Showing posts with label wanda ventham. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wanda ventham. Show all posts

Saturday, January 17, 2015

This story will make you love Benedict Cumberbatch even more

GLAMOUR
By ELLA ALEXANDER
FRIDAY, 16 JANUARY 2015



Benedict Cumberbatch has said that telling his parents he has been nominated for an Oscar is one of the "proudest moments" of his life.

Ok, that's it. Just give the award to him already…

The 38-year-old actor was "knocked for six" to be in the running for Best Actor at the Academy Awards for his role in The Imitation Game and delighted in breaking the news to father Timothy Carlton and mother Wanda Ventham yesterday.





Wanda Ventham and Tim Carlton, Benedict Cumberbatch's parents, both great actors themselves, play his character, Sherlock's, parents as well.

He said: "I am knocked for six by this. So excited and honoured to receive this recognition. It's wonderful to be included by the academy in this exceptional year of performances. To ring my parents who are both actors and tell them that their only son has been nominated for an Oscar is one of the proudest moments of my life."

Meanwhile, fellow Best Actor nominee Eddie Redmayne - who picked up the Best Actor in a Motion Picture - Drama at the Golden Globe awards last weekend - was woken up with the good news this morning.



The Theory of Everything star told USA Today newspaper: "I'm in bed! 20 minutes ago I was in a deep, dark sleep, and there was this gigantic knock on the door. I stumbled in the dark and put a towel on and my manager was there brandishing a telephone with a lot of screaming coming out of it.


READ MORE HERE: http://www.glamourmagazine.co.uk/news/celebrity/2015/01/15/oscars-2015---winners-nominations--dates

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Benedict Cumberbatch: Breaking the code to stardom

EXPRESS
By: Robert Paisley
Published: Sun, November 16, 2014



The rise and rise of Benedict Cumberbatch has taken him from Harrow School via a Tibetan monastery to Baker Street and Hollywood. Now the next stop may be the Oscars thanks to his role in new movie The Imitation Game.

"It's been a lovely sort of slow build and this is just a great time," says the newly-engaged star, who says what surprises him most about his ascent is his sex symbol status.

"I am not a typical beauty," says Benedict, 38. "Mine is a weird face; a cross between that of an otter and something people find vaguely attractive. I've got a long face and a long neck which, for an actor, is useful in period roles. So my approach has been to wear high collars in period dramas and to turn my collar up in 21st-century dramas, like Sherlock."

His acting abilities are far more extensive and first bloomed 25 years ago when he played Titania, Queen of the Fairies, at his all-boys boarding school production of A Midsummer Night's Dream.

Benedict was a leading light of Harrow's Rattigan Society, the drama club named after old Harrovian and playwright Terence Rattigan, but before continuing his acting studies at Manchester University he spent a gap year in Darjeeling, India, teaching English in a Tibetan-run monastery.



"It was such a different environment from what I had left and I learnt far more than I taught during that year," he says.

Benedict emerged with a Zen-like calm that has served him well in showbusiness, and having actors as parents has helped him cope with career fluctuations.

"I had two parents who had lived with all the perils. I knew what the negatives were so when they hit I was prepared for them and just grafted on," says Benedict of Wanda Ventham and Timothy Carlton. They also played his parents in Sherlock.

Benedict made his mark playing classic roles in small theatres before graduating to leading parts at the prestigious Royal Court, Almeida and National Theatre.

He returns to the London stage for 12 weeks next summer, in what he describes as "a little play called Hamlet at the Barbican". Tickets for his return to Shakespeare sold even faster than concerts by One Direction and Beyonce.



His television career began with guest spots in Heartbeat and Spooks and then leading roles as Stephen Hawking, Guy Burgess and Vincent Van Gogh before his mercurial magic as Sherlock in 2010, but Benedict almost turned down the role.

"It was such an iconic character, the most filmed one in all of fiction, so I knew it would be a very exposing role with a lot of focus on it and I wondered if I really wanted to take that step into the limelight.

"It was such good material, though, that I took it and I'm glad I did as it is great fun to play the number one consulting detective and high functioning sociopath.

"I was amazed at how vocal and immediate the response was from the TV audience. All that tweeting and blogging was a new experience for me and overwhelming."

