Showing posts with label Douglas Henshall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Douglas Henshall. Show all posts

Sunday, 7 April 2013

Douglas Henshall: 'Shetland' second series commissioned

Shetland crime drama returns for more
Douglas Henshall is returning to lead the cast in the debut of 'Shetland' as detective Jimmy Perez. Photo BBC BBC ONE has commissioned a further six episodes of the murder mystery Shetland based on the crime novels of author Ann Cleeves to be filmed in the isles this year.
Following the huge success of the initial two part debut featuring actor Douglas Henshall as detective Jimmy Perez, the broadcaster has commissioned three more Shetland books by Cleeves for the TV screen.
The initial two part drama Shetland was based on Red Bones, the third book in Cleeves' Shetland Quartet, and was watched by more than 12 million people over two nights last month.

Two of the remaining books in the quartet will now be filmed by ITV Studios as two 60 minute episodes with screenplays from three different writers.
Read more at Shetland News

Also reported by Digital Spy, Red Magazine, and many others, and tweeted by the BBC

Sunday, 24 March 2013

Douglas Henshall: masterclass at Mountview academy


Mountview graduate Douglas Henshall gave a masterclass to second and third year acting students on 14 March.
He talked honestly and amusingly about the realities of life after training at Mountview, including the countless letters he wrote until he got his first acting job at Citizens Theatre in Glasgow.
He went on to reveal that he missed out on a role in Trainspotting because he’d just signed a contract to work at the RSC and that even after 25 years it’s still frustrating to get turned down for a role.
Questions from students revealed his favourite and worst acting experience and advice on whether to use a native accent for a part (unless the script demonstrates the character is from a particular region, he suggests you stay true to your natural accent).
Source: Mountview Academy of Theatre Arts

Sunday, 17 March 2013

Douglas Henshall: 'Shetland' reviews, and 'Loose Ends' interview


Shetland reviews:

Loose Ends
Clive Anderson chats to 'Primeval' star Douglas Henshall, who's taken a break from battling the apocalypse to become a detective in BBC One's new murder-mystery 'Shetland'. Douglas plays native Shetlander Jimmy Perez, who finds himself leading a murder investigation, uncovering secrets and lies from the past. 'Shetland' starts on Sunday 10th March at 21.00.
Read more, and listen to the interview, at BBC

Sunday, 10 March 2013

Douglas Henshall: 'Shetland' previews, trailer, and interview

Shetland starts on Sunday 9 March at 9pm on BBC1

Shetland previews

  • From the Radio Times:
Douglas Henshall, Steven Robertson and Gemma Chan in BBC1's Shetland - see a trailer and photos


Douglas Henshall, Steven Robertson and Gemma Chan in BBC1's Shetland - see a trailer and photos
Crime drama Shetland, starring Douglas Henshall, Steven Roberston and Alison O'Donnell, is based on the bestselling novel Red Bones by Ann Cleeves.Starting on Sunday 9 March on BBC1, the two-part story follows police detective Jimmy Perez as he investigates a murder on his native Shetland islands.

Douglas Henshall stars as Perez alongside a host of recognisable faces including Being Human's Steven Roberson and Doctor Who/Sherlock actress Gemma Chan – plus Monarch of the Glen alumni Lewis Howden, Lindy Whiteford and Alexander Morton.

The atmospheric drama kicks off when an archaeologist discovers a mysterious set of human remains – and continues as an elderly woman is shot dead at her home.
The thriller has been likened to popular Scandinavian dramas. Executive producer Elaine Collins said: "Influenced by both mainland Scotland and Scandinavia, but with very much its own identity, Shetland is a location like no other. The uniqueness and sense of place make it an ideal setting for traditional British crime drama with a unique twist."
Christopher Aird, Head of Drama at BBC Scotland added: "A truly atmospheric murder mystery, Shetland has a unique tone and will be a real treat for fans of crime drama on BBC1. The Shetland Isles are a very special place, they are extremely remote – further away from Glasgow than London. And an island setting is perfect for a murder mystery; it is like a pressure cooker – you know one of the characters must be the murderer..."

Watch the trailer:

Source (including photo and trailer): Radio Times


  • From The Guardian: 
Shetland is like a cross between McWallander and Midsomer Murdurrs
A moss-faced local glares at DI Jimmy Perez (Douglas Henshall) over a pint of Old Exposition. "We're all connected on Shetland, in one way or another," she says. She's no' wrong. Shetland, or at least the Shetland of Shetland (Sunday, 9pm, BBC1), is a rum old place, a wind-blasted wilderness seething with ancient family feuds, sheep, buried secrets, accents, overly eyebrowed yokels and, inevitably, murdurr most foul.
A two-part procedural based, as the opening credits whisper, "ON THE BOOK RED BONES BY ANN CLEEVES", Shetland starts with an old woman getting shot in the gilet. While Perez (a knob) investigates, islanders with complexions like dead bread stand glumly at kitchen sinks in knitwear that speaks of long nights and minor livestock displacement. There are spats over land rights, inheritances and empty crofts, but most of the grumbles appear to centre on the islands' atrocious mobile coverage, which invariably plays up at times of mild peril. "Nae signal," grumps Perez in his minging roll-neck as witnesses trudge around holding their phones like kites and saying things like "… grandmother … dinnae understand … dead … " and "… umph … ib … urgent … LANDLINE".
The tone lumbers between brooding glum-swept noir (McWallander) and rural teatime potboiler (Midsomer Murdurrs). There are extras from The Hoots Mon's Guide To Scotland and a soundtrack composed of depressed pipes and sporran runoff. And yet! Beneath the kilt twitches a rudimentary nub of wit. Henshall gives good roll-neck ("I can still roll over the bonnet of a car if I need to"). Sidekick Tosh wears braces because she "disnae want Scottish teeth". But then somebody says, "People say Shetlanders discovered the double agent and meted out their own brutal form of justice," and all hope crumbles like a bombed cliff. 
Read more at The Guardian


