PLAYBILL
BY MARK SHENTON
MAR 02, 2017
He will receive the award at this year's ceremony April 9 at the Royal Albert Hall.
Previously an Olivier Award winner for Best Newcomer in 1982, the stage and screen star has appeared frequently in the West End, with the RSC and at the National Theatre. Most recently, the Kenneth Branagh Theatre Company put on its inaugural West End season, comprising seven plays that were staged at the Garrick Theatre, with three of them, The Winter’s Tale, Romeo and Juliet, and The Entertainer, also broadcast to cinemas across the world, where they were seen by over 430,000 people.
In a press statement, Caro Newling, president of the Society of London Theatre, commented, “The Society of London Theatre is delighted to formally celebrate Kenneth Branagh’s outstanding contribution to London theatre. Whether acting or directing, there is no greater advocate for our industry.”
Past recipients of the Special Award include Kevin Spacey, Stephen Sondheim, Judi Dench, and Ian McKellen.
http://www.playbill.com/article/sir-kenneth-branagh-to-receive-special-award-at-this-years-olivier-awards
For those who love Jane Austen and all Historical Romance books, movies, or series
Showing posts with label Ian Mckellen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ian Mckellen. Show all posts
Tuesday, March 7, 2017
Sir Kenneth Branagh to Receive Special Award at Oliviers
Labels:
Ian Mckellen,
Judi Dench,
kenneth branagh,
kenneth branagh theatre company,
kevin spacey,
olivier awards,
Sir kenneth branagh,
stephen sondheim
Friday, April 24, 2015
(Tom Hiddleston, Matthew Macfadyen, Benedict Cumberbatch, Helen Mirren, Ralph Fiennes, David Tennant...) 12 British Actors Reading Shakespeare for Shakespeare Day
ANGLOPHENIA BBC AMERICA
By Fraser McAlpine | Posted on April 23rd, 2015

Tom Hiddleston (Pic: Jason Merritt/Getty Images)
British actors have a particularly strong relationship with the works of Shakespeare, as they’ll have studied his plays when honing their stagecraft and possibly discovered some of their best thespian tricks while working out how to tackle Polonius or Caliban at a tender age.
So, as it’s Shakespeare Day and we love actors who love reading Shakespeare, here they are doing that very thing, starting with Tom Hiddleston reading the “if music be the food of love” speech from Twelfth Night:
And now, Dame Helen Mirren reading from Anthony & Cleopatra, in a special clip for BBC Newsnight. She has played the title role on stage three times, at the National Youth Theatre in 1965, for the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1983, and at the National Theatre in 1998:
Poor Matthew Macfadyen is feeling a bit down in the dumps because he’s not a success in his chosen field. This bothers him enough to start reciting the apposite “Sonnet 29″ in a cafe, until, just at the point at which the poet reminds him of his true love, she appears. Then everything is right as rain:
By Fraser McAlpine | Posted on April 23rd, 2015

Tom Hiddleston (Pic: Jason Merritt/Getty Images)
British actors have a particularly strong relationship with the works of Shakespeare, as they’ll have studied his plays when honing their stagecraft and possibly discovered some of their best thespian tricks while working out how to tackle Polonius or Caliban at a tender age.
So, as it’s Shakespeare Day and we love actors who love reading Shakespeare, here they are doing that very thing, starting with Tom Hiddleston reading the “if music be the food of love” speech from Twelfth Night:
And now, Dame Helen Mirren reading from Anthony & Cleopatra, in a special clip for BBC Newsnight. She has played the title role on stage three times, at the National Youth Theatre in 1965, for the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1983, and at the National Theatre in 1998:
Or, for people with short attention spans, here’s David Tennant reading a collection of Shakespeare’s greatest hits in verse, performing “Sonnet 2,” “Sonnet 7,” “Sonnet 9,” “Sonnet 17,” “Sonnet 18,” “Sonnet 11,” “Sonnet 14″ and “Sonnet 154:”
Continuing the theatrical metaphors from earlier, here’s Benedict Cumberbatch reading “The Seven Ages of Man” speech from As You Like It, which contains some wonderful descriptive moments, ripe for reuse, including “mewling and puking” and “the lean and slippered pantaloon”:
Poor Matthew Macfadyen is feeling a bit down in the dumps because he’s not a success in his chosen field. This bothers him enough to start reciting the apposite “Sonnet 29″ in a cafe, until, just at the point at which the poet reminds him of his true love, she appears. Then everything is right as rain:
Labels:
benedict cumberbatch,
David tennant,
Emma Thompson,
Helen Mirren,
Ian Mckellen,
Judi Dench,
loki,
matthew macfayden,
ralph fiennes,
Sherlock,
tom hiddleston
Sunday, March 22, 2015
Anthony Hopkins & Ian McKellen Talk Tyrannical Directors, State Of TV & Finally Working Together On ‘The Dresser’
DEADLINE HOLLYWOOD
by Nancy Tartaglione
March 19, 2015 5:00pm