With Sherlock an instant hit, suddenly Benedict was in demand for movies. After smaller roles in British films Starter For Ten and Atonement he suddenly had Steven Spielberg casting him in War Horse, joined the all star cast of Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy and then Danny Boyle recruited him for the National Theatre's Frankenstein.

"It might seem like that whole momentum came from one particular role but Steven Spielberg had not actually seen me in Sherlock at that time, neither had Danny Boyle nor Tinker Tailor director Tomas Alfredson. What these people do with their spare time I don't know!" Playing Peter Guillam in Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy was a special thrill for Benedict because he had long wanted to be a spy, on screen or in reality.



READ MORE HERE:http://www.express.co.uk/news/showbiz/535985/Rise-of-actor-Benedict-Cumberbatch



Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Benedict Cumberbatch ''Really Happy'' After Engagement: Will Martin Freeman Be His Best Man?!

E! ONLINE
by ALYSSA TOOMEY
Today 8:59 AM PST

Benedict Cumberbatch, Sophie Hunter

So of course, when E! News caught up with the 38-year-old thesp at the premiere of his upcoming flick The Imitation Game, hosted by Chanel, we had to ask the Sherlock stud how it feels to be the biggest heartbreaker of 2014—and no surprise, the handsome Brit was as polite and humble as ever.

"There'll be another one..." he joked of his heartbreaker status. "And I don't know that I really deserve that title. I think most people are just really happy as we are."

The actor announced his engagement in a traditional matter, opting for a paid-for announcement in The Times newspaper's classified section, which named his parents, Wanda and Timothy, as well as his fiancée's, Katharine and Charles.


Following the exciting news, fans have rallied around the star and seem genuinely excited that Cumberbatch has found his match, but according to the newly engaged celeb, the only support he needs is from his bride-to-be.

"It is," he said when asked if it's nice to have such strong support his loyal admirers. "But the only support I really need to be honest I need is the woman I love who I proposed to."

Swoon alert!


READ MORE HERE: http://www.eonline.com/news/596871/benedict-cumberbatch-really-happy-after-engagement-will-martin-freeman-be-his-best-man

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

'Sherlock' Star Benedict Cumberbatch Announces Engagement in the Newspaper

ABC NEWS
Nov 5, 2014, 9:30 AM ET
By MICHAEL ROTHMAN
Entertainment Reporter
 via GOOD MORNING AMERICA

PHOTO: Benedict Cumberbatch is pictured Oct. 8, 2014, in London.

Talk about old school.

"Sherlock" star Benedict Cumberbatch decided to quietly announce his engagement to now-fiance Sophie Hunter by placing an eight-line notice in the births, deaths and marriages column of The Times newspaper of London, The Associated Press reported.

The actor's rep confirmed his engagement to the actress and theater director to the AP.


His humble announcement reads, "Mr B.T. Cumberbatch and Miss S.I. Hunter - The engagement is announced between Benedict, son of Wanda and Timothy Cumberbatch of London, and Sophie, daughter of Katherine Hunter of Edinburgh and Charles Hunter of London."

Yep, that's all!


READ MORE HERE: http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/sherlock-star-benedict-cumberbatch-announces-engagement-newspaper/story?id=26702523

Thursday, October 16, 2014

Benedict Cumberbatch’s mum, Wanda Ventham to appear in Holby City!

UNREALITY TV
October 16th, 2014 by Anna Howell.



Benedict Cumberbatch’s mum, Wanda Ventham, is to make a guest appearance in Holby City next week.

Fans of the ridiculously popular Sherlock star will know that both his mother, Wanda Ventham and his father, Timothy Carlton (real name Timothy Carlton Congdon Cumberbatch), are established actors also.


In fact, you have probably already seen them as they starred in Sherlock last series playing the leading man’s parents in two episodes, not to mention the fact that their uber-famous son called on them to attend the TV Choice Awards on his behalf.

wanda ventham timothy carlton

But Wanda Ventham will not have her son, who she worked with on the Chelsea Flower Show earlier this year, or her husband by her side as she makes her Holby City debut next Tuesday evening.


But the Cumberbatch/Ventham/Carlton family are no strangers to Holby City – Wanda’s husband Timothy Carlton, who is known for his sitcom roles such as Executive Stress, Next of Kin and in the television film The Scarlet Pimpernel, appeared in the show himself back in 2011, playing Leslie Clarke-Jones.