  • From This is Bristol:
Murder mystery set in stunning Scottish setting
Influenced by both mainland Scotland and Scandinavia, the Shetland Islands is a location like no other. For award-winning writer Anne Cleeves, the uniqueness and sense of place made it an ideal setting for her novel Red Bones, a traditional British crime drama with a unique twist.
Cleeves' work has been adapted into this two-part drama being shown on consecutive nights, with Douglas Henshall assuming the role of detective Jimmy Perez, a native Shetlander and widower who has decided to return home with his step-daughter so she can be near her biological father.
Needless to say, it's not too long before his professional skills are called upon when a young archaeologist discovers a set of human remains that could be more recent than may be considered appropriate.
Suspicions are reinforced when a local woman is shot dead on the same site.
Henshall's Scottish accent is, of course, entirely genuine, though he was born in urban Glasgow rather than the rural splendours of Shetland. "Sometimes I wonder if people really know where it is or what it's like, what the people are like and what goes on there. It's worth taking a look at Shetland and you'll discover it's a truly beautiful place."
Full report at This is Bristol


  • From The Express:
Northern Star


THE Shetland Islands are as far north as you get within the United Kingdom. They are actually closer to Norway than to Scotland.
"Shetland is so far of the coast of Scotland that during national weather forecasts on TV, they have put it in its own separate box because the map does not stretch far enough north!" says Douglas Henshall, the Scotish star of Shetland, a new two–part detective drama set on the wild, isolated archipelago.
Shetland's extreme remoteness helps to create a wonderfully atmospheric setting.
Adapted by David Kane (The Field Of Blood, Taggart) from the best–selling books by Ann Cleeves, this murder mystery is set against the breathtaking backdrop of the rugged islands.
The central character is Detective Jimmy Perez (played by Douglas), a native Shetlander who has come back home after many years away. Recently widowed and looking after his young stepdaughter, Jimmy boasts a wry sense of humour and the idealistic aim of preserving his adored island as he remembers it from his youth.
When an archaeologist uncovers a set of human remains and an old woman is shot dead soon afterwards, Jimmy's investigation unearths a feud between two families whose long–running and biter enmity has split the tight–knit island community.
Elaine Collins, the executive producer of Shetland, explains just why this isolated, windswept location works so well as a setting for drama.
"It's the same as shows like The Killing or Wallander. I love to watch dramas like that. They are set in places that do not feel like here," she says.
"It's very appealing to us as viewers to be taken out of our own world. It's like listening to great music or looking at a painting. We want to escape from what we are dealing with on a daily basis and lose ourselves in this diferent realm."
Douglas, 47, who has also starred in Primeval, Doors Open and The Silence, underscores that crime on such a sparsely populated island has deeper resonance than it would in a big city.
"In a small community, murder takes on even greater signifcance because you know everyone – one half of the island is related to the other," he explains.
"This crime totally shocks the community. Everyone is suspicious of everyone else because people are so intertwined and families' histories with each other become more important.
In a small community, murder takes on even greater signifcance because you know everyone
Douglas Henshall
"It's one of those places where, regardless of how self–conscious or shy or reclusive you are, you just have to mix in and put in the efort to be part of the community. You have to communicate with other people. Community really maters."
 Read more at The Express


  • TV Choice Magazine has an interview with Douglas Henshall here 

Monday, 4 March 2013

Douglas Henshall: 'Shetland' interviews, 'Doors Open' premiere, and Burns interview


Douglas Henshall on Scotland's answer to The Killing
Douglas Henshall stands at the door of his trailer, cigarette in one hand and a coffee in the other.
Shetland stars Steven Robertson, Douglas Henshall and Alison O'Donnell. Photograph: Neil Davidson
Shetland stars Steven Robertson, Douglas Henshall and Alison O'Donnell. Photograph: Neil Davidson
At first glance we could almost be in a Hollywood lot, but rather it's the decidedly less glamorous setting of a car park in Irvine, across the road from the Magnum Leisure Centre.
Overlooking grey waters and a driftwood-strewn stretch of sandy beach, it's probably perfectly pretty when the sun is shining, but today is dull and overcast, lending the scene a grim and foreboding air.

Still as atmosphere setters go it's perfect. Henshall is filming scenes for Shetland, a BBC drama already dubbed the Scottish equivalent of The Killing. An adaptation of author Ann Cleeves's book Red Bones, part of her quartet of crime novels set on the islands, the actor plays the lead role of brooding police detective Jimmy Perez.

