Showing posts with label john thornton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label john thornton. Show all posts

Friday, November 14, 2014

10 Years Later, ‘North & South’ Remains the Greatest Period-Drama Miniseries of All Time

FLAVORWIRE
By Sarah Seltzer on Nov 14, 2014 12:00pm




Ten years ago tonight, the BBC premiered a four-part miniseries, North & South (not to be confused with the Patrick Swayze-starring civil war drama of the same name), adapted from Elizabeth Gaskell’s 19th-century novel of cross-class romance in the industrial North of England. The BBC didn’t harbor huge expectations for the series, coming as it did in the midst of a glorious decade of nonstop adaptations of major works by Austen, Brontë, and Dickens. But then, a few weeks later, the fourth installment of North & South ended with a tender, long-awaited kiss (now known to viewers as “The Kiss”). Immediately, so many people flooded the BBC’s online message boards that they crashed and shut down. It’s been enshrined in fangirl lore as “the infamous night that period drama fans broke (a small part of) the BBC (dot com).”

Richard Armitage, who played the brooding hero John Thornton, became a star and heartthrob — move over Colin Firth! — and the show was enshrined as a fan favorite.



I had a similar reaction to those first viewers’ when I watched North & South on DVD across the pond a few years later. I tracked down an email I sent eight years ago after a binge-watching frenzy:

“We watched the final three hours of North and South... you must must must must watch it. I literally couldn’t breathe at the end it was so good.

Literally. I literally couldn’t breathe! Yet somehow I lived! In all seriousness, what about the miniseries sends so many viewers into apoplexy the moment it ends? It’s hard to see at first: North & South has the marriage plot of an Austen adaptation but with no witty repartee, and the social strife and coughing deathbeds of a Dickens adaptation yet without any broad humor. In addition, it’s filmed in a mostly muted register of colors to signify the dark, industrial vibe of “Milton” (a stand-in for Manchester). We enter very few polished drawing rooms, witness not a single ball or country dance, and everyone speaks with accurately indecipherable Northern English accents. Over the course of four installments, quite a few main characters die of various lingering illnesses. The downtrodden working people of Milton get supplanted by even more desperate, literally starving Irish strike-breakers, and then they almost murder the strike-breakers, which is not something you see very often on TV. It’s bleaker than Bleak House.

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But all these qualities make North & South so unforgettable, too. Like the best “prestige TV,” its concerns are with social justice, moral ambiguity, and individual responsibility. Everyone is rendered sympathetically, to some degree, even those who stand in opposition to each other. Surrounded by the conflicts of this complex world, we have the love story between Thornton, who transcended his modest background to become a mill owner (a boss with principles, but a boss nonetheless), and the refined, socially liberal Margaret Hale (played by a radiant Daniella Denby-Ashe), who comes from the gentler South and thinks him an oppressive brute. It’s one of the most explosive, chemistry-rich misunderstanding-laden romances that’s ever graced the small screen. Their courtship has a structure that clearly imitates Pride and Prejudice, but each step along the way is ten times as dramatic.




Monday, October 13, 2014

Richard Armitage reveals The Crucible in cinemas

THE TELEGRAPH
By Kat Brown
11:16AM BST 13 Oct 2014



Missed out on a hit? No problem. Following in the footsteps of the National Theatre’s successful NT Live series, the Old Vic’s sold-out production of The Crucible is to be screened in over 350 cinemas across the UK this December.


In this short clip, its leading man Richard Armitage reveals plans for the screenings on Thursday 4 and Sunday 7 December followed by an extract from what cinema audiences can expect.




READ MORE HERE: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/culturevideo/stagevideo/11158450/Richard-Armitage-The-Crucible-live.html

Monday, August 5, 2013

Richard Armitage And Why He Should Be Considered To Play ‘Batman’


Riichard Armitage and why he should be considered to play Batman.

THE INQUISITOR
5 August, 2013

To most Americans, Richard Armitage is not a name that they recognize, but rumor has it, he is being considered as the next Batman. Why should he be in serious contention to play the dark knight? Richard Armitage is a British actor who is well known and very much liked by audiences in England and those who follow period dramas.


Richard is 41, so he fits the bill as far as age is concerned. He definitely fits the bill with his looks, he is 6’2″, has a deep, rich voice, and has the acting ability to play anything he wants. Heck, he just finished playing a dwarf. Yes, at 6’2″. Peter Jackson gave him the job of dwarf leader Thorin Oakenshield in The Hobbit trilogy and he didn’t go unnoticed.



Richard is a theater trained actor, as are many of the Brits. He has had stints in several popular period dramas. His career took off in Britain when he was cast as the romantic hero Mr. Thornton in North And South. From there, he has played different roles within the genre most notably the sexy Guy of Gisborne in Robin Hood for the BBC. He also became very popular for his performances in The Vicar Of Dibley and Spook in which he played spy agent Lucas North.




Read more at http://www.inquisitr.com/888087/richard-armitage-and-why-he-should-be-considered-to-play-batman/#fuviYI7iY8XwFa3e.99


Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Richard Armitage: Great Dan & Maz Interview Richard Armitage, star of The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey!






Richard Armitage: It cost $1.6m to get a face like this! Richard Armitage's Thorin make-over for The Hobbit By Kate Midena May 01, 2013 1:32PM (Adelaide Now)


EVER wondered what it would take to make a beautiful man look like a dwarf?

Three hours in the make-up chair, ten test faces, a wig, a beard, some body padding, eight weeks of dwarf-walk training and $1.6 million worth of prosthetics.

Richard Armitage, who plays Thorin Oakenshield in the JRR Tolkien/Peter Jackson-adapted The Hobbit, revealed to news.com.au the lengths it took to transform him into the King Under The Mountain.

"Well it's my beard, which I'm growing back in time for the next lot of filming, the hair is a wig which strangely a lot of people don't realise, but the forehead the eyebrows and the nose are all prosthetics.

"It takes about three hours to get ready - about an hour and a half for the face and 45 minutes for the hair. If we started shooting at eight o'clock we would have to be in the chair at 4.30am. That's over 270 film days.

"Each piece had a price tag on it that would make you baulk. They cost about $2000 each, you only stick them on once because they’re so delicate, and once the day is over you throw them in the bin. I had a collection of Thorin's eyebrows stuck to the wall, each eyebrow hair had to be punched in by hand, and if you think that every single time it has to be identical, it's just a work of art. Our prosthetic artist would spend each night punching eyebrow hairs into the mould, being so meticulous about it. It's a whole new world of skill.”

But the real question for Armitage, who won legions of fans thanks to his roles as Lucas North on Spooks and John Thornton in North & South, is: Why cover up such a delightful nose in the first place? It has, after all, inspired countless tumblr pages, websites and blog posts.

"Do people really think that about my nose? I spent my whole life hating it so it's amusing that people like it!" Armitage said

"When they started putting a big nose on me I was like, ‘Are you sure I really need this?’ I could have gotten away with not having it! But funnily enough at the end of the day, I'd pull the nose off and hold it there just to see what it looked like and my own nose looked so tiny, it was great."

read more: http://www.adelaidenow.com.au/entertainment/movies/it-cost-16m-to-get-a-face-like-this-richard-armitages-thorin-make-over-for-the-hobbit/story-e6freeuc-1226633125451