On the Ealing Studios lot, which once played host to Alec Guinness and the Ealing Comedies — and is now the residence of Downton Abbey — Anthony Hopkins and Ian McKellen have been shooting BBC/Starz’s upcoming The Dresser. This is the adaptation of Ronald Harwood’s classic play that’s produced by Colin Callender’s Playground Entertainment. It’s the first time in many years that a play has been adapted in such a way for television. And it joins the two veteran stars together for the first time. It will air on BBC Two this year and on Starz in 2016.
Callender tells me it is likely the first project of a six-part series of single dramas that Playground is developing for television that he will produce with Sonia Friedman. I was on The Dresser set last week, speaking with the principals on such diverse topics as Hopkins’ distaste for theater acting thanks to “tyrannical directors” and McKellen’s belief that some television is currently “in the doldrums.”
In The Dresser, Hopkins plays an ailing actor known as Sir, and McKellen is his devoted backstage hand and dresser, Norman. It takes place on a fateful night in a small regional theater during World War II as a troupe of touring actors stage a production of Shakespeare’s King Lear. As the backstage situation reaches a crisis, it parallels the onstage struggle of Lear and his Fool. The play was inspired by Harwood’s experiences as a dresser for the distinguished British actor-manager Sir Donald Wolfit. Richard Eyre is directing. Emily Watson, Happy Valley‘s Sarah Lancashire, Everest’s Vanessa Kirby and Edward Fox, who also had a role in Peter Yates’ Oscar-nominated 1983 film version, are part of the supporting cast.
The small set of Sir’s dressing room and other parts of the backstage are closed off with a video village a few feet away. There are about 30 people milling about. Watson tells me, “There is so much history here, somewhere if you dig deep enough, the walls have got bales of hay in them.”
The craft services table is emblematic of British shoots. There are some sandwiches, mounds of teabags and three jars of Marmite. McKellen, I’m told, drinks Marmite with hot water in the mornings.

When I arrive, he, Hopkins, and Watson are shooting a scene where Norman, growing increasingly drunk over the course of the night, is regaling Sir on the reactions out front. The three actors clearly are reverent of the material, but there’s friendly banter in between takes when Hopkins says he had the recurring “actors’ dream” the night before of being onstage and forgetting one’s lines. He later tells me: “The dream is very real. I suppose what it is is that the subconscious mind regurgitates the mirror image. I’m meticulous about learning lines — I always have a dread about not knowing them, so I do know them.”
While learning his lines in California beginning last fall, Hopkins said he was “counting the days” until production started. “I had my face buried in the book all the time, much to the alarm of my wife (who said), ‘You’ve got to get out.’ But I loved it.”
Now, he says, “To do such a well-structured play and something I know — the insecurities the fears jealousy, paranoia, all of that. I had a dresser at the National Theatre who was one of the loneliest men I’ve ever met. He lived in East London and had nothing. Poor old guy. I remember everything. He’s dead and gone now, but I remember the loneliness of that guy. This is Norman.”
Hopkins didn’t last long on the boards when he was younger, saying he “skedaddled from the theater years ago.” What made him leave? “I couldn’t fit in, I just feel alien in companies. … I get bored after the second night. I’d think ‘Oh, God.’ So I escaped and went back to California.” The Dresser is particularly poignant because it brings back the “bleakness of life in those touring companies.” He toured with the National Theatre for four months in 1957, and it was a killer. “Some people thrive on (tours), but I couldn’t. You get the thing where you have the tyrannical directors screaming and shouting, and costume calls at 1 AM and being ridiculed. And, I remember thinking, ‘Oh, I’m getting out of this; I’d rather do something else’.”
I asked him if he had come across tyrannical directors in film. “I don’t put up with them,” Hopkins said. “They keep out of my way. They don’t mess with me.” The Dresser, he said, is “a return, in a way, to a kind of pain-free visit to the theater.” And working with McKellen has been “extraordinary. … He’s a great actor to be with. He’s a great friend and very, very funny. We laugh all the time.”
The pair were both in Laurence Olivier’s company at the National Theatre many years ago, and each reminisces about the actors of the day — “All the old guys like Ralph Richardson and John Gielgud because we knew all of them, that’s a world I remember,” says Hopkins.
McKellen tells me, “We’ve worked out that I was (at the National) for nine months and I think about the day I left, he joined.” McKellen still regularly does plays, having stuck it out with such artists as Derek Jacobi, Michael Gambon, Michael York, Maggie Smith and Joan Plowright, he reels off to me in his dressing room, which is peppered with The Dresser paraphernalia.
Working now with Hopkins, McKellen says: “If you had to pick one of the top actors of our time, you know Anthony Hopkins would have to be up there in any country. So to be close to him while he’s working has been a thrill.”
Watson echoes that there are days “when I really pinch myself; I can’t believe I’m here doing this with these guys.” Watson’s character, Her Ladyship, is Sir’s long-suffering wife and leading lady.
READ MORE HERE: http://deadline.com/2015/03/anthony-hopkins-ian-mckellen-the-dresser-set-1201395026/
by Nancy Tartaglione
March 19, 2015 5:00pm

