Showing posts with label Daniel Kerr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Daniel Kerr. Show all posts

Sunday, 31 March 2013

Daniel Kerr: two awards in one week!

Daniel Kerr with Karen Dunbar

It's been a busy week for Daniel!
On Thursday Daniel Kerr scooped the BAFTA Best New Talent Award, then on Saturday he won the Scottish Variety Award for Best New Actor!
We're awaiting press reports on the event, but in the meantime - congratulations, Daniel!

More reports on Daniel's BAFTA win:
Scotsman
Milngavie Herald
The Sun

Sunday, 24 March 2013

Daniel Kerr: BAFTA win for 'The Wee Man' role

12-year-old Daniel Kerr gets Bafta nod for Paul Ferris role in The Wee Man
Glaswegian is youngest recipient of Bafta New Talent Award

A 12-year-old boy who played a Scottish gangster in The Wee Man has become the youngest person to scoop a Bafta New Talent Award.

Daniel Kerr, who played a young Paul Ferris, drew raves for his mature performance in a movie that otherwise earned mixed reviews from critics.
“It just felt fantastic to even be nominated, it was a night to remember. I must be doing something right to win a Bafta,” he said, after picking up his gong for Best Acting Performance. “I could relate to Paul Ferris as a young boy, getting up to mischief.”
Read more at The Independent

Also reported by 
BBC News
STV
Scotsman
and many others






BAFTA winner Daniel Kerr talks about Wee Man award
Daniel Kerr, who played a young Paul Ferris in gritty drama The Wee Man, chats to STV about winning the BAFTA for best acting performance at the BAFTA in Scotland New Talent Award - watch the interview here
Source: STV 



Congratulations, Daniel!

Sunday, 10 March 2013

Daniel Kerr: BAFTA nomination for 'The Wee Man'

Schoolboy actor nominated for Bafta for role in gangster drama


Screen star: Daniel Kerr, 12, is in line for a Bafta New Talent Award. Photo source: STV
A 12-year-old actor who portrayed notorious Glasgow gangster Paul Ferris in the film The Wee Man has been nominated for a Bafta.
Daniel Kerr from Glasgow is one of more than 30 nominees for this year's Bafta New Talent Awards, which recognise stand-out work across several categories including acting, writing and animation.
The first-year Bearsden Academy pupil said his nomination was "amazing".
He said: "It just feels amazing to be nominated, I can't believe it.
"When I told my dad when I was younger that I wanted to be an actor, I never imagined I'd be nominated for a Bafta."

The winners will be announced at a ceremony hosted by broadcaster Muriel Gray in Oran Mor, Glasgow, on March 21.
Read more at STV

Also reported by
BBC


Scotsman


Daily Record

The Scottish Sun
and many others

Sunday, 17 February 2013

Daniel Kerr: set for big award

Bearsden 'Wee Man' actor set for big award
daniel kerr 
A young star of the silver screen is in the running for the accolade of best new actor of the year.
Following his staring role in the film The Wee Man about former Gangland hardman Paul Ferris’ life, Daniel Kerr (12) - who plays a young Ferris - has been nominated as part of the Scottish Variety Awards.
The budding Bearsden actor is no stranger to rubbing shoulders with actors who have become household names such as John Hannah and Denis Lawson.
The Bearsden Academy pupil has been a member of Scream Management Kids agency for the past two years ago and has also acted alongside The Royle Family’s Ricky Tomlinson in the ITV’s Great Night Out.
Daniel’s step-dad Iain said: “This is great news. Daniel was nominated on-line by quite a few member of the public and we are looking for as many people in the community to get behind him. This is a fantastic accolade just to be nominated. In my eyes it’s almost as important as getting a BAFTA.”
Daniel is one of five young actors up for the award. Online voting is now open and runs until March 8.
The winner will be announced at a star-studded, glitz and glamour evening at The Crowne Plaza Hotel, Glasgow on Saturday, March 23.
To vote for Daniel go to www.capitalfm.com/scottishvarietyawards
Read more here.

