Q: Will there be another season of “The Last Thing He Told Me” on Apple TV+? The first season ended abruptly.
A: Yes. The thriller’s first season, starring Jennifer Garner, was based on the novel of the same name by Laura Dave. Deadline.com says the second season will be based on Dave’s sequel novel, which is due out next year — before the new TV season airs.
Out for ‘Revenge’
Q: In the ‘90s or 2000s there was a show on Sunday evenings about a girl whose father was taken away from her at an early age. I think it had something to do with him being accused of murdering someone. Years later she returned to her original home on the East Coast, possibly the Hamptons or some other well-to-do area. The title was possibly one word. Can you provide any help?
A: It appears that you are remembering “Revenge,” a drama starring Emily Van Camp and Madeleine Stowe, which originally aired on ABC for four seasons from 2011-15. You can find it streaming on Hulu and Disney+. There also have been DVD releases. (Shop carefully because there are other productions also called “Revenge,” such as a 1990 movie starring Kevin Costner.)
‘Sopranos’ still singing
Q: In reading various articles about the recent documentary on “The Sopranos,” I’m wondering if the series will ever be run again. I missed it when it was on originally and would love to see it, even after all these years.
A: You can find “The Sopranos” in several places. HBO on demand has the complete series as well as “Wise Guy: David Chase and The Sopranos,” the documentary you read about. Max has the entire series, the documentary and “The Many Saints of Newark,” a prequel movie. There also have been DVD and Blu-ray releases of the complete series, and Prime Video has it.
A loaded ‘Gunn’
Q: Any suggestions as to the availability of the old “Peter Gunn” series?
A: The 1958-61 detective drama starring Craig Stevens was one of the coolest shows of its day. (One grand example: the episode “Streetcar Jones.”) Created by Blake Edwards, it had the debonair Stevens, stylish visuals and Henry Mancini’s music. TV music historian Jon Burlingame says Mancini’s jazz-based work “altered the direction of television scoring practically overnight.” A recent Burlingame book is “Dreamsville: Mancini, Peter Gunn and Music for TV Noir.”