Showing posts with label hayley atwell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hayley atwell. Show all posts

Monday, November 13, 2017

Hayley Atwell leaves little to the imagination during no holds barred sex-scene with co-star Matthew Macfadyen in resurfaced scenes from 2010 drama Any Human Heart

Daily Mail
By Jason Chester for MailOnline
PUBLISHED: 09:22 EST, 13 November 2017 | UPDATED: 12:10 EST, 13 November 2017


A mesmerising, multi-generational tale exploring youth, middle-age and the inevitability of death is given a provocative flourish thanks to Hayley Atwell in recently resurfaced scenes from 2010 miniseries Any Human Heart.


The British actress strips off for a passionate love scene with co-star Matthew Macfadyen in the three part period drama, adapted from William Boyd’s 2002 novel of the same name.

Leaving little to the imagination, Hayley, 35, embraces her role as the flighty Freya Deverell, with whom MacFadyan’s existential protagonist Logan Mountstuart embarks on an all-encompassing affair.

The screen-lovers are seen working up a sweat as they writhe across a double bed, lost in the throes of passion, during one particularly heated tryst.


Sitting astride Macfadyen, Atwell smothers him with an embrace before leaning in for a series of fervent kisses.

Winning the Drama Serial gong at the 2011 British Academy Television Awards, Any Human Heart follows Mountstuart from exuberant adolescence to reclusive old age, charting his marriages, affairs, tragedies and triumphs along the way.





Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-5077573/Hayley-Atwell-leaves-little-imagination.html#ixzz4yMgccsee
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Wednesday, November 8, 2017

Howards End star Matthew Macfadyen: ‘It’s about sex, money and power!’

Whats On TV
Caren Clark
12:15am - Tue, November 7



Here, Hayley and Matthew tell TV Times about starring in the lavish new version of Howards End…

TV Times: How would you describe your characters?

Hayley Atwell: “Margaret has a wonderful warmth and is an eccentric character. She’s an independent thinker but she’s disillusioned. She feels she can talk about social affairs but not do anything about them, so she is searching for her place in the world.”
Matthew Macfadyen: “Henry’s one of those manly men of that time who isn’t prone to bouts of introspection or navel-gazing or talking about feelings. He’s very confident and pig-headed.”

What’s their relationship like?

MF: “Henry doesn’t have the tools that Margaret has to deal with the complex situations that arise; he gets frightened. They’re probably not a natural match, but she’s attracted by his self-possession and it’s a slow burn.”
HA: “Yes, they have a different set of values and it begins as something that isn’t rational and she doesn’t understand it herself. She has self-awareness and he is emotionally constipated but she ultimately finds that endearing because his intentions are good.”



How important is class to the drama?

MM: “Hugely and it’s just wonderful. It’s about sex, money, power, and how people operate in society and that doesn’t go out of fashion does it? It’s fantastic because you see everyone’s point of view.”
HA: “It brings up really interesting questions because you have capitalists with a drive for power and people at the lower end who are teetering on the abyss but know their place better than the Schlegels who are the wandering middle class. The novel talks about how we should “only connect” and that becomes Margaret’s message. She wants to connect everyone together so that things become classless.”



Read more at http://www.whatsontv.co.uk/news/howards-ends-matthew-macfadyen-sex-money-power-502577/#6izxYkGeE1Ke8qDt.99




Saturday, November 4, 2017

Matthew Macfadyen: When love and class collide: Sumptuous Sunday night TV returns with a new four-part adaptation of Howards End, EM Forster’s tale of romance across the social divide

Daily Mail
Nicole Lampert For Weekend Magazine
PUBLISHED: 18:31 EDT, 3 November 2017 | UPDATED: 18:31 EDT, 3 November 2017




The setting is as splendid as you’d expect for the BBC’s latest costume drama.

Just outside the stunning stately home in the grounds of the picturesque, 5,000-acre West Wycombe Estate in the Chiltern Hills, there’s a marquee overlooking the lake.

Inside, it’s beautifully decorated with intricate winding flowers flowing from ornate Edwardian vases, and the table is laden with vintage crystal champagne glasses, along with decorative platters of fruit and cakes baked to the recipes of Victorian cook Mrs Beeton.

