Lena Dunham's 'Too Much' is actually just enough
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When it premiered on HBO in 2012, Lena Dunham’s Girls - about the trials and tribulations of a squad of 20-something privileged, often self-involved friends in New York City - was the talk of the town,
I was experiencing those voices in 2012,” Dunham said of the far-right’s rise. “In the way that there were so many angry, seemingly men and some women, dissecting the show in these incredibly conservative terms.
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Could Lena Dunham bring “Girls” into the 2020s? The series creator and recent “Too Much” showrunner told Variety that she is still open to the possibility of revisiting the beloved HBO show. "Girls" concluded in 2017 after six seasons,
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Too Much, which stars Megan Stalter and Will Sharpe, follows New York workaholic Jessica, who moves to London planning on being alone following a breakup, only to meet Felix, who causes her to reconsider finding love again. The show debuts on Netflix on July 10.
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Writer and actress Lena Dunham has revealed that she received “incredibly conservative” backlash for her hit HBO series Girls.
Head’s up: Lena Dunham’s new rom-com series, Too Much, has finally landed on Netflix—and just like HBO’s Girls, the show has been described as semi-autobiographical. Which, of course, begs the question: How much of Too Much is based on a true story?
Into this fray enters Lena Dunham, the oft-controversial writer/director/actor whose HBO series “ Girls ” was a conversation-driving cultural force throughout its run from 2012-2017. Her last TV show was 2018’s “Camping,
When Lena Dunham reached precocious fame with her series Girls (she wrote and sold the show to HBO aged just 23), she was primed to become the next big thing for a generation of millennials. And yet nothing she’s created or starred in since the show ended in 2017 — including the 2022 comedies Catherine Called Birdy and Sharp Stick and a small role in Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon A Time .