Saturday, November 26, 2011

Jennifer Saunders' Embarrassment At New York Prizegiving


British actress Jennifer Saunders was left red-faced when she wore an outrageous outfit to an awards ceremony in New York because the bash turned out to be "one of the most serious events" she has ever attended.

Saunders and her pal Joanna Lumley were handed the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Pride Award for their TV show Absolutely Fabulous, and the pair donned flamboyant costumes for the 2002 prizegiving.

They were surprised when the event took a sombre turn, and Saunders admits she has "never been so embarrassed".

She tells U.K. talk show host Graham Norton, "We got made honorary New Yorkers. It was a ceremony at the Senate in New York, during Gay Pride week... so we went and I thought this will be a good old night.

"I said to Joanna... 'Let's go dressed up.' So I got a white hat with the stars and stripes around it, a great white suit...

"So we went dressed up looking like clown versions of ourselves to, honestly, one of the most serious events I've ever been to. Lots of songs for people who had died, there was tears and slow piano playing.

"Whoopi Goldberg introduced us with such a lovely citation... I've honestly never been so embarrassed in my life. I had a stetson with a stars and stripes (flag) coming out of it!"

The pair later attended another party in the city and felt much more comfortable with their outfits. Saunders adds, "We then went on to a gay club where they'd done a lookalike contest and suddenly I was with my people."

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Elijah Wood on Returning as 'Frodo' in The Hobbit and Whether The Lord of the Rings Will Go 3-DPosted 11.26.11


Elijah Wood on Returning as 'Frodo' in The Hobbit and Whether The Lord of the Rings Will Go 3-DPosted 11.26.11 by BrentJS
Co-writer and director Peter Jackson will be in New Zealand filming the two-part prequel to The Lord of the Rings (LOTR) trilogy, The Hobbit, for quite some time, but Elijah Wood's time there is already at an end. The 30-year-old actor spent a month filming "a little cameo" in The Hobbit as Frodo Baggins, his character from LOTR, who is believed to appear in book-end scenes either reading the story of The Hobbit from the fictional "Red Book of Westmarch" or having it read to him. Now in the U.K. and stumping for his new movie, Happy Feet Two, Wood spoke candidly with DenOfGeek about what it was like to put on Frodo's furry feet once again and whether or not we might see LOTR on the big screen in eye-popping 3-D at some point.

Wood admitted that he shot "very little" as Frodo, "mainly because Frodo’s not alive at the time of The Hobbit," and that he needed a little refresher on how to speak as a Hobbit after a decade away from the character.
Before we started, I watched Fellowship [of the Ring] again, just to remember the way that he spoke. Outside of that it was revisiting something I'd spent the better part of four years playing, and it was just a joy. ... The weirdest thing was being on set, looking down at my feet and it just feeling oddly normal, like, 'Here we are, doing another scene at Bag End, 10 years later.'
Wood said that there are still deleted scenes from LOTR that could turn up in future DVD releases, and that there are hours of "f*ck-ups and jokes" that would make great fodder for a "blooper reel." As for whether we will ever see LOTR on the big screen in 3-D, Wood said that he would like to see that happen and that there has been some talk of it happening.
I think it would be cool to see. There's talk of releasing a dimensionalised trilogy eventually. I'm okay with doing post-process 3D, as long as someone takes the time. What I'm upset about is when a movie doesn’t have the budget and the time to devote to it and they're not fine-tuning the detail of that, because it can look really bad and cheap. But I know that they wouldn't dimensionalise it unless it was a super meticulous process.
I mean, Titanic's coming out in 3D now, and Star Wars: Episode I [The Phantom Menace], which means we have to wait three movies to get to the f*cking good sh*t, it's unbelievable, I'm like, 'We have to wait three years for that? You're doing Episode I first? [frustrated squeal], what a bummer!'
The Hobbit screenplays were written by Jackson, Guillermo del Toro, Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens and are based on the works of J.R.R. Tolkien. The movies will chronicle the adventures of Hobbit Bilbo Baggins (Martin Freeman) as he leaves the comfort of his home in the Shire to "burgle" from the dragon Smaug (Benedict Cumberbatch) for a company of dwarves. Joining Wood in reprising their roles from LOTR in The Hobbit are Sir Ian McKellen as Gandalf, Hugo Weaving as Elrond, Cate Blanchett as Galadriel, Orlando Bloom as Legolas, Sir Christopher Lee as Saruman and Andy Serkis as Gollum (motion-capture). The first movie, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, debuts in late 2012, with The Hobbit: There and Back Again following in 2013.

The British are royalty in world entertainment

By Dot Ramos Balasbas-Gancayco (The Philippine Star) Updated November 27, 2011 12:00

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The Beatles has influenced world culture and global music| Zoom
MANILA, Philippines - I just got back from a jaunt across several European countries that climaxed in the United Kingdom, where my artistic appetite was whetted double-time but sated, too. On a hop-on, hop-off tour bus (that I took twice!), I craned my neck as far as it could (wishing I had one as long as a giraffe’s) to ogle at the houses where the Beatles lived and the music school where Sir Elton John studied (yup, they were included in the bus tour itinerary!). While (window) shopping at Harrods, I secretly hoped that I would run into Madonna and Gwyneth Paltrow, who both decided to leave the US and reside in London, to ask them how their British lovers compare with past American sweethearts. If by chance I met Victoria Beckham, I was ready with my application form to be a nanny for her husband David Beckham, err, I mean her kids, for free (ha, ha, ha!).