Source (including photo): Milngavie and Bearsden Herald 

More information at Daniel's official website

Wednesday, 6 February 2013

Daniel Kerr: Scottish Variety Awards 2013 nomination


Young Scottish actor Daniel Kerr has been nominated for the Best New Scottish Actor 2013 Scottish Variety Award.

 
Scottish Variety Awards 2013 Logo

The Scottish Variety Awards 2013
The Scottish Variety Awards, sponsored by Auchentoshan Visitor Centre, together with Entertainment Sponsor M&H Logistics, are delighted to announce that voting for 2013 will open on Sunday 3rd February at 23:59. 
It's your chance to select the best new Scottish actress/actor, best new comedian, best band, sports person & much much more until the 8th of March. Get voting from Sunday 3rd February to tell us who you want to win!

Celebrating the best in Scottish Variety during an evening of glitz and glamour, hosted by our own Capital Breakfast presenters Des & Jennie on Saturday the 23rd March 2013 at Glasgow’s Crowne Plaza hotel.

For further information on sponsorship opportunities, single tickets and to book a table please get in touch via: 0141 353 5000 or scottishvarietyawards@kjmevents.com
Don't forget to keep listening to Des and Jennie on Capital Breakfast for your chance to win yourself to the awards!

Also, anyone who votes using the form below will automatically be placed into a prize draw to win tickets to attend, on Des And Jennie's table no less!
For the terms and conditions of the competition, click here.

Source: Capital FM



The nominations for "Best new Scottish actor/actress 2013" are:
  • Daniel Kerr
  • Sharon Rooney
  • Kevin Guthrie
  • Fraya Mavor
  • Jenny Douglas 

Tuesday, 29 January 2013

Daniel Kerr: Scotland's youngest showbiz sensation

Daniel Kerr: I was The Wee Man... now I’m the big man starring with Angelina


Talented schoolboy Daniel Kerr is fast becoming Scotland’s youngest showbiz sensation. The 12-year-old, from Bearsden, Glasgow, is currently starring as a young Paul Ferris in the ex-hood’s movie biopic The Wee Man.
Last Friday, nearly four million telly viewers saw him appear alongside Royle Family actor Ricky Tomlinson in new comedy-drama Great Night Out.
And the icing on the cake for the youngster is a dream role in Disney’s animated blockbuster Maleficent, which is out next year and stars Angelina Jolie and Peter Capaldi.

Daniel has had a part in Waterloo Road too but the biggest role of his career is undoubtedly playing former gangster Ferris in the controversial film about his life.
It’s become a box-office smash in Scotland and has taken more cash per screenings across the UK than Quentin Tarantino’s Django Unchained and Disney hit Monsters Inc 3D. Daniel — accompanied by contracts manager Iain and hairdresser Annemarie — met with the 49-year-old convicted gun runner at a Glasgow hotel to discuss the role before filming started.
He says: “I was really quite thrilled talking to a former Glasgow gangster just drinking a wee bottle of Coke!
“But I was quite nervous and quite excited too. I kept thinking about what I was going to say. I just wanted to be polite and friendly.”
Iain, 36, adds: “Daniel knows about Paul, his past and where he came from — the good bits and the bad bits.
“He’s aware that he’s gone to jail and done a lot of things but to be honest, when Paul met with us he was brilliant. He insisted on speaking to Daniel and he was straight with him and told him he’d done some bad things in his day.
“Paul warned Daniel that people might speak about them and challenge him about them.
“My impression of him? I wouldn’t want to cross him.
“But he’s been brilliant with Daniel and a gentleman to me and my wife.
“He’s taken time out with Daniel to make sure he’s OK.
“He’ll still contact us every now and again, and he says to Daniel, ‘listen to your mum and dad’.”
Iain initially feared the part could make his son a hate figure.
He says: “We had concerns about how the film would be perceived and how Daniel would be perceived in the film because if you’re a baddie in EastEnders, you’re a baddie in real life.
“Some folk don’t like you. And I didn’t want anything like that for Daniel.”
Daniel Kerr and Paul Ferris
Meeting ... Daniel Kerr with Paul Ferris

