Actor Morris Chestnut is ready for his close-up in the new CBS medical drama 'Watson,' which puts a modern twist on the Sherlock Holmes mythology.
Famed antagonist Moriarty has a part to play in the show, with Chestnut describing him as having the ability to "be places and touch people close to Watson when he is not necessarily in front of them.
Morris Chestnut stars as Dr. John Watson in CBS's new show "Watson," a medical detective series where Watson tackles mysteries on his own after Sherlock Holmes' death.
Actor Morris Chestnut is ready for his close-up in the new CBS medical drama 'Watson,' which puts a modern twist on the Sherlock Holmes mythology.
Morris Chesnut is on a press tour for his new TV show 'Watson' and we are loving it. Each appearance reminds us why he's still so fine.
Dreyfus explores little white lies in a marriage in the movie “You Hurt My Feelings,” making its streaming debut this week on Netflix. The animated charmer, “The Wild Robot,” begins streaming on Peacock and “Watson,
Grimes, during a singing performance at Star Trek Las Vegas, announced "The Orville" would enter pre-production for Season 4 in "early 2025." While no official confirmation has surfaced since to support his claims,
Section 31,” a new movie streaming Friday on Paramount+, is pretty much the “Star Trek” version of “Suicide Squad” as a group of rogues team up to save the galaxy. Initially intended as a series, “Section 31” is set during the early seasons of “Star Trek: Discovery,
Morris Chestnut poses in the IMDb Exclusive Portrait Studio at The Critics Choice Association 7th Annual Celebration of Black Cinema & Television at Fairmont Century Plaza on Dece
Morris Chestnut, who plays John Watson on CBS's newest medical drama, exclusively told Us Weekly who had his vote to play Sherlock Holmes
The narrative arc of The Resident had the character of Dr. Barrett Cain leaving Chastain Park Memorial Hospital to assume a new and comparatively high-paying job at John Hopkins. In real life, Morris Chestnut's exit from the show was necessitated by the end of his contract.
There is no point to CBS’s utterly stale procedural “Watson.” It thinks it’s clever but isn’t. The writing is in shambles. The original score possesses all the depth and nuance of a toddler’s tiny electronic keyboard going boop-boop-boop.