Thursday, September 18, 2014

Dame Judi Dench: Benedict Cumberbatch is a true gentleman

TELEGRAPH
Tim Walker. Edited by Katy Balls
7:30AM BST 18 Sep 2014




Dame Judi Dench agreed to star opposite Benedict Cumberbatch in the BBC's Richard III after the Sherlock actor propositioned her during a Shakespeare masterclass at the Hay Festival. However, Mandrake can disclose that the pair are in fact old friends.

“I knew him when he was a little boy at prep school before he went on to Harrow," Dame Judi tells me. "His mother, Wanda Ventham, was at the Royal Central School of Drama a year ahead of me.”



“He is a true gentleman and a thoroughly good actor, which helps,” she says. “We start on Monday and it’s a huge project, six months in filming.”

Meanwhile, the actress says it is unlikely she will attend the Oscars next year. Despite being nominated for the Best Actress award, Dame Judi Dench was notably absent at this year’s awards after filming in India for the sequel to The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel clashed with the ceremony. Now, the actress, who turns 80 this year, confides that she is in no hurry to make an appearance.

“No, I don’t think I’ll attend,” she tells me. “I don’t imagine so.”


READ MORE HERE: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/celebritynews/11102811/Dame-Judi-Dench-says-Sherlock-actor-Benedict-Cumberbatch-is-a-true-gentleman.html

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

(video) Benedict Cumberbatch wins best actor at TV Choice Awards as Sherlock wins best drama

INDEPENDENT
DAISY WYATT
Tuesday 09 September 2014

Benedict Cumberbatch Benedict Cumberbatch Gif animated GIF

Benedict Cumberbatch has been named best actor for his starring role in Sherlock at the TV Choice Awards.



The actor, who was recently tipped for an Oscar nomination for his portrayal of Alan Turing in new film The Imitation Game, beat David Tennant, Allen Leech and Bradley Walsh to take home the award for the second year running.

Sherlock also won best drama series at the awards, following its success at last month’s Emmys.


READ MORE HERE: http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/tv/news/benedict-cumberbatch-wins-best-actor-at-tv-choice-awards-as-sherlock-wins-best-drama-9720063.html






Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Benedict Cumberbatch: Interview with Benedict’s mum, Wanda Ventham, in the TVTimes, 28th July 1979.




Every Monday morning for the past seven years a perfect single rose has arrived for Wanda Ventham. They’re from her second husband, actor Timothy Carlton—and even when he is away filming or on tour, the rose arrives.

“Tim is a great romantic, which is really why—in the end—I decided I would remarry,” Wanda told me.

They were married in April 1976, but had been together virtually since they first met in Ireland in 1972 while filming sequences for A Family At War. At the time her first marriage, the businessman James Tabernacle, was well on the way to a conclusion.


“Tim didn’t break up a marriage,” she said, “but I suppose he was what was needed to help me make the final decision. All divorces are unpleasant, but I was lucky because I had someone in my life to cushion me.

“Even so, it didn’t make it easy, and I ended up feeling really sad and with an awful sense of failure.”

But that’s all well in the past now. She and Tim have a three-year-old son, Benedict, an energetic handful who was treating the living room like a sports stadium when I saw Wanda at her Kensington flat.

“Our brains go to jelly the whole time,” she said, watching him. “He has been rather vile today, though—you’ve hit on a bad day. He has just had his adenoids and tonsils out and his temperament has gone slightly loopy in the last day or so. But even at times like this Tim is fantastic with him.”



While Carlton was being fantastic, keeping the boisterous Benedict relatively quiet in another room, I asked Wanda about her daughter by her first marriage.

“It’s smashing to have a 20-year-old daughter because our interests are so similar,” she said. “She’s an art student now, something I always wanted to be when I was a child and before I decided to become an actress.



“Tracy was 13 when Tim and I got together, but I had no misgivings about living with him. Thirteen is a vulnerable age, but she was mature enough to realise there wasn’t a happy relationship between her father and me.

“She has never taken sides, although she leans towards me. I think it’s because she has always lived with me and that is where her security and her continuity have come from.