Indeed, the world would be much duller without the artists and entertainers of the United Kingdom. In all aspects of life, Great Britain has real flesh-and-blood celebrities who sparkle, especially in the entertainment firmament. Even the Philippines is not spared from their luster. Foreign British magazines like OK and Hello! have local editions. Through the media, we are exposed to the lives of the Queen and members of her family, and other popular English entertainment personalities.
Rowan Atkinson as Mr. Bean is loved by people of all ages
Below are a sampling of enduring British celebrities who have become part of the consciousness of Filipinos.
The music group that has influenced world culture is the Beatles. (At a recent fund-raising concert for the Philippine Science High School by my daughter’s batch, I was astounded by 13- to 17-year-olds singing with their parents to Beatles songs performed with gusto by the Bloomfields Band). On the subject of groups, we have the Bee Gees, referred to as “Britain’s first family of harmony,” and the Spice Girls that holds the best-selling album by a female music group in history. In the ’80s, we were all enthralled by the androgynous Boy George, and the seemingly macho vocalist of the pop duo Wham! who later admitted to being gay, George Michael. The bespectacled Sir Elton John is considered the world’s most famous pianist. Although controversial as well, made more so with partner David Furnish, he is a great fund-raiser. He was one of the few invited to Prince William’s wedding last April. Chris Martin, lead singer of Coldplay, an alternative rock band that became mainstream and conquered the music scene, won over America’s hot Oscar-winning actress Gwyneth Paltrow. Of course, Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber has influenced musical theater with Jesus Christ Superstar, Cats and other works, some of which were turned into films.

British gem Keira Knightle
In the field of motion pictures, I should not fail to mention Robert Pattinson of the Twilight series. Pattinson, first seen in the big screen as Cedric Digory in Harry Potter And The Goblet Of Fire, has reinforced the seductive charisma of a vampire, someone to desire and love, and not to fear. Water for Elephants, where Robert played the role of a young man falling deeply in love with the much older circus performer in the person of Reese Witherspoon, was an unexpected box-office hit, obviously because of his crowd-drawing capacity. Daniel Craig is said to be the better Bond. We are awaiting the latest, much-guarded, 007 movie in which he stars.

Filmdom’s royalty come to mind with Sir Laurence Olivier, Dame Helen Mirren, Sir Anthony Hopkins, Dame Judi Dench, Sir Michael Caine and Sir David Attenborough. Whichever the genre, these ladies and gentlemen of the Queen put gravitas to a movie. A comedian for all seasons, Rowan Atkinson, the Mr. Bean, is loved by people of all ages. A very private person, even his age is not known. We have the Oscar winners with Colin Firth and Daniel Day-Lewis. Then, there are the other British gems that include Vivien Leigh, Julie Andrews, Sean Connery, Vanessa Redgrave, Peter O’Toole, Jessica Tandy, Angela Lansbury, Ben Kingsley, Peter Sellers, Ralph Fiennes, Liam Neeson, Hugh Grant, Clive Owen and Keira Knightley. Kate Winslet of the Titanic fame, now a mature movie star in such classics as Revolutionary Road, has become a much better actress. And of course, we have the younger set with Daniel Radcliffe and Emma Watson of the Harry Potter films who even dare to play challenging theater roles.

Although these British celebrities may be deemed royalty in the world of entertainment, Filipinos are not far behind in terms of talent. We have shown to the world what we can offer through the likes of Lea Salonga, Freddie Aguilar, Charice, Arnel Pineda and Jed Madela. Taking a leaf from the hop-on, hop-off tour buses of London, would it not be great to include in Philippine tour itineraries Olongapo City where both Freddie Aguilar and Arnel Pineda started their musical careers and mention the name of Charice to lure tourists to Pampanga? Why not invite tourist night owls to the music bar of Arnel along Timog Avenue with Arnel himself entertaining guests? Surely, there are many imaginative ways to hitch the Philippine tourism industry to the star of our great Filipino artists to make even bolder and bigger our country’s imprint in the world entertainment scene.

PhilStar.com

(E-mail me at celebrationsdot@yahoo.com or text 09275000833).

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Martin Clunes: Doc Martin - wonderful show on PBS



It is with some trepidation one approaches this interview with Martin Clunes. He is about to turn 50 on Monday, and let's just say that based upon what we know of his TV alter ego, Doc Martin, and how little it takes to set him off on a frightening tirade, we fear that the man might be in a most ornery mood.

Such is the power of the tube. And such is the power of the performance Clunes brings to the character that one has trouble separating the two.

"I'm just fine about (turning 50)," says a laughing Clunes, over the phone from London. "It's just an-other day."

The man turns out to be rather mellow. And Doc Martin, as cantankerous a character as there is on TV, turns out to be just another role. But a role that has won Clunes the British Comedy Award for Best TV Comedy Actor.

Those who have caught Clunes in past series like Men Behaving Badly and Reggie Perrin already know about his versatility.

They probably wouldn't even recognize him now. In Doc Martin, he sports tight, ill-fitting suits and a constant frown. His hair is also closely cropped, accounting for that nasty - albeit anal - Roman emperor look. In Men Behaving Badly, Clunes lets his hair and his guard down. Apart from some loutish bar-room behaviour, he is mostly amiable. Also much younger, since the latter series was done about 15 years ago.

Clunes, however, is amazed with the fan-base Doc Martin has, particularly in North America.

"It's quite curious having an over-seas following," he says. "It's so different from here. In England, it's on (mainstream TV - ITV), so people really have no choice. We just don't have that many channels.

"But it always seems like such a surprise when another country sort of chimes in wholeheartedly, in a kind of epicurean way. Especially the way it has been picked up in Canada and the U.S. in almost cultish fashion. You're not going to be a cult in England when you're on mainstream TV."