The two-part murder mystery unfolds after human remains are unearthed by an archaeological dig, the plot hinging on an unsettling question – are the remains from ancient times or, chillingly, a much more modern burial? Granted, it's not as gory as the Danish and Swedish crime noir to grace screens of late, but throw in a couple of murders, a simmering family feud stoked by greed and envy, and a stunningly beautiful backdrop, and we have ourselves a good old-fashioned meaty thriller. The screenplay was written by David Kane, whose credits include The Field of Blood, Taggart and Rebus, and if well received, the other three books could also be dramatised.
Read much more at Herald Scotland 

Shetland will be shown on BBC One at 9pm on March 10 and March 11

Another long interview with Douglas has also been published by the Daily Record 


Ovation to premiere "Doors Open" starring Stephen Fry and Douglas Henshall
An Ovation Original, the Art Crime Caper Film Debuts Saturday, April 13
Ovation, the only network devoted to artists and every kind of artistic expression, will premiere an Ovation original film, DOORS OPEN, on Saturday, April 13 at 8:00 pm ET. Based on the 2008 novel by crime writer Ian Rankin, DOORS OPEN stars Stephen Fry (Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows) and Douglas Henshall (Dorian Gray) in the story of a self-made millionaire, an art professor and a banker who come together to undertake an audacious art heist.
Set in Edinburgh, Scotland's world of corporate banking and fine art, DOORS OPEN stars Douglas Henshall as "Mike Mackenzie," a self-made businessman with too much time on his hands. Bored by the comfort of his millions and grieving for the woman who walked out on him five years previously, his adventurous side is about to get him into trouble. When the love of his life, "Laura Stanton" (played by Lenora Crichlow, Being Human), art consultant and auctioneer, returns to Edinburgh, his whole world is turned upside down and he'd risk anything to get her back.
Read more at Digital Journal
Also reported by Broadway World 


Douglas Henshall on Burns
Actor Douglas Henshall reveals why he's been touched by, and amazed at the scope of, the writing of his fellow countryman Robert Burns.

Source: TES

Monday, 11 February 2013

Douglas Henshall: BBC Media interview ('Shetland')

Shetland: new crime drama for BBC one starring Douglas Henshall
As a curiosity it’s worth taking a look at Shetland and you’ll discover it’s a truly beautiful place. But, above all else, Shetland is a really good crime story.
Douglas Henshall
Douglas Henshall
Douglas Henshall plays Jimmy Perez

What kind of person is Perez?
In terms of his character, he’s not one of those haunted types with lots of problems, he’s actually a straightforward man who would just like a quiet life. Perez is a slightly idealistic guy who thinks Shetland is a safe haven - a nice, safe place to raise his daughter.
Why does he return to Shetland?
Essentially he moves back for his daughter. Cassie’s real father lives in Shetland and Perez wants her to be close to her dad because her mother has died. I think he’s got a slightly idealised view of Shetland - a place where people don’t lock their front doors.
What is Perez’s relationship with his police partner, Tosh, like?
I suppose Perez is something of a mentor towards Tosh. She’s bright and focused and together they have quite a quirky relationship where she’s very sharp and funny and Perez is the straight man, if you like. I think they rub along nicely together.
What attracted you to the role?
It's always such a cliché but it was simple – the script. If the script’s good it makes it interesting. I really like David Kane’s writing and I’ve worked with him before [This Year’s Love] so there was a draw there for me. And Ann Cleeves’ sense of Shetland is fantastic – the way she describes the location is incredible.
What makes the island location so unique to film a crime drama such as Shetland?
Shetland is such a unique place it’s impossible to double somewhere like that. The communities are quite spread out so when a murder happens in a location like Shetland it affects everyone. With that there’s an instant sense of tension because everyone will inevitably know who the murderer is. That immediately ratchets up the tension because you think “who can I trust?” Those little things make Shetland a unique location to set a crime drama.
What was it like filming in Shetland?
It’s such a beautiful place, so stark and unique – the sky is huge, the air is fresh, the sea is clear... it’s a lovely place. I’d never been before but I’d love to go back. Everyone worried about the weather but we really didn’t have it that bad – it was lovely actually.
Everybody was incredibly helpful and they honestly couldn’t do enough for us. Shetland was the biggest film production to ever be shot on the islands so I think everyone was really excited about us being there.
We didn’t leave any mess behind so hopefully they’d be happy for us to go back.
Was it good returning to Scotland to film Shetland?
Oh absolutely, yes. I don’t get the opportunity very often so it’s always nice to get back. Glasgow [where some of the Shetland shoot was filmed] is my home city and I’m always happy to go back whenever I can.
Any memorable filming experiences?
Well I got to go back to my hometown of Barrhead which was lovely. The old Health Centre where we shot the hospital scenes was where my mother worked as a district nurse so I knew the place. There were lots of ghosts walking around.
And the old council building which doubles as our police station was where my granddad worked so it was all very interesting. But also slightly surreal.
Are you a fan of crime dramas?
There’s such a proliferation of them but if they’re well done then I’ll watch. I can’t watch for the sake of it.
But I loved The Wire – it was fantastic – and I really liked The Killing and The Bridge and, years ago, Cracker. The thing about The Wire is you could have an hour-long episode and the only thing you’d discover is they’d find a phone number but it had power.
Talking of The Killing, Sarah Lund has her jumpers... what is Perez’s chosen attire?
Whatever’s functional for Perez, really. I was thinking about jumpers for my character but everyone around about me told me to avoid any kind of jumper. Sarah Lund has cornered the jumper market.
Why should viewers tune into Shetland?
I always thought of Shetland as being a place that was so remote it was always in a wee box during the weather. Sometimes I wonder if people really know where it is or what it’s like, what the people are like and what goes on there. As a curiosity it’s worth taking a look at Shetland and you’ll discover it’s a truly beautiful place. But, above all else, Shetland is a really good crime story.
What’s next for you work-wise?
I’m currently in 55 Days at Hampstead Theatre until the end of November which is a Howard Brenton play where I’m playing Oliver Cromwell.
And then who knows? Hopefully I’ll be going back to Shetland again for more of this drama...

