Showing posts with label Billy Connolly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Billy Connolly. Show all posts

Sunday, 21 April 2013

Billy Connolly: new merchandise range

Billy Connolly launches man bag range
He's one of Britain's best-loved comedians and now Billy Connolly is branching into fashion.
But as fans would expect of the wacky stand-up, he doesn't take take himself too seriously with his range of clothing and households goods.
Items on sale from the 70 year old comedian's website, www.billyconnolly.com, include man bags, T-shirts and hats.
Billy Connolly's range includes the £4.50 man bag, right, featuring himself in the Leonardo Da Vinci 'Vitruvian Man' drawing
The Fairtrade cotton man bag costs £4.50 and features a take on Leonardo Da Vinci's famous drawing 'Vitruvian Man' with Connolly's face and body

Funny man: Billy Connolly's range includes the £4.50 man bag, featuring himself in the Leonardo Da Vinci 'Vitruvian Man' drawing
The merchandise includes images of the bearded actor or lines from some of his most popular jokes, such as 'too old to die young' and 'never trust a man who, when left a lone with a tea cosy doesn't try it on'.
Source (including photos): Daily Mail 
Also reported (with different images and more information) by Scotsman

Sunday, 31 March 2013

Billy Connolly: art and museum exhibitions


Billy Connolly's art work at the Castle Fine Art on The Promenade in Cheltenham
Comedian Billy Connolly's art work is coming to a Cheltenham gallery.
Ink drawings from the BAFTA nominated actor, comedian, musician and presenter will be hanging his work at the Castle Fine Art on The Promenade.
His collection of six prints is his second foray into the world of contemporary art and is influenced by his filming of The Hobbit.
Read more at This is Gloucestershire 
Billy's art work will also be on show in Cambridge and Liverpool.

Billy Connolly's trike goes on display at North-east museum
A trike used by comedy legend Billy Connolly is the star attraction at a Grampian Transport Museum as it gets set to celebrate its 30th anniversary.

Source: Evening Express 

Monday, 11 February 2013

Billy Connolly: 'The Man Live Tour' in Ireland


'The Man Live'
Ireland 2013

Fri 3 May & Sun 5 May, 8pm
Tickets on sale Fri 15 Feb at 10am
Billy Connolly, the greatest stand-up comedian of his generation, brings his “The Man Live Tour” to Ireland this April & May!

Billy Connolly is a stand-up comedian, actor, musician, TV presenter and artist.
After an apprenticeship as a welder in his hometown of Glasgow, he became a professional performer in 1962, forming “The Humblebums” band with Gerry Rafferty, before pursuing a solo career as a comedian.
Aside from starring in numerous films and TV series, Billy has toured worldwide continuously for the last 50 years, performing to an audience of over 10,000,000. Billy was awarded a CBE in 2003, was given the Freedom of the City of Glasgow in 2010 and received the BAFTA in Scotland Outstanding Contribution to Television and Film Award in 2012.

Perhaps best known for his moving performance as the loyal servant John Brown in the highly acclaimed MRS. BROWN, Connolly’s other film credits include GULLIVER’S TRAVELS, THE X-FILES: I WANT TO BELIEVE, FIDO, GARFIELD 2, LEMONY SNICKET: A SERIES OF UNFORTUNATE EVENTS, THE LAST SAMURAI and TIMELINE. His previous film credits include Peter Kosminsky’s WHITE OLEANDER, Troy Duffy’s THE BOONDOCK SAINTS and the sequel ALL SAINT’S DAY, Stephen Metcalfe’s BEAUTIFUL JOE and Barry Levinson’s AN EVERLASTING PIECE, Stanley Tucci’s THE IMPOSTORS, CROSSING THE LINE with Liam Neeson, the Muppet movie version of TREASURE ISLAND, GABRIEL AND ME, GENTLEMAN’S RELISH and THE MAN WHO SUED GOD, as well as the acclaimed BBC productions DOWN AMONG THE BIG BAD BOYS and THE LIFE AND CRIMES OF DEACON BRODIE. His voice is also featured on the animated films POCAHONTAS, OPEN SEASON and the Disney Pixar animation BRAVE. He has recently appeared in QUARTET, directed by Dustin Hoffman, as well as the three-part adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien’s THE HOBBIT, directed by Peter Jackson.

On television, Billy featured in HEAD OF THE CLASS, which was later spun off into his own series, BILLY. He hosted BILLY CONNOLLY’S WORLD TOUR OF SCOTLAND, a six-part series documenting a tour of his homeland, a theme continued later in his World Tours of New Zealand, Australia and England, Ireland and Wales. More recently, Billy has hosted television series JOURNEY TO THE EDGE OF THE WORLD and ROUTE 66. Other specials include PALE BLUE SCOTTISH PERSON, A SCOT IN THE ARCTIC, THE BIGGER PICTURE and AN AUDIENCE WITH BILLY CONNOLLY. Connolly has also made various television guest appearances, most notably in the U.S. series HOUSE M.D. as well as COLUMBO, THIRD ROCK FROM THE SUN and VERONICA’S CLOSET.

Please note there will be no support at this gig.
Tickets €50/€55* limited to 4 per person.
On sale Fri 15th Feb at 10am.
*Booking fees may apply

Source: Cork Opera House

Sunday, 13 January 2013

Billy Connolly: 'The Hobbit' 2 and 3 spoilers

10 Things You'll See In The Hobbit 2 And 3
What to expect when you're on an unexpected journey
10 Things You'll See In The Hobbit 2 And 3 | 9. Billy Connolly Riding A Pig


9. Billy Connolly Riding A PigYes, you read that right. It appears that Dain Ironfoot, the tougher-than-tungsten lord of the dwarves of the Iron Hills, will rock up to the Battle of the Five Armies astride a combat-hog.
“I ride into war on a wild pig!” Billy Connolly told Vulture last year. Richard Taylor seemed to confirm this while speaking to Empire shortly before Christmas, when he said, “It’s been great fun designing a dwarfish army - what they might wear, what they might ride into battle, all that stuff.”
The fact he’s sat on the back of a war-ready oinker won’t be the only eye-opening thing about Connelly’s Dain. “They’re broadening me, making me wider,” added the actor. “I have a mohawk and tattoos on my head. Let me say, this guy will terrify the life out of you.”