“When I first got married my parents, and my husband’s, would have been horrified if we had decided to just live together. But now—it’s an awful thing to say, perhaps—I would encourage my daughter to live with someone at first rather than jump into marriage straight away.”

Tracy took time off from school to be at Wanda and Tim’s wedding. Her own objection seemed to be her mother’s choice of a wedding outfit—jeans, held up by braces. And she was really delighted when her step-brother arrived on the scene.



Benedict Cumberbatch with parents Timothy Carlton and Wanda Ventham in Sherlock

I asked Wanda (who gives what she calls “a rather flashy cameo performance” in John Osborne’s play You’re Not Watching Me, Mummy on Monday and will star in a second series of Fallen Hero later this year) what she felt was meant by the word “raunchy”. A well-known gossip columnist she has never met recently described her as “a very raunchy lady”.

“I don’t know,” Wanda said. “It sounds rather game, and I’ve always led such a domestic life. Raunchy doesn’t sound at all domesticated…”

And Wanda Ventham, who seems to be rather more disturbing than domesticated, started to make Benedict’s tea. When you have a Benedict in the house, you can’t just sit around all day looking like Wanda Ventham.



Found on PerfectBenny tumblr
http://perfectbenny.tumblr.com/post/25310748160/ladyavenal-jessa-84-interview-with


Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Benedict Cumberbatch lights up the Chelsea Flower Show

RADIO TIMES
Ben Dowell
12:28 PM, 19 May 2014

View image on Twitter

It is surely the most dramatic thing to have happened to horticulture since the invention of the lawn mower: yes, indeed, Sherlock star Benedict Cumberbatch has graced the Chelsea Flower Show with his presence.

Breathless gardening fans at the event were eager to catch a glimpse of the star as he arrived this morning wearing a pink shirt, light grey jacket and sunglasses - in the company his mother the actress Wanda Ventham.






Cumberbatch and his Mum - who plays Sherlock's mother in the hit BBC series - were there to review the floral displays for BBC2's coverage.

The actor, who has said that he relaxes by "roof terrace" gardening, is due to appear in a section of BBC2's coverage of the show called Mum and Me in which he will converse with his mother about the various displays.

READ MORE HERE: http://www.radiotimes.com/news/2014-05-19/benedict-cumberbatch-lights-up-the-chelsea-flower-show

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Benedict Cumberbatch to Launch BBC’s Chelsea Flower Show with his Mum

BBC AMERICA
By Fraser McAlpine | Posted on May 14th, 2014



This is just advance warning: next week we’ll be bringing you some footage that might cause involuntary head-tilts, raised pulses and the irresistible urge to hug someone, while buying flowers.

Benedict Cumberbatch will be helping the BBC to launch their coverage of this year’s Chelsea Flower Show next Monday (May 19), with a little assistance from his mum, Wanda Ventham.



The pair join presenters Monty Don and Joe Swift to discuss their own memories of the garden show, which is organized by the Royal Horticultural Society and held every May in the grounds of the Royal Hospital Chelsea in London.

The show is always a big talking point, with gardeners taking enormous pains to create great displays of their horticultural handiwork. And I’m sure we’ll find out exactly what the nature (no pun intended) of link between Benedict, Wanda and the show may be on Monday.

READ MORE HERE: http://www.bbcamerica.com/anglophenia/2014/05/benedict-cumberbatch-launch-chelsea-flower-show-mum/

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Benedict Cumberbatch By Colin Firth

TIME MAGAZINE
BY COLIN FIRTH
APRIL 23, 2014



When I was about 25 years old, I worked with two very good actors. The encounters were brief, but I’ve remembered them both with great admiration. Wanda Ventham and Timothy Carlton both embodied qualities which one is fogyishly tempted to look at with nostalgia. Along with very considerable talent, they had elegance, glamor, wit, kindness and decency.


I didn’t know at the time that they were married or that they had a son of about 10 who was quietly gestating all the same attributes. And now, 30 years later, the boy has been let loose. He has taken the form of Benedict Cumberbatch.


His parents’ qualities are on rampant display. It’s rare to the point of outlandish to find so many variables in one actor, including features which ought to be incompatible: vulnerability, a sense of danger, a clear intellect, honesty, courage — and a rather alarming energy. I take no pleasure in feeling humbled, but there’s no getting around it.