Source (including photo): BBC Media

Wednesday, 6 February 2013

Douglas Henshall: Douglas Henshall discusses his films on Twitter, and Shetland Updates



Douglas Henshall has been talking to fans on Twitter about his forthcoming TV drama Shetland and the films he has appeared in.
He said "Peter Mullan’s Orphans is my favourite."
He also recommended Thomas Vinterberg’s BAFTA nominated film The Hunt and said that Vinterberg’s It’s All About Love in which he starred with Claire Daines and Joaquin Phoenix "had its’ heart in the right place".
Henshall would like to do more films
"I would love to do more films but don't have any plans at the moment or should I say no (one) seems to have any plans to offer me one!’"
Of Shetland he said "Loved my time in Shetland and keeping my fingers crossed we will be back for more in the summer". BBC Scotland features Shetland in its latest video Compelling Stories, and Promote Shetland, the official site for Shetland tourism, has published a map to download on its website promoting the locations that inspired the Shetland series of novels by author Ann Cleeves.

Source: www.douglashenshall.com / https://twitter.com/djhenshall

Source: Douglas Henshall (Live Journal)

Sunday, 23 December 2012

Douglas Henshall: 'Doors Open' interview, forthcoming appearance

'Doors Open' preview
Sprout Productions for 

ITV

Doors Open

Picture Shows: MIKE MCKENZIE Playing Douglas Henshall

The story follows Mike Mackenzie (Dougie Henshall), a self-made businessman with too much time on his hands. Bored by the comfort of his millions and grieving for the woman who walked out on him five years previously, he's got an adventurous side just waiting to get him into trouble. When he hears the love of his life, art consultant and auctioneer Laura Stanton (Lenora Crichlow), has returned to Edinburgh, his whole world is turned upside down and he'd risk anything to get her back.

This photograph is (C) ITV Plc and can only be reproduced for editorial purposes directly in connection with the programme or event mentioned above, or ITV plc. Once made available by ITV plc Picture Desk, this photograph can be reproduced once only up until


