NY-LON
2004 British TV series or programme
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NY-LON is a 2004 British drama series that aired on Channel 4 in the United Kingdom. The series was created and written by Simon Burke and Anya Camilleri, and starred Rashida Jones and Stephen Moyer. NY-LON was also broadcast on BBC America in the United States.
Anya Camilleri
Anya Camilleri
Keith Boak
Anya Camilleri
| NY-LON | |
|---|---|
| Genre | Drama |
| Created by | Simon Burke Anya Camilleri |
| Written by | Simon Burke Anya Camilleri |
| Directed by | Otto Bathurst Keith Boak Anya Camilleri |
| Starring | Rashida Jones Stephen Moyer |
| Opening theme | "Oh Katrina" performed by Tender Trap |
| Ending theme | "Tuesday's Girl" performed by Akayzia Parker |
| Composer | Hal Lindes |
| Country of origin | United Kingdom |
| Original language | English |
| No. of seasons | 1 |
| No. of episodes | 7 |
| Production | |
| Executive producer | Rob Pursey |
| Producer | Peter Norris |
| Running time | 50 mins. |
| Production companies | Touchpaper Television Pandemonium Films |
| Original release | |
| Network | Channel 4 |
| Release | 24 August – 5 October 2004 |
Synopsis
The series chronicles the transatlantic romance between Edie Miller (Rashida Jones), who is from New York City and Michael Antonioni (Stephen Moyer), who is from London. NY-LON is the first British drama filmed in both London and New York City[citation needed]. The scenes in New York City were filmed in the neighborhoods of the Lower East Side and East Village.
Characters
- Edie Miller (Rashida Jones)
- Michael Antonioni (Stephen Moyer)
- Katherine Williams Osgood (Christine Adams)
- Astrid (Rachel Miner)
- Luke (David Rogers)
- Lauren Antonioni (Emily Corrie)
- Raph (Navin Chowdhry)
Episodes
- "Something about Chemicals"
- "Something about Baggage"
- "Something about Commitment"
- "Something about Honesty"
- "Something about Family"
- "Something about Friends"
- "Something about Love"
American adaptation
In March 2008, CBS announced plans to remake the series for American audiences, with Elisha Cuthbert taking a starring role,[1] but CBS did not move forward with producing a series.