READ MORE HERE: http://time.com/70781/benedict-cumberbatch-2014-time-100/

Monday, March 10, 2014

‘I am so ready to play a really dumb character’: Benedict Cumberbatch says he’s ready for a less intellectual role and that Sherlock is ‘an absolute b*****d’

MAIL ON LINE
By HANNA FLINT
PUBLISHED: 02:31 EST, 10 March 2014 | UPDATED: 05:48 EST, 10 March 2014



He’s played a super sleuth with an IQ through the roof, a slave-owner with a conflicted heart and a journalist hell bent on revealing government secrets.

Now, Benedict Cumberbatch, 37, is ready for a less intellectual role.

‘I am so ready to play a really dumb character,’ the actor told T magazine, having just finished filming a biopic of the British cryptographer Alan Turing, The Imitation Game, where he plays the lead role.

It’s no wonder Cumberbatch might feel ready for a less trying role, for Turing is often thought of as the father of theoretical computer science; whose life ended in tragedy when in 1954 he committed suicide, two years after being convicted for homosexuality.



‘I always seem to be cast as slightly wan, ethereal, troubled intellectuals or physically ambivalent bad lovers,’ Benedict explained, but with his educational background and upbringing his acting roles aren’t that surprising.

Both his parents Wanda Ventham and Timothy Carlton were actors, and after attending famous public boys’ school Harrow, he studied at the University of Manchester as well as the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2577183/Benedict-Cumberbatch-says-ready-intellectual-role.html#ixzz2vZHPp0yg 
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

Friday, January 31, 2014

How Benedict Cumberbatch's family made a fortune from slavery (And why his roles in films like 12 Years A Slave are a bid to atone for their sins)

MAL ON LINE
By GUY ADAMS
PUBLISHED: 17:27 EST, 31 January 2014 | UPDATED: 18:37 EST, 31 January 2014


Benedict is currently treading red carpets in support of the Oscar campaign for 12 Years A Slave, the harrowing hit film which depicts the ugly reality of the slave trade

High above Bridgetown, the capital of Barbados, is a range of hills known locally as the ‘Scotland District’ on account of its uncanny resemblance to the Highlands.

Here, roughly 45 minutes’ drive along a Tarmac road and then a dusty track, past endless acres of sugar cane swaying gently in the breeze, is a weather-beaten white stone archway announcing that you have arrived at the Cleland Plantation.

The owner, 66-year-old Stephen Tempro, has lived here since 1985, eking out a modest living from the small herds of cattle and goats that graze his 150-odd acres, along with a smattering of small fruit and vegetable plots.




'Sherlock' actor Benedict Cumberbatch's ancestors' plantation house in Barbados

‘I sometimes think about what went on here, and it brings a tear to my eye,’ says Mr Tempro. ‘Thinking of the struggles of the people who occupied the place can be very emotional.’

Intriguingly, almost every single one of the brutal slave masters who held sway here boasted the same, highly-distinctive surname: Cumberbatch.

In an irony which even a Hollywood screenwriter couldn’t make up, Benedict is currently treading red carpets in support of the Oscar campaign for 12 Years A Slave, the harrowing hit film which depicts the ugly reality of the slave trade.



The plantation was purchased in 1728 by Abraham Cumberbatch, Benedict’s seventh-great-grandfather. It remained in the family until slavery was abolished in the 1830s, when  it was owned by Benedict’s great-great- great-grandfather, Abraham Parry Cumberbatch. Slavery built the Cumberbatch fortune, which at its height in the  mid-18th century made them one of Britain’s wealthiest families, owning  at least seven Barbados sugar plantations and a stately home near Taunton, Somerset.

Its proceeds, trickling down through generations, helped Benedict attend Harrow, the £33,000-a-year boarding school which has produced no fewer than seven British prime ministers.

Today, Cumberbatch, 37, is rightly horrified by his family’s dark history.


His role as a slave owner in the new film, as well as his part as William Pitt the Younger in Amazing Grace, a movie about slavery abolitionist William Wilberforce, attest to his sense of shame.

Indeed, he said at the time of making Amazing Grace that the role was a ‘sort of apology’ for his ancestry.

Cumberbatch has also revealed that his mother, the actress Wanda Ventham, had urged him not to use his real surname professionally, in case it made him a target for reparation claims by the descendants of slaves.