Source (including photo): Empire Online 

Sunday, 6 January 2013

Billy Connolly: 'Quartet' interviews

Billy Connolly talks Quartet: 'Dying is easy, but staying alive is quite difficult' 
Billy Connolly
In his latest film role, Billy Connolly plays a womanising former opera star.
Quartet, set in a nursing home for retired opera singers, features a host of British stars including Dame Maggie Smith, Sir Tom Courtenay, Pauline Collins, Sir Michael Gambon and Sheridan Smith.
The film marks the directorial debut of Hollywood actor Dustin Hoffman, who describes the story as being about people in their "third act".
Comedian Connolly, 70, talks about Hoffman's skills behind the camera, and how he was made to look older to play the role of Wilf.
Didn't Dustin Hoffman think you looked a bit youthful?
I'm the right age, but I don't look wrinkly and I don't have a comb-over and I'm not bald. Being hairy and bearded, I didn't fit - but, at the end of the day, they put me through the wrinkle machine.
Wilf is a horny old guy, trying to stay alive. He's single and he's randy and he would like a cuddle from time to time, and there's nothing wrong with that, I think.
How did Dustin Hoffman get you involved in the film?
I actually thought we were going to do [Samuel Beckett play] Waiting for Godot. I'd read it and found it impenetrable and then I went to see it in London and loved it, so I couldn't wait. When I met Dustin in LA after Route 66 [TV documentary] he said: 'Are you on the same number? I've got a thing for you' - and I thought 'This is it - this is Godot.'
He was waiting for Albert Finney [to play Wilf] but Albert wasn't very well, so he came to me, which was a great compliment. He wrinkled me up and off we went!
What is it like being directed by an actor?
It's much better than being directed by writers. Most of them rightly think their words are carved in marble, and they obviously think it's important you get all the commas in the right place. An actor doesn't normally think that - he can see shortcuts to making the point. When you get an actor as director you get the best of both worlds.
What is the overall message of the film?
Stay young. Me? I'm 37! I haven't changed my attitude to things since I was 37. I like asking people what age they think they are - some of them are 28, and 34, and some are 40. Stay there! That's when you were happy and healthy. Stay there and it'll do you good. It'll feed you and keep you alive.
Dying is easy. You just lie down, but staying alive is quite difficult - you have to stay interested and stay in touch with everything.
Who do you think will be the audience for this film?
Now that I have no idea. When people hear "old" and "old folks' home" they might stay away from it. That part of the movie company is going to have to work very, very hard to get the audience because the people who come and see it all love it - and they are all ages.
Do you detect a change in the film industry about the portrayal of older characters?
I think it's all about carrying Maggie Smith shoulder high! I think she's going to single-handedly save the old actors of the world.
I think people are getting back to the old way of making movies. If you look at the movies of the 1930s and 40s there's no young people in them. And then in the 50s they invented this thing called the teenager and stuck him in everything.
It became the norm to have that kind of person as the lead - and the more mature actor in the background. But I think they are getting back to making movies that resemble life pretty generally.
Quartet is out in the UK on 1 January 2013.
Source (including photo): BBC (includes video interview)


The Review Show with Billy Connolly
The comedian discusses his role in Dustin Hoffman’s directorial debut Quartet, his relationship with his father and his feelings about independence for Scotland.
Listen to the interview here (The Guardian)

Weekly schedule for Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson


Mo 1/7: Billy Gardell, Krysten Ritter
Tu 1/8: Billy Connolly, Meghan Rath
We 1/9: Steven Wright, Genesis Rodriguez
Th 1/10: Tim Allen, Margaret Cho
Fr 1/11: Julie Chen, Angela Kinsey

Mo 1/14: Jenna Elfman, Guillermo Del Toro
Tu 1/15: Lena Dunham, Bill Pullman

Sunday, 23 December 2012

Billy Connolly: interviews, and new 'Quartet' clip

Digital Spy Exclusive: 'Quartet': Billy Connolly hits on Sheridan Smith in new clip
Dustin Hoffman's Quartet has debuted a new clip exclusively on Digital Spy.

The footage has Billy Connolly's former opera singer Wilfred Bond hitting on Sheridan Smith's character without success.

Quartet stars Dame Maggie Smith as famed opera singer Jean Horton, whose appearance at the Beecham House home for retired musicians is not entirely welcomed by her former singing partners and ex-husband Reginald Paget (Tom Courtenay).

She insists on claiming all the attention by playing the diva, all the while refusing to perform in the annual concert in celebration of Verdi's birthday.

Hoffman, who makes his directorial debut with the film, was honoured with the 'Hollywood Breakthrough Director Achievement Award' at the 16th annual Hollywood Film Awards in October for his work on the movie.

Quartet received a standing ovation when it debuted at the Toronto International Film Festival in September.

The film will release on January 1, 2013 in the UK and January 4, 2013 in the US.

Source: Digital Spy


Billy Connolly: My family values
The actor and comedian talks about coming to terms with his children growing up and the joy of being a grandparent
Elaine Lipworth, The Guardian, Saturday 22 December 2012

Billy Connolly
Billy Connolly: 'All my kids are quite funny.' Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA Photograph: Murdo Macleod for the Guardian

I am a kind of Victorian father. I haven't caught up with the mood of the age yet, although I look and speak as though I have. I still care about all my children [he has four girls and a boy], and worry about my girls and always make sure they are on the right lines. When we're crossing the road, I go, "Righto, here we go!" as if they're six years of age. Amy, who is 24, has her own apartment. But the other night she was going out from our house and she said, "See you later," and I said, "Oh, when will you be back?" She said: "I'm going to my apartment." I said: "Yes, but when'll you be back?" She said: "I won't be back, I've got an apartment." I went: "Oh, yeah."
Pamela [Stephenson] is a much better parent than me because she knows what's right and wrong, being a psychologist. She knows a great deal more about behaviour than I do. I panic and get worried about the girls and think: "Ahhh, something is wrong, she's out too late!" Pamela just says: "Oh, at this stage she should be doing that." But I think I'm also a product of my generation. As a family, we are all very loving. We still kiss each other. Jamie's 42 and he still kisses me good night. We've just got back from fishing in Mexico. We were staying in two rooms, in a fishing lodge and at night we would have a cigar and at the end of the evening, we'd say: "OK, you going to bed? Good night, give us a kiss."
It's very difficult bringing up the girls without spoiling them because you sound like an old bore when you start saying: "Oh, I had to finish every brussels sprout on the plate when I was a boy." It's true though, I used to go to the movies and put my sprouts in my pocket and pretend I had eaten them. I've stayed away from that kind of behaviour towards them, but obviously we have lived well on my earnings and I try my best to show them the value of things. But you can't be too strict with them, because you just sound like a whinge-bag. Anyway, spoiling them is buying them things in place of love, and they've never been in that position.
I'm a great family guy, I'm all for keeping them all together and it's getting sad now because the girls have got boyfriends and they don't want to come home for Christmas. All that kind of stuff is sad, but you just have to get used to it and grow up a wee bit.
My children and I are pals and allies, they're lovely. We all get on great. But I never carry photographs of my wife and kids because they make me sad. I'm not one of those guys who gets to the hotel room and puts the framed pictures up. I really can't do it. Photos make you miss them more.
Always tell the kids the truth. When they ask where they come from, don't give them that gooseberry bush nonsense, just tell them – they'll appreciate it much more. If they say, "Did you take drugs?", if you did, say yes because they'll find you out. And if you say, "I tried marijuana and I hated it, it was horrible," and then they try it and it isn't horrible, they'll think you were lying about marijuana and wonder whether you were lying about heroin and could try that as well. I am totally open with my children.
All my kids are quite funny. They all really enjoy making me laugh. Scarlett works in an art gallery in Soho here in New York, Cara is making documentary films and Amy is studying to be an undertaker. She was working as a dress designer in Los Angeles and she got fed up with it. She saw an advert for an intern in a cemetery and she loved it the second she did it. It's the truth! She loves it.
Pamela saved me without being ruthless with me when I was drinking and smoking, by saying: "Look, if you don't give up the way you're living, you're gonna die. And I don't want to be there watching it when it happens." I haven't had a drink for 28 years. With Pam, I discovered that you could not get away with anything. When I married her I had to own up to everything, which no one had ever asked me to do before. I learned to be honest with myself, which was great.
The character I play in Brave – the dad – does a lot of shouting and thumping around and the mother does the heavy work. And I've found that in my own life, I do a lot of "this must be done and that must be done" but most of "it" is done by Pamela. My marriage to her has lasted because she knows how to do things. She knows much more than I do about technical stuff and how to do practical things, who to phone when you need to get something done in the house. I know bugger all. I swim along dreaming through life and she allows me to do that. She has taken on the male role and I have taken on what people used to think was the female role.
It's brilliant being a grandfather. My grandchildren – Walter is 12 and Barbara is 10 – are the best. When you have children in the first place and you can see the genetics, you see who they look like and it changes all the time. One day your son looks like your wife, one day he looks like you. It's the same with grandchildren. Cara burst out laughing the other day. I said, "What's wrong?" She said, "Look at your feet." I was standing next to Walter and I looked down and realised that our feet are identical. You'd think they'd just been moulded in a shop. With grandchildren you understand that the generations go on and on and on.