On the Ealing Studios lot, which once played host to Alec Guinness and the Ealing Comedies — and is now the residence of Downton Abbey — Anthony Hopkins and Ian McKellen have been shooting BBC/Starz’s upcoming The Dresser. This is the adaptation of Ronald Harwood’s classic play that’s produced by Colin Callender’s Playground Entertainment. It’s the first time in many years that a play has been adapted in such a way for television. And it joins the two veteran stars together for the first time. It will air on BBC Two this year and on Starz in 2016.
Callender tells me it is likely the first project of a six-part series of single dramas that Playground is developing for television that he will produce with Sonia Friedman. I was on The Dresser set last week, speaking with the principals on such diverse topics as Hopkins’ distaste for theater acting thanks to “tyrannical directors” and McKellen’s belief that some television is currently “in the doldrums.”
In The Dresser, Hopkins plays an ailing actor known as Sir, and McKellen is his devoted backstage hand and dresser, Norman. It takes place on a fateful night in a small regional theater during World War II as a troupe of touring actors stage a production of Shakespeare’s King Lear. As the backstage situation reaches a crisis, it parallels the onstage struggle of Lear and his Fool. The play was inspired by Harwood’s experiences as a dresser for the distinguished British actor-manager Sir Donald Wolfit. Richard Eyre is directing. Emily Watson, Happy Valley‘s Sarah Lancashire, Everest’s Vanessa Kirby and Edward Fox, who also had a role in Peter Yates’ Oscar-nominated 1983 film version, are part of the supporting cast.
The small set of Sir’s dressing room and other parts of the backstage are closed off with a video village a few feet away. There are about 30 people milling about. Watson tells me, “There is so much history here, somewhere if you dig deep enough, the walls have got bales of hay in them.”
The craft services table is emblematic of British shoots. There are some sandwiches, mounds of teabags and three jars of Marmite. McKellen, I’m told, drinks Marmite with hot water in the mornings.

When I arrive, he, Hopkins, and Watson are shooting a scene where Norman, growing increasingly drunk over the course of the night, is regaling Sir on the reactions out front. The three actors clearly are reverent of the material, but there’s friendly banter in between takes when Hopkins says he had the recurring “actors’ dream” the night before of being onstage and forgetting one’s lines. He later tells me: “The dream is very real. I suppose what it is is that the subconscious mind regurgitates the mirror image. I’m meticulous about learning lines — I always have a dread about not knowing them, so I do know them.”
While learning his lines in California beginning last fall, Hopkins said he was “counting the days” until production started. “I had my face buried in the book all the time, much to the alarm of my wife (who said), ‘You’ve got to get out.’ But I loved it.”
Now, he says, “To do such a well-structured play and something I know — the insecurities the fears jealousy, paranoia, all of that. I had a dresser at the National Theatre who was one of the loneliest men I’ve ever met. He lived in East London and had nothing. Poor old guy. I remember everything. He’s dead and gone now, but I remember the loneliness of that guy. This is Norman.”
Hopkins didn’t last long on the boards when he was younger, saying he “skedaddled from the theater years ago.” What made him leave? “I couldn’t fit in, I just feel alien in companies. … I get bored after the second night. I’d think ‘Oh, God.’ So I escaped and went back to California.” The Dresser is particularly poignant because it brings back the “bleakness of life in those touring companies.” He toured with the National Theatre for four months in 1957, and it was a killer. “Some people thrive on (tours), but I couldn’t. You get the thing where you have the tyrannical directors screaming and shouting, and costume calls at 1 AM and being ridiculed. And, I remember thinking, ‘Oh, I’m getting out of this; I’d rather do something else’.”
I asked him if he had come across tyrannical directors in film. “I don’t put up with them,” Hopkins said. “They keep out of my way. They don’t mess with me.” The Dresser, he said, is “a return, in a way, to a kind of pain-free visit to the theater.” And working with McKellen has been “extraordinary. … He’s a great actor to be with. He’s a great friend and very, very funny. We laugh all the time.”
The pair were both in Laurence Olivier’s company at the National Theatre many years ago, and each reminisces about the actors of the day — “All the old guys like Ralph Richardson and John Gielgud because we knew all of them, that’s a world I remember,” says Hopkins.
McKellen tells me, “We’ve worked out that I was (at the National) for nine months and I think about the day I left, he joined.” McKellen still regularly does plays, having stuck it out with such artists as Derek Jacobi, Michael Gambon, Michael York, Maggie Smith and Joan Plowright, he reels off to me in his dressing room, which is peppered with The Dresser paraphernalia.
Working now with Hopkins, McKellen says: “If you had to pick one of the top actors of our time, you know Anthony Hopkins would have to be up there in any country. So to be close to him while he’s working has been a thrill.”
Watson echoes that there are days “when I really pinch myself; I can’t believe I’m here doing this with these guys.” Watson’s character, Her Ladyship, is Sir’s long-suffering wife and leading lady.
READ MORE HERE: http://deadline.com/2015/03/anthony-hopkins-ian-mckellen-the-dresser-set-1201395026/
Labels:
anthony hopkins,
bbc two,
derek jacobi,
Ian Mckellen,
joan plowright,
Maggie Smith,
michael york,
starz,
the dresser,
The hobbit,
thor,
xmen
Saturday, January 10, 2015
Anthony Hopkins, Ian McKellen team for Starz movie 'The Dresser'
ENTERTAINMENT
By Natalie Abrams on Jan 9, 2015 at 7:06PM @NatalieAbrams

Anthony Hopkins and Ian McKellen will team together for the first time in Starz’s adaptation of Ronald Harwood’s classic play The Dresser, the network announced at the Television Critics Association’s winter TV previews.
Based on Harwood’s own experiences as a dresser for the distinguished British actor Sir Donald Wolfit, the movie is set against the backdrop of World War II. Hopkins (Silence of the Lambs, Thor) will portray Sir, while McKellen (Lord of the Rings, X-Men) will play his dresser, Norman.
“The Dresser is a timeless and poignant story about the relationship between artists, and to have this classic play brought to life on-screen by such acting giants as Anthony Hopkins and Ian McKellen is thrilling,” says Starz Managing Director Carmi Zlotnik. “We are glad to be working in partnership again with the BBC and Colin Callender on this very special project, and to be establishing a relationship with acclaimed theater producer Sonia Friedman.”
READ MORE HERE: http://insidetv.ew.com/2015/01/09/anthony-hopkins-ian-mckellen-starz-dresser/
By Natalie Abrams on Jan 9, 2015 at 7:06PM @NatalieAbrams