Yet every so often the subject rears its ugly head. This week, for example, New York’s newly-appointed transport commissioner, an African-American lawyer named Wanda Cumberbatch, was asked at a press conference about her distinctive surname.

She said that she and Benedict were ‘related, but not by blood,’ since her ancestors had taken the name of their former masters after being freed.

Delve rather deeper into the Cumberbatch family history, and you find an epic tale of greed, swashbuckling bravery, incredible luck and, at times, appalling cruelty.

At least one chapter also revolves around a darkly-intriguing sex scandal. For one of Benedict’s wealthy ancestors, a plantation owner called Lawrence Trent Cumberbatch, ended up fathering a child through an extra-marital affair with one of his female slaves.

This revelation — which we shall explore later — is particularly ironic given the plot of 12 Years A Slave, based on the memoir of Solomon Northup, a 19th-century black musician who was kidnapped and sold into slavery in the Deep South.

After all, much of the film details an abusive relationship between slave master Edwin Epps (played by Michael Fassbender) and a slave called Patsey (Lupita Nyong’o).


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2549773/How-Benedict-Cumberbatchs-family-fortune-slavery-And-roles-films-like-12-Years-A-Slave-bid-atone-sins.html#ixzz2s1b3xXDd 
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook



Benedict Cumberbatch's very big year

USA TODAY
January 30, 2014
Bill Keveney



PASADENA, Calif. – Benedict Cumberbatch has had a memorable year, including roles in five major films, but he's trying to look forward.

"You can't get too nostalgic. You can look back and go, 'That was a great year, a great moment,' but I want 2014 to be better for different reasons. I've got personal goals and all sorts of things that I want to evolve. I always have been about building a career of longevity," he says during an interview to discuss PBS' Sherlock (third-season finale, Sunday, 10 p.m. ET/PT, times may vary).

Cumberbatch's contemporary take on Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's iconic character became more personal this year, as Holmes' parents were portrayed by his mother and father — actors Wanda Ventham and Timothy Carlton. In one scene, Sherlock unceremoniously shoos them from the room when Watson arrives.



Working with his parents was "terrific. Sort of like home, really. Alarmingly so, for those who know our relationship off screen," he jokes. "It was a beautiful thing. ... It was the first day of shooting and I was nervous for them. And then I realized, now I really have to take control of this, and I just started to kind of make sure that they felt all right. And they ended up having a really good day."

He credits his parents and actors they introduced him to for his desire to pursue the same career, but there "wasn't one Saul-on-the-road-to-Damascus moment of inspiration. It was just an accumulation, really."

That has led to an accumulation of significant roles, too, for the London-born actor.



Cumberbatch, 37, finished work in December on The Imitation Game, an upcoming film in which he plays real-life British mathematician and World War II code breaker Alan Turing.

He plans to take on another real Brit, the explorer Percy Fawcett, in The Lost City of Z, a film about "this rather brilliant, rather lovely Victorian man who just became obsessed with this discovery he made in the Amazon jungle" in the early 20th Century. The melancholy Dane, Hamlet, is on the actor's schedule for fall on the London stage.

And Sunny March, the production company he started with friends just produced a short film that he appears in, Little Favour.



All of this comes on the heels of a remarkable year. Since May, he has appeared on the big screen in five major films, including an Oscar best-picture nominee,12 Years a Slave; an ensemble piece earning praise for its cast, August: Osage County; a lead role as Julian Assange in The Fifth Estate; and two blockbuster sequels, Star Trek Into Darkness and The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug. It can be difficult, even for a man of Cumberbatch's quick intelligence, to remember every detail.

"Five films come out and they're so different. From Khan (Trek) to Smaug to Julian Assange to Ford (Slave) to …," he says, pausing. "You see, this is the problem. I actually then start forgetting what the other role was. (Another pause.) To Little Charles in August: Osage County. And that's when it is literally an embarrassment of riches."

He credits Sherlock, which premiered in 2010, with providing a big career boost, but says he was landing roles for 2011 productions — War Horse and Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy on film and Frankenstein at the Royal National Theater in England — at about the same time with major directors who hadn't seen him play the iconic sleuth.