The Wee Man — which also stars Martin Compston and John Hannah — follows Ferris’s life from a youngster in Glasgow’s tough Blackhill area to feared enforcer working with ‘The Godfather’ Arthur Thompson.
It features graphic scalping, shooting and stabbing scenes. Daniel revealed he is banned from watching the film because of his age and has had to settle for a montage of his scenes.
He says: “My dad’s explained why I can’t see the movie.
“I’ve thought about trying to sneak in and watch it somewhere but it’s probably better for me to play it safe!”
He’s well aware of the controversy surrounding The Wee Man and its subject, and adds: “I know some people aren’t really going to like it and I’ll just need to cope with that.
“Nobody from my school gives me any attention about what I do so it’s quite good. I don’t really tell anybody.
“I like to keep my acting life to myself when I’m at school.
“I don’t like to broadcast what I do and I never really talk to my friends about it either.
“When I go on set, that’s when I go into acting mode.
“But when that’s over I just do my homework, get told what to do and look after my wee brother Cameron, who’s seven.”
The movie sees a young Ferris being bullied by a group of older boys that include the cruel Banks brothers.
Daniel relates to his character’s ordeal, saying: “I’m one of the smallest boys in my school.
“And at my old primary school I used to get a lot of hassle about that. I didn’t react with violence though, I just ignored them.”
In one scene the thugs kick his dog like a football, and Daniel adds: “The emotion of the dog scene I quite liked.
“I loved the dog too. I was always playing with it off set.
“I’d get my make-up done and then go and roll about on the grass with it and the make-up girls would shout on me to stop!”
The most nerve-wracking moment during filming for Daniel was rehearsing confrontational scenes with his character’s tormentors.
He says: “I was terrified even though I knew it wasn’t real.
“They were bigger boys and were up in my face. That was scary.”
Daniel’s already had his first experience of being recognised by fans.
He says: “I was in B&Q with my mum after Waterloo Road had been on and all these people were looking at me. That was a wee bit strange but I liked it. I’m quite glad about the attention.”
The acting prodigy, a first year pupil at Glasgow’s Bearsden Academy, joined a local theatre group aged five.
His supportive parents have guided his career ever since. He now combines school with regular auditions and his studies at the Glasgow-based UK Theatre School, where he’s been going for four years.
Daniel says: “Ever since I can remember, I was saying to my mum and dad that I wanted to be an actor when I grew up. It’s a really exciting time for me right now. I got into the local drama group and then they said I was good enough to go to a higher level so that’s how I ended up at the theatre school.
“I didn’t get in the first time I tried but I got a place after trying out the second time.
“When I first do an audition, I just feel like it’s a breeze.
“But then when it’s like a really important part, I have to get into the zone and I get quite nervous.”
His first appearance on screen was in a Scottish Government advert and he followed that up with a part in Waterloo Road last year, playing poverty-stricken youngster Ewan Murray.
Daniel — who was an extra in Peter Mullan’s gritty film Neds — will also pop up in BBC3 sci-fi series Being Human next month.
Iain adds: “Daniel might turn 16, get a girlfriend, do something else and walk away from acting.
“Whatever he does, we’ll support him.
“Just now, he’s a normal boy going to school, doing things right, doing things wrong and nagging his wee brother. I want him to grow up as a kid and not lose his childhood.”

Kid could be next Kevin Bridges
Daniel's scenes in Disney’s fantasy blockbuster Maleficent are expected to open the film.
The reworking of the fairytale Sleeping Beauty was shot in London last summer and is due out next year.
Incredibly it stars three of Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt’s kids — Pax, eight, Zahara, seven and four-year-old Vivienne.
Daniel says: “Originally I went for quite a big part but I didn’t get it.
“I got a smaller part and that was amazing too.
“I’m the shepherd’s son at the beginning of the film and my face will probably be the first face that people see.
“Unfortunately I didn’t meet Angelina Jolie but I saw her and waved.
“It still seems weird that I’m going to be in the same film as her.”
Daniel still gets starstruck whenever he’s on set. He adds: “I feel really excited when I meet people I know from TV.
“The person I really want to meet is David Tennant.
“He’s the best Scottish actor I can think of, along with Martin Compston, and I’m a big Doctor Who fan.
“Martin was like a big brother to me on set.”
The young Scot dreams of becoming a comedian if acting doesn’t work out.
He says: “I like Kevin Bridges — he’s one of my favourites. My dad didn’t let me watch the DVD but keeps wondering how I know all the lines.”
Dad Iain adds: “He’s not allowed to watch Mrs Brown’s Boys either.
“But the last time we went to a family party he was giving it chapter and verse from both of those!”