The show's popularity in North America is a little surprising in that it really runs counter to the norm for TV series featuring physicians. On this side of the pond, we've been force-fed a slew of milquetoast medical men, from the avuncular Marcus Welby to the benign Dr. Kildare. Doc Martin even makes the abusive and truculent House look warm and fuzzy.

"Doc Martin really is just so wrong, isn't he?" an amused Clunes notes.

Quite. In Season 5 - which just debuted on VisionTV - Clunes's character, Dr. Martin Elleringham, plans to leave the English coastal village of Portwenn to take up practice in London. This in spite of the fact that his estranged partner, Louisa, has given birth to their son.

The doc seems devoid of a heart. He also has the sort of quirks one wouldn't expect of a physician, such as having an aversion to blood.

"It's really such a liberating role. It's nice to be rough with the elderly, violent with children and generally rude to everyone," he says, possibly tongue-in-cheek. "But audiences seem to like it, wondering what kind of outrageous thing he will say or do next.
He could have also added that the doc is less than kind to dogs, as well. The point is that he has few re-deeming qualities. Clunes doesn't disagree, "apart from the fact that he is a brilliant diagnostician and doctor.

"I must admit, though, that it's fun having the baby to be wrong with this season," he adds. "I must also point out that no babies were hurt in the making of the program this season."
And animals? "A little bit," he jests.

And what's with that coif of his? A few years ago, Clunes was quoted as saying he wanted a break from the series because he wanted to grow his locks back. "The hair is as wrong as a giant car. It is just so wrong on my head. Like every-thing else on the show, it's all about wrongness."

Clunes denies that the inspiration for his part is Ebenezer Scrooge or any other screen villain. "It's really quite simple. What I do is just the opposite of right. But the hard part is getting him written. It's never simple when you have a main protagonist who doesn't like anybody, and nobody else likes him. No one has yet been able to draft a complete Doc Martin script in one shot. They've al-ways required five or six drafts to get it right with a character who never says he's sorry."

Yes, but it's precisely that kind of British wrongness that North American TV execs have been cot-toning to of late, in the hopes of re-making their shows on this side of the ocean.

"There had sort of been a rumbling of that for Doc Martin for a while a few years ago. But we now sell it to so many territories that North American producers might wonder who they would sell their version to."

Not that this would be a deterrent. Then again, the Americans did at-tempt a remake of Men Behaving Badly, and let's just say the show performed badly.

"I only saw one episode, but it really didn't take off," Clunes says.

No surprise, really. That series was lacking the acting touch of Clunes and his fellow thespians, who had a better knack for playing likable boors and throwing caution to the wind.

Although Clunes plays a doctor on television, you would be wrong to stop him on the street and consult him for medical advice. In fact, he's not particularly fascinated by or interested in the field.
"Honestly, as I get older, I find it really hard to remember words like 'polymyalgia rheumatica.' Some of these medical terms I can't even get out of my mouth. Some have to be written on the walls behind the characters with the diseases."

Clunes acknowledges that there will "probably" be a Season 6 for Doc Martin, but that is likely to be the final one.

When not doing Doc Martin these days, Clunes hosts and narrates nature shows on subjects he - unlike his medical TV persona - absolutely adores: dogs and horses and even manta rays.
"At heart, I'm really a bunny-hugger," confesses Clunes, who is married to Doc Martin producer Philippa Braithwaite. "On our farm, we have three dogs, two cats, 14 horses, a flock of sheep, five head of cattle and many chickens."

Pastoral bliss, perhaps, for Clunes, but utter hell for Doc Martin.

Season 5 of Doc Martin airs Wednesdays at 9 p.m. on VisionTV.

bbrownstein@montrealgazette.com

twitter.com/billbrownstein


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UK media inquiry becomes hottest show in town as JK Rowling, Hugh Grant take tabloids to task

By Associated Press, Published: November 25


LONDON — It was a bad week to be a tabloid journalist in Britain.
For four days, the famous, the infamous, the bereaved and the wronged sat in a London courtroom and told how snooping, smears and snatched photographs had made their lives a misery. They portrayed the press as cynical and brutal in its treatment of individuals, capitalizing on their tragedies with little decency or compassion.
 
High-profile celebrities testified in UK courts about how they say they were hounded by paparazzi after their phones were hacked. (Nov. 25)
High-profile celebrities testified in UK courts about how they say they were hounded by paparazzi after their phones were hacked. (Nov. 25)

A-list witnesses including J.K. Rowling, Hugh Grant, and Sienna Miller turned Britain’s media ethics inquiry into the most compelling drama in town. But critics say it’s a misleading and one-sided show.
“It has not been a pretty sight,” said Bob Satchwell of media group the Society of Editors. “But there are 1,300 newspapers, national and regional, in Britain, and most journalists don’t behave in the way that’s being portrayed.”

The behavior of Britain’s scandalmongering, scoop-hungry and millions-selling tabloids was summed up by “Harry Potter” creator Rowling as “cavalier.” The best-selling author said newspapers took the attitude that “You’re famous, you’re asking for it.”

Rowling recounted how journalists slipped a note into her 5-year-old daughter’s school bag, took pictures of her children in their swimsuits and staked out her home until she felt “like a hostage.”
Grant said that since “Four Weddings and a Funeral” made him a star, details of his hospital visits had been leaked, his garbage rifled, his ex girlfriend and infant daughter harassed.

Miller, the star of “Alfie” and “Layer Cake,” described being pursued down the street at midnight by 10 large men.

“And the fact that they had cameras in their hands meant that that was legal,” said the 29-year-old actress. “But if you take away the cameras, what have you got? You’ve got a pack of men chasing a woman.”

Witnesses’ detailed descriptions of aggressive press intrusion, broadcast live on British television, have focused public attention on murky tabloid practices.