Source (including photo): Guardian


Lucy Kellaway talks to Billy Connolly
He has had Britain howling with laughter for decades. Now 70 and showing no signs of slowing down, the comedian opens up about getting old, forgiving his father – and the beauty of swear words
Bill Connolly
Billy Connolly is standing with his back to the door, singing raucously to himself. From behind, he looks slightly frightening – a mane of wild white hair, a black T-shirt, black jeans and a big tattoo on his left biceps – but then he turns and eyes me benignly through round tortoiseshell glasses. I’m not sure who he reminds me of most: King Lear, David Hockney or Ozzy Osbourne.
He invites me to sit, while he paces restlessly, checking the thermostat of the Soho hotel room.
Tell me about your hair, I say.
It is not the most obvious place to start with Scotland’s most famous comic, film star, abused child, artist, former alcoholic and all-round icon, but I’ve been taking lessons in how to interview him from a world authority – Connolly’s wife, Pamela Stephenson.
I started by watching a clip of the couple’s first meeting on the set of Not the Nine O’Clock News in 1979. Stephenson is wearing false teeth and pretending to be Janet Street-Porter. She talks broad cockney; he talks broad Glaswegian. The gag is that they can’t understand each other.

I then watch a clip from just two years ago; this time Stephenson doesn’t have false teeth, though she has false everything else: boobs, face etc. No longer a comedian, she is a sex therapist and has installed her husband on the couch to analyse him for her viewers’ entertainment.
She starts like this: “It seems to me that hirsuteness is quite important to you. Help me to understand why.”
This elicits a long answer about his need to hide, about being himself, about being attractive, about the classlessness of hippies. But when I ask him the same thing, he says: “It comes from an inability to decide what to do with it between films, so I leave it alone.”
I point out that he didn’t say that to his wife.
“Didn’t I?” he says. “Ach, it depends what day of the week it is.”
The previous night Connolly was at the London premier of Quartet, a light comedy directed by Dustin Hoffman set in a home for retired opera singers. He plays Wilf, an amiably lecherous old geezer with short hair and clad in a tweed jacket. I say the look suits him.

Bill Connolly as retired singer Wilf in 'Quartet'
As retired singer Wilf in 'Quartet'

“Ach,” he says. “A lot of women said that last night, that I looked handsome. But I felt like a big Tory.”
The film is all about the indignities of ageing. But Connolly, who turned 70 in November, tells me that he’s spent his life looking forward to growing old (which sets him apart from Stephenson, who has paid frequent visits to the cosmetic surgeon “because I want to be a babe”).
“I always wanted to be old as a wee boy,” he says, swinging his cowboy-booted feet on to the coffee table. “We used to go to a swing park and there were always loads of old men in the shed playing dominoes. They always had knives – that’s what I liked about them. I like old men very much.”
I protest that old men are surely no nicer than anyone else.
“Aye,” he says, changing tack. “I think young arseholes tend to become old arseholes.”
One of the difficulties with interviewing Billy Connolly is that he says one thing one moment and another the next, his thoughts following a curious pattern of their own.
So his mention of knives leads him to cigarette cards and from there to self-defence and the body language of giving directions.
This ability to free-associate is part of his comic genius. Since he started amusing his fellow welders in Clyde shipyards nearly 50 years ago – he has never planned his performances, or written down a single word. Instead, he meanders all over the place, laughing at his own jokes as he does so, giving marathon performances that last up to four hours.
I wonder if he fears for his ability to go on doing it as he gets older. In the film, his co-star Maggie Smith (“Oh God I love her, she makes me scream with laughter”) plays a retired diva who is so upset at no longer being able to reach the high notes she has renounced singing altogether. Connolly says that when it comes to making people laugh, age doesn’t matter.
“It’s nothing to do with ageing,” he says. “I remember in my twenties, saying: f*** I hope it turns up tonight. If you look at Doddy – Ken Dodd – he’s busier than most people I’ve ever known. Some people accept that styles have changed and move along. Others say, f*** it I’m out there, this is my trade and I’m going to practise it.”
But then he tells me that despite recent accolades – he’s been voted the most influential British comedian of all time and has just been given a Bafta lifetime achievement award – he finds the idea of performing more alarming as he gets older. “Maybe I see the pitfalls and threats more than I used to.” But when I ask what they are, he says there aren’t any.
“I get great adoration, sometimes guys shake when they’re talking to me. A man cried last night. I just put my hand on him and stroked him a bit. He’d seen me in newspapers and films and on the stage and all that and there he is talking to me and I’m talking back to him and he got overwhelmed and his lip started to go. It’s weird, it’s lovely.”
. . .
Not everyone, however, was so awed. Later on he says: “Last night a guy got a bit iffy with me, you know, smart-arse about my performance. He said I was less than good. You know how the British do that British put-down thing that they think is funny?”
The Scottish comedian was not amused.
“I just turned and walked away in the middle of his sentence.”
This, it seems, is a trick he is getting into the habit of. Twice during his last tour of Britain he stormed off stage in response to heckling from the audience. When I mention this, Connolly waves his hands dismissively.
“Generally it’s made into something it isn’t, it’s no big deal. I wish journalists would just f***ing ask what it is and I would tell them. Once I’ve done my two hours it’s my time. After [that] I don’t want to be shouted at because I’m in a funny mental place.”
What is shocking – and almost sweet – about this is not that Connolly is so sensitive to both his detractors and his fans – it’s that he’s so unashamedly open about it. Suddenly I think of Wilf, who also lacks any sense of propriety – though in his case it’s as a result of a stroke. Connolly, it seems, never had one to lose, or if he did he quickly figured out that a great living could be made by dispensing with it.
“I speak the way I think. I give it a voice. And other people will think one way and speak another.”
And what he thinks about, often, is the body.
“I blame myself for that,” he says. “About bums and willies and going to the bathroom and venereal disease and all those things. That was the level I came in ... I broke a lot of ground there.”
Bill Connolly with his future wife Pamela Stephenson in 1982 
©Alan Davidson/Picture Library
With his future wife Pamela Stephenson in 1982