Source (including photos): The Scottish Sun


The Wee Man
Whilst some of the critic response is not fantastic, Daniel Kerr is getting good press for his acting performance:
“it's a shame the film doesn't spend more time on Paul's life as a child, since Daniel Kerr delivers a likeable and engaging performance that pretty much deserves its own film”
Source: View London
“It starts well, with exceptional work from child actor Daniel Kerr as the young Ferris”
Source: The List 

Another positive report for the film is noted from the Guardian
The local hit
In England and Wales, not many people have heard of new release The Wee Man, or indeed of the real-life Scottish gangster-turned-author on which it's based, Paul Ferris. Consequently, the picture is playing on just one screen south of the border (London's Piccadilly Apollo). In Scotland, where it's showing in 15 cinemas, it's a different story. Thanks to stonking takings especially in Glasgow, Paisley, Falkirk, Hamilton and Clydebank, the crime tale achieved over £103,000 in Scotland, enough for fifth place in the local market and a Scottish site average of £6,897. While Scotland typically accounts for around 8% of the UK and Ireland box office, in The Wee Man's case the country is so far delivering more than 99%. A further expansion is planned from Friday. Concentrating media spend in Scottish national and local press, on Glasgow underground and outdoors, and on Scottish TV, distributor Carnaby followed the gameplan of earlier Scotland-skewing hits such as NEDS (79% of box-office from the region) and The Angels' Share (72%). The Wee Man stars locally popular Greenock-born actor Martin Compston, who got his acting break as a teenager with Ken Loach's Sweet Sixteen.


Sunday, 23 December 2012

Daniel Kerr in radio drama 'The Pythagorean Comma'

Daniel Kerr

Daniel Kerr stars in 'The Pythagorean Comma'

Loosely based on Jules Verne's story "Mr Ray Sharp and Miss Me Flat", "The Pythagorean Comma" is a music drama with text by Blake Morrison and music by Gavin Bryars. It's about one of the oldest mysteries in the science of sound. The story says Bryars, "has wit, whimsy, fantasy and magic and is also about scientific experiment".
Verne's story takes place in a 19th century Swiss village. This contemporary take on the original is set on a remote fictional Scottish island but the essential story is unchanged.
A village organist gets old and deaf and stops playing and the organ falls silent. A mysterious stranger arrives who not only plays the organ beautifully but also declares that he will develop a new organ registration with the voices of the children in the school. Each will have his or her own note that has a special resonance.
Though the children are musically untrained, the stranger rehearses them with an iron discipline and prepares them for a Christmas concert. It's at this concert that he demonstrates his phenomenon of a "human organ". He tells the children that he will make them famous and that they are a choir like no other choir.
A boy and girl who are arch rivals are given their special notes. They're angry because this strange music maestro seems to have given them the same note. However he explains that there is a tiny beating sound between them - and this difference is the Pythagorean Comma. The two children are relieved that they have their own notes but strangely, once they start to sing, their old rivalry disappears and it is as if a new harmony has come to them and to the village in general.
The stranger seems to have a power over the choir and they outperform everyone's expectations in a Christmas concert for the island community.
Composer Gavin Bryars and author Blake Morrison have collaborated before on a Jules Verne story, 'Doctor Ox's Experiment' - also about Verne's interest in music and science.
Gerda Stevenson stars as the narrator, Anna. She's the church warden and mother of a child she christened Ian but who now has the new name of Ray because his special note is Ray sharp. She sees at first hand how the stranger brings his gift of music.

