Showing posts with label howards end. Show all posts
Showing posts with label howards end. 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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Saturday, October 22, 2011

Sherpa's Top 10: Best Helena Bonham Carter movies

Yakkin' with the Sherpa

 
Life Sherpa Best Helena Bonham Carter movies
 
The career of Helena Bonham Carter -- who stars in "Toast," a movie opening today in St. Louis -- can almost be divided into two distinct halves.
First, she excelled in what I call the "Merchant-Ivory" roles (director James Ivory/producer Ismail Merchant), young women in romantic but dramatically sophisticated period pieces of high quality. Second, possibly due to her long and continuing relationship with director Tim Burton, she has worked as an eccentric, alluring supporting character.
(Interesting family-tree note: Bonham's great-grandfather was H.H. Asquith, Great Britain's prime minister from 1908 to 1916.)
Either way, her combination of sultry good looks and substantial acting talents makes the 45-year-old Bonham Carter hard not to notice. So let's notice her 10 best movies:
10. Sweeney Todd (2007) Mrs. Lovett: In Tim Burton's delicious telling of the tale of the Demon Barber of Fleet Street, Bonham Carter plays the owner of the meat-pie shop who is good friends with the barber (Johnny Depp) who takes the job of "cutting heads" to a new level.
9. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005)Mrs. Bucket: Burton also directed this adaptation of Roald Dahl's story about a young boy touring a candy plant. Johnny Depp excelled as candy king Willy Wonka, while Bonham Carter played the mother of adorable Freddie Highsmith.
8. Mighty Aphrodite (1995) Amanda: Bonham Carter and Woody Allen are the adoptive parents of a young genius and Allen sets out to find the birth parents, who he assumes are brilliant as well. To his dismay, Allen discovers the boy's mother (Mira Sorvino) is a prostitute/porn star.
7. King's Speech (2010) Queen Elizabeth: She was good, but I'm not sure it was worth of her Oscar nomination. Still, it was one of the two best films of 2010 (along with "Winter's Bone") and it was nice to see Bonham Carter in a role requiring a normal amount of eye makeup.
6. Harry Potter movies (2007-2011)Bellatrix Lestrange: We rolled all the roles into one entry, for her sometimes small role -- as the wonderfully evil, hintingly kinky maidservant to Voldemort -- was a delight. Bonham Carter appeared in the last four of the eight movies.
5. The Wings of the Dove (1997) Kate Croy: Bonham Carter earned a best-actress Oscar nomination playing an aristocratic British woman whose father lost the family fortune. But when she meets an American actress, she devises a plot to have both love and money.
4. Howard's End (1992) Helen Schlegel: A Merchant-Ivory work about class war in England, Bonham Carter and Emma Thompson (who won the best-actress Oscar) play middle-class English sisters who become involved with families from both the aristocracy and the lower classes.
3. A Room with a View (1985) Lucy Honeychurch: Bonham Carter's first movie role was in this superior film from the Merchant-Ivory gang. She plays a young woman who along with her chaperone (Maggie Smith), meet an intriguing man in Florence. Julian Sands was the rising star, not the unknown player who played nerdy Cecil, Daniel Day-Lewis.
2. Big Fish (2003) Jenny/The Witch: An off-beat movie, skillfully directed by Tim Burton, that tells the tale of a larger-than-life patriarch whose life is recounted in myths as he nears death. Albert Finney is superb in the lead and there's strong support from Bonham Carter, Ewan McGregor, Billy Crudup and Jessica Lange.
1. Fight Club (1999) Marla Singer: So I've mentioned -- every chance I get -- that this is one of my favorite movies of the last 20 years. Brad Pitt and Edward Norton get lofty marks for their alter-egoness, but let's not forget that Bonham Carter's turn as the seriously, comically disturbed girlfriend is another key to the movie's success


Read more: http://www.stltoday.com/lifestyles/columns/joe-holleman/article_06ceea12-fa97-11e0-be14-0019bb30f31a.html#ixzz1bW04V5OF