Ian Rankin on the TV adaptation of ‘Doors Open’
Ian Rankin is a happy man. We are in one of his favourite pubs. From our position in the snug of Bennets Bar in Tollcross we are watching the filming of Doors Open, ITV’s adaptation of his bestseller of the same name, which stars Douglas Henshall and Stephen Fry.
It’s a hugely atmospheric boozer – all warming log fires, giant gilded mirrors, elegant wooden tracery, extensive single-malt whisky menus and tables inlaid with maps of Edinburgh. We are stationed next to a bookcase, where the first novel to catch my eye is – you’ve guessed it – Doors Open.
Looking dreamily into the middle distance, Rankin remembers how he found this place. “This was the first Edinburgh pub I drank in. I was sharing a flat with a mate from school who was studying architecture. His first project was about this pub. So we’d move in here every night and do research.”
As content as he is today, Rankin, 52, won’t be rushing to spend a lot more time on film sets. He is used to the solitary, but fairly straightforward process of writing – where it’s just one man and his word processor. So he has been taken aback by the sheer complexity of a big film production – which is more like a hundred people and a million gadgets.
Rankin, best known for his Rebus novels, says the filming process is a mystery to him. “Writing a book, I get no sense of just how difficult it is to organise a shoot. I did my first individual cameo yesterday. I played a man at an auction house chatting to Stephen Fry. I had to wear a suit. Luckily I have one that I wear to weddings and funerals, but it was still odd.
“Initially, the filming was quite exciting. But we ended up doing my scene about 15 times – and they never told us why we had to redo it. It was like being Charlie Watts who once said that being in the Rolling Stones was a case of playing for five years and hanging around for 45 years.”
Hanging around aside, Rankin is delighted that ITV have turned his novel into a TV drama, which will be broadcast on Boxing Day. His Rebus novels have already been made into a series of memorable TV films, starring John Hannah and then Ken Stott. So what is it about Rankin’s writing that lends itself so well to the small screen? Gina Carter, the executive producer of Doors Open, says plot has a lot to do with it. “Ian writes incredibly entertaining books. They’re real page-turners. You get completely engrossed in them. Also, Doors Open is about a victimless crime that doesn’t require any blood or death, which is a great part of its charm.”
Jon Finn, the producer of Doors Open, which is scripted by James Mavor and Sandi Toksvig, chimes in, “Ian’s work is a gift for any screenwriter. He has that quality that all great thriller writers have: you endlessly want to keep turning the pages. Reading his novels is like visiting an old friend.”
Doors Open tells the story of Mike Mackenzie (Henshall), a self-made millionaire who is bored by his cosseted lifestyle. When he learns that the love of his life, Laura Stanton (Lenora Critchlow from Being Human) – an art expert who ditched him five years ago - has returned to Edinburgh, he hatches a plot to win her back.
After a night drinking in their local – stand up Bennets Bar – Mike and his close friends, disgruntled art academic Professor Gissing (Fry) and disillusioned banker Allan Cruickshank (Kenneth Collard, The Borgias), plot and scheme how they will pull off an audacious crime.
They aim to con one of the most high-value targets in the country – a national bank’s priceless art collection which is hidden away from public view in a high-security vault.
The idea is to replace the invaluable works of art with undetectably exact forgeries. They intend to execute this fiendishly clever conceit on the one day of the year Edinburgh’s buildings of special interest are open, thanks to the “Doors Open” scheme. What could possibly go wrong?
Finn reveals that the production created its own counterfeit paintings for the drama. “In making the fakes, we stole bits from all over the place – in the style of Picasso. He had a saying that good art is a copy, great art is a steal. So we knocked off a genius.”
The conspirators in Doors Open view their act as “freeing” timeless works from their private seclusion. In the pub, Gissing rationalises their plan to his collaborators: “We’re not stealing. We’d be liberating them.”
“You mean like a heist?” Allan ripostes. “Like The Italian Job?”
“Yes, sort of,” Gissing rejoins. “But less Italian. And less jobby.”
Finn explains, “Most national galleries only display three per cent of their collection at any one time. They have so many spare Warhols lying around. The depositories are in inconspicuous suburban areas, so no one knows this stuff is just lying around there.”
So is there some moral justification for the plan? Rankin adds, “Gissing is exasperated by the way in which art is treated as a commodity by these institutions. They do not display these great works of art, but keep them as collateral.
“Banks own huge collections that are kept locked away out of public view. And the National Galleries north and south of the Border have more art than they can ever show. It’s very frustrating because it’s ours!”
It is not an entirely black and white issue, though. As Rankin says, “It’s quite complex. Are they freeing these works or are they greedy sods who just want to hold onto these works for themselves?”
Joining our table at Bennets Bar, Henshall takes up the theme.
“There’s not a great deal of logic to Mike’s plan. In a sober moment, you would say that it is illogical and stupid, but at that moment in the pub, it makes complete sense.
“It may be stupid, but there’s also a lot of nobility in his quest. So much of the best art is hidden away in cellars and not shown to the public. It’s not bought by people who love art – it’s merely purchased as an investment. But great art should be for the people and seen by the people. I hope that viewers will be rooting for Mike. He’s a very sympathetic character.”
Henshall says the cast had a great time getting dressed up for the heist.
“We went for retro disguises. So I looked like someone from a 1970s Norwegian rock band, and Kenneth looked like the Portuguese rep for Nandos.”
Of course the other major character in Doors Open is Edinburgh. 47-year-old Henshall, dapper with his swept-back blond hair, white shirt and immaculately cut black overcoat, says, “The producers were determined to shoot here – they didn’t want to film anywhere else.
“Edinburgh is so specific looking, and it’s such a photogenic place. 2000 years of history have gone into this city. If you’re a director of photography, Edinburgh is a dream because the light is amazing and everywhere you look, there is a great shot. I’m not nationalistic in any way, shape or form, but I’m absolutely delighted it’s being filmed here. I can’t imagine it being shot anywhere else.”
The actor, well-known for his roles in Primeval, Collision, The Silence and The Secret of Crickley Hall, adds that Bennets Bar is the ideal location for the drama’s crucial planning scene. “There are so few bars like this nowadays. Everything is an O’B*llocks fake Irish pub. It’s nice to find somewhere like this with genuine character.”
Finn agrees, “Edinburgh is the most distinctive city in the UK.
“You can’t fling a camera at it without it looking fantastic. It’s a city built around monuments. The buildings are spectacular, and the hills give it layers. In places, it’s like an Escher drawing – one road going this way and one road going that way.”
Carter adds, “Edinburgh is so filmic. It’s a very rare combination of elements. You have both a massive castle and rolling hills in the city centre. You don’t get that in Oxford Street in London. Also, Ian writes about Edinburgh so beautifully.”
In his novels, Rankin has certainly always been fascinated by the duality of Edinburgh, and Doors Open gives him another chance to explore that. “In the crime novels, I’m always talking about the underbelly of Edinburgh,” he says. “This book allowed me to talk about the other Edinburgh, the Edinburgh in which self-made millionaires go to auction houses for something to do. There are not many self-made millionaires in my crime novels.”
Expanding on the concept of the city’s ambiguity, he says, “Structurally, Edinburgh is Jekyll and Hyde. It’s a city of haves and have-nots. Are the tourists seeing the real Edinburgh or what the city fathers want them to see?”
He believes that Edinburgh is a constant source of inspiration to writers, “The city continues to surprise. So many authors are writing about it because it shows so many different facets to us all. If I’d made sense of Edinburgh, I’d have stopped writing about it by now.
“But I’m always finding new things to talk about. Every time you think you’ve done it, something else comes along like the Parliament, the financial crisis or 
the trams. I have a love-hate thing with Edinburgh. But I have no interest in writing about London. I’ve never found a place I want to write about more than Edinburgh.”
Another element that makes Doors Open so watchable is that it pivots on a heist. Carter says, “There is a certain caper-ish element to a heist that we all enjoy. Look at films like The Italian Job, Ocean’s Eleven or The Ladykillers.
“Also, you can’t do a heist on your own because that’s just robbery.
So a heist will inevitably involve lots of different people. That makes it engaging because you’re following all these different characters. It’s a terrific ensemble vehicle. Heist dramas are thrillers, chases, ‘will they, won’t they?’s and big set pieces all rolled into one. They tick all the boxes for great entertainment.”
Finn says that the characters have gelled so well in Doors Open that he could envisage a further life for them. “I’d love to do another drama with these characters. It would be great fun. What could they do next? How about breaking into Fort Knox like Goldfinger?”
Henshall lives in London these days, but he has relished working in Scotland on Doors Open. It has also given him the chance to catch up with his beloved St Mirren.
“We’re the only team that have ever sacked Sir Alex Ferguson,” he says. “That sums up our history in one easy sentence. Our victories are always hard won, and therefore much more enjoyed. It’s usually us and someone else very bad fighting relegation – which adds a certain drama to the season. That’s better than mid-table mediocrity. Who wants that?”
Doors Open used a real-life Glasgow repository to film the key heist sequence, a factor that invests the production with extra verisimilitude. Carter recalls, “We shot in the Museums Resource Centre, where three national collections are stored. Everything is there, from 19th century masterpieces to modern sculptures and African art. There are also racks and racks of great Scottish paintings. It’s stunning. But as you can imagine, there were a lot of security guards keeping their eyes on us all the time when we were filming there.”
Henshall says with genuine awe, “I didn’t know places like that existed. But great collections can’t show all their work all the time, and it has to be kept somewhere. These wonderful paintings just appeared from drawers. There was a wee Renoir in there that I was particularly fond of.”
A pause and a wry grin. “But I think they might have missed it.”