The table, and indeed the stage, is set for one of the most pivotal and dramatic scenes in the new adaptation of EM Forster’s novel Howards End – the wedding of rich businessman’s daughter Evie Wilcox to Percy Cahill at her family’s country estate, Oniton.

By the end of the reception, however, the three very different families the story centres on will have collided to disastrous effect.

And as the millions who’ve read Forster’s book or wallowed in the glorious 1992 Merchant Ivory film will know, what follows is destitution, tragedy, manslaughter and incarceration.



Despite Forster’s book being 107 years old, the themes still feel uncannily modern. The story revolves around three families in England at the beginning of the 20th century – the Wilcoxes, rich capitalists with a fortune made in the colonies, the half-German Schlegel siblings Margaret, Helen and younger brother Tibby, bohemian intellectuals who have much in common with the real-life Bloomsbury Group, and the Basts, an impoverished young couple from a lower-class background. Howards End, Mrs Wilcox’s beloved ancestral home – albeit a pile far less grand than Oniton – is almost a character in its own right too, becoming integral to the complex relationships between these three very different strata of society.

And this new four-part adaptation shows just how timeless, and at times brutal, the tale is.

‘Our series has been written to be deliberately not too earnest. In some ways it doesn’t feel like a period drama at all,’ says Hayley Atwell, who plays the central character of Margaret Schlegel in the drama, which has been adapted by American Kenneth Lonergan who won a BAFTA earlier this year for his film Manchester By The Sea.

‘We were all told not to watch the Merchant Ivory film because this was going to be very different. Despite the constrictions of the costumes and the period, we did feel we wanted to make it accessible to modern audiences by not making it feel mannered.’

Even Emma Thompson, who played Margaret in the 1992 film, told Hayley (who played Emma’s character’s daughter in the 2008 film version of Brideshead Revisited) not to refer to the Merchant Ivory version. ‘She said, “Don’t watch the film. She is you and you are she and she is you.”’

That’s not to say this lavish drama skimps on the things period fans love. There are plenty of corsets and bonnets, beautiful houses, high teas and even a former Mr Darcy in Matthew Macfadyen playing the businessman Henry Wilcox.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-5046257/A-new-four-adaptation-Howards-End-comes-BBC.html#ixzz4xVThMRGX 
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Wednesday, November 1, 2017

Matthew Macfadyen: BBC One Sets Premiere Date For ‘Howards End’

The TVWise Team | October 31, 2017 - 5:16 pm |




BBC One’s four-part drama Howards End will premiere on Sunday November 12th at 9pm, it has been announced.

Based on the E.M. Forster novel of the same name, Howards End explores the changing landscape of social and class divisions in turn of the century England through the prism of three families: the intellectual and idealistic Schlegels, the wealthy Wilcoxes from the world of business, and the working class Basts. The four-parter is produced by Playground in association with City Entertainment and KippSter Entertainment and stars Hayley Atwell, Matthew Macfadyen, Julia Ormond, Philippa Coulthard, Joseph Quinn, Rosalind Eleazar, Tracey Ullman and Alex Lawther.

http://www.tvwise.co.uk/2017/10/bbc-one-sets-premiere-date-howards-end/

Friday, May 5, 2017

First look at Hayley Atwell and Matthew Macfadyen in Howards End

COMING SOON.NET
May 4, 2017



Starz, with the BBC, today released the first image from the limited series Howards End, based on the classic E.M. Forster novel. The above photo features Hayley Atwell (Margaret Schlegel) and Matthew Macfadyen (Henry Wilcox) at Simpson’s-in-the-Strand restaurant.

Howards End is the first television adaptation from the Academy Award-nominated screenwriter and playwright Kenneth Lonergan (Manchester by the Sea, Gangs of New York, You Can Count on Me).This four-part limited series is the story of two independent and unconventional sisters and the men in their lives seeking love and meaning as they navigate an ever-changing world. Academy Award-winning screenwriter Kenneth Lonergan brings a fresh take to this adaptation directed by BAFTA winner Hettie Macdonald (White Girl).