Sherlock has "done a lot. I won't say it's changed my life, because I had a huge break at the same time as this role first came to fruition," says Cumberbatch, substituting a sleek blue suit for Sherlock's layered look on this warm winter day. "It was a sort of perfect storm of all mediums coming together at the same time, television, film and theater, even some radio."

Cumberbatch has a rare star quality that makes viewers root for the often difficult Holmes, Sherlock co-creator Steven Moffat says.

"I think he's capable of being aloof and dangerous and (being able to) do, with complete honesty, every beat of unlikable behavior, and yet you still like him," he says. "The other thing you have to say is he's one of the best actors alive. He's absolutely supreme."

READ MORE HERE: http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/tv/2014/01/29/benedict-cumberbatch-talks-sherlock-film-stage-success/4838037/

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Benedict Cumberbatch’s parents make Sherlock cameo

Benedict Cumberbatch’s parents make Sherlock cameo

RADIO TIMES
Paul Jones
9:55 PM, 01 January 2014

BBC1 viewers met Sherlock Holmes’s parents tonight and – unbeknown to many – were simultaneously introduced to Benedict Cumberbatch’s real mum and dad.

Wanda Ventham, 78, and Timothy Carlton (real name Timothy Carlton Cumberbatch), 74, appeared in the much-anticipated first episode of series three of Sherlock in a short scene that saw them having tea with the consulting detective in the sitting room of his Baker Street flat.

It finally became clear that the rather ordinary-sounding elderly couple were in fact Sherlock’s parents as he made increasingly impatient attempts to usher them out of the room.



But despite Sherlock’s reaction to his folks turning up at his place, Cumberbatch himself says the experience was a moving one.

“I nearly cried watching it,” the star told an audience at a premiere screening of the episode in December. “I’m so proud of them and I’m so proud of the reaction they got – and I think they’re perfect casting as my parents!”

Cumberbatch said filming the scenes had been both stressful and rewarding for himself and the two veteran actors. "It was kind of nerve-wracking. They’re actors, and they get nervous as well, and yet they were brilliant, they hit home runs, they were fantastic and it was lovely – really, really nice – to have them on set... It was really gorgeous, a very special feeling."

READ MORE HERE: http://www.radiotimes.com/news/2014-01-01/benedict-cumberbatchs-parents-make-sherlock-cameo

Monday, December 30, 2013

Oh God, Stop Telling Benedict Cumberbatch You Think His Mom Is 'Hot'

JEZEBEL
Rebecca Rose
December 30, 2013



Filed under things I should never, ever have to tell you, everyone please stop going up to Benedict Cumberbatch and telling him you think his mother is hot.

For those that don't know, everyone's most beloved Tumblr gif is the son of actress Wanda Ventham, who yes, is quite beautiful indeed. She starred in the science fiction drama UFO and had a recurring role in a sitcom called Only Fools and Horses which sounds fucking awesome, obviously. In the understatement of the year, Cumberbatch says he feels "awkward" when strange men come up to him in small, enclosed spaces and want talk to him about his hot, sexy mom:

Wanda Ventham

"I've been trapped with men in elevators who say to me, 'Oh... I really used to like your mum. She's really hot'", he told the Daily Mirror. ''I don't know what to say. If I say, 'No, she's not', that is really insulting to my mother, and if I say she is, it seems very wrong. She is smokin', I guess.''

Yes, he's at a loss for words because he's too busy running and screaming in fit of maniacal panic to find the bleach in which he might douse his mind.



So, we're all in agreement on this one. Let's not go up to actor Benedict Cumberbatch and talk to him about his super hot mom,OK? Here's a suggested list of nice conversation starters you can use if you ever run into him at the Taco Bell by your dorm room, (which is a thing I know about 75 percent of you believe totally could happen for real) that don't have anything to do with the man's mother:


READ MORE HERE: http://jezebel.com/oh-god-stop-telling-benedict-cumberbatch-you-think-his-1491451980

Saturday, August 3, 2013

Sherlock, his crippling insecurities and the mystery of why Benedict Cumberbatch can't find a wife despite being Britain's latest superstar


Benedict Cumberbatch and a mysterious woman as they leave Cirque Le Soir Night club at 3am in the morning

MAIL ON LINE
By CHRISTOPHER STEVENS
PUBLISHED: 16:59 EST, 2 August 2013 | UPDATED: 03:18 EST, 3 August 2013


He’s a mass of insecurities — defensive about his schooling, constantly seeking approval, afraid to turn work down and filled with self-reproach over his failure to find a wife and have children.
Yet at 37, Benedict Cumberbatch is Britain’s newest global star, a sex symbol who can command multi-million dollar fees from the world’s top film-makers.