Since he went on Parkinson in 1975 and told the joke about the man who killed his wife and buried her with her bum sticking out of the ground so that he had somewhere to park his bike – Britain has been howling with mirth at Connolly’s body parts.
While he’s been delighting audiences with tales of his prostate exam, Stephenson has been making a living telling tales of his emotions – and has written two bestselling books chronicling them.
Doesn’t he mind, I ask, when she starts describing to everyone just how he felt when his first wife – a recluse and an alcoholic – died? He shakes his head. “Who better to tell it? Some f***ing journalist?”
Stephenson’s interpretation of Connolly is not always flattering: I read something recently in which she said he was slightly autistic as well as suffering from an attention deficit disorder.
“Did she?” He laughs fondly. “She’ll accuse me of anything. I don’t think I’m autistic, but I do have attention deficit disorder.”
And then his mind is off on another excursion: he tells me that Stephenson has just emailed him a list of all the different words for depression, as he is planning to write a song in which the word “blues” is replaced by synonyms. He laughs for a long time, delighted by the idea. When he has stopped I ask if he suffers from the blues himself.
“Sometimes I plunge into it, headlong, but the clown with a tear is a myth – that comedians are really dark and tortured and troubled.”
It’s odd that he says this, as he seems to fit the mould of damaged comedian so perfectly. His mother walked out when he was four, he was brought up by two wicked aunts, who used to hit him and rub his nose in his soiled underpants, and he was later abused by his father.
“Well I come from a dark place but it doesn’t make me dark”, he says. “My ambition was always to be as funny as ordinary people are; as the regular working guys are.”
Yet for all of his admiration for the common man, Connolly has left them long behind. He is a friend of Prince Edward and countless celebrities, and owns three huge properties as well as a yacht. People are always complaining that his swanking around is a betrayal of his working-class roots.
“They’re just wankers,” he says. “That’s the press talking; they’re talking shite as they usually do. I have deep, deep distrust of them. I see them as my enemy. I’ve had years of experience of the vile f***ing vitriol.”
It strikes me as strange that Connolly is so full of rage at journalists (who as far as I can see have been more nice than nasty over the years), but when you get him on to the subject of people who he has real reason to hate – his father and mother for a start – he is all mildness.
“Well I loved my father. I didn’t know my mother very well. I didn’t meet her from when I was four until I was in my twenties,” he says evenly, as if it was of no matter.
The reason he forgives them is partly thanks to a “wee book”.
“I think maybe Pam gave it to me. It said there’s no such thing as hate, there’s only love and fear. I forgave my father for all that had gone on and it took a huge load off me. It was like having a rucksack taken off your back.”
This sounds like psychobabble to me. History shows that there is such a thing as hate.
“Well it manifests itself as hate but I think it’s based on fear and sometimes it’s encouraged by the f***ing Daily Mail.”
. . .
Thus far in the interview he has said the f-word 27 times, but instead of finding it repetitive or limiting, I like it. On his lips the word is both funny and melodic.
“It’s also rather beautiful,” he says. “In sport, you say he whacked it into the top right, it was f***ing beautiful. There’s no English word to replace that.”
So why do people go on being shocked by the f-word?
“Because they’re middle-class wankers.”
And then he says: “In America they seem to have just discovered Kant.”
This strikes me as a strange turn for the conversation to have taken. But then I realise he didn’t say that: we are still on obscenities.
“I went to see a movie the other night, Seven Psychopaths, which you must see, it’s f***ing great, and they use it brilliantly, you c***. They’ve got it right at last.”
He then starts on an inspired rant about
how the c-word never appears on its own. “Usually it’s a something c***. Like, she’s a nasty c*** that one.”
My time is nearly up, but before it is I want to ask him about his newest accomplishment – drawing. Earlier this year there was an exhibition of his work, including a rather nice picture of a mummified woman in a belted dress with two heads.
I ask what I’d have to pay to own it.
“I’m not talking about that. I don’t talk about money. It’s vulgar.”
But isn’t that rather middle class?
“Money’s a boundary because it makes people feel inadequate when they shouldn’t.”
Yet for all that Connolly isn’t scared of flaunting it. As well as the yacht and the houses in New York and in Malta, he owns a castle in Scotland called Candacraig. This is now available for hire to corporate groups, who for nearly £4,000 a night can enjoy an orgy of tartan and try to imagine the presence of the many Hollywood celebrities that the website promises are regular visitors.
I can just about see the attraction from the guests’ point of view. But I struggle to see why the owner would want corporate fat cats sleeping in his bed and going through his bathroom cupboard.
“I don’t care about that,” he says. “I’ve told everybody all my secrets.”
‘Quartet’ is released in cinemas on January 4
 Source (including photos): Financial Times


Tuesday, 18 December 2012

Billy Connolly: BAFTA award

Scots comedy legend Billy Connolly in tears as he accepts BAFTA award
Kevin Bridges presented the Big Yin with the Outstanding Contribution in Television and Film award, and thanked him for being an inspiration to Scottish comedians.



Kevin Bridges and Billy Connolly
Kevin Bridges and Billy Connolly
Billy Connolly sobbed  as he received a Scottish Bafta award last night (10 Dec)
He was presented with a gong for an Outstanding Contribution in Television and Film by stand-up comedian Kevin Bridges.
Kevin thanked Billy for being a inspiration to generations of Scots comics and Billy replied: “This is a delightful thing, especially coming from Scotland.
“I’ve been nominated for loads of things and got b***** all. I occasionally get these good attendance things, like the guy in remedial class getting a prize for being kind.
“Genuinely, to get this from Scotland, I almost say it breaks my heart. It just hits me somewhere where I live.”
As Billy burst into tears, the crowd in Glasgow’s Fruitmarket applauded wildly.
He continued: “I don’t know what to do now. It’s been a real pleasure to talk to you. I guess you only get these things once … but could we meet every second week?”
The presentation came at the end of a 90-minute discussion about Billy’s Life In Pictures alongside a few dodgy jokes about thalidomide and the Gorbals.
The Big Yin talked about his roles in films such as 1978’s Absolution with Richard Burton and Mrs Brown with Judi Dench.
Of Burton, he said: “The funny thing was, I was drunk and he was sober.
“They shot the graveyard scene from the back and what you couldn’t see was him singing I Belong to Glasgow.
“He was a priest and I showed him where the pocket was in the cassock for his fags.”
Mrs Brown also left a big impression. Billy said: “At one point, I thought that Judi Dench fancied me. She kept giving me the eye in one scene and I thought, ‘What am I going to do?’ I danced about more and she started doing it again.
“It was getting worse and then it dawned on me that she was being Queen Victoria, so I fancied her back.”
Billy admitted he was disappointed to miss out on a Bafta for Mrs Brown – instead it went to Ewan McGregor for Trainspotting.
He said: “Ewan beat me with that filth about drugs in Edinburgh – and that language, too.
“I hate Ewan for beating me. When you get beaten by somebody you like, it’s worse. “
However, Billy said he never likes to watch himself and branded method acting as “pretentious c**p”.
And he admitted he sometimes calls his wife Pamela Stephenson for acting tips when he is on the film or TV set.
He also confessed he wasn’t a fan of JRR Tolkien’s The Hobbit before he starred in the film.
Billy said: “I hadn’t read The Hobbit and don’t like people who have. They’re not my cup of tea.”
He said two of his favourite current comedians are Dylan Moran and Bill Bailey.
But he added: “Most of the others are Americans and Robin Williams beats everybody when it comes to sheer invention.”
Source (including photo): Daily Record