Read more at http://www.comingsoon.net/tv/news/844745-first-look-at-hayley-atwell-and-matthew-macfadyen-in-howards-end#RBwcRJXyCxP2LJ16.99


Friday, March 17, 2017

PICTURED: Hayley Atwell is Edwardian chic in a brown full-length coat with patterned red scarf as she joins dapper Matthew MacFadyen on the London set of Howards End

DAILY MAIL
By Ryan Smith and Emily Chan For Mailonline
PUBLISHED: 09:14 EDT, 17 March 2017 | UPDATED: 09:17 EDT, 17 March 2017


With a black velvet hat resting atop her chestnut brown tresses, the actress got into character as she filmed with Matthew, who cut a dapper figure in a top hat and black waistcoat under a midnight blue coat. 


Over the past week, they've been busy getting into character for their latest - and highly anticipated - project, which transports them back to Edwardian London.

And on Thursday, things appeared to be going swimmingly for Hayley Atwell and Matthew MacFadyen as they shot scenes along London's River Thames for the glamorous BBC adaptation of E.M. Forster's 1910 novel Howards End.

Hayley, 34, was appropriately dressed the era, stepping before cameras in a full-length brown coat, teamed with a red patterned scarf and flowing blue skirt.


The dark TV drama - already dubbed by some as the next Downton Abbey - explores the changing landscape of social and class divisions in turn of the century England through the tales of three families.

These are the intellectual and idealistic Schlegels, the wealthy Wilcoxes from the world of business, and the working class Basts.

British actresses Helena Bonham Carter and Emma Thompson previously starred in the 1992 film adaptation of the novel.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-4323804/Hayley-Atwell-Matthew-MacFadyen-shoot-Howards-End.html#ixzz4bcH8KLj7 
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Sunday, February 26, 2017

Matthew Macfadyen leads cast for Howards End miniseries



RTE
Updated / Friday, 17 Feb 2017 10:26

Image result for matthew macfadyen gif

Ripper Street star Matthew Macfadyen, Hayley Atwell from Marvel's Agent Carter and comic Tracey Ullman have all been cast in a new big-budget TV adaptation of EM Foster's classic Howards End.

The novel was previously a hit film for Merchant Ivory and memorably won an Oscar for Emma Thompson for her starring role opposite Anthony Hopkins.

The Oscar nominated writer director of Manchester By the Sea, Kenneth Lonergan is adapting Forster's turn-of-the-century novel about the English class system into a four-episode run.

In a statement a spokesperson for the BBC described Lonergan as "one of our truly great contemporary voices" ans said that his adaptation would "surprise and delight a whole  new audience with its timely and relevant themes."

The story is told focusses on the triumphs and tragedies of the Schlegel, Wilcox and Bast families, with Hayley Atwell playing the intellectual Margaret Schlegel and Matthew Macfadyen the widower Henry Wilcox. Tracey Ullman appears as the ailing Aunt Juley.

The 1992 film adaptation of Howards End bagged Emma Thompson an Oscar for her performance as Margaret Schlegel, and earned nominations for co-star Vanessa Redgrave and director James Ivory.

https://www.rte.ie/entertainment/2017/0216/853189-ripper-streets-matthew-macfadyen-for-bbc-period-drama/

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Olivier Awards 2014 nominees

THE GUARDIAN
theguardian.com, Monday 10 March 2014 08.01 EDT



Best actor

Henry Goodman – The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui at the Duchess theatre
Tom Hiddleston – Coriolanus at the Donmar Warehouse
Rory Kinnear – Othello at the National Theatre, Olivier
Jude Law – Henry V at the Noël Coward theatre

Best actress

Hayley Atwell – The Pride at the Trafalgar Studios
Anna Chancellor – Private Lives at the Gielgud theatre
Judi Dench – Peter and Alice at the Noël Coward theatre
Lesley Manville – Ghosts at the Almeida theatre & Trafalgar Studios

Best actor in a supporting role

Ron Cook – Henry V at the Noël Coward theatre
Mark Gatiss – Coriolanus at the Donmar Warehouse
Jack Lowden – Ghosts at the Almeida theatre & Trafalgar Studios
Ardal O'Hanlon – The Weir at the Donmar Warehouse & the Wyndham's theatre

