Showing posts with label the audience. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the audience. Show all posts

Friday, June 28, 2013

Helen Mirren on the terrifying headmistress who inspired her rise to fame - and why she almost refused a damehood By JAMES PEACHEY (MAIL ON LINE)

Helen Mirren says her terrifying headmistress inspired her rise to fame

Dame Helen Mirren doesn’t do demure. Indeed, she’s made a very successful career out of playing formidable characters that you wouldn’t mess with.

From Queens — including Cleopatra, Elizabeth I, Elizabeth II (twice) — to uncompromising women like Lady Macbeth, Madame Bovary and the ice-cool Detective Chief Superintendent Jane Tennison in Prime Suspect, she can face down even the strongest opponent with an imperious flick of an eyelid.

She famously demonstrated her forbidding demeanour only last month, when she stomped off the stage to confront a group of drummers in the street outside who were providing unwelcome musical accompaniment to her performance in The Audience at the Gielgud Theatre in London’s West End.

So it is hardly a surprise that in her latest movie, Monsters University — in which she is heard but not seen — she easily digs deep into those natural reserves of unchallengeable authority.  

Helen plays Dr Abigail Hardscrabble, dean at the School of Scaring in Monsters University, a prequel to the enormously successful 2001 Disney Pixar animated movie Monsters Inc.

She is easily the most intimidating woman I’ve ever played,’ she assures me when we meet at a London hotel where she was preparing for the film’s release.  


For extra inspiration, she confides, she drew on her memory of her old school headmistress — ‘who used to terrify me, frighten me to death’.

It was at St Bernard’s Convent High School, in her native Southend-On-Sea, Essex, almost 60 years ago that Dame Mother Mary Mildred scared young Helen and inspired her in equal measure.

She said: ‘The funny thing is, I didn’t consciously think about her when I was voicing the part of Dean Hardscrabble in a Hollywood studio, even though she made such a big impression on my early life.

‘It was only when I came back to England and somebody asked me whether I had anybody in mind when I was playing her that I realised that she’d been in my thoughts. To me, she was really scary, sitting there dressed in black and white and exuding this sort of strict kindness.

‘But — and here’s my really important memory of Dame Mother Mary Mildred — she was very wise, and I like to think I’ve imbued the character of Dean Hardscrabble with a mixture of her scariness and wisdom.

‘At the age of ten, she gave me not only the best piece of advice that anyone has ever given me but advice which I’ve lived by ever since and which has helped me enormously in life — and that advice was to understand fear, to recognise that the worst thing about fear is fear itself.

'Once you recognise that, and can deal with it, even if it’s just by pretending you’re not frightened, life isn’t nearly as frightening.

‘Without those words of wisdom from my old headmistress, I don’t think I would have had the courage to take on some of the really challenging roles in my career.’


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2350382/Helen-Mirren-terrifying-headmistress-inspired-rise-fame--refused-damehood.html#ixzz2XX7H7ix2 
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Sunday, June 23, 2013

Helen Mirren in filmed play 'Audience' sets screen record MARK KENNEDY ASSOCIATED PRESS (DAYTONA BEACH NEWSJOURNAL)


NEW YORK — As a queen, Helen Mirren reigns on screen and stage.

National Theatre Live, which broadcasts stage shows from England to movie screens worldwide, said Monday that its June 13 live broadcast of Mirren as Queen Elizabeth II in the play "The Audience" has captured its largest audience to date.

"We were expecting a big audience for it because there's been great buzz, but it's turned out even greater than expected," David Sabel, executive producer of NT Live, said in an interview from London. "It's very exciting."


Peter Morgan's play, performed at London's Gielgud Theatre, was seen by nearly 30,000 people in North America and nearly 80,000 people in the United Kingdom, a record for the four-year-old program which began with a screening of "Phedre" starring Mirren.

The response has prompted more encore screenings of the play. In North America, there are 700 screenings scheduled throughout the summer, with additional encores to be added. In the UK, nearly 800 screenings will take place.