Media lawyer David Allen Green wrote in a blog for the New Statesman magazine that the inquiry was already helping freedom of expression.

“The merit of the Leveson inquiry — regardless of its formal findings in its reports — is that it is giving a platform to those whose voices are deliberately smothered by the tabloid press,” he wrote.
Not all the witnesses were famous. Some suffered because of proximity to fame. Mary Ellen Field, who worked for Elle Macpherson, recounted how the supermodel blamed her when personal stories started appearing in the press, and forced Field to go to a rehab facility in the U.S. for her — nonexistent — alcoholism.

Macpherson later learned her phone had been hacked — newspapers were getting information by illegal eavesdropping, not because of any indiscretion on Field’s part. Field had already been fired.
The parents of missing and murdered children told of much worse ordeals, of unbearable intrusion at times of grief.

Kate McCann, whose daughter Madeleine vanished during a family holiday in Portugal in 2007, said she felt “totally violated” when extracts from her private diary appeared in the News of the World tabloid in 2008.

Washington Post

Game of Thrones Starts Shooting in Iceland

 
The filming of scenes for the American television series Game of Thrones will begin in southeast Iceland today. A crew of 140 people is set to work on the shooting for two weeks.

vatnajokull_ps
Vatnajökull, Europe's largest glacier. Photo by Páll Stefánsson.

The filming is set to start by Svínafellsjökull, a sub-glacier of Vatnajökull, then move on to Vatnajökull itself and also take place on the heath Höfðabrekkuheiði, ruv.is reports.

Managing director of Icelandic production company Pegasus Snorri Þórisson said he is bound by a confidentiality agreement and cannot reveal who will take part in the shooting but confirmed that “a number of famous actors” will be in Iceland.

The series are produced by HBO and are based on eponymous adventure stories. The leads are played by Lena Headey and Jack Gleeson, and Sean Bean and Charles Dance also appear.

Snorri said that the material filmed in Iceland will be used for many shows in the upcoming season.
Click here to read more about Game of Thrones in Iceland and here to read other recent film news.

Iceland Review Online

PLAYBILL'S BRIEF ENCOUNTER With Seminar and "Harry Potter" Star Alan Rickman

By Harry Haun
26 Nov 2011
Alan Rickman
Alan Rickman
Photo by Joseph Marzullo/WENN
Alan Rickman, currently dipping his tongue in acid Broadway's Seminar, talks about his stage and film career, including "Sweeney Todd" and his "Harry Potter" pictures.
*
Leonard, the literary lion conducting private writing classes in Theresa Rebeck's new Seminar, is a man without a country — primarily because she never ascribed him one — but the role is played with a lofty imperialism only an English actor could muster by Alan Rickman, replete with a full arsenal of Rebeck zingers.
The actor whose Broadway appearances are rare and the character who has no specific nationality should not have connected, but — ah! — there's a backstory. Under the radar is a longstanding friendship going on between actor and author. "I've known him a while," says Rebeck. "He's a deeply generous human being. I could go on and on about what a great person he is. He has been very kind to me over the years. He reads my plays and talks to me about them or writes me really very cryptic and beautiful emails that are provoking your thoughts about things. We had been in discussion about this play in a very mysterious way. And I did ask him, at one point when he was here, 'Would you just read it to me?' I thought it would truly be a wonderful thing to hear him do it. And I was right."

A second reading, for backers, put the play on the fast track to Broadway, with Rickman leading the charge. Director Sam Gold hired a first-class class of wannabe novelists (Lily Rabe, Hamish Linklater, Hettienne Park and Jerry O'Connell) to hear his words of wisdom and derision. It's now playing the Golden Theatre.
Welcome back to Broadway. It has been almost a decade.

Alan Rickman: I guess it has. But I was in New York last winter at BAM, performing there with Lindsay Duncan in John Gabriel Borkman, and I was directing at BAM the spring before that.
That was Strindberg's Creditors. Did you enjoy doing that?

AR: I loved doing that. It was very special, to watch it move from the Donmar to, really, one of the most thrilling theatre spaces in the world — at BAM [at the Harvey Theatre in Brooklyn]. It was a joy for the actors [Owen Teale, Tom Burke and Anna Chancellor]. And it was a pleasure to say to Lindsay Duncan [for Borkman], "Yeah, but wait until we get to BAM." She'd never walked out on a stage like that before.

New Yorkers could get the impression that you and Lindsay are the English Tracy and Hepburn. She co-starred with you both times you were on Broadway — in 1987's Les Liaisons Dangereuses and 2002's Tony Award-winning Private Lives — and the two of you got Tony-nominated both times so you obviously play beautifully together. Do you work with her a lot?

AR: Well, no. With her, it was a ten-year gap before we did Borkman, so I wouldn't call it a lot, but it was great to kinda close that gap. She's busily working away back in England, and I'm over here.
Rickman in John Gabriel Borkman.
photo by Ros Kavanagh
You don't seem to do a lot of contemporary roles.
AR: Well, I've played quite a lot of them on film, but, in terms of being on a big Broadway stage, it has only been twice: One was 18th century, and the other was the 1930s. But it's relaxing to just put on ordinary clothes.
One of those was a drama, the other a comedy. How would you characterize this play?
AR: Seminar is similar in a way. Give me any straight play — it should have a lot of laughs in it. I remember the laughs in Hamlet when I did that. There were plenty in that, and Les Liaisons Dangereuses is, of course, incredibly funny. That house was rocking with laughter, even though, as you say, it was ultimately a drama. We, of course, walk out into this play, not knowing it's funny. It's dead serious to us, but Theresa's writing is terribly witty. Fingers crossed. All I know is the play makes me laugh, but it's tough, too — tough and funny and sexy. Those are three great words.