Best actress in a supporting role

Sharon D Clarke – The Amen Corner at the National Theatre, Olivier
Sarah Greene – The Cripple Of Inishmaan at the Noël Coward theatre
Katherine Kingsley – A Midsummer Night's Dream at the Noël Coward theatre
Cecilia Noble – The Amen Corner at the National Theatre, Olivier

American airlines best new play

1984 at the Almeida theatre
Chimerica at the Almeida theatre & Harold Pinter theatre
The Night Alive at the Donmar Warehouse
Peter and Alice at the Noël Coward theatre

Best new comedy

The Duck House at the Vaudeville theatre
The Full Monty at the Noël Coward theatre
Jeeves & Wooster In Perfect Nonsense at the Duke of York's theatre
The Same Deep Water As Me at the Donmar Warehouse


Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Matthew Macfadyen talks 'Pillars Of The Earth'


Matthew Macfadyen talks Pillars Of The Earth

YAHOO NEW ZEALAND
September 24, 2013, 3:10 pm


TV mini-series 'The Pillars Of The Earth' hits our screens from this week - one of the stars, Matthew Macfadyen, talks about what it was like working on the adaptation of the popular Ken Follett novel.

About his character, Prior Philip:

Well it's interesting in terms of his character (as) he knows himself quite well. I think that he knows that his chief temptation is vanity and pride because he’s intelligent and he’s ambitious for the church and for the greater glory of God I suppose in his way of thinking. And to do that you have to make compromises I suppose; and you have to be able to put yourself in a position of power.



About the cast:

Talking about the other cast members; I can’t remember a job where everyone has enjoyed being in [each other’s] company so much. I can’t speak for the other actors but I, we all really get on. And they are just great; everyone is fantastic and very different.



And I think because it is such an ensemble piece, because you’ve got the monks, and you’ve got the builders, you’ve got the royals, and you’ve got the big powerful noble families, it feels, when everyone gets together it feels like a party.

About the sets:

I mean, you can’t see this, but it is just extraordinary. I had just come off another medieval set, Ridley Scott’s ‘Robin Hood’ project, and there really is no difference. There is a difference in budget but there is no difference in scale here. So it’s just great. When it is like that it’s fantastic because you don’t need to use your imagination the same that you do when you are in a studio.


READ MORE HERE: http://nz.entertainment.yahoo.com/news/article/-/19089184/matthew-macfadyen-talks-pillars-of/

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Hayley Atwell: From Captain America to Jimi Hendrix


TELEGRAPH
By Chris Harvey
8:00AM BST 10 Aug 2013


Hayley Atwell’s beauty is the first thing you notice about her. She walks out of a rehearsal room near London Bridge into an outdoor café, and it almost makes me laugh. If there were a kit for making a film star, her dark flashing eyes and full lips would be included in the box. What’s more surprising is that she turns out to be so funny.

She’s recently returned from Comic-Con, the American convention that celebrates all things fantasy and sci-fi. She was there because in the Marvel Universe she is Peggy Carter, the wartime British agent girlfriend of Captain America himself, as seen in the 2011 blockbuster The First Avenger. It sounds like a strange experience.

“What is weird is walking down the streets seeing people dressed as superheroes but then picking their nose or running for the bus,” she says. “That’s really surreal. You’re like, 'I’m sure Wonder Woman doesn’t eat burgers slouched over a bench like that.’ It was very funny, but the level of commitment is quite humbling. There’s an innocence about them as a fan base, it’s not aggressive, but they really do love that world. I approach Peggy Carter as I would any character, then take all the make-up off and go home and be myself. But for the fans, those worlds live for longer within them.”


I ask if the films – some of the most lucrative franchises in contemporary Hollywood – pay as well as they’re said to, mentioning Robert Downey jnr’s reported $75 million earnings for The Avengers. “Really? Is that true?” Atwell gapes. “Well, he is also an executive producer. It completely varies according to your star power, how big your name is.”

But is it life-changing? “That’s a very personal question,” she says, adopting a clipped RP tone. “I think anything is life-changing money if you’re doing something you love and earn a living from it, because it takes you beyond doing a job just for survival.”