Anthony Hopkins and Ian McKellen will team together for the first time in Starz’s adaptation of Ronald Harwood’s classic play The Dresser, the network announced at the Television Critics Association’s winter TV previews.
Based on Harwood’s own experiences as a dresser for the distinguished British actor Sir Donald Wolfit, the movie is set against the backdrop of World War II. Hopkins (Silence of the Lambs, Thor) will portray Sir, while McKellen (Lord of the Rings, X-Men) will play his dresser, Norman.
“The Dresser is a timeless and poignant story about the relationship between artists, and to have this classic play brought to life on-screen by such acting giants as Anthony Hopkins and Ian McKellen is thrilling,” says Starz Managing Director Carmi Zlotnik. “We are glad to be working in partnership again with the BBC and Colin Callender on this very special project, and to be establishing a relationship with acclaimed theater producer Sonia Friedman.”
READ MORE HERE: http://insidetv.ew.com/2015/01/09/anthony-hopkins-ian-mckellen-starz-dresser/
Labels:
anthony hopkins,
gandalf,
Ian Mckellen,
lord of the rings,
silence of the lambs,
starz,
the dresser,
The hobbit,
thor,
X-men
Friday, November 28, 2014
Benedict Cumberbatch and Dame Helen Mirren lead starry cast presenting the London Evening Standard Theatre Awards
LONDON EVENING STANDARD
LOUISE JURY, CHIEF ARTS CORRESPONDENT
28 November, 2014

Stars including Dame Helen Mirren, Benedict Cumberbatch, Carey Mulligan and Eddie Redmayne will hand out the honours at the 60th London Evening Standard Theatre Awards.
It will be a night to remember as Sienna Miller, Sir Ian McKellen, American actress Anna Kendrick and Damian Lewis — the host of the 2013 ceremony — also turn out at the London Palladium on Sunday to honour fellow professionals.
Dame Helen, who was named best actress last year, will anoint this year’s best actor from among Tom Hiddleston, Ben Miles and Mark Strong.
And Idris Elba will present the Natasha Richardson Award for best actress from a line-up of five: Gillian Anderson, Helen McCrory, Tanya Moodie, Billie Piper and Kristin Scott Thomas.
The NOOK Award for best play will be presented by James McAvoy, who returns to the stage in January in The Ruling Class. And Cumberbatch, who jointly won best actor in Danny Boyle’s Frankenstein, will warm up for his stage return as Hamlet by revealing the recipient of an award given in the name of the Evening Standard’s owner, Evgeny Lebedev.
READ MORE HERE: http://www.standard.co.uk/showbiz/celebrity-news/benedict-cumberbatch-and-dame-helen-mirren-lead-starry-cast-presenting-the-london-evening-standard-theatre-awards-9889712.html
LOUISE JURY, CHIEF ARTS CORRESPONDENT
28 November, 2014

Stars including Dame Helen Mirren, Benedict Cumberbatch, Carey Mulligan and Eddie Redmayne will hand out the honours at the 60th London Evening Standard Theatre Awards.
It will be a night to remember as Sienna Miller, Sir Ian McKellen, American actress Anna Kendrick and Damian Lewis — the host of the 2013 ceremony — also turn out at the London Palladium on Sunday to honour fellow professionals.
Dame Helen, who was named best actress last year, will anoint this year’s best actor from among Tom Hiddleston, Ben Miles and Mark Strong.
And Idris Elba will present the Natasha Richardson Award for best actress from a line-up of five: Gillian Anderson, Helen McCrory, Tanya Moodie, Billie Piper and Kristin Scott Thomas.
The NOOK Award for best play will be presented by James McAvoy, who returns to the stage in January in The Ruling Class. And Cumberbatch, who jointly won best actor in Danny Boyle’s Frankenstein, will warm up for his stage return as Hamlet by revealing the recipient of an award given in the name of the Evening Standard’s owner, Evgeny Lebedev.
READ MORE HERE: http://www.standard.co.uk/showbiz/celebrity-news/benedict-cumberbatch-and-dame-helen-mirren-lead-starry-cast-presenting-the-london-evening-standard-theatre-awards-9889712.html
Labels:
benedict cumberbatch,
carey mulligan,
damian lewis,
eddie redmayne,
Helen Mirren,
Ian Mckellen,
idris elba,
james mcavoy,
london evening standard theatre awards,
mark strong,
sienna miller,
tom hiddleston
Tuesday, June 3, 2014
Watch James McAvoy And Michael Fassbender's 'X-Men' Impressions (Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen)
ET CANADA
By DAVID HUMPHREYS
6/2/2014 at 5:07 PM ET