Doors Open is on STV on Boxing Day at 9pm.

Source (including photo): Scotsman


Douglas Henshall to judge The Frank Deasy Award to develop Scottish drama-writing talent

Acclaimed Scottish actor Douglas Henshall will join the judging panel on this year’s Frank Deasy Award 2012-13, an initiative to develop television writing talent in Scotland in conjunction with BBC Scotland, BBC Writersroom and Creative Scotland.

Henshall, who will star in BBC Scotland’s new two-part crime drama Shetland later this year, will be joined on the judging panel by Edinburgh playwright and director Zinnie Harris alongside Christopher Aird, Head of Drama, BBC Scotland; Kate Rowland, BBC Creative Director, New Writing; and Laura Mackenzie Stuart, Portfolio Manager, Creative Scotland.

Designed to inspire, develop and celebrate writing talent in Scotland, the Frank Deasy Award was named in honour of the Emmy-award winning writer whose credits include Prime Suspect – The Final Act, Looking After Jo-Jo, Real Men and The Passion. Deasy died in 2009.

Douglas Henshall (Shetland, The Secret of Crickley Hall, The Kidnap Diaries) says: “Writers are so crucial to drama – without them people like me are out of work – so to be involved in this award is an honour. After all, writers are the past, present and future for drama.”

Read more at BBC Media Centre

Tuesday, 18 December 2012

Douglas Henshall: 'Doors Open' interview


The art of a good heist movie
It's a cold spring day in the capital and, in the back room of a wood-panelled bar in Tollcross, author Ian Rankin is reliving his youth.

"This was the first pub I drank in in Edinburgh," he says, looking around. "I was sharing a flat just round the corner with a mate from school who was doing architecture, and his first project was about this pub. So we'd come along every night and do our 'research'."

Back then, before its stained glass windows and ornate wooden interior put it on the tourist map, Bennets Bar was the haunt of writers. Norman MacCaig was a regular. "You'd see him at the bar and of course I was always after tips because at that time I was writing poetry," Rankin recalls. "So you'd buy him a wee whisky and he'd tell you how to try to get published."

Today, however, Bennets is the haunt of two men who are very definitely not poets: Mike Mackenzie and Allan Cruickshank, respectively a self-made millionaire in a rut and a harassed banker with school fees and alimony to pay. Or, to dispense with the character names and give the actors their real ones, Douglas Henshall and Kenneth Collard, two of the four leads in comedy thriller Doors Open, which has taken over the pub for a day's filming.

Adapted from Rankin's 2008 novel of the same name, it also stars Stephen Fry as eccentric art expert Professor Robert Gissing, and Being Human's Lenora Crichlow as Mike's ex, Laura Stanton.

Equal parts love story, buddy movie, heist caper and celebration of a city, it's being brought to the small screen this festive season by Sprout Pictures, Fry's own company, with a script by James Mavor, a long-time friend of Rankin's. Fry bought the novel at an airport, loved it, and thought he'd be perfect to play Gissing. And so here we are.

Right now, as dry ice hisses out of a machine and hot tungsten lights pick out Henshall and Collard sipping whisky at the bar, director Marc Evans is preparing to shoot the scene in which Allan tells Mike he's been sacked. Blackout blinds have turned day into night and there's now a pleasing smoky ambience for director of photography George Steel to shoot through. Executive producer Gina Carter, Fry's business partner in Sprout, looks on approvingly from a doorway.