Billy Connolly Interview - The British Independent Film Awards 2012
Published on Dec 9, 2012
Stefan Pape from HeyUGuys interviews acting royalty and comedy legend Billy Connolly at the 2012 British Independent Film Awards
Source: YouTube

Sunday, 9 December 2012

Billy Connolly: Time Out interview

The Big Yin expounds on Chaucer’s fart jokes, speaking Dwarvish and the irreplaceable f-word
Billy Connolly
Billy Connolly Photograph: Tony Lyon

Few can match Billy Connolly’s reach and longevity in the entertainment industry. After a short-lived folk music career, the Scot turned his attention to comedy full-time; he’s remained a wildly popular international presence for 40 years, while compiling a massive catalog of stand-up specials that showcase his rowdy storytelling skills. He’s also become a documentary producer and a reliable character performer in films such as Brave and the upcoming The Hobbit. TONY spoke to the NYC resident the day after he received an award from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts.

Congratualations on your BAFTA award. What does it mean?
I think I should die now. Or retire. I think these lifetime achievement ones are gentle hints that you should bugger off.

You play a dwarf in the new Peter Jackson movie, The Hobbit. Did you approach this differently than you would playing a man?
Well, you have to speak Dwarvish. So you can’t help but approach it differently.

So you’ve picked up a new language?
No, I’ve already forgotten my line. Well, I had about four lines, but they’re all along the lines of “Come on, lads, let’s show them what for!” I have the best line in the movie, but I’m not allowed to tell you. James Nesbitt [the Irish actor who plays fellow dwarf Bofur] was seething with envy.

Your energy during your stand-up sets doesn’t seem to have diminished with age. How do you explain that?
I haven’t a clue. I’ve gone on sick and come off well. I’ve gone on sick and remained sick after the show was over. I had a virus in Australia and I couldn’t cancel—it was the Sydney Opera House—and I had to stop and go for a pee. I told them, “I have this virus and it makes me pee a lot. Oh ho, pee time.” I went offstage and peed in a bucket—so we miked the bucket.

Paradoxically, you address crowds in an intimate way. How do you envision them?
I try very hard to unite them all as one big animal, as though I’m speaking to them in a bar. I’ve never had difficulty communicating with strangers. In fact, I rather like them—some of them turn out to be the most interesting of people. If you stick to cigar smokers, fly fishers and banjo players, you can’t go wrong—a bit dodgy on the banjo player front, but most of them are nice.

How do American audiences compare with others around the world?
I find them rather nice and badly spoken of by people who know nothing about them. I think Americans generally are. Look at what you’ve given the world, for crissakes: rock & roll and Hank Williams, jazz and Chuck Berry. Holy fuck, you can retire on that!

When you perform here, do you find people listen differently?
No, but I thought they would have trouble with my accent. If I use obscure language, they’ll have a problem with it. I’ll be raging and I’ll say, “A sleekit old bastard”—sleekit means, eh, untrustworthy—and then I’ll explain it to them. Skunner is another one: a repulsive person who makes you physically ill, like someone who chews with their mouth open. There’s a lot of lovely ones.

The best Americans have to offer these days is douche bag.
But you know, I love douche bag. [Laughs] The one I love also is doofus. I think it’s a beautiful word with a friendly ring to it. A doofus to me is an overweight, clueless guy, but likable.

This reminds me of your list of childish things you say men never get over: knickers, bums, farts and so on. Why do you think that’s so?
In Britain, we’ve taken great joy and pride in vulgarity since the days of Milton and Chaucer talking of farting and belching. There’s a thing that really irritates me when some pretentious prick posing as a comedian says, “Fart jokes,” then looks down his nose as if they were easy to do and then goes on to tell you about Kierkegaard. Go fuck yourself.

Ten years ago, you prided yourself on your computer illiteracy. How has that changed in the intervening decade?
Not at all. I Amazoned two things today and it was the first time I’ve ever bought something—if indeed I have. Maybe if they had invented brand-new words to go along with [computer technology], but a lot of the words they use have old meanings and they don’t relate to the new meanings.

Well, what’s nice about English is that you can simply turn a noun into a verb, like you did with Amazon.
Yes. [Pause] I hadn’t even realized I’d done that! [Laughs]

You’ve had a long relationship with the word fuck
Oh, yes!

As it becomes more mainstream over time, do you feel protective or are you proud of it?
Where I was born, it was part of the mainstream. Scottish author James Kelman has lots of swearing in all of his books, and when he was interviewed in one of those British Sunday supplements he said, “If you can give me the English equivalent of fuckin’ beautiful, I’ll write it down.” I was watching Barcelona play football last night and they did some things that were fuckin’ beautiful, you know? There’s no equivalent.

I often think of what Tommy Tiernan said: “The English language is a brick wall between me and the audience, and fuck is my chisel.”
That’s nice. A little pretentious, but nice. He’s Irish, you know; they try so hard.

But it is lovely.
It’s fuckin’ beautiful.

Source (including photo): Time Out


Quartet
Reel Life with Jane interview: Dustin Hoffman and Billy Connolly talk Fear, Improvisation and Making Quartet
Read it here

Sunday, 2 December 2012

Billy Connolly celebrates his 70th Birthday with Conan

Billy Connolly Celebrates His 70th Birthday with Conan



Comedy legend Billy Connolly paid a visit to Conan last night (26 Nov). The Scotsman turned 70 over the weekend, and he got to celebrate the milestone on the show. And by celebrate, I mean complain about his age and talk about all of the weird things that are happening to his body, which is how one celebrates every birthday from 70 on.



Source: Splitsider

Sunday, 25 November 2012

Billy Connolly: Outstanding Contribution BAFTA, and birthday tributes

Billy Connolly is still going strong at 70

Billy Connolly is still going strong at 70
 
Fellow comedians and friends pay tribute to Billy Connolly as he turns 70
He is the Scots legend who made his name with a banjo, a pair of banana boots and a place to park a bike.

