Saturday, May 31, 2014

LISTEN: Benedict Cumberbatch and Hugh Bonneville Reading Children’s Stories

BBC AMERICA
By Fraser McAlpine | Posted on May 30th, 2014

Hugh Bonneville, Benedict Cumberbatch and Juliette Lea (Pic: BBC Radio 2)

This week, the Chris Evans Breakfast Show on BBC Radio 2 have been running a very special competition, encouraging children to write short stories. The winners were announced from the Hay festival, earlier this morning, and read out by some very special guest stars indeed.



These were then read out live on air, with special help from the likes of Benedict Cumberbatch, Paloma Faith, Hugh Bonneville, and Harry Potter star Matthew Lewis.

LISTEN HERE AT ANGLOPHENIA: http://www.bbcamerica.com/anglophenia/2014/05/listen-benedict-cumberbatch-hugh-bonneville-reading-childrens-stories/


Tom Hardy and Charlotte Riley make cute couple at Edge of Tomorrow premiere

FAN SHARE
MOVIES NEWS / MERLINE ERDA
May 29, 2014

Tom Hardy and Charlotte Riley make cute couple at Edge of Tomorrow premiere

When it comes to high-profile Hollywood relationships there are not many that are as cute as actor Tom Hardy and his beautiful actress girlfriend Charlotte Riley. While Tom Hardy has slowly but surely become one of the biggest names in Hollywood and one of the most sought after actors on the face of the Earth, Charlotte Riley has also enjoyed a successful acting career of her own.



Charlotte Riley has a role in the movie Edge of Tomorrow, which stars Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt in the lead roles, and the London premiere of the movie took place at BFI IMAX earlier this week. Tom Hardy joined his girlfriend Charlotte Riley on the red carpet for the Edge of Tomorrow premiere and the two stars made the perfect couple


READ MORE HERE: http://www.fansshare.com/news/tom-hardy-charlotte-riley-make-cute-couple-at-edge-of-tomorrow-premiere/

Ripper Street producers under fire after filmmaker attacked by on-set medic

TIMES OF LONDON
Jules Mattsson
Last updated at 12:01AM, May 31 2014


Filmmaker Charlie Veitch is forcefully removed from the set of Ripper Street by a ‘medic’

The producers of Ripper Street have come under fire after a medic on the set in Manchester was captured on camera claiming to be a police officer and forcefully trying to stop a man filming.



Charlie Veitch, a filmmaker and free speech activist, says he saw people bunched up on the street in period costumes using iPads so decided to film it using his small camcorder.




Thursday, May 29, 2014

'Downton Abbey' Creator Slams PBS

THE HUFFINGTON POST
By Jessica Toomer
Posted: 05/28/2014 4:05 pm EDT Updated: 05/28/2014 9:59 pm EDT



Big changes might be in store for the Crawley family when "Downton Abbey" returns for a fifth season next year.

The PBS show has collected hordes of fans all over the world, but if you're not British -- more specifically, if you aren't living in the U.K. -- you're probably aware of its wonky TV schedule. The Brits have the special privilege of viewing the period drama months before its American audience tunes in, and we Yanks don't mind complaining about the network playing geographic favorites whenever we get the chance.

But now it seems Americans aren't the only ones criticizing the scheduling conflict. The show's creator Julian Fellowes told The Telegraph he'd be more than happy to have the show simulcast. “I want to have simultaneous transmission in America and Britain,” Fellowes said. “The difficulty that we have is that people are discussing the series as it happens online before America’s seen it and on the Internet we’re all in the same company. It’s madness.”

Spoilers are a huge problem for American fans. While the Christmas special of the show trended on Twitter last year, American audiences were only able to view the episode as recently as two months ago. After fellow British export "Doctor Who" saw big success in simulcasting its 50th-anniversary special in the U.S. and the U.K., Fellowes insisted there's no reason why "Downton Abbey" wouldn't also benefit from airing at the same time in both countries. Or at the very least, on the same day.

“I don’t mean exactly the same time so people have to stay up all night," Fellowes explained. "But instead the same day in order for everyone to have a chance to watch it. The BBC have shown it can be done so all this talk that it’s impossible is wrong,””




READ MORE HERE: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/05/28/downton-abbey-simulcast-schedule_n_5405729.html

Which Poem Makes Tom Hiddleston Cry? This One…

BBC AMERICA
By Fraser McAlpine | Posted on April 11th, 2014



Tom’s choice is a poem called Love After Love by Derek Walcott, and according to the extract published in Marie Claire, he has this to say about it:

“I read this poem often. Once a month at least. In the madness and mayhem of modern life, where every man seems committed to an endless search for approval and esteem of his fellows and peers, no matter what the cost, this poem reminds me of a basic truth: that we are, as we are, ‘enough.’

“Most of us are motivated deep down by a sense of insufficiency, a need to be better, stronger, faster; to work harder; to be more committed, more kind, more self-sufficient, more successful. We are driven be a sense that we are not, as we are, ‘enough.’ But this short poem by Derek Walcott is like a declaration of unconditional love. It’s like the embrace of an old friend. We are each of us whole, perfectly imperfect, enough.”



Love After Love

The time will come
when, with elation,
you will greet yourself arriving
at your own door, in your own mirror,
and each will smile at the other’s welcome,
and say, sit here. Eat.
You will love again the stranger who was your self.
Give wine. Give bread. Give back your heart
to itself, to the stranger who has loved you

all your life, whom you ignored
for another, who knows you by heart.
Take down the love letters from the bookshelf,

the photographs, the desperate notes,
peel your own image from the mirror.
Sit. Feast on your life.