that there was no representation of ME," Arfin tweeted; she later went back and deleted it following the uproar. Lena Dunham has given interviews where she talks about the diversity question with the series, stating that with HBO's renewal of the series for a second season, "these issues will be addressed." Donald Glover guest starred as Sandy, a black Republican and Hannah's love interest, in the first two episodes of season two.

Broadcast

Girls premiered on April 15, 2012, on HBO in the United States. The first three episodes were screened at the 2012 SXSW Festival on March 12.

Although the series attracted modest ratings for the network, HBO renewed the series for a second season of ten episodes on April 30, 2012.

International broadcasting

Country Television network Premiere Source(s)
Arab World OSN First September 7, 2012
Showcase May 2012
Prime July 18, 2012
HBO Brasil July 23, 2012
HBO Canada April 15, 2012
Super "?cran in (French) August 19, 2012
HBO Nordic December 15, 2012
DR3 January 31, 2013
Orange ciné max September 18, 2012
HBO Nordic December 15, 2012
Yle TV2 February 8, 2013
Glitz* October 2012
Stöð 2 June 2012
Yes Oh May 2012
MTV Italia October 10, 2012
SoHo May 2012
C More May 19, 2012
NRK January 22, 2013
HBO Poland July 30, 2012
TVSéries August 26, 2012
Dizimax Comedy November 1, 2012
C More June 2012
C More May 19, 2012
SVT2 February 16, 2013
Sky Atlantic October 22, 2012



This webpage uses material from the Wikipedia article "Girls_%28TV_series%29" and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. Reality TV World is not responsible for any errors or omissions the Wikipedia article may contain.
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