But as Billy Connolly celebrates his 70th birthday today (24 Nov), he shows no signs of slowing up.
Named earlier this year by modern stand-ups as the most influential comic of all time, he is as loved by young stars as by veterans.
Billy went from shipyards to folk music to comedy and his career took off after an appearance on the Michael Parkinson show in 1975 – when he told a gag about a man who buries his wife and uses a part of her anatomy as a bike stand.
Pals and fans tell Brian McIver of their admiration for the Big Yin.
Read more at Daily Record

Billy Connolly wins Outstanding Contribution award at Scottish BAFTAs
Scots comedian Billy Connolly was honoured at the Scottish BAFTAs for his Outstanding Contribution to Television and Film.
'The Big Yin' couldn't attend the ceremony at Glasgow's Radisson Blu hotel, but actor Brian Cox was still delighted to be making the announcement – if a little surprised.
"I'm shocked actually," Cox said on the red carpet. "I thought Billy had probably already got something here. So I was a wee bit taken aback that they hadn't honoured him before.
"Once you've seen Billy on stage and you've seen him perform he's unbeatable. And he started it all. Every comedian today owes something to Billy. I'm sorry he's not here, but I'm glad he's working."
Connolly couldn't accept the award in person because he was working in San Francisco, but said before the event: “I’m really pleased and proud to receive this trophy from BAFTA in Scotland, because I know you probably think we luvvies get shiny prizes all the time. But actually, sometimes we don’t."
Among Connolly's many film and TV credits are The Man Who Sued God, Mrs Brown and Brave.
He also regularly presents travel programmes and is due to appear in The Hobbit: There and Back Again.
Brian Cox added: "It's a great honour for me, and it's a great honour for Billy Connolly to have something presented by me… I'm only joking."
On December 10, an event will be held in Glasgow exploring Connolly's life in pictures*, with tickets available from the BAFTA website nearer the time *
Source (with video): STV

Billy Connolly's acceptance speech can be seen here

Also reported by Contact Music and (with video interview) The Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games Official Channel

* Tickets are now on sale for the Billy Connolly BAFTA Scotland event - see here for details

Scottish BAFTAs

A dram fine Baftas night for Angels’ Share as Scots film scoops awards


Paul Brannigan with his Best Actor award. Picture: PA Paul Brannigan with his Best Actor award. Picture: PA
Whisky caper The Angels’ Share, its young star, Paul Brannigan, and rising film-maker Zam Salim grabbed a share of the glory from Billy Connolly at tonight’s Scottish Bafta ceremony in Glasgow.
The screenplay for director Ken Loach’s Cannes prize-­winning heist movie won the best writer gong for his regular collaborator, Paul Laverty.
The best actor award went to Brannigan, who was plucked from obscurity, while working on a violence-reduction programme, by the veteran English director for the lead role of a troubled young Glaswegian persuaded to stage a dramatic raid on a distillery.
Brannigan had been competing with one of his co-stars, Siobhan Reilly, for the coveted prize.

BBC Scotland won a huge boost after capturing the current affairs award for its controversial documentary, Rangers, The Men Who Sold The Jerseys.

Among the stars to attend the event – hosted by Edith Bowman – were Brian Cox, Ewen Bremner, Siobhan Redmond, Rory Bremner and Neil Oliver.

Connolly, who was awarded an outstanding contribution to film and television Bafta, was 
unable to attend the event due to a previous commitment in the United States.
But he recorded a video message, in which he spoke of his pride at getting the award,
telling the 500-strong audience: “I left school with nothing, you know.”
Connolly, who is due to make an in-person appearance at the Old Fruitmarket in Glasgow next month, added: “Thank you very, very much, television viewers and people of Bafta Scotland, for this wonderful, wonderful award. I really appreciate it.
“I know you people think that we luvvies get prizes every day, shiny things handed to us, but the last time I was up for a Bafta prize in Scotland, I lost both of them, one to Ewan McGregor and the other to Kaye Adams.
“I’m really sorry I can’t be there, because I am in San Francisco doing some engagements, but I will be in Glasgow in
December and my heart is there all the time.”

Hollywood star Cox, who made a tribute speech about Connolly in the star’s
absence, said: “An honour like this for Billy has been a long time coming, he really should have been honoured well before now. As an actor, he’s simply been getting better and better.”

Zam Salim collected both the best director Bafta and best feature film prize with his black comedy Up There, his first film, which was premièred at the Glasgow Film Festival this year.

Stuart Cosgrove, the broadcaster, writer, media pundit and TV executive, was honoured for a career which saw him become head of programmes for the
nations and regions on Channel Four.

Rab C Nesbitt star Gregor Fisher beat off competition from co-star Elaine C Smith to win the best TV actor award, while Antiques Road Trip, which STV made for the BBC, scooped the best factual entertainment programme award.

Brannigan said: “It’s a real honour to be here. It’s the proudest moment of my life, after the birth of my son.!
“I could never have imagined I’d be here in Glasgow on the red carpet.
“It’s bigger than Cannes, to be honest.”

Jude MacLaverty, director of Bafta in Scotland, said: “The awards reflect the sheer breadth of talent being generated in Scotland, and it’s great to see so much of it celebrated tonight.”

Read more at Scotsman

Also reported (with video) by BBC

Also reported by:

Herald Scotland
Female First 
Sydney Morning Herald
Screen Daily and many more


Winners of the BAFTA Scotland Awards 2012

  • Best Comedy / Entertainment - Mrs Brown's Boys
  • Best Game - Bad Hotel
  • Current Affairs - Rangers The Men Who Sold The Jerseys
  • Single Documentary - Afterlife: The Strange Science of Decay
  • Best Factual Series - Afghanistan: The Great Game, A Personal View by Rory Stewart
  • Features / Factual Entertainment - Antiques Road Trip
  • Best Actor / Actress Television - Gregor Fisher (Rab C Nesbit)
  • Director - Zam Salim (Up There)
  • Best Writer - Paul Laverty (The Angels' Share)
  • Best Actor / Actress Film - Paul Brannigan (The Angels' Share)
  • Animation - The Making of Longbird
  • Feature Film - Up There
  • Special Achievement Award 2012: Callum Macrae (Director) SRI LANKA'S KILLING FIELDS
  • Special Achievement Award 2012: Paul Mcguigan (Director) SHERLOCK
  • Outstanding Contribution to Broadcasting - Stuart Cosgrove
  • Outstanding Contribution for Craft (In Memory of Robert McCann) - Trisha Biggar
  • Outstanding Contribution to Television and Film - Billy Connolly CBE
Read more at Daily Mail

Sunday, 18 November 2012

Billy Connolly

Knit your own Billy Connolly
Billy Connolly is one of several Caledonian legends features in a new book, Knit Your Own Scotland, by costume designers Jackie Holt and Ruth Bailey