Anna ..... Gerda Stevenson
Irvine ..... Gerard McDermott
Kubiak ..... Renny Krupinski
Ray ..... Daniel Kerr
Mimi ..... Olivia Cosgrove
Oakham School Jerwoods Choir
Soloist, Dominic Hill
Conductor, Peter Davis
Organist, Thomas Chatterton
Sound Design, Mike Thornton
Producer and Director, Judith Kampfner
A Corporation for Independent Media Production

Availability: 6 days left to listen
Duration: 1 hour
First broadcast: Saturday 22 December 2012
Listen to the play here

Radio Times Review by Laurence Joyce
On a remote Scottish island a mysterious stranger is rehearsing the children’s choir for a Christmas concert. Sounds spooky enough, but this music drama from composer Gavin Bryars and writer Blake Morrison (after a tale by Jules Verne) also explores one of the oldest mysteries in sound. And when you hear that two of the children are called Ray and Mimi you might guess what that is. (Clue: think Julie Andrews.)




Bearsden actor rubs shoulders with Hollywood stars

editorial image
A talented young actor from Bearsden is going to appear in a Disney film next year with Hollywood actress Angelina Jolie.
Daniel Kerr (12) was on set with the star in London recently to shoot Disney’s ‘Maleficent’, a re-telling of the classic ‘Sleeping Beauty’ story from the perspective of the princess’s evil nemesis, Malificent.
The Bearsden Academy pupil also appeared in the popular BBC school drama series Waterloo Road last Thursday as a young boy called Ewan.
He is represented by Scream Management Kids agency and since joining them two years ago he has also landed a major role in a film called ‘The Wee Man’ about former Glasgow gangland figure Paul Ferris - Daniel plays him as a young man.
Directed by the Silver Rose award-winning director Ray Burdis, the sixties-based film will be screened next January.
Brought up in the notorious area of Blackhill, Glasgow, Ferris, the son of decent, hardworking, parents he learns that life on the street is tough. With a cast boasting names such as Martin Compston, Denis Lawson, John Hannah, and Patrick Bergin, this Carnaby International Feature Film follows Paul Ferris’s journey from childhood to manhood.
Daniel has also been working on Hat Trick Production’s Great Night Out which will air next January and he played the role of Decky in Touchpaper West’s series 5 of Being Human.
LEADING ROLE . . . Daniel Kerr on the set (above) of The Wee man - he plays the part of a young Paul Ferris.
Source (including photo): Milngavie & Bearsden Herald

'The Wee Man' - review by The List


The Wee Man (2 stars)

Martin Compston stars in this uneven crime drama that glamourises its real-life subject


The Wee Man
Based on the memoirs of Glasgow gangland figure Paul Ferris, this chronicle of a bloody underworld feud runs from the early 1970s, when a young Ferris and his friends are menaced by the ruthless Welsh family, to the 80s, when Ferris is married and expecting a child, but still engaging in increasingly high-stakes tit-for-tat attacks with his old nemeses. Oh, and getting into the odd sticky situation while working as a debt collector for a notorious crime boss.

The film makes impressive work of its shifts through time, with diligent production design and authentically heinous 70s and 80s fashions and interiors creating a highly persuasive physical environment. It starts well, with exceptional work from child actor Daniel Kerr as the young Ferris and Denis Lawson as the father who tries to guide him into the understanding that their world has real-life 'monsters' in it. However, the tale of Ferris’ ensuing adult struggle against these bad elements is told with scant recourse to subtlety, and with a partiality that leaves an unpleasant taste in the mouth. While the crimes of the Welshes – which escalate from dog abuse to child rape to old lady murder – are shored up relentlessly enough for us to conclude that they are indeed as close as people come to being the fairytale monsters of Ferris Sr’s construction, Paul himself as played by Martin Compston is persistently painted as a good guy in a bad situation, and his eye-for-an-eye approach to justice as simply the only route available.