In order to play Professor X and Magneto in X-Men: Days of Future Past, James McAvoy and Michael Fassbender had to study old footage of Sir Patrick Stewart and Sir Ian McKellen, who play the older versions of the two characters.
As the below video demonstrates, they perhaps studied the footage a little too closely. Asked by Stewart and McKellen to share their impressions, Fassbender says "Three days as the crow flies" in a pitch perfect Gandalf voice, then launches into a word for word recreation of a speech that McKellen delivered in front of the Royal Shakespeare Company about Macbeth in 1979. McAvoy, meanwhile, says "Logan, haven't you got a lesson to teach?" in a way that makes Stewart slap his knee in disbelief.
It's easy to see why McAvoy and Fassbender decided to only loosely channel Stewart and McKellen in the film rather than do the exact imitation you see in the video. Had they taken the latter approach, Days of Future Past would have been an early contender for funniest movie of the year.
READ MORE HERE: http://www.etcanada.com/blogs/etc_98888/watch-james-mcavoy-and-michael-fassbenders-x-men-impressions/film/
By DAVID HUMPHREYS
6/2/2014 at 5:07 PM ET
In order to play Professor X and Magneto in X-Men: Days of Future Past, James McAvoy and Michael Fassbender had to study old footage of Sir Patrick Stewart and Sir Ian McKellen, who play the older versions of the two characters.
As the below video demonstrates, they perhaps studied the footage a little too closely. Asked by Stewart and McKellen to share their impressions, Fassbender says "Three days as the crow flies" in a pitch perfect Gandalf voice, then launches into a word for word recreation of a speech that McKellen delivered in front of the Royal Shakespeare Company about Macbeth in 1979. McAvoy, meanwhile, says "Logan, haven't you got a lesson to teach?" in a way that makes Stewart slap his knee in disbelief.
It's easy to see why McAvoy and Fassbender decided to only loosely channel Stewart and McKellen in the film rather than do the exact imitation you see in the video. Had they taken the latter approach, Days of Future Past would have been an early contender for funniest movie of the year.
READ MORE HERE: http://www.etcanada.com/blogs/etc_98888/watch-james-mcavoy-and-michael-fassbenders-x-men-impressions/film/
Labels:
filth,
Ian Mckellen,
james mcavoy,
michael fassbender,
patrick stewart,
Shame,
X-men,
x-men days of future past,
x-men first class
Monday, May 19, 2014
Benedict Cumberbatch keeps 1970s-style shades on inside as he arrives at Park Theatre gala
MAIL ON LINE
By DAILY MAIL REPORTER
PUBLISHED: 18:14 EST, 18 May 2014 | UPDATED: 06:50 EST, 19 May 2014

Benedict Cumberbatch's character Sherlock Holmes rarely lets an opportunity pass to poke fun at those closest to him.
And no doubt the detective would have had something to say if he could have seen the actor sporting an eye-catching pair of sunglasses inside London's Park Theatre on Saturday.
The 37-year-old's 1970s-style brown shades were hard to miss as he attended the venue's first birthday gala, hosted by Sir Ian McKellan.
By DAILY MAIL REPORTER
PUBLISHED: 18:14 EST, 18 May 2014 | UPDATED: 06:50 EST, 19 May 2014

Benedict Cumberbatch's character Sherlock Holmes rarely lets an opportunity pass to poke fun at those closest to him.
And no doubt the detective would have had something to say if he could have seen the actor sporting an eye-catching pair of sunglasses inside London's Park Theatre on Saturday.
The 37-year-old's 1970s-style brown shades were hard to miss as he attended the venue's first birthday gala, hosted by Sir Ian McKellan.
Jokes on you: The Sherlock actor was spotted chatting to the theatre's artistic director Jez Bond outside the bash, hosted by Sir Ian McKellen
Labels:
Bbc,
benedict cumberbatch,
Ian Mckellen,
masterpiece mystery,
pbs,
Sherlock
Wednesday, January 29, 2014
Matthew Macfadyen, Ian McKellan, Patrick Stewart, Stephen Mangan: 10 Best Plays of the Year: Perfect Nonsense, Richard III, No Man’s Land, and More
THE DAILY BEAST
Janice Kaplan
December 30, 2013
From Mark Rylance’s lip-curling portrayal of a limping Shakespearean king to Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen’s bromance, see 2013’s best plays.

This was the year that British actors took over Broadway and showed just how good they are. In addition to being thrillingly talented, they performed shows in repertory—which could be seen as showing off.
Americans responded with one brilliant take on a classic, and a host of clever and quirky shows that proved creativity in theater hasn’t been lost. At least twice this number were worth seeing, but here are my ten favorites of the year.
10. Jeeves and Bertie In Perfect Nonsense
Three esteemed actors trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts in London pop into a slapstick play based on the beloved novels of P.G. Wodehouse and have a grand old time. Serious Shakespearean star Matthew Macfadyen plays Jeeves and cross-dresses as a female love interest, and Stephen Mangan is Wooster, in on the joke as he takes a bubble-bath on stage. Now drawing sell-out crowds on London’s West End, the English humor would delight on Broadway, and here’s hoping the producers bring it across the pond. We do love our Brits.
6. The Winslow Boy
Playwright Terrence Rattigan was dismissed as old-school decades ago, but the wonderful revival of this 1946 play should make him as sought-after as mid-century designer furniture. In this classic drawing-room drama, Arthur Winslow (Roger Rees) is a father who goes to extreme measures after his young son (Spencer Davis Milford) is thrown out of a naval academy for a petty offense. The virtue of fighting for the truth at any cost is front and center, but in this terrifically acted and directed production, the characters register as real people who care about love and family as well as ideals.
3. No Man’s Land
Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen enthrall as two old writers who (possibly) knew each other at Oxford and try to drown the pains of the present with tales of a happily philandering past. Though the play is imbued with the despair of aging and impotence, these brilliant actors give unforgettably virile performances as men caught in a moment where they no longer matter. For those who recognize them only from movie blockbusters, the stars’ artistry with Pinter’s language is a revelation. They appear in alternate performances in a wonderfully picaresque Waiting for Godot.