Have there been people in your life who mentored you that you consider teachers? I'm thinking about Sir Nigel Hawthorne and Sir Ralph Richardson. You were their dressers, weren't you?

AR: I was, yeah, when I was in drama school. Well, I think anyone who's honest — and why wouldn't you be? — would say there are marker posts in your life which are absolutely to do with great teachers. I don't know how great a teacher Leonard is, but he's definitely passionate. I've had some absolutely crucial teachers at several points in my life.

This play is so word-led. Does that make you appreciate your character more, get you deeper into his psyche, because he is a man who loves words?

AR: I love words. I love language. I think one of the great things that theatre can do is celebrate language, and Theresa doesn't write a lazy line. You have to play right the way through a thought all the time, and some of them are very long — so it's not that kind of snap-happy [dialogue]. Although it's very crisp and very funny, you still gotta get hold of the whole thought all the time, and that means being really aware of the power of language.

The last time I saw you was at a Roundabout opening. I'd just come from a screening of "Sweeney Todd," where I'd left you gushing a torrent of blood as Judge Turpin. I told you I didn't know you had that much blood in you, and you said, "It's called acting."

AR: Well, it wasn't called acting — it was called fake blood, being pumped by three guys off screen. It was in tubes. That movie was a privilege to make, but I associate it with the scariest sentence I've ever heard in my life. We were in a room. There was a piano, a pianist, me — and the door opened, and Stephen Sondheim walked in and said, "O.K., let's hear it."

Your first musical?

AR: No, but the first one with such a kind of spotlight put on it, I suppose. I had to get some training. I had to work with a voice teacher. There were some notes in there that were not in my range so, thank God, a voice teacher was there to get me up there.

Did they have someone dub your voice sometimes, for certain notes? In the movie of Gypsy, Rosalind Russell got a lot of help from Lisa Kirk.

AR: No, no, I'm afraid that was all me in "Sweeney Todd."

It must be wonderful to go into a musical role like that and know "I can do that."

AR: Well, I didn't know. This career is an adventure as much as anything else. There's not anything planned about it — or it seems that way to me — so I had no expectation of suddenly being asked by Tim Burton. Whoever knew that Tim Burton was going to direct a film of Sweeney Todd?

You were in all eight of the "Harry Potter" films, and that's an epic arc you have to play as Prof. Severus Snape — from sinister to sensitive. Who'd have thunk it?

AR: Well, it's a great story, and I have a really complicated and interesting character. Of course, by the time I got to play the last scenes, I had spent ten years watching Daniel Radcliffe grow from 12 to 22. I only shot seven weeks a year, so every year I'd come back, and he had grown a bit, his voice had changed, and he was becoming more and more the young man and not a little boy. In many ways, No Acting Required. At the end, when I'm looking him in the eyes, I have that relationship to play out — in fiction and in reality.

Snape's a great double agent, although you don't get to see that side of him until late. That's as much as I can say, without spoiling anything for some little kid who reads this article and he's on Book Three. You don't want to spoil anything for anyone when they haven't got to the end yet.

I trust it's not giving anything away if I congratulate you on Snape winning the MTV News' "Harry Potter" World Cup as the greatest character in J.K. Rowling's series.

AR: It was a big cup — it was too big to be able to take home — but it was incredibly gratifying to have the young people's approval like that.
Rickman and Daniel Radcliffe in "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire."
2005 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. - Harry Potter Publishing Rights
Daniel is also your Oscar campaign manager. Did you know he's talking you up for a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for your work in the final installment?

AR: Oh, is he? That's very nice. I gotta pay him.

Have you seen him in How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying?

AR: I saw him in the first preview. Yeah, I was there cheering him on. He was brilliant.

I didn't know he could do all that musical comedy stuff.

AR: I think he can do almost anything. He's literally one of those people who, if he puts his mind to it, he'll do it. He put his mind to 'O.K., I have to dance' and became as good a dancer as anybody in the chorus. He was with them, completely. Fantastic!

I'm sure you've had more than three Broadway offers in your career.

AR: Yeah, but often you're not free. Having a commitment — even though it was seven weeks a year to "Harry Potter" — is a difficult thing to slide around, especially if you're doing other projects. I was doing Borkman in Dublin before it came to New York and directing the Creditors in England before it came here, so to commit to a potential six-month run in New York is quite hard. We were able to do it with Private Lives because I had just finished 'Harry Potter.' In fact, I was shooting a 'Harry Potter' while I was on stage in the West End with Private Lives. And then, when that finished, I knew I had six months off to come to New York to do it, but it's not easy to organize, that. Now I have finished with the 'Harry Potter' series, and here I am.

Are you doing mostly movies now or stage work in London these days?

AR: I have something to direct next year, I hope, which is a new film. I directed one before — "The Winter Guest" with Emma Thompson and her mother, Phyllida Law. And I just finished acting in a film called "Gambit," in London, with Colin Firth and Cameron Diaz. That, I think, comes out next summer. It's a remake [of a Shirley MacLaine-Michael Caine-Herbert Lom thriller of 1966], but the script is by the Coen Brothers so, as you can imagine, "remake" doesn't really describe it. They weren't directing it, so I never saw them on the set. Michael Hoffman directed it. He did the movie that was out recently with Christopher Plummer and Helen Mirren, "The Last Station." That was his. He did the movie of Midsummer Night's Dream with Kevin Kline. We had a really good time on it.

Do you like going from one medium to another?