Next up is something for love. She’s rehearsing the dual role of Sylvia, the trapped, lonely wife of a repressed homosexual man in Fifties London, and the independent, supportive friend of an identically named gay man in the present, in Alexi Kaye Campbell’s play The Pride, which opens at Trafalgar Studios later this month, directed by Jamie Lloyd. It’s an interesting choice, not least because Atwell’s last stage outing was in Kaye Campbell’s The Faith Machine two years ago, also directed by Lloyd.




“I like working with them as people and it’s nice to do something that’s at least half modern,” she says. She’s referring to the way casting directors look at her voluptuous figure and see the perfect Forties heroine. “I suppose physically I suit that era. It’s wonderful to look like a period heroine, there’s something very beautiful and romantic about that. But I think there’s so much more going on behind my eyes and in my head than just looking a certain way.”


The play juxtaposes the way that changing attitudes affect the lives of people who are alike in spirit but living in different eras. The earlier Sylvia is “fragile and sensitive, and has suffered from an illness that nowadays we would call depression. I think Sylvia loves her husband deeply and his unhappiness causes her great unhappiness.

“I can relate to bouts of the blues or moments when self-destructive thoughts are a way of dealing with your surroundings. Some people, if they’re going through a difficult time they’ll lash out, and then you have people, like myself, who direct it inwards. I’m much more of an internal person than an external one, I think.”

Is there a temptation to put theatre to one side when your career is at its most bankable, I wonder, when you’re “hot”, as Atwell is now?

“Oh really?” She laughs. “'So hot right now’ – I feel like I’m in Zoolander. I think there’s a fear. The fear-based mentality would be to go, 'I’ve got to capitalise on this right now.’ I think it can be detrimental because the minute you’re hot or 'in’ the next step is to be not hot, or out. So you’re only just waiting for the time when you’re not considered cool. I think if I’m interested in my work, then life will forge its own path.”




Saturday, July 20, 2013

Comic-Con: Marvel Screens Their Latest One-Shot, Agent Carter! (Hayley Atwell)



Super Hero Hype
by Silas Lesnick
July 19, 2013

As they did last year with their "Phase One" short film finale, "Item 47," Marvel Studios hosted a special San Diego premiere screening of the new 15-minute "Agent Carter" short, which will be included as a bonus feature on the Iron Man 3 Blu-ray release. While it's well-known that the film features Captain America: The First Avenger star Hayley Atwell returning in the role of Peggy Carter, the film also offers a wide variety of surprise cameos. We'll refrain from revealing the two big ones at the end, but if you want to stay completely spoiler-free, stop reading now.
"After the premiere of 'Captain America,' I went straight back to London to do a play," says Atwell of how the project came about. "I thought that was the end of it. Then months and months and months later, I got a call from Lou [D'Esposito] saying that this was something that we could make together. It was as new to me as it was to the fans."



"Agent Carter" begins with the final scene of Captain America as Peggy says goodbye to Chris Evans' Steve Rogers. Jumping ahead a year, we find Peggy working in a government office and none too pleased with her lot in life. She's the victim of gender politics of the day and, despite being an agent, winds up primarily doing glorified secretary work. That all changes one night, however, when she takes matters into her own hands and takes on a middle-of-the-night mission issued by a mysterious voice (Iron Man 3 writer-director Shane Black in a voice-only cameo).

We won't say where "Agent Carter" winds up, but it's safe to say that Peggy Carter has quite a potential future in the Marvel cinematic universe. In fact, it was Marvel Studios executive producer Victoria Alonso who shouted out during the Q&A, "Will you do the TV series, Hayley?"



Monday, April 22, 2013

Tom Hiddleston and Hayley Atwell join Close Enough 22 April, 2013 | By Michael Rosser (SCREEN DAILY)

Romantic drama about two war photographers will be directed by Song for Marion’s Paul Andrew Williams.

Hiddleston will play famous war photographer Robert Capa while Atwell will portray the equally famous first female war photographer Gerda Toro.


The story is set during their years in Paris in the mid-1930s and leads to a dramatic conclusion during the Spanish Civil War.

It will be directed by Paul Andrew Williams, the writer-director behind Song for Marion and London to Brighton.

Principal photography is set to begin in June 2013.

Production companies are Camera Entertainment BV (Netherlands), Kanzaman S.A. (Spain) and Steel Mill Pictures (UK).