READ MORE: http://www.news-journalonline.com/article/20130623/WIRE/306199986/1064?Title=Helen-Mirren-in-filmed-play-Audience-sets-screen-record

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Becks cuddles ‘The Queen’: David Beckham poses with Helen Mirren (THE SUN) By FRAN WETZEL Published: 2 hrs ago


IT seems even Helen Mirren can’t resist the charm of David Beckham – cuddling up to the footie legend at a birthday party for the Queen.


The actress, 68, got close to the former England ace as they posed for photos at the bash held in honour of Her Majesty in Shanghai, China.

The pair had previously met an awards ceremony in 2007. And it seemed they are old pals, chatting away happily at a reception afterwards.


Monday, May 20, 2013

Dame Helen Mirren grants dying fan's wish (MSN)



The actress reached out to 10-year-old schoolboy Oliver Burton, who is battling cancer in his spine and may have just weeks to live, after learning he was unable to meet the real Queen at Buckingham Palace.

Dame Helen then stepped in to help make Burton's dream come true - she treated him to a limousine ride to see her London play The Audience, in which she portrays the monarch, and met him in character backstage at the Gielgud Theater after the show.

The star, who introduced Burton to her corgi dog co-star and even pretended to knight him during the visit, tells The Sun on Sunday, "It was a pleasure and a privilege to meet such a brave young man."

READ MORE: http://entertainment.ca.msn.com/celebs/dame-helen-mirren-grants-dying-fans-wish-1

Monday, May 6, 2013

Helen Mirren:(VIDEO) 'They were very sweet and stopped the minute they knew I wasn’t just a batty old woman': Queen Helen on the moment she stormed off stage to confront a noisy drumming troupe (Mail On LIne)

By ALASDAIR GLENNIE and EMILY ALLEN


PUBLISHED: 17:11 EST, 5 May 2013 | UPDATED: 10:56 EST, 6 May 2013

 Reports of her exact words differ, but it is clear the 67-year-old was, like Queen Victoria, not amused.  Some said she told the group to ‘shut the **** up’.
One is not amused: Helen Mirren as The Queen in play The Audience
One is not amused: Helen Mirren as The Queen in play The Audience
Others said she ‘stomped out and shrieked “Quiet! I’m trying to do a play in here!” ’
Dame Helen is playing the Queen in The Audience, a play about the monarch’s private weekly meetings with various prime ministers at Buckingham Palace.
Last week the role earned her an Olivier award for best actress. 
The play’s writer Peter Morgan also scripted the 2006 film The Queen, for which Dame Helen won an Oscar.
Saturday night’s West End performance of the play was disturbed by the sound of drums five minutes before the interval.
A troupe of performers marched past the theatre in a parade designed to promote As One In The Park, a festival for gay and transgender people due to take place in East London this month.
Followed by a crowd of around 200, the musicians and dancers stopped outside a bar to perform a drum crescendo – unaware they were drowning out Dame Helen’s lines.
Now Dame Helen has revealed she would like to invite the performers to see her play. 
Audience member Ben Scotchbrook told the Daily Mail that the actress finished the first half without letting the noise affect her performance. 
When the second half was interrupted by a lighting blackout, she went on stage and revealed she had dealt with the source of the noise.
‘She was a real pro, she saved the day,’ said Mr Scotchbrook, a 43-year-old communications consultant from Buckinghamshire.
‘The noise was really irritating, but she didn’t get ruffled on stage.
‘In the interval I went out and tried to ask the drummers to move on, to no effect. I don’t think they realised they could be heard inside the theatre.



Helen Mirren storms out of theatre dressed as the Queen to rebuke noisy drummers (THE GLOBE AND MAIL)


Silence for the queen, please.

A troupe of street drummers got a shock when Helen Mirren, dressed as the Queen, emerged from a London theatre to berate them for disrupting her show.

Mirren is starring in The Audience, a drama about the weekly meetings between the queen and Britain’s prime ministers over her 60-year reign.