AR: Yeah, it makes me feel really lucky. Again, it's an adventure…

View Playbill Video's preview of Seminar:


Playbill

Meet the new Superman, British actor Henry Cavill. Plus, Breaking Dawn premieres in Australia

Sir Ian McKellen Has Sad News for Hobbit Fans: “There’s No Sex in Middle Earth!”

Eric Spitznagel


If you’re the kind of person who gets obsessive about all things Tolkienian, it’s been a pretty big week. Sir Ian McKellen made it official Tuesday, announcing on his Web site that he’ll playing Gandalf in the upcoming two-part movie adaptation of The Hobbit, which begins filming in New Zealand next month. Along with recent reports that Elijah Wood, Orlando Bloom, Cate Blanchett,andthe guy who plays Gollum are also Hobbit-ready, it would seem that the band, as they say, is really getting back together. But for anybody who’s followed the Internet hand-wringing about the on-again-off-again production, it can feel presumptuous to assume anything until we actually see the opening credits roll. For most of 2010, McKellen kept us guessing about his involvement in the Lord of the Rings prequel the way some actors keep us guessing about their sexuality. As least with McKellen, there’s never been any mystery about the latter. This is a man who famously went on a talk show in Singapore, a country with strict laws against homosexuality, and asked the host, “Can you recommend any decent gay bars?” But when it comes to his future as Middle Earth’s favorite wizard, he’s been downright cagey.


Last September, McKellen caused a minor stir when photos of him at a London rally showed the actor wearing a T-shirt that read “I’m Gandalf and Magneto. Get over it!” Somebody eventually figured out that the picture had been Photoshopped, and McKellen was actually wearing a shirt that read, “Some people are gay. Get over it!” The fake T-shirt was vaguely funny, assuming it made any sense. (To be honest, I still don’t understand. Was the joke that McKellen has played multiple movie roles and that can be confusing? Or that he’s played two seemingly non-gay wizards while he is, in fact, gay?) But it would’ve been so much more poignant had somebody thought to Photoshop his shirt with the message “I may or may not be Gandalf again. Get over it!” With all due respect to the gay community, they don’t have to contend with nearly the same anxiety and helplessness as a Lord of the Rings blogger.


I met with McKellen at the Savannah Film Festival, where he was given a lifetime-achievement award. During his acceptance speech, he talked about how the Georgia governor nearly replaced Martin Luther King Day with “Ian McKellen Day,” and how he became the first openly gay man to legally serve in the American military (long story). Prior to the ceremony, I was invited to speak with him at the local college’s library. McKellen teased me about wearing shorts (complimenting my boyish calves, thank you very much) and proved that he has a healthy sense of humor about himself. Except, of course, when it comes to Photoshopped t-shirts that make fun of wizards and homophobia.


Eric Spitznagel: I’m not sure what I should call you. Is it Sir Ian or just Ian?


Ian McKellen: Just Ian, please.


So the bloom is off the rose with the whole knighthood thing?


Well, I don’t know about that. There are some tremendous actors in the U.K. who have been knighted, and I’ve spent much of my life admiring many of them, like Laurence Olivier. So it’s very flattering to be in their company. But you also end up in the company of people you don’t admire, including some rather dodgy politicians. I tend to discourage people from calling me “Sir Ian,” because I don’t like being separated out from the rest of the population. Of course, it can be useful if you’re writing an official letter, like trying to get a visa or something passed through Parliament. They’re impressed by these things.


I was under the impression that British theater actors, at least the good ones, are all drunks. And yet talking to you now, you seem completely sober. Are you the exception that makes the rule, or is it just too early in the day?


(With an expression of exaggerated umbrage.) Well, there are many famous drunk actors, the most famous of which is probably W.C. Fields. So I’ll thank you not to be so rude about the Brits.


Touché.


There are actors who feel the need to have a little drink before they go onstage, and they probably act worse as a result of it.


Even Peter O’Toole? Or Richard Burton?


I don’t know anybody who does that. If drinking was a requirement for someone to be an actor, and they couldn’t function on stage without a drink, then I would think they should perhaps change their jobs. I don’t see how you could be in control if you’re inebriated, do you?


I guess not. But I’ve heard such amazing stories. Oliver Reed throwing up on Steve McQueen, and Robert Newton stumbling on stage and saying “If you think I’m pissed, wait till you see the Duke of York.”


Perhaps you should ask Anthony Hopkins about this. I think he would have a very strong negative view on drunk actors.


Obviously you’re not a big drinker. Do you have any vices?


[Laughs.] None that I’m going to share with Vanity Fair.


Well, are you superstitious? Can you say the M word? The Scottish play that dare not speak its name.


Macbeth? Absolutely. All the time. Macbeth was a very lucky play for me.


You’re positive you haven’t just ruined this interview by mentioning it?


That’s nonsense. Do you know the origin of that myth?


I vaguely recall something about actors dying or getting hurt every time the play was produced. Isn’t it like the Spider-Man of Elizabethan theater?


Yes, well, that’s the story anyway. The most likely explanation is the most practical. Macbeth is a very popular play with audiences. If you want to sell out a theater, just mount a production of Macbeth. It’s a short play, it’s an exciting play, it’s easy to understand, and it attracts great acting. So in the old days, if you were in a touring company and you found out that you were doing Macbeth, it meant there was trouble. There probably wasn’t enough money in the kitty to pay the actors. So even mentioning Macbeth was considered bad luck.


Are you superstitious about anything?


I don’t think I am, no. As a kid, I was a bit cautious about not stepping on cracks in a sidewalk. But I think that was more of a challenge than a superstition. I have little routines in the theater. Once I’ve established something, like the order of putting on makeup and a costume, I have to invariably do it in the same order every time, even if I only did it by chance the first time round. That is a superstition of sorts, but it’s a practical one, because it means as you go through the same routine each day and don’t miss anything. If you suddenly decide to change your shoes and pants before putting on your makeup rather than after, for example, then you may forget to put on your underpants. Which does happen on occasion.