READ MORE HERE:http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/12/27/10-best-plays-of-the-year-richard-iii-no-man-s-land-and-more.html
Janice Kaplan
December 30, 2013
From Mark Rylance’s lip-curling portrayal of a limping Shakespearean king to Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen’s bromance, see 2013’s best plays.

This was the year that British actors took over Broadway and showed just how good they are. In addition to being thrillingly talented, they performed shows in repertory—which could be seen as showing off.
Americans responded with one brilliant take on a classic, and a host of clever and quirky shows that proved creativity in theater hasn’t been lost. At least twice this number were worth seeing, but here are my ten favorites of the year.
10. Jeeves and Bertie In Perfect Nonsense
Three esteemed actors trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts in London pop into a slapstick play based on the beloved novels of P.G. Wodehouse and have a grand old time. Serious Shakespearean star Matthew Macfadyen plays Jeeves and cross-dresses as a female love interest, and Stephen Mangan is Wooster, in on the joke as he takes a bubble-bath on stage. Now drawing sell-out crowds on London’s West End, the English humor would delight on Broadway, and here’s hoping the producers bring it across the pond. We do love our Brits.
6. The Winslow Boy
Playwright Terrence Rattigan was dismissed as old-school decades ago, but the wonderful revival of this 1946 play should make him as sought-after as mid-century designer furniture. In this classic drawing-room drama, Arthur Winslow (Roger Rees) is a father who goes to extreme measures after his young son (Spencer Davis Milford) is thrown out of a naval academy for a petty offense. The virtue of fighting for the truth at any cost is front and center, but in this terrifically acted and directed production, the characters register as real people who care about love and family as well as ideals.
3. No Man’s Land
Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen enthrall as two old writers who (possibly) knew each other at Oxford and try to drown the pains of the present with tales of a happily philandering past. Though the play is imbued with the despair of aging and impotence, these brilliant actors give unforgettably virile performances as men caught in a moment where they no longer matter. For those who recognize them only from movie blockbusters, the stars’ artistry with Pinter’s language is a revelation. They appear in alternate performances in a wonderfully picaresque Waiting for Godot.

READ MORE HERE:http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/12/27/10-best-plays-of-the-year-richard-iii-no-man-s-land-and-more.html
Labels:
Ian Mckellen,
Matthew Macfadyen,
orlando bloom,
p. g. wodehouse,
patrick stewart,
roger rees,
stephen mangan
Saturday, December 14, 2013
Benedict Cumberbatch steals the movie: ‘Smaug’ fires up second ‘Hobbit’
THE EDGE
Thursday, December 12, 2013
By:James Verniere
“The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug” is not the first Peter Jackson film with a scene-stealing performance by a digital character. In this second installment in the “Hobbit” trilogy based on J.R.R. Tolkien’s “The Hobbit, or There and Back Again,” the standout creature is Smaug, a hoard-guarding giant lizard that speaks in the dulcet tones of ubiquitous Englishman Benedict Cumberbatch. Cumberbatch transforms a fire-breathing dragon into a Middle-earth Hannibal Lecter with wings and fangs and talons, oh my, and the results are scary, seductive, insinuating and sibilant. He even knows how to pronounce “precious.”

Back in their quest to reclaim the Lonely Mountain of Erebor, ancestral homeland of the dwarves, are 13 heavily armed and heavily bearded dwarves, led once again by the regal Thorin Oakenshield (the gifted Richard Armitage), rightful King of the Dwarves, accompanied by wizard Gandalf the Grey (Ian McKellen) and “burglar” and ring-bearer Bilbo Baggins (Martin Freeman), a hobbit from the Shire. Still endeavoring to hunt the journeyers down is the white Orc Azog (Manu Bennett), who commands a hellish Orc posse and rides a slavering white Warg.
In opening scenes, the band is rescued from the Orcs and taken captive by warrior “woodland elves” Legolas (LOR’s Orlando Bloom) and ginger-haired Tauriel (Evangeline Lilly), who enjoys a flirtation with “surprisingly tall” dwarf Kili (Aidan Turner). Also back are Buster Keaton-inspired action set pieces and a Rube Goldberg device in the form of the dwarves’ reignited furnaces and smelting operations.
READ MORE HERE: http://bostonherald.com/entertainment/movies/movie_reviews/2013/12/smaug_fires_up_second_hobbit
Thursday, December 12, 2013
By:James Verniere
“The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug” is not the first Peter Jackson film with a scene-stealing performance by a digital character. In this second installment in the “Hobbit” trilogy based on J.R.R. Tolkien’s “The Hobbit, or There and Back Again,” the standout creature is Smaug, a hoard-guarding giant lizard that speaks in the dulcet tones of ubiquitous Englishman Benedict Cumberbatch. Cumberbatch transforms a fire-breathing dragon into a Middle-earth Hannibal Lecter with wings and fangs and talons, oh my, and the results are scary, seductive, insinuating and sibilant. He even knows how to pronounce “precious.”