READ MORE: http://www.screendaily.com/news/hiddleston-atwell-join-close-enough/5054124.article?blocktitle=Latest-News&contentID=1846#

Monday, February 4, 2013

Hayley Atwell Left Stunned By Meryl Streep Meeting (CONTACT MUSIC)



Hayley Atwell is still starstruck after receiving a personal compliment from Meryl Streep on her acting talents, calling the encounter her proudest moment of 2012.

The Captain America: The First Avenger star was stunned when Oscar winner Streep introduced herself and began doling out praise, and admits the meeting was a career highlight.

When asked to name her proudest moment of the past year, she tells Britain's InStyle magazine, "Meeting Meryl Streep."

Atwell recalls, "She knew who I was and came up to compliment me on a performance. She was so utterly charming and at that moment I thought, 'Yes, sanity does exist in this industry.' If, like her, I focus on what matters? Then I'll be fine."


READ MORE: http://www.contactmusic.com/news/hayley-atwell-left-stunned-by-meryl-streep-meeting_3481522

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Hayley Atwell to star in second series of Charlie Brooker's Black Mirror Details of the three very different new episodes have been released MATILDA BATTERSBY (INDEPENDENT)



Black Mirror the unusual satirical drama written by journalist-come-television writer Charlie Brooker will return to Channel 4 this year for a second series consisting of three dark episodes.

Restless actress Hayley Atwell will star in the first of the trio, each of which will once again have “a different cast, a different setting, even a different reality”, according to Brooker. In an interview in December he said: "Like the last series we've done three stories that are three different genres. We've also got all sorts of unpleasant things and also one of them is very sad.”

In Be Right Back Atwell appears as Martha alongside Domhnall Gleeson, her social media junkie boyfriend Ash. He is tragically killed just after the couple move to a remote cottage and Martha soon becomes aware of a creepy new social network that allows grieving relatives to communicate with the digital semblance of the deceased. Disgusted, but compelled by it, Martha, who discovers she is pregnant with Ash’s child, becomes embroiled in a murky world of online ‘ghosts’.

READ MORE: http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/tv/news/hayley-atwell-to-star-in-second-series-of-charlie-brookers-black-mirror-8461611.html

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Exclusive: First Poster for THE SWEENEY Starring Ray Winstone, Hayley Atwell, and Damian Lewis by Adam Chitwood (COLLIDER)


We’re happy to debut the first poster for the upcoming action thriller The Sweeney today.  Directed by Nick Love (Outlaw) and co-written by John Hodge (Trainspotting), the film stars Ray Winstone as Detective Inspector Jack Regan and Ben Drew as his partner George Carter.  The two are “old school crime fighters” who enforce the law in a modern underworld, and with a bank heist in progress and Regan’s old enemy making an appearance on the streets of London, the veteran cop will do whatever it takes to get the job done.   The pic also stars Homeland’s Damian Lewis and Captain America’s Hayley Atwell.  The Sweeney will be available in theaters and VOD on March 1st.



Monday, December 17, 2012

Hayley Atwell - Hayley Atwell recalls weight jibes (CONTACT MUSIC)



She said: ''I was Hayley 'Fatwell' at school. I was on only child, very quiet and very shy, I was surrounded in primary school by skinny girls in crop tops, when I had puppy fat. I wasn't cool.''

Hayley, 30, has since slimmed down and started turning heads with her dazzling looks, which have been likened to stars of the 30s and 40s.

Discussing the comparisons with old time movie stars, she said: ''Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's the square jaw. Stars in the old days used to be more angular. I think my face works on screen because there's a lot of angles to it.''

Hayley also counts the pinnacle of her career so far as meeting Meryl Streep, who complimented her acting abilities.

She added in an interview with The Times newspaper: ''I was presenting at the BAFTAs, and she came up to me and said my performance in 'The Duchess' was 'Wonderfully imagined,' and I just went, 'Waaaaaaaahhhhh.' ''

READ MORE: http://www.contactmusic.com/news/hayley-atwell-recalls-weight-jibes_3424086

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Michelle Dockery to star in Restless Downton Abbey actress Michelle Dockery will star in BBC adaptation of William Boyd novel Restless. (TELEGRAPH)


Downton Abbey star Michelle Dockery is to join Rufus Sewell and Michael Gambon in a BBC adaptation of best-selling novel Restless. The two-part film - based on the book by William Boyd - will also star Hayley Atwell and Charlotte Rampling playing the same character more than 30 years apart.