If I’m hearing you correctly, you’re telling me that you went commando during the entire Lord of the Rings trilogy.


I’m not familiar with that phrase.


Gandalf may not have been wearing his tightie-whities.


[Laughs.] No, I’m afraid you’re mistaken.


Are you impressed that I went this long without bringing up Gandalf?


No. It always happens, eventually.


Does that get annoying? You’ve done so many roles, both in movies and on stage. And yet people probably aren’t running up to you on the street and saying, “Holy shit, it’s Uncle Vanya!”


You’d be surprised. They do say that. But yes, I see what you mean. And it’s perfectly obvious why that is. If you’ve been in a film that’s seen by millions and millions and millions of people, you’re more likely to be recognized for that than for your theater performances, which were seen by considerably less people. Why would I get upset by that?


I don’t know. Why would Russell Crowe throw a phone at a hotel clerk? Why would Christian Bale have a meltdown on a movie set? Why would Mel Gibson call a traffic cop “sugar tits”? Actors have a reputation for being touchy.


Yes, O.K., I see. But it would be silly for me to take that personally. There are people who’ve enjoyed my work in the theater and they let me know that it was special for them. I’m not going to say, “Well, you should have seen me as Gandalf!” It doesn’t worry me at all. It’s not the same thing as being so identified with a part that you couldn’t go on to do anything else. I’m not in that position, thankfully. I’m not like James Tyrone in Long Day’s Journey who just did the one part over and over again and it turned him mad.


Does Gandalf know where all the gay bars are in Middle Earth?


[Thunderous laughter.] Of course not! Gandalf is 7,000 years old. There’s no sex in Middle Earth.


Are you sure? There’s some fan fiction on the Internet that would beg to differ.


Tolkien was the only authority on that world, and I don’t think he was very interested in sex, at least not with the evidence of Lord of the Rings. Other people can read into it what they like or what they can. But I don’t really see it. Although I have heard speculation that Sam and Frodo might be an item, but I don’t think Tolkien really saw it that way. I don’t think Peter Jackson does either.


Here’s a hypothetical epic battle: Albus Dumbledore versus Gandalf the White. Who wins?


[Long pause.] Well, the real wizard, of course.


And who would that be?


[Rolls eyes.] I cannot believe I have to answer these silly questions. The real wizard.


Your money’s on Gandalf?


Obviously.


I think you might lose that money. Other than using his staff as a flashlight, what exactly are his magical talents?


I can’t help you with that one. I should probably chat with Michael Gambon [who plays Dumbledore in the Harry Potter films] before saying anything derogatory about Dumbledore’s magical abilities. You know, he and I often get mistaken for each other. I saw Mike recently when he was doing a play in the West End and I asked if he gets mistaken for me. He said it happens all the time. But he never corrects them. He told me, “Oh, I just sign your name.”


Here’s another hypothetical battle. Gandalf versus the Pope. Who wins that one?


I can’t touch these questions, I’m sorry.


Really? I’m surprised you have cold feet about poking fun at the Pope. I heard you like to rip out the passage in the bible that condemns homosexuality as a sin.


I do, yes. It’s Leviticus 18:22 that I object to. And I only do it when I’m in a hotel room and there’s a Bible in the drawer next to the bed. I don’t want those nasty, homophobic sentences lying within 12 inches of my head. I’m the sort of person who doesn’t write in ink. I only write in pencil so it can be rubbed out. I never turn down the corner of a book. I respect books, but what I don’t respect is that particular little verse. It’s not the whole of the book.


You don’t have a problem with the rest of Leviticus?


I don’t mind there being injunctions against eating shellfish or the injunctions against wearing cotton and wool clothing. I only get offended when it suggests that men shouldn’t make love to each other.


What about a line like “Any person who curseth his father or mother must be killed.” That should probably go too, right?


Well, perhaps.


“People who have flat noses, or are blind or lame, cannot go to an altar of God.” That can’t be right. “The eating of fat is prohibited forever.” Obviously not in America.


There’s a lot in there that doesn’t make sense. But I can’t take on all the worries of the world, you know. I can only talk about being gay and being an actor. I’ll have to leave those other battles to somebody else.


Let’s talk about another controversy. Your T-shirt that never was. The one that was Photoshopped to read “I’m Gandalf and Magneto. Get over it.”


Yes, I was a little disappointed about that. Because the original T-shirt was much more interesting. “Some people are gay, get over it.” I was proud to wear that shirt at the anti-Papal march. If some people want to make a joke about it, that’s O.K. But there was a serious intent behind the real shirt.


What was the joke, exactly? I don’t get it. “I’m Gandalf and Magneto. Get over it.” What does that mean?


I don’t really know.


It’s like the caption of a New Yorker cartoon.


I don’t find it funny. It’s a very serious matter, my campaigning on behalf of young people. I don’t want to pretend that it’s something we can all laugh about and you don’t have to worry about being gay anymore. People have a very, very hard time of it. It’s not a joke to me.


Let’s move on to something that is funny. You’ve got a Lord of the Rings tattoo, right? Any regrets?


Oh no, not at all. It was a sweet idea. The hobbits had such a wonderful time on their first big job, and they wanted to commemorate it in some way. I happily joined in. I’m very proud of that little tattoo. I can’t see it very well. It’s very small and very discrete. I’m very happy to keep it.


What does it say again?


It says nine in Elvish.


Are you positive? Sometimes people don’t do their research before getting a tattoo.