Back in their quest to reclaim the Lonely Mountain of Erebor, ancestral homeland of the dwarves, are 13 heavily armed and heavily bearded dwarves, led once again by the regal Thorin Oakenshield (the gifted Richard Armitage), rightful King of the Dwarves, accompanied by wizard Gandalf the Grey (Ian McKellen) and “burglar” and ring-bearer Bilbo Baggins (Martin Freeman), a hobbit from the Shire. Still endeavoring to hunt the journeyers down is the white Orc Azog (Manu Bennett), who commands a hellish Orc posse and rides a slavering white Warg.
In opening scenes, the band is rescued from the Orcs and taken captive by warrior “woodland elves” Legolas (LOR’s Orlando Bloom) and ginger-haired Tauriel (Evangeline Lilly), who enjoys a flirtation with “surprisingly tall” dwarf Kili (Aidan Turner). Also back are Buster Keaton-inspired action set pieces and a Rube Goldberg device in the form of the dwarves’ reignited furnaces and smelting operations.
READ MORE HERE: http://bostonherald.com/entertainment/movies/movie_reviews/2013/12/smaug_fires_up_second_hobbit
Labels:
benedict cumberbatch,
bilbo baggins,
Ian Mckellen,
Martin Freeman,
Richard Armitage,
Sherlock,
smaug,
Star Trek,
the desolation of smaug,
the desolation of smaug review,
The hobbit,
thorin oakenshield
Wednesday, October 30, 2013
X-MEN DAYS OF FUTURE PAST - Trailer
Labels:
halle berry,
hugh jackman,
Ian Mckellen,
james mcavoy,
jennifer lawrence,
michael fassbender,
movie trailer,
nicholas hoult,
patrick stewart,
x-men days of future past,
x-men movie trailer
Thursday, October 17, 2013
Luke Evans on facing down dragons and dwarves in 'The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug'

HIT FIX
By Chris Eggertsen Thursday, Oct 17, 2013 1:00 PM
It's clear Luke Evans still can't quite believe he's here.
"The first scene [I] did, I did with Ian [McKellen]," says the actor during an interview on the New Zealand set of Peter Jackson's "The Hobbit." "It's just a weird thing, isn't it, when you've seen it [the 'Lord of the Rings' trilogy] for ten years and all of a sudden you're actually on set and he's looking at you with the white eyes...It's brilliant. It's brilliant."
Evans, who plays Bard the Bowman in the fantasy trilogy, sits in the center of a group of reporters who have traveled to Wellington for a sneak peek at "The Desolation of Smaug," the second film in the series. Far from being handed the part, the actor tells us he was forced to wait a year-and-a-half after his first audition before he was finally offered the role ("He's not in it for the majority of the first film, so...there was no room in their heads to be thinking about Bard," he says), which came just as he was about to begin shooting the horror film "No One Lives" in Louisiana.
"Three days before I left, before I got on the plane, I had a phone call saying that Peter wanted to meet me and test me for the role of Bard," he says. "And I was like, 'What?'"
For those unfamiliar with the novel, the Bard - a descendant of Lord Girion of Dale - leads the defense of the settlement of Lake-town against the fearsome dragon Smaug, who attacks the community after becoming enraged at the intrusion of Bilbo and the dwarves (led by Thorin Oakenshield) into the Lonely Mountain. Following the dragon's attack, during which Lake-town is completely destroyed, the Bard travels to the Lonely Mountain to request reparations from Thorin for the devastation that has occurred - only to meet with resistance.
Read more at http://www.hitfix.com/news/luke-evans-on-facing-down-dragons-and-dwarves-in-the-hobbit-the-desolation-of-smaug#sxKKWET1MlrxiUd1.99
Read more at http://www.hitfix.com/news/luke-evans-on-facing-down-dragons-and-dwarves-in-the-hobbit-the-desolation-of-smaug#sxKKWET1MlrxiUd1.99
Labels:
bard the bowman,
dracula 2000,
Ian Mckellen,
immortals,
luke evans,
The hobbit,
The hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug,
The Raven,
thorin oakenshield
Tuesday, October 1, 2013
THE HOBBIT: THE DESOLATION OF SMAUG - new trailer
Labels:
Evangeline Lily,
Ian Mckellen,
luke evans,
Martin Freeman,
movie trailers,
orlando bloom,
Richard Armitage,
the desolation of smaug,
the desolation of smaug movie trailer,
The hobbit
Friday, September 6, 2013
Ian McKellen Cast as Sherlock Holmes
COMIC BOOK RESOURCES
Thursday, September 5th, 2013 at 11:45am PST - by Josh Wigler
Robert Downey Jr., Benedict Cumberbatch and Jonny Lee Miller have a new Sherlock Holmes to welcome into their ranks.
Lord of the Rings and X-Men star Ian McKellen has been cast as the iconic detective in a new film called A Slight Trick of the Mind. McKellen will reunite with his Gods and Monsters director Bill Condon for the project, an adaptation of the novel written by Mitch Cullin, with a screenplay by Jeffrey Hatcher.
In A Slight Trick of the Mind, McKellen plays a long-retired Sherlock Holmes. Sherlock’s days of sleuthing are behind him, as he now lives in a sleepy Sussex village with his housekeeper and son, an amateur detective in his own right. But Sherlock remains haunted by one unsolved case from 50 years ago, drawing him back into the detective game.
Labels:
a slight trick of the mind,
benedict cumberbatch,
Ian Mckellen,
Masterpiece,
pbs,
Robert Downey Jr,
Sherlock,
sherlock holmes,
the hobbit gandalf,
the lord of the rings
Saturday, August 24, 2013
Ian McKellen, Derek Jacobi - VICIOUS! (The Orgy)