The plot turns on the decision by the three friends to steal ("liberate", in Gissing's words) a few paintings during the annual Doors Open day, when institutions such as art depositories allow the public into buildings normally closed to them.

The paintings in question are owned by a bank which employs Gissing as its curator-in-residence. The plan is to swap the real paintings for forgeries and trust that no-one will know the difference – no-one, perhaps, except Laura and her new boyfriend, who have been hired by the bank to help sell the collection. Aiding the inept trio outwit the constabulary is Mike's childhood friend Charlie Calloway (Brian McCardie), now a career criminal who has his own reasons for helping out.

Fry will be along later to shoot the pivotal scene in which he first mentions the plan to his sceptical friends. Meanwhile, one of Crichlow's big early scenes, a flashback in which we see Mike buying the painting that will come to symbolise his and Laura's relationship, was shot earlier in the New Town. It required the actress to become an auctioneer for the day.

"I'm not going to lie, it was a lot of fun," she laughs. "I didn't have time to research it but I watched lots of videos of auctions and we had real auctioneers on set who sat down with me. They were in the audience playing the people who were bidding so they kept an eye on things and told me what was and wasn't reading as authentic, so I trusted them."

To Crichlow's mind, however, Doors Open is a love story, first and foremost. "Mike bids for the painting in a bid to win Laura's heart. They get together and are in love, but when we meet them five years later they've broken up," she says. "Throughout the film they are playing catch up to get back to that early magical spark they shared, because it's clear there is still something between them."

His scene finished, Douglas Henshall ambles over and takes a seat. Clad in his onscreen gear of black Crombie coat, crisp white shirt, silky blue trousers and polished black shoes, he looks more like a suave criminal than an anguished lover, but he agrees with Crichlow's take on the story.

He says: "In the book, Mike's described as being bored, but in the way our script has been adapted – or so it seems to me, anyway – he's driven more from love for Laura, by the fact that he's lost her and the fact that this painting represents the five happiest years of his life. I don't think there's a great deal of logic to it, which I quite like."

Like Fry, Henshall has much invested in Doors Open. His commitment to the project came at the expense of a role in new US historical drama Hell On Wheels. Made by AMC, home to the award-winning Mad Men, it is set in 1865 and tells the story of the building of America's first transcontinental railway. But by the time AMC decided they wanted him for a part, Henshall had signed up with Fry.
America's loss is Scotland's gain, however. As well as Doors Open, Henshall can soon be seen playing a policeman in Shetland, a two-part murder mystery filmed on the titular island in June. Based on the work of crime writer Ann Cleeves, it sees him team up again with writer-director David Kane, who cast him in his Altmanesque 1999 film, This Year's Love.

Henshall says: "I've known Davie for over 20 years. He's a fantastically imaginative leftfield writer. He's not formulaic, which is one of the reasons I like him so much. His sense of humour is so sharp and dry."

Shetland and Doors Open mark a rare foray north for Henshall, though. His first small screen outing came in a 1990 episode of Taggart, which also featured Ewen Bremner and Peter Mullan – "I was a guy who fell off a bike," he recalls. "I was working with 7:84 theatre company at the time and I had a couple of days off to film two scenes - It wasn't a memorable role." But in the last decade only a biopic about Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and a couple of episodes of Sea Of Souls have brought him work in Scotland. "I don't get asked to do very much here," he says simply.

One project which might bring him back – with, perhaps, some A-list Caledonian talent in tow – is his long-cherished screen adaptation of Christopher Brookmyre's novel One Fine Day In The Middle Of The Night. "It starts off like Gregory's Girl and ends like Die Hard," Henshall says with relish. He had the film rights for a time but "trying to get it together was a nightmare - But you never know, I might have another bash at it".

Right now there's another Doors Open scene to have a bash at, and Henshall is ushered away. Rankin has disappeared too, his curiosity about how his amateur art thieves will look in the flesh satisfied and his cameo appearance in the can.

"The weird thing is, Doors Open was always meant to be a film," Rankin muses before he leaves. "James Mavor and I were sitting in a café years ago and he said, 'Wouldn't it be great if we had Ocean's Eleven set in Edinburgh?'. I said, 'Yeah, but we don't have any casinos.' He said, 'But it could be an auction house or an art gallery they're ripping off-'"

And so the cogs began to turn, cogs that have brought Fry & Co to the capital – and daylight robbery to Edinburgh's streets.

Doors Open is on STV on Boxing Day at 9pm

Source: Herald Scotland

Sunday, 25 November 2012

Douglas Henshall: Shetland preview, Doors Open update, The Secrety of Crickley Hall reviews

http://ic.pics.livejournal.com/douglashenshall/12668006/19471/19471_original.jpg 
From Douglas Henshall.com:
Douglas Henshall will be on the panel of judges for the Frank Deasy Writers award 2012 – 2013.
BBC Scotland has announced its plans to offer residencies for writers to develop ideas for BBC1, in hopes that one of their dramas will be commissioned through BBC Scotland.
Dougie said: “Writers are so crucial to drama – without them, people like me are out of work, so to be involved in this award is an honour. After all, writers are the past, present and future for drama.”