Elijah Wood sorted it all out for us, so you’d have to ask him. It’s on my upper arm, so when I look at it in the mirror, it’s usually upside down and it actually spells Gucci. I don’t know if there’s any significance to that.


Would you ever get another tattoo?


Not a Lord of the Rings one, no.


But you’ve been in plenty of productions since. How about Waiting For Godot? Didn’t you do almost four hundred performances of that show?


Three hundred and sixty. We did a tour of Australia, New Zealand, and Africa.


That’s worth commemorating. How about a stage direction from the script, something like, “Let’s go. Yes, let’s go. [They do not move]?”


[Laughs.] No, no. My body isn’t a temple, but nor is it an advertising hoarding. I don’t think I shall be putting anything else on it.

Vanity Fair

Hugh Bonneville, the star of Downton Abbey, makes a rare public appearance with his wife, Lulu, at the first night of Matilda in the West End.


Hugh Bonneville has been married to Lulu since 1998. Photo: Getty Images

Tim Walker. Edited by Richard Eden

The West End musical, which is staged by the Royal Shakespeare Company, will have brought back happy memories for the actor, 48, who began his career at the RSC, where he starred in such productions as 'Tis Pity She’s a Whore.

Bonneville, who later appeared in Conspiracy of Silence, is looking forward to the third series of Downton Abbey. In the last, his character, the Earl of Grantham, was overcome by passion for a woman in his pay. Naughty boy.

Downton Abbey - Take a breathtaking video tour around Highclere Castle, the real Downton Abbey



Lady Carnarvon shows The Telegraph around Highclere Castle, where hit ITV drama series Downton Abbey is filmed.

Friday, November 25, 2011

PBS Announces Air Dates Of ‘Great Expectations’ & ‘The Mystery of Edwin Drood’, Plus See The First Images

Great-Expectations-1

PBS gave details of their spring line-up last week and in addition to Downton Abbey (premiering January) and Sherlock (premiering May) we now also have two more great mini-series to look forward to, when they announced that their co-productions with the BBC, Great Expectations and The Mystery of Edwin Drood will premiere next April.

In the official press release PBS stated that their Masterpiece series will celebrate Charles Dickens with the Masterpiece / PBS co-production of the two-part “Great Expectations,” on Sundays, April 1 and 8 at 9:00 p.m., and their production of the Dickens classic “The Mystery of Edwin Drood,” will air Sunday, April 15 at 9:00 p.m.

Widely considered one of Dickens’ greatest novels, Great Expectations tells the story of Pip the battered orphan boy, who rises from blacksmith’s apprentice to gentleman under the patronage of a mysterious benefactor, who assures him of “great expectations.” As Pip grows up, he befriends Magwitch, a convict, becomes the pet to Miss Havisham, an insane heiress, and falls in love with Estella, her cold-hearted ward. A series of shocking setbacks teaches Pip the true source of moral worth.

We have been keeping you up to date with the latest adaptation of Great Expectations as it has such an all star cast lined up. David Suchet (Poirot), who will play Jaggers, Ray Winstone takes the role of Magwitch, Gillian Anderson (The X-Files) takes the role of Miss Havisham and Douglas Booth (Worried About The Boy, Christopher And His Kind) as Pip. You can see first images of all the cast members below.

The Mystery Of Edwin Drood is an adaptation and completion of Charles Dickens’ last novel, Edwin Drood, left unfinished at the halfway mark at his death on 9 June 1870. It tells the story John Jasper, a troubled man, his psyche split between darkness and light. He has spent his life in the stifling and claustrophobic cathedral town of Cloisterham in a state of frustrated ambition and has become addicted to opium in an attempt to still his ennui and expand his horizons. But the opium is fracturing Jasper’s mind so that even as his soul reaches for the sublime in his music, his darker self has conceived a murderous hatred of his nephew Edwin Drood who, he believes, stands between him and the lovely Rosa. The stage is set for a story of mental and moral decline as we discover exactly how far Jasper will go to attain the object of his desire.

As with Great Expectations another all-star cast is lined up for this one with Matthew Rhys (Brothers & Sisters) as John Jasper, Rory Kinnear (Hamlet, Women In Love, Lennon Naked) as Reverend Septimus Crisparkle, Freddie Fox (Worried About The Boy, The Shadow Line) as Edwin Drood, and Tamzin Merchant (Jane Eyre, Miranda, The Tudors) will play Rosa Bud.

Take a look at the first images from the BBC Christmas centerpiece, Great Expectations below, it is going to be interesting to compare the two adaptations of this novel that are arriving over the next year with Mike Newell’s big screen adaption of the Dickens classic also set to arrive in 2012.













BritScene

George Harrison candlelight memorial this Tuesday in Hollywood

[Posted by Adam Forrest on Friday, 11/25/11 11:35 am]

Fans of George Harrison will hold a public candlelight memorial on the 10th anniversary of the passing of "the quiet Beatle". The event will be held to honor and remember the legendary singer, songwriter and former Beatles member, and to show that our hearts still gently weep.

The memorial will take place this coming Tuesday, November 29, 2011, from 6:00 PM until 8:00PM at George Harrison's Hollywood Walk of Fame Star, which is located at 1750 N. Vine Street, in front of Capitol Records Tower Building.



Fans are invited to bring candles and flowers to place around the star. Fans are also invited to bring their music and poetry to share.

George Harrison was born February 25, 1943 in Liverpool and passed away November 29, 2001 in Los Angeles after a long bout with cancer.

The event is being sponsored by the Alliance for Survival peace group. For more information, email JerryPeaceActivistRubin@earthlink.net.
BeatlesNews.com

Colin Firth on playing The King