Mirren told the Daily Telegraph newspaper that she used less-than-royal language in the rant during the intermission of Saturday’s performance.

“I’m afraid there were a few ‘thespian’ words used,” Mirren was quoted as saying Monday. “They got a very stern royal ticking off but I have to say they were very sweet and they stopped immediately.

“I felt rotten, but on the other hand they were destroying our performance so something had to be done.”

The drummers were marching through London’s West End to promote As One in the Park, a gay music festival being held later this month.


READ MORE: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/helen-mirren-storms-out-of-theatre-dressed-as-the-queen-to-rebuke-noisy-drummers/article11730323/

Monday, April 29, 2013

Helen Mirren reigns at London's Olivier awards April 28, 2013 | 11:22 pm JILL LAWLESS Associated Press The Washington Examiner



LONDON (AP) -- Helen Mirren was crowned queen of the London stage at the Olivier Awards Sunday, while compelling, canine-titled teen drama "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time" emerged as best in show with seven trophies.

Mirren, 67, was a popular and expected best actress choice for her regal yet vulnerable Queen Elizabeth II in "The Audience," Peter Morgan's behind-palace-doors drama about the relationship between Britain's queen and its prime ministers.

The actress, who won an Academy Award in 2007 for playing Britain's monarch in "The Queen," quipped that it was 87-year-old Elizabeth who deserved an award, "for the most consistent and committed performance of the 20th century, and probably the 21st century."

Backstage, it turned out she wasn't kidding. Mirren, who has been Olivier-nominated three times before, said that finally winning "doesn't mean that I was the best actor. There were so many incredible performances out there."


"I was making a joke about the queen winning, but I think actually it is a reflection of the kind of respect the queen is held in," she said.

Her "Audience" co-star, Richard McCabe, who won the supporting actor trophy for playing 1960s and 70s Prime Minister Harold Wilson, said Mirren was a joy to work with.

"It's important as an actor to be absolutely fearless, and she is," he said.

While the queen herself hasn't been to see the Stephen Daldry-directed show -- rumored to be Broadway-bound -- McCabe said "a lot of people in the royal household have been coming in and watching incognito, and they must be reporting back."

The surprise of the awards ceremony at London's Royal Opera House was "Curious Incident," an adaptation of Mark Haddon's best-selling young-adult novel about a teenage math prodigy with Asperger's Syndrome who sets out to find the killer of his neighbor's dog, with destabilizing results.

The show, which premiered at the state-subsidized National Theatre last year before transferring to a commercial West End playhouse, has won praise for its creative use of movement and technology to make the leap from page to stage.

The Simon Stephens-scripted drama was named best new play, and 28-year-old Luke Treadaway was crowned best actor, beating a strong list of contenders including Rupert Everett, Mark Rylance and James McAvoy.


READ MORE: http://washingtonexaminer.com/helen-mirren-reigns-at-londons-olivier-awards/article/2528386

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Helen Mirren heading to America with The Audience (EXPRESS)

DAME HELEN MIRREN is set to thrill her American fans with her portrayal of QUEEN ELIZABETH II in hit stage show THE AUDIENCE - the production is heading Stateside next year (14).


The actress has won rave reviews for her role as the monarch in Stephen Daldry's West End production, which dramatises pivotal meetings between the Queen and 12 prime ministers over 60 years - and now U.S. theatre fans will have the chance to see it.

The Daily Mail reports the show is set to open in New York in 2014, and Mirren will resume her role in the play, which is due to finish its London run in June (13).

The actress says, "There are talks and negotiations going on now, and I will be going to do the play over there around this time next year."






Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Helen Mirren nominated for an Olivier Award TELEGRAPH


By Daisy Bowie-Sell
1:45AM GMT 26 Mar 2013

She has won an Oscar, a Bafta and a Golden Globe for her portrayal of The Queen, and now Helen Mirren will have the chance to add an Olivier to her list of awards won for playing Elizabeth II.

Mirren has been nominated in the Best Actress category this year, for her role in the new play The Audience, directed by Stephen Daldry.