So why, with the world at his feet, is the Sherlock actor so desperately unsure of himself? And is his debilitating self-doubt in danger of derailing his progress to career superstardom — and his own personal happiness? Could it be that, in the past, his emotional intensity and his urgent yearning to become a father have scuppered relationships? 



Women — especially the independent, career-minded women he finds attractive — seem to be
 scared off by him.

His see-sawing temperament is enough to deter any woman from marriage. To make matters worse, he’s highly cautious, even paranoid, about money.


Now he is hotly tipped for an Oscar in a movie no one has even seen yet, playing Wikileaks mastermind Julian Assange in The Fifth Estate.

In recent weeks he has sent the gossip columns into overdrive, after being photographed with two glamorous and very different women, leaving nightclubs in the small hours, officiating at a gay wedding and camping it up wildly as he revealed his crush on Hollywood A-lister Matt Damon. ‘Do you have Matt’s number?’ he demanded to a baffled interviewer for a web fansite. ‘My biggest wish is to hang out with him .

He is a high-intensity boyfriend. He once cited his father’s tradition of presenting his mother with a red rose every Monday morning as the epitome of romance. But what might be endearing for a long-married couple is apt to come across as needy, even creepy, in a new relationship.

He is also ferociously chivalrous, old-fashioned even. After BBC radio’s film reviewer Mark Kermode poked fun at Keira Knightley, Cumberbatch — her co-star in Atonement — punched the critic when they appeared together on air. Kermode was amazed, though he later insisted it was ‘a light tap on the arm’ and ‘playful’.

More recently, Cumberbatch has dated furniture designer Anna Jones, before apparently rekindling an old friendship with Russian model and actress Katia Elizarova. 

Benedict Cumberbatch on holiday with Russian model, Katia Elizarova

Last month, the pair were photographed snuggling on a sun-lounger beside a pool at Ibiza’s Hotel Hacienda. She is wearing next to nothing, and he strokes her arm as she nuzzles his face with her blonde hair.

But Katia was apparently as surprised as anyone when Cumberbatch was snapped days later leaving his birthday party at the saucy London nightclub Cirque du Soir, which features fire-eaters and topless dancers, with red-haired actress Charlotte Asprey on his arm. She is another friend from theatre school days.


He once auditioned for a PlayStation version of James Bond, in a bow tie and tuxedo, but was rejected.

The stress made him ill. He tried to stay fit with Bikram yoga and a daily spoonful of organic honey, but succumbed first to glandular fever, then pneumonia. 

It didn’t help that he was smoking heavily. On a bad day, it took half a dozen cigarettes and a drink before he could even face talking to an interviewer.

Then, at 33 he scooped a part in a National Theatre production, playing ‘a rich, alcoholic monster’ in Terence Rattigan’s After The Dance. His performance won sparkling reviews, but it was his parents’ approval that he craved.



After the first night, his father was in tears. Irrationally anxious that Tim was weeping because he had been a disappointment, Benedict simply held onto him like a child. 

At last, his father said through his tears: ‘You stupid boy. I’m crying because you were so wonderful.’ This uncertainty about the emotions of the people closest to him is at the heart of all Cumberbatch’s insecurities. He doesn’t trust himself to read the people around him, or to say the right thing.

And if he doesn’t trust himself, he can’t trust anyone at all.

In 2010, his career took off when Sherlock caused a national TV sensation. But his mood was bitter.

He dismissed praise with sour soundbites: ‘I’ve been the next big thing for ten years,’ he said. 

He turned on friends and colleagues in a series of vicious interviews.  He accused Bond actor Daniel Craig of spouting ‘bull****’ for claiming that he did his own stunts. And he lashed out at family friend Lord Fellowes, calling Downton Abbey ‘sentimental’, ‘cliched’ and ‘f***ing atrocious’.

Later, he apologised profusely. He had no filter, no ‘off’ switch, he said. ‘I am a PR disaster because I talk too much.’


Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook