Lipstick Jungle casting news es muy caliente

Ponce/Perez duoWhen Lipstick Jungle comes back for the new season on Wednesday, September 24, we already know that Wendy’s life will be impacted by the appearance of her challenging, iconic mother Joyce, played by television great Mary Tyler Moore.

Now comes news via E! Online that things will be getting more complicated for the Lipstick Jungle with the addition of two more name stars; Latino talents Carlos Ponce and Rosie Perez are both booked for guest roles.

Carlos, best known to American TV fans from 7th Heaven, is a singer-hotty heartthrob. He’ll be getting into Victory’s storyline, playing Rodrigo, a contractor who turns her head. They’re saying that Rodrigo is the complete opposite of Victory’s Mr. Big-style lover, Joe Bennett, so you can see why Victory may be attracted to him.

After all, Victory has bucked under the all-encompassing love Joe’s offered her, feeling a need to assert her independence. Perhaps Rodrigo is just the kind of rebellion to make Joe realize not to take her for granted? By the way, NBC may be hoping to pull in the telenovela crowd with this casting: Ponce was a major player in Dame Chocolate on Telemundo (also an NBCUni product).

Still no word from CBS on whether Rosie will be called back to duty for the Geena Davis cop drama pilot in which Perez co-starred.

Exclusive: Rosie Perez and Carlos Ponce Swing Into Lipstick Jungle

Rosie Perez, Carlos Ponce

Hey, Andrew McCarthy, don’t look now, but a totally hot Latin guy is headed for your girl.

Inside sources reveal that Rosie Perez and Puerto Rican singing sensation Carlos Ponce are coming to NBC’s Lipstick Jungle for multiepisode arcs in the new season, which premieres Sept. 24.

I just got off the bat phone with Lipstick show runner Oliver Goldstick who confirmed the news and revealed inside details on their roles…

Lindsay Price, Lipstick Jungle

Carlos will play Rodrigo, a contractor and potential love interest for Lindsay Price’s character, Victory Ford (side note: an insider connected to Mario Lopez tells me he was up for the same role), while Rosie is playing Dalia, Lindsay’s passionate new publicist. She’s “fiery and fiesty and the hottest publicist on the planet right now,” explains Oliver.

Salma Hayek

Oliver reveals that Rosie’s role was inspired by Salma Hayek, whom he worked with on Ugly Betty. “To Salma, nothing’s unreachable and no one’s untouchable,” Oliver explains.” That’s what I love about her, that can-do approach to everything, and I thought that was a great character to introduce to the show.”

Oliver also first met Rosie on Ugly Betty when she auditioned to play Hilda’s boss (a role which never came to fruition).

Andrew McCarthy in Lipstick Jungle

So does Victory’s hot new lover mean McCarthy is on his way out? Definitely not, says Oliver. “He is still very much apart of Victory’s life via the business. Andrew is still a regular on the show, and Rodrigo is basically the opposite of Joe Bennett in every way.”

What’s that I smell? Oh yes, a very spicy love triangle! Yum. 

What do you think of this casting? Post in the comments below.

Andrew McCarthy: In the Limelight

andrew mccarthyWhile the casting for the ladies to play the power brokers on NBC’s Lipstick Jungle was imperative, no less attention was paid for the men with whom those women would be romantically entwined. For the character of Joe Bennett, the enigmatic, high-powered, complicated Prince Charming with a dark side, producers had to be looking for just the right combination of sexual appeal and sensitive undercurrent. They found the right guy when Andrew McCarthy was cast. The former Brat Packer could be the find of the TV season; the new McDreamy.

Being the hot commodity is nothing new for Andrew McCarthy. He was just 19 when he made his feature film debut in Class as Rob Lowe’s (Brothers and Sisters) prep school roomie who had a fling with Rob’s mom, Jacqueline Bisset. That was 1983; and just a couple of years later, McCarthy and Lowe were part of St. Elmo’s Fire, the quintessential Brat Pack movie. The Brat Pack was a group of attractive, young Hollywood stars seen as taking the industry by storm. McCarthy was a key component in other Brat Pack pics, like Pretty in Pink with Molly Ringwald, Jon Cryer (Two and a Half Men) and James Spader (Boston Legal), and Less than Zero, again with Spader. But it may have been the goofy comedy Weekend at Bernie’s that brought him new fans, as did Mannequin with Kim Cattrall (pre-Sex & the City) and Spader once again. Both Bernie and Mannequin showed that McCarthy could be cute — and funny, too. Ironically, the films were bigger hits on video than in the theaters, and today are sort of cult classics.

Doing films and theater work occupied much of Andrew McCarthy’s career in the 1990’s, with an occasional foray into television. In 1991, he appeared and wrote an episode of Tales from the Crypt for HBO, and in 1996, he was directed by Sally Field (Brothers and Sisters) in an ABC holiday telefilm called The Christmas Tree. On the personal side, in 1999, he married his high school sweetheart, Carol Schneider, 20 years after they first dated.

McCarthy scored critically on Broadway in the Tony-winning play Side Man, and while in New York he did a Law and Order, then a Law and Order: SVU. But in 2003, something went awry and Andrew was fired from a gig on Law and Order: Criminal Intent. Producer Dick Wolf said McCarthy was responsible for a tiff with actor Vincent D’onofrio. McCarthy shot back, saying, “I was fired because I refused to allow a fellow actor to threaten me with physical violence, bully me and try to direct me.” Whatever the bad blood at the time, it’s now all in the past. Just last week, McCarthy starred in an episode of L&O: CI as an over-ambitious A.D.A.

TV has enjoyed more and more of Andrew McCarthy since 2000, although he was recently featured in Neil Labute’s off-Broadway play, Fat Pig with Jeremy Piven (Entourage), to critical acclaim. He starred in the CBS’s military drama E-Ring; guested as a killer on Monk; and had a memorable turn as Dr. Hook in the TV series based on Stephen King’s Kingdom Hospital in 2004. In 2007, the actor signed for Lipstick Jungle after doing the big screen children’s film, The Spiderwick Chronicles.

Being an admirer of Sex & the City and Candace Bushnell, the creator of Lipstick Jungle, is what led him to take on the Joe Bennett character. He told reporter Troy Rogers, “I was a big fan of Candace’s sort of world and her voice. And I thought it was a really interesting show that treated women with a real regard, that I don’t see on television too much.”

As for the imperious Mr. Bennett, McCarthy said of his new character: “I think he’s just direct and follows his own sort of agendas without being encumbered by anything that society would put on him, because that’s what money does. It buys us freedom from having those constraints. But I guess we’ll just have to see where it unfolds, you know. I think that’s the thing about television until you - certain relationships and certain dynamics start to work, and so then they’re written for. And other ones work less well so they sort of phase out. And it’s just sort of a movable feast, always.”