The Audience opened to a string of favourable reviews earlier this month, with Charles Spencer, The Daily Telegraph's theatre critic, calling Mirren's performance 'Magnificent'.

The actress will be competing for the award against Hattie Morahan, who won this year's Evening Standard Theatre Award for her role as Nora in Ibsen's A Doll's House, Billie Piper for The Effect and Kristin Scott Thomas for Old Times.

In the Best Actor category Mark Rylance has been nominated for his acclaimed, cross-dressing performance in Twelfth Night. He is up against Rupert Everett in The Judas Kiss, James McAvoy in Macbeth, Rafe Spall in Constellations and Luke Treadaway in The Curious Incident.

READ MORE:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/theatre/theatre-news/9953945/Olivier-Award-nominations-Helen-Mirren-nominated-for-best-actress.html

Monday, March 4, 2013

Helen Mirren: Review of THE AUDIENCE (LONDON THEATER)


Review by Peter Brown
2 March 2013
Helen Mirren (Queen Elizabeth II), Haydn Gwynne (Margaret Thatcher),Richard McCabe (Harold Wilson), Paul Ritter (John Major) (Photos by Johan Persson) 

Every week – when the relevant parties are in London – Queen Elizabeth II meets with her current Prime Minister for a cosy chat about … well, we don't actually know what they talk about because no minutes are published, or even kept. And so far as I am aware none of the 12 Prime Ministers who have served during the Queen's 61 year reign has given anything more than a vague hint of what their discussions have covered. So, how do you make a play out of meetings like that?

Peter Morgan's answer to that tricky question is to blend fact and fiction. He draws on what is commonly known about the personalities of various Prime Ministers and the issues they faced during their periods in office, then mixes-in the character of a shrewd, hard-working and intelligent monarch, and finally tops it all off with completely fictional but rather witty dialogue. The recipe proves immensely successful so that the final theatrical dish is humorously entertaining, well-observed, and has enough in the way of authenticity to be (just about) believable.

In the lead, as Queen Elizabeth II, is Helen Mirren who has already had a fairly decent rehearsal for the part, as she won an oscar in 2006 for her portrayal of the same person in the film 'The Queen'. With the kind of experience she has acquired, perhaps she may be missing a few performances in the near future in order to stand in for HMQ while she recovers from her current illness.


READ MORE: http://www.londontheatre.co.uk/londontheatre/reviews/audience.htm

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Helen Mirren Play 'The Audience' to Screen in Movie Theaters Worldwide 6:36 PM PST 2/21/2013 by David Rooney (THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER)

The actress reprises the role of Queen Elizabeth II in Peter Morgan's new play, which focuses on the monarch's weekly meetings with Britain's prime ministers.


NEW YORK -- It's already one of the hottest tickets of the theater year in London, but international audiences will also get a chance to see Helen Mirren in The Audience when a performance of the play is broadcast live to movie screens around the world on June 13.

Directed by Stephen Daldry, the production reunites Mirren with playwright Peter Morgan, who wrote the screenplay for The Queen. That 2006 Stephen Frears film earned Mirren a best actress Oscar for the title role of Queen Elizabeth II. She steps back into the shoes of the British sovereign in this new play, which provides a fictionalized account of the monarch's weekly closed-door chats with her prime ministers during her six decades on the throne.



Thursday, February 14, 2013

Helen Mirren: My living portrait of the Queen (TELEGRAPH)


By Sarah Crompton12:30PM GMT 14 Feb 2013

Helen Mirren: "This Queen is everything" Photo: David Levene /eyevine

Helen Mirren sits very straight, folding and unfolding her hands from a resting position just below her bosom as she speaks. It is a gesture reminiscent of Her Majesty the Queen.

In all other respects, the 67-year-old actress, who possesses a glamour that time has not withered, bears little resemblance to the 86-year-old monarch either now or at any point in her 60-year reign.