Labels:
derek jacobi,
Ian Mckellen,
The hobbit,
vicious
Friday, August 16, 2013
Vote in the Anglo Fan Favorites Tournament, Men of 2013: Semifinals (FINAL FOUR)
BBC AMERICA
ANGLOPHENIA
15 AUGUST, 2013
Quarterfinals are over; on to the semis! But before we move forward, let’s take a look at the last round’s surprising results.
We know that close matches generate huge vote totals. However, we never could have anticipated the almost 500,000 votes in the David Tennant/Alan Rickman quarters battle. (That’s far more votes than in either of our previous years’ finals — truly impressive.) With their topsy-turvy race never budging far from 50/50, Rickman just edged out Tennant, 50.92 percent to 49.08.
This reminds us that, while Rickman had an early exit last year, our 2011 Anglo Fan Favorites champion is very much a factor in 2013, Snape or no Snape. And his AFF record is 1-0 against the towering Benedict Cumberbatch, whom he faces this week.
Cumberbatch drops from No. 1 seed to last seed this week, as he had the smallest vote total of the Final Four. His quarterfinals match with Sir Ian McKellen, a legend to be sure, was never competitive, leaving no real need for fans to stuff the ballot box to secure Cumberbatch’s ultimate landslide victory. As a result, Cumberbatch only required 44,000 quarterfinals votes to win while Rickman needed 251,000. Against the resurgent Rickmaniacs, Benedict’s fans will surely have to mobilize this round to get their lad into the finals.
Meanwhile, last year’s champion Tom Hiddleston looks strong as ever this year. He was challenged early on by Merlin‘s Colin Morgan, but Hiddles eventually found a comfortable cushion of votes and never looked back. Could Hiddleston find himself defending his title next week in the finals, possibly in a Cumberematch?
Labels:
alan rickman,
BBC America,
benedict cumberbatch,
colin morgan,
David tennant,
Ian Mckellen,
loki,
Severus Snape,
Sherlock,
Star Trek,
tom hiddleston,
xmen first class
Friday, August 9, 2013
Vote in the Anglo Fan Favorites Tournament, Men of 2013: Quarterfinals
BBC AMERICA
By staff | Posted on August 8th, 2013
“It’s not going to get any easier from here on out, is it?” asked one Anglo reader on Twitter.
No. No, it’s not. Just take a look at this week’s matchups. There will be tears.
After Round 2′s lopsided victories — only two battles were decided with less than 25-point margins — the strongest have survived into the quarterfinals. The names are titanic: Cumberbatch. McKellen. Tennant. Rickman. Smith. Freeman. Morgan. Hiddleston. Any one of them would be an honorable Men’s Champion. But by this time next week, four of them will be gone from the competition.
Labels:
alan rickman,
andrew garfield,
BBC America,
benedict cumberbatch,
Ian Mckellen,
Martin Freeman,
matt smith,
tom hiddleston
Thursday, July 25, 2013
Ian McKellen: "I'm Looking For a Husband" — Wouldn't Mind Michael Fassbender

Gina Carbone
WET PAINT
In a cheeky segment at Comic-Con, the Lord of the Rings star said he was happy to be back in California.
"I feel safe here now that you got rid of Prop. 8. I'm looking for a husband," Ian said (via Huffington Post). He then turned to his X-Men co-star Michael Fassbender. "It's great to meet you, Michael."
READ MORE HERE: http://www.wetpaint.com/network/articles/2013-07-23-ian-mckellen-im-looking-husband
Labels:
"Game of Thrones",
Comic Con,
Ian Mckellen,
james mcavoy,
jennifer lawrence,
lord of the rings,
michael fassbender,
The hobbit,
x-men days of future past
Saturday, June 29, 2013
'The Hobbit': Ian McKellen Says Goodbye to Gandalf (Photo) 11:06 AM PDT 6/28/2013 by Rebecca Ford (THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER)
Goodbye, Gandalf.
Ian McKellen has played Gandalf, the wise wizard in Peter Jackson's Tolkien films, since The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring began filming in 1999.
But now the English actor has finally wrapped up his role as the iconic wizard, having completed work on the final film in Jackson's Hobbit trilogy, There and Back Again.
The director posted a photo of himself with McKellen on set in New Zealand.
READ MORE: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/hobbit-ian-mckellen-says-goodbye-577258
Labels:
Ian Mckellen,
lord of the rings: the fellowship of the ring,
Peter Jackson,
The hobbit,
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey,
The hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug,
The hobbit: There and Back Again
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
RICHARD ARMITAGE, MARTIN FREEMAN, LUKE EVANS - FIRST TRAILER FOR THE HOBBIT: THE DESOLATION OF SMAUG
Labels:
Ian Mckellen,
luke evans,
Martin Freeman,
movie trailers,
orlando bloom,
Richard Armitage,
the hobbit movie trailer,
The hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
Monday, June 10, 2013
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug Teaser Poster Has Arrived! Source: Warner Bros. Pictures June 9, 2013 (COMING SOON)

The second in a trilogy of films adapting the enduringly popular masterpiece "The Hobbit," by J.R.R. Tolkien, The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug continues the adventure of the title character Bilbo Baggins as he journeys with the Wizard Gandalf (Ian McKellen) and thirteen Dwarves, led by Thorin Oakenshield (Richard Armitage) on an epic quest to reclaim the lost Dwarf Kingdom of Erebor.
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug hits theaters December 13 with the final chapter, The Hobbit: There and Back Again arriving December 17, 2014.
READ MORE:
Labels:
benedict cumberbatch,
Ian Mckellen,
Martin Freeman,
Richard Armitage,
The hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
