Knit Your Own Scotland by Ruth Bailey and Jackie Holt
Read more at Daily Record

Photos from Daily Record

Sunday, 4 November 2012

Billy Connolly


Billy Connolly 
Billy Connolly honoured for life's work 
Billy Connolly will receive the award at a public event in December.
Comedian Billy Connolly is being honoured with a lifetime achievement award by Bafta Scotland.
The 69-year-old, who is also an actor and musician, has been hailed by the arts organisation as one of Scotland's most successful talents.
He will be given the award for his outstanding contribution to television and film.
Connolly will not be at the ceremony on 18 November but a recorded message will be played on the night.
Instead, he will receive the award at a public event in December.
Connolly said: "I'm really pleased and proud to receive this trophy from Bafta in Scotland because I know you probably think we luvvies get shiny prizes all the time. But actually, sometimes we don't.
"I'm really sorry I can't be there because I'm in San Francisco doing some prior engagements.
"But in December I will be in Glasgow, where my heart is all the time, doing a Bafta Life in Pictures event highlighting my film and television work from over the years, which might be quite groovy."
The event in December will see Connolly discuss his life and career which has spanned 30 films, numerous sell-out stand-up tours and television series.
He is set to appear in Dustin Hoffman's directorial debut Quartet and the much-anticipated The Hobbit, both to be released next year.
Past recipients of the outstanding contribution award include Sir Sean Connery, Brian Cox and Robbie Coltrane.
Read more at BBC

Also reported by Scotsman, Hollywood, and many others

'Quartet' review
by SCAD District
Rating: ★★★★☆
Read the review here

Sunday, 28 October 2012

Alan Cumming selling Billy Connolly's suit

Billy Connolly's Signed Suit VERY RARE!
Here is your chance to own Billy Connolly's one of a kind suit, signed by Billy!!
This suit was worn during his famous Albert Hall performance in London. BID NOW!!

This item is part of a series of items being auctioned off by Alan Cumming and friends to raise money for good, social change.
Source: Ebay

A full list of items in the auction is available on Alan's blog

Billy Connolly: 'Quartet' trailer

Trailer for Dustin Hoffman's Quartet
The trailer for Dustin Hoffman's directorial debut, Quartet, is now online and you can check it out in the player below, courtesy of Yahoo! Movies.

Maggie Smith, Billy Connolly, Michael Gambon, Pauline Collins, Tom Courtenay and Sheridan Smith star in the December 28 release.

Quartet tells the story of Reggie (Courtenay), Wilf (Connolly) and Cissy (Collins) who reside in Beecham House, a home for retired opera singers. Each year they stage a concert to celebrate Verdi's birthday, which also raises funds for the home. Reggie's ex-wife Jean (Smith) arrives at the home and creates tension, playing the diva part but refusing to sing in the concert.
Source: Coming Soon
 

Sunday, 21 October 2012

Billy Connolly: 'Quartet' BFI premiere and review


Dustin Hoffman's 'Quartet' cast draws laughs at London appearance

Comedian Billy Connolly and Downton Abbey star Maggie Smith entertained the crowd with jokes and banter here Monday as they answered questions about their roles in Dustin Hoffman's directorial debut Quartet ahead of the film's red carpet gala screening Monday evening. The screening was part  of the BFI London Film Festival.

Hoffman's film, based on a stage play by Ronald Harwood that the playwright himself adapted for the screen, details the story of a group of retired opera singers in a retirement home whose annual concert to celebrate composer Giuseppe Verdi's birthday is disrupted by the arrival of an eternal diva played by Smith and the former wife of one of the residents.

Smith, whose turn as the sharp-tongued countess Violet Crawley in Downton Abbey has been a TV ratings hit in the U.K. and the U.S. alike, was at one point asked if she knew that a sandwich seller with an outlet outside the Venice Film Festival's main theater had named a sandwich after her. "Is it ham?" she asked in response - a reference to an unskilled actor who overacts.

Connolly, whose stand-up comedy routines led Hoffman to cast him in his directorial debut, was up and running with humor from his  first question.

Asked how Hoffman was as a director, fellow ensemble cast member Pauline Collins described him as a "dynamo and a darling," mostly because "it was clear he understood actors." Connolly's immediate response was that he'd forgotten the question in a playful reference to the themes of old age in the film. "A nightmare – tantrums, long silences, inappropriate touching," Connolly then said, before adding that Hoffman actually  "was excellent."

Hoffman jumped in to ensure that Connolly meant the director had provided "excellent touching."
When asked if she felt she started being asked to play "ageing women" a little early on in her career and whether she minded or not, Smith said she was "glad to get any work" and the fact "they're all 90 is neither here nor there."

Hoffman added that he knew Smith was getting offers of other kinds of film work all the time, noting she'd only last year turned down My Week With Marilyn.

Fellow ensemble cast members Tom Courtenay and relative youngster Sheridan Smith at 32 also joined in the fun.
Courtenay chimed in with an impression of Hoffman as a director and the points during the shoot when he knew the debutant helmer was happy. "Gorgeous, gorgeous take, that's in the movie," Courtenay said Hoffman would bellow.

But one question drew incredulity from Connolly when he was asked if he felt more likely to be inappropriate as he got older.

"Are you kidding me on"?, Connolly said in his Scottish drawl. "I've been accused of being inappropriate from day one. I have pretty much said exactly as I please all my life. I wasn't just pretending to be old."

On a more serious note, the cast members were asked if they thought that a fresh genre of movie had been invented on the back of the critical and boxoffice success of movies featuring older casts, such as The Best Exotic Marigold HotelThe King's Speech as well as TV shows, such as Downton.

"I think it is because a lot of grown-ups would like films [made] for grown-ups about grown-ups. I can only hope that's correct," Smith said.

Hoffman and company also revealed that much of the dialogue in the film came from the Oscar-winning actor making his cast feel free to improvise. "It was openly encouraged and a very good idea," Connolly said before adding a complaint that his best ad lib was left on the cutting room floor.

Hoffman explained that when they were shooting, Connolly and Courtenay's characters were meant to be watching a deer on the edge of the forest in a highly-charged emotional scene.

Being "low-budget filmmaking," Hoffman said it ended up that the separate CGI deer scene just didn't sit right with the other film footage. Connolly's improv quip for the scene was: "Do you think he knows how delicious he is."

The film will be released in the U.S. by the Weinstein Co., which is giving it an Academy-qualifying run on Dec. 28.
Source: Hollywood Reporter

'Quartet' review - BFI London Film Festival 2012 
Director: Dustin Hoffman; Screenwriter: Ronald Harwood; Starring: Maggie Smith, Billy Connolly, Tom Courtenay, Pauline Collins, Sheridan Smith, Michael Gambon; Running time: 90 mins; Certificate: TBC Dustin Hoffman had a trial run behind the camera way back in 1978 for pet project Straight Time, but ended up as an uncredited director for the hard-hitting crime drama. Quartet, his first proper stab as a filmmaker, is an altogether more sedate and cosy affair.

It takes place at Beecham house, a retirement home for musicians that counts the likes of Billy Connolly, Tom Courtenay and Pauline Collins among its residents. Each year the house holds a concert to celebrate composer Giuseppe Verdi's birthday, but their latest money-spinning event is thrown into jeopardy when Reg's (Courtenay) ex-wife Jean Horton (Maggie Smith) comes to live at Beecham.