It’s of course the filmmakers’ prerogative to paint Ferris’s life story as they choose, and the performers here all share a commitment to their work that elevates the whole – but the script’s struggle to flatter its unprepossessing vigilante protagonist (he’s prone to coming out with poetic self-justifying speeches, too) is unconvincing, if not arguably irresponsible.
Selected release from Fri 18 Jan.

Source (including photo): The List

Fancarpet has some stills from the film here

Tuesday, 18 December 2012

Trailer and poster for 'The Wee Man'


A new trailer and poster have been released for Martin Compston’s next film, The Wee Man, based on the life of notorious Glasgow gangster, Paul Ferris.
The film follows Paul (Compston) as he grows up an ordinary young kid in the notorious area of Blackhill, Glasgow and the journey through his teenage years to manhood.
The story begins in the sixties. At the age of just eleven, Paul has already learned that life on the street is tough. Everybody knows his place. Poverty breeds corruption, crime, violence and bullying. The film charts the way in which Paul was bullied as a child, and whose road to crime came as a reaction against the monsters of his youth.


Patrick Bergin, John Hannah, Denis Lawson, Lorna McMonagle, Stephen McCole and Rita Tushingham co-star.
Source: Reel Scotland

There's also a glimpse of Daniel Kerr, who plays the young Paul.

The Wee Man trailer offers glimpse of Martin Compston as Paul Ferris

New film The Wee Man is based on the well documented life story of reformed Glaswegian gangster Paul Ferris – and its first released trailer reveals more about what audiences can expect from the gritty true-life tale.

With a Scottish cast led by Martin Compston (The Disappearance Of Alice Creed, Sweet Sixteen), the film features John Hannah (The Mummy Trilogy, Four Weddings And A Funeral, Spartacus), Denis Lawson (Perfect Sense, Star Wars Trilogy), Lorna Mcmonagle (Lip Service), Clare Grogan (Gregory's Girl) and Stephen McCole (Neds).

The Wee Man follows Paul (Compston) growing up as an ordinary young kid with hardworking parents in Blackhill, Glasgow, and follows the journey through his teenage years to manhood. The film has been produced by Carnaby International Productions (Rise Of The Footsoldier, A Lonely Place To Die).
The plot description is as follows: “The story begins in the sixties. At the age of just eleven, Paul has already learned that life on the street is tough. Everybody knows his place. Poverty breeds corruption, crime, violence and bullying. Blackhill was the most notorious area of all.

“The film charts the way in which Paul was bullied as a child, and whose road to crime came as a reaction against the monsters of his youth. Paul worked for feared gangland boss Arthur Thompson Snr (Patrick Bergin) and rose to power in Glasgow's murky underworld in the late 80s and early 90s. In 1991 he was charged with the murder of Arthur 'Fat Boy' Thompson Jr (Stephen McCole), son of Arthur.
“Ferris sparked a furore when he was given a hero's reception outside the High Court and walked free after a not-proven verdict, following one of Scotland's longest murder trials. He was jailed for gun-running in 1998, and on his release in 2002 turned his back on his former gangster life and vowed to go straight, determined to teach others how to avoid a life of crime.”
Source: STV
  • The Wee Man is released in selected UK cinemas on January 18, 2013.


Sunday, 9 December 2012

Daniel Kerr: young Scottish actor stars in 'The Wee Man'

Daniel Kerr

Daniel Kerr made his acting début in the popular CBeebies children's television series ME TOO!, before going on to act in the supernatural thriller THE AWAKENING and in Peter Mullan's acclaimed NEDS. Other credits include the television series WATERLOO ROAD, BEING HUMAN and GREAT NIGHT OUT. Daniel is currently filming alongside Angelina Jolie in Disney's new feature film MALEFICENT, due for release in 2014.
Source (including photo): The Wee Man official website


Daniel is 12 years old and an actor born and bred in Scotland.
Daniel is a bright, energetic and enthusiastic young man with a truly magical natural ability to perform. Anyone whom he comes into contact with recognises this gift very quickly and is immediately drawn to his huge personality.
Daniel also plays the Young Paul Ferris in the new movie “The Wee Man” due for release 18th January 2013.
Source: Iain C Kerr (by email)
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