Yet ever since she played the title role in The Queen – the 2006 film directed by Stephen Frears and written by Peter Morgan – the two have become muddled in people’s minds, making the Queen seem slightly more beautiful than she is and Mirren rather more regal.

That confusion will become even greater next Friday when Mirren steps on to the stage as Elizabeth II in The Audience, Morgan’s new play which examines the monarch’s relationship with the prime ministers who have served her. Morgan wrote it with Mirren in mind – but she was initially reluctant to reprise the role.

“I didn’t want to do it. The first thing I emailed to him was ‘You b------’,” she says. “[As an actress] you want to go forward and not be stuck with a character for the rest of your life. I always think of the obituary, you know?” She is laughing now. “Well, I do. It was Prime Suspect for ages: ‘Jane Tennison has been sadly knocked over by a bus’.” Now the image of Mirren as the hard-drinking detective she played for seven series on ITV has been supplanted in people’s minds by her uncanny portrayal of the Queen.


Helen Mirren dressed as the Queen in the new play, The Audience. Photo: Johan Persson

We are talking during a break in rehearsals for the new play. Harold Wilson (played by Richard McCabe) has just wandered out of the room; David Cameron (Rufus Wright) has not yet arrived. Around a table, surrounded by books, papers and scripts, sit Mirren, Morgan and the director Stephen Daldry. All are smiling and apparently relaxed, despite the fact that they are only two weeks from the opening of one of the most anticipated plays of the season.

Morgan first came up with the idea for The Audience when he was working on The Queen, which was set immediately after the death of Diana, Princess of Wales. “I remember people were keen that I didn’t have Blair in the film because they felt that would make it less filmic,” he says. “But I really loved writing the Blair-Queen scenes because that was where it came alive for me.”



READ MORE: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/theatre/london-shows/9858532/Helen-Mirren-My-living-portrait-of-the-Queen.html

Sunday, December 9, 2012

Mirren, Dench crown London theater tour December 9, 2012 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette



Judi Dench and Helen Mirren head the cast list for the Post-Gazette's early spring Critic's Choice theater tour to London, March 10-17, when the daffodils and magnolias will be in bloom. Along with London's palaces, street life, museums, cathedrals and pubs, the trip features three plays and a chance to see several more. Chosen so far are:

• "Peter and Alice," John Logan's new play about Alice Liddell and Peter Davies, played by Ms. Dench and Ben Whishaw (James Bond's new Q). Alice and Peter are the real-life people who inspired "Alice in Wonderland" and "Peter Pan." "Enchantment and reality collide," says the press release. (Note: we will see "Peter and Alice" in the first week of its previews, before it has been reviewed by the critics.)

• "The Audience," with Ms. Mirren as Queen Elizabeth II, is by Peter Morgan, who wrote "The Queen," the movie in which Ms. Mirren also played Elizabeth II and won an Oscar. In this new play, the queen meets with a series of prime ministers, from Churchill to Cameron.


Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/stories/life/travel/mirren-dench-crown-london-theater-tour-665558/#ixzz2EZNJjduI

Saturday, June 23, 2012

Mirren is fit for a queen Last Updated: 12:19 AM, June 21, 2012 Posted: 10:31 PM, June 19, 2012 Michael Riedel (NEW YORK POST)



Helen Mirren won an Oscar as Elizabeth II in “The Queen.”
So why not wear the crown again?

Mirren’s doing readings in London this week of a new play called “The Audience,” which chronicles Elizabeth II’s reign from 1952 to this month’s Diamond Jubilee.

“The Audience” is by Peter Morgan, who wrote “The Queen” as well as the hit Broadway play “Frost/Nixon.”

Morgan’s top choice for director, I hear, is Stephen Daldry, who staged “Billy Elliot.”

If Mirren commits to “The Audience,” the plan is to produce it in London this fall and then move it to Broadway, possibly by spring 2013.


Read more: http://www.nypost.com/p/entertainment/theater/mirren_is_fit_for_queen_670kx2yXn9M19O2lvlVxEO#ixzz1ycVhTrwp