Acclaimed theatre director Edward Hall is to dramatise the tale about a female spy on the run who has led a double life for three decades Dockery plays a young woman, Ruth Gilmartin, who learns that her mother Sally (Rampling) was recruited by the British Secret Service at the start of the Second World War, but has been in hiding since a mission went awry. Atwell - who plays the younger Sally - has previously starred in a Channel 4 adaptation of Boyd's Any Human Heart.


READ MORE:http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tvandradio/downton-abbey/9354284/Michelle-Dockery-to-star-in-Restless.html

Monday, April 16, 2012

Dan Stevens, Celia Imrie, Zoe Wanamaker,Hayley Atwell, David Suchet, James McAvoy: STYLE AT 2012 OLIVIER AWARDS April 15, 2012 What they wore: 2012 Olivier Awards Examiner.com by Sofia Ambrosia Atlanta Fashion Examiner


Celia Imrie


Zoe Wannamaker


James McAvoy & wife


David Suchet


Hayley Atlwell


Dan Stevens and Wife plus best of all accessories - a baby bump



Atlanta fashionistas and British expats, Londoners held their 2012 Olivier Awards at The Royal Opera House on Sunday April 15, 2012 in London, England. Dan Stevens of Downton Abbey fame, playing the role of heir apparent “Matthew Crawley” was attending with wife Susie Hariet, who looked lovely in her maroon gown with bared shoulders, though very advanced in her pregnancy.


 Continue reading on Examiner.com What they wore: 2012 Olivier Awards - Atlanta Fashion | http://www.examiner.com/fashion-in-atlanta/what-they-wore-2012-olivier-awards


Tuesday, April 10, 2012

DAN STEVENS: SPECIAL REPORT: Olivier Awards to Stream Globally; Zach Braff, Laurie Metcalf, Patrick Stewart Among Presenters By Andy Propst • Apr 10, 2012 • London, New York City (THEATER MANIA)




The 2012 Olivier Awards ceremony, honoring the best of British theater, will be streamed live to audiences around the world on both BBC Radio 2 (www.bbcco.uk/radio2 and the official site for the awards, www.olivierawards.com, on Sunday, April 15. Coverage will begin on the BBC broadcast at 12:30pm (EST), with coverage from the red carpet.

The broadcast of the ceremony will begin on both sites at 1pm (EST). The awards, which will be held at London's Royal Opera House, will be hosted by West End stars Michael Ball and Imelda Staunton. Presenters will include Hayley Atwell, Douglas Booth, Zach Braff, Jim Carter, Tom Chambers, Tyne Daly, Jack Davenport, Agyness Deyn, Jonathan Edwards, Susannah Fielding, Vittorio Grigolo, Lenny Henry, Ronan Keating, Katherine Kelly, Harry Lloyd, James McAvoy, Natascha McElhone, Laurie Metcalf, Elaine Paige, Dan Stevens, Sir Patrick Stewart, David Suchet, Kara Tointon, Will Young, Zoe Wanamaker, Jodie Whittaker and Barbara Windsor.


READ MORE:  http://www.theatermania.com/london-theater/news/04-2012/special-report-olivier-awards-to-stream-globally-z_54378.html


Friday, March 30, 2012

Michelle Dockery is apparently in talks to star in spy thriller Restless. (MSN)

Dockery set for a Restless role Michelle Dockery is apparently in talks to star in spy thriller Restless.



The Downton Abbey star is rumoured to be in line to appear alongside Hayley Atwell and Charlotte Rampling in the adaptation of William Boyd's award-winning novel, reported the Daily Mail. Hayley and Charlotte would play the same character - Russian spy Eva Delectorskaya - at different ages and various aliases, with the younger actress portraying her during the war years while the elder would play her as a 66-year-old retired grandmother known as Sally Gilmartin.


READ MORE:  http://tv.uk.msn.com/news/dockery-set-for-a-restless-role