Still nursing a broken heart, Reg can't bear to face Jean, and it takes some cajoling from Wilf and Cissy - all part of a classic Rigoletto recording back in the day - to mend old wounds in the group. They're also not helped by Jean's resistance to performing - she was a superstar in her youth and believes she'll tarnish that memory by singing now.

Quartet has a warmth and charm that'll likely make it a firm hit with the same crowd that turned out for The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel. Both films were marked by flinty, terse performances by Maggie Smith, with her characters (both needing hip replacements!) gradually warming over time. Like Marigold, Quartet tackles ideas of ageing without pushing the story into too dark a direction.

The film's greatest strength lies in the excellent performances from the cast. Connolly provides much-needed light relief as ladies' man Wilf, who describes himself to the in-house doctor (Sheridan Smith) as like "vintage wine and seasoned wood". The likes of Michael Gambon and Andrew Sachs also leave an impression in their fleeting roles.

Ronald Harwood's script, based on his own stage play, occasionally betrays its theatrical roots with some dense dialogue and reliance on the same locations, but his story of the elderly finding a way to relive their glory days is sure to cement this as a blue rinse favourite.
Source (with photos): Digital Spy

Monday, 8 October 2012

The Hobbit: new artwork and poster


New banner artwork and White Council poster for The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey 

There's just over two months to go until Peter Jackson takes us back to Middle-earth for the first of his three-part adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien's classic Lord of the Rings prequel The Hobbit, and now the official Facebook page has released four new banners for the hotly-anticipated first installment, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, which you can check out right here

Meanwhile, earlier this week a new promo poster also arrived online via Filmcells, which gives us a look at White Council members Gandalf (Ian McKellen), Galadriel (Cate Blanchett), Elrond (Hugo Weaving) and Saruman (Christopher Lee) meeting in Rivendell.

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey stars Martin Freeman in the lead role as Bilbo Baggins, along with a huge ensemble cast that includes Richard Armitage, John Bell, Jed Brophy, Adam Brown, John Callen, Billy Connolly, Luke Evans, Stephen Fry, Ryan Gage, Mark Hadlow, Peter Hambleton, Barry Humphries, Stephen Hunter, William Kircher, Evangeline Lilly, Sylvester McCoy, Bret McKenzie, Graham McTavish, Mike Mizrahi, James Nesbitt, Dean O’Gorman, Lee Pace, Mikael Persbrandt, Conan Stevens, Ken Stott, Jeffrey Thomas, and Aidan Turner. Also reprising their roles from The Lord of the Rings trilogy are Orlando Bloom as Legolas, Ian Holm as the elder Bilbo Baggins, Elijah Wood as Frodo Baggins and Andy Serkis as Gollum.

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey is released on December 14th, while The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug opens on December 13th, 2013 and The Hobbit: There and Back Again concludes the saga on July 18th, 2014.


Source (with poster and artwork): Flickering Myth


 

Scottish quote of the week: Billy Boyd on Hobbits and Scots 

Billy Boyd
Scottish actor Billy Boyd was born in 1968 in Glasgow and is best known for playing hobbit Peregrin “Pippin” Tookin in the film adaptations of J.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of The Rings series. 

Boyd worked as a bookbinder for several years before embarking on his acting career, and one of the books he bound was The Lord of the Rings.

The films were shot in director Peter Jackson’s native New Zealand, a country whose landscape is often compared to that of Scotland, and many of whose people are descended from Scots, lending an extra dimension to Boyd’s comparison of Scottish people and hobbits:
“Hobbits are a lot like Scots. It’s all about nature and enjoying their land, which is a very Scottish thing” – Billy Boyd

Source: The Scotsman

 

Billy Connolly: second night at Beacon Theatre

Billy Connolly adds second night to Beacon Theatre engagement

Comedian Billy Connolly is so popular that he's been forced to add a second night to his previously announced one-night engagement at The Beacon Theatre. He will now be appearing at 8pm on December 6 in addition to his performance on December 7.

The show is Billy Connolly: The Man Live, an evening of the British star's uncensored, uncut, and unpredictable stand-up. Connolly, who has appeared Off-Broadway, is perhaps best known for his work on the TV series Head of the Class and as loyal servant John Brown opposite Judi Dench in the film Mrs. Brown. Upcoming films include Quartet and the two-part adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien's The Hobbit.

For more information and tickets to Billy Connolly: The Man Live, click here

Source: Theater Mania

Sunday, 23 September 2012

Billy Connolly: Glasgow Commonwealth Games ambassador; live show in San Francisco


Billy Connolly  
  • Billy Connolly is Glasgow Commonwealth Games ambassador

Billy Connolly has been confirmed as the latest star name to become an ambassador for the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow.

The comedian and actor narrates a special animated film telling the story behind the games official mascot, which will be unveiled on Thursday.

He is the third ambassador to be named and joins cycling great Sir Chris Hoy and swimming legend Rebecca Adlington.

Connolly, a Freeman of Glasgow, said the games would be "a huge success".

Speaking ahead of the mascot launch at BBC Scotland's Glasgow headquarters, Connolly said: "I know that the people of Glasgow will enjoy the Games immensely, the whole of Scotland will.

"We are a nation that welcomes all visitors with a smiling face, the goodwill of Scots will stand forever, we will always have that."

The comedian said he believes that involving young people is key to the success of the games.

'Buzz created' "There is nothing more important than getting young people involved, without the youth of today creating a momentum behind an event, nothing is taken forward," he said.

"By engaging with children in the design of the mascot, a buzz has been created - you can feel the excitement for the games already."

Connolly also believes that Glasgow 2014 will have no problem recruiting up to 15,000 volunteers required to help stage the games and that the events will be well attended.

He said: "Glasgow is a great city of partakers. We love taking part in everything and for something as big as the Commonwealth Games, people will be coming out in their droves to spectate and volunteer, without question Glasgow 2014 will be a huge success.

"Glaswegians and Scots are great people for turning out and offering support to all individuals and teams - it will be no different in 2014."

Source: BBC 

Glasgow Commonwealth Games mascot unveiled
A cheeky cartoon mascot called Clyde is to help spread the word about Glasgow's Commonwealth Games in 2014.

The zip-sliding, street-dancing thistle, designed by a 12-year-old schoolgirl, was yesterday unveiled as the official mascot for the games.
Upstaging Olympic heroes Michael Jamieson and Rebecca Adlington at the official unveiling, Clyde has been described as "curious, confident and cheeky" and comes with a backstory narrated by the world's best-known Glaswegian, Billy Connolly.

Read more at Herald Scotland

  • Billy Connolly: The Man Live to Play San Francisco

British actor and comedian Billy Connolly will bring his show Billy Connolly: The Man Live to San Francisco's Marines' Memorial Theatre for five performances from November 27 to December 1.

Connolly is best known* for his work on the TV series Head of the Class. He has appeared opposite Judi Dench in the film Mrs. Brown, and will soon appear in the films Quartet and the two-part adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien's The Hobbit


Click here for more information and tickets to Billy Connolly: The Man Live.

Source: Theater Mania





* we assume this refers to the US ;)
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