More here.
Dougie’s new TV drama Shetland, based on the work of popular crime-writer Ann Cleeves had a preview in Mareel on Wednesday 21st November 2012. Read about the event here and here

The Secret of Crickley Hall episode 2 will be shown on Sunday November 25th at 9pm and episode 3 on Sunday December 2nd at 9pm. A DVD of the drama is due to be released on December 3rd 2012.

Doors Open is being adverstised as part of ITV's Christmas drama season.

55 Days finished its run at the Hampstead Theatre on Saturday November 24th.
Source (including photo):  DouglasHenshall.com


There are detailed reviews of  the first episode of The Secret of Crickley Hall at Primetime and at SFX


MY SIX BEST BOOKS- DOUGLAS HENSHALL

Douglas Henshall, 47, is the actor best known as the star of Primeval, South Riding, Lipstick on Your Collar and Collision. He stars next month alongside Stephen Fry in the ITV1 art heist drama Doors Open.

Douglas Henshall discusses his favourite reads
The Gambler by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Penguin, £10.99
A book about love and roulette – a giddy mixture.

I find my spirits soaring at the way he writes about love and plummeting to the very depths of hell at the way he writes about addiction. Gloriously romantic in that reckless Russian way.

If This Is A Man by Primo Levi
Abacus, £9.99
A most extraordinary book and the one which has had the biggest influence on me. An unimaginable story about his time in Auschwitz and the way he manages to keep his humanity alive and survive.

Heartbreaking, uplifting and humbling in ways I can’t begin to describe.

Summer Lightning by P G Wodehouse
Arrow, £7.99
The antithesis of Primo Levi. I adore all the Blandings books.

It’s a safe world where nothing bad is going to happen with the most glorious wit and the most absurd characters.
I’ve re-read and re-read them. They’re like Christmas; they never fail to put a smile on your face.

Women
by Charles Bukowski
Virgin Books, £8.99
Bukowski can be incredibly nihilistic. You can only read him in small doses before you want to kill yourself.

He was a man who wrote when drunk and edited when sober and there’s a brutal honesty with which he talks about himself and his success or failure in relationships with women. I found it quite poetic.

Trainspotting
by Irvine Welsh
Vintage, £7.99
I don’t think you can overestimate how important a book this was.

To use the Leith vernacular in the way he did, the rhythms and the poetry, it was a revolution in Scotland.

He talks about male friendship better than anyone and is the most important Scottish writer around.

The Gulag Archipelago
by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
Harper Perennial, £18.95
Sometimes I admire the people as much as what they write and this is an extraordinary piece by an extraordinary man.

It’s about incarceration by an unjust, criminal and inhumane people but the way in which he writes, well, I want to say this out loud walking around my house, not just read it.

Source (including photo): Express
 

Sunday, 18 November 2012

Douglas Henshall


The Secret of Crickley Hall, 9pm, BBC1
Prepare yourself to be spooked good and proper by this three-part adaptation of the novel by horror writer James Herbert. A great cast includes David Warner who can't half do creepy well, along with Suranne Jones, Tom Ellis and Douglas Henshall. The action flits between a contemporary couple Ellis and Jones who are trying to come to terms with the disappearance of their young son and back to the war years. To try to escape the past they move to Crickley Hall (don't these people ever read horror stories?) which was once used as an orphanage. It is riddled with secrets as well as strange bumps in the night. It's enough to put you off that place in the country.
Source: This is South Wales

Sunday, 11 November 2012

Douglas Henshall

The Secret of Crickley Hall 
The Secret of Crickley Hall was shown on BBC America as a three hour TV special on October 31st 2012
The BBC has now announced that The Secret of Crickley Hall episode one will be shown on BBC One in the UK on Sunday November 18th from 9 - 10 pm. The second episode will be shown week beginning November 24th, date and time to be announced. The Secret of Crickley Hall page has been updated with more information about the programme. Read more here
Source: Douglas Henshall | Livejournal

Shetland
Douglas Henshall attended the BAFTA Scotland screening of Shetland on 28 October. The screening was followed by a Q&A session.
Photos here  

Sunday, 4 November 2012

Scottish drama

Why Scottish television drama goes beyond Rebus and Taggart
Source: The List (Issue 705)
Date: 1 November 2012
Written by: Miles Fielder
Why Scottish television drama goes beyond Rebus and Taggart

Peter Capaldi in The Field of Blood

Recent TV drama includes Lip Service, Single Father, Waterloo Road and The Field of Blood

A look at recent Scottish television drama reveals far more than police shows – whether it’s lesbian life in Glasgow, the travails of comprehensive teachers or the pressures on a desperate dad …
Not so very long ago, Scottish television drama was dominated by Rebus and Taggart. The audience-conquering popularity of STV’s Edinburgh and Glasgow cops was such that you could be forgiven for thinking Scotland hosted or produced little but crime dramas for the small screen. In more recent years, with the retirement of Inspector Rebus, and Taggart settled into the background as one of the UK’s longest-running television shows, television drama made in Scotland has become more diversified, arguably providing viewers with a broader reflection of life north of the border.

Last year’s The Field of Blood, a two-part thriller set in a Glasgow newsroom in the 1980s, adapted by Denise Mina from her own novel and starring Peter Capaldi, was the perfect example of quality home-grown drama. It was nominated for three BAFTA Scotland awards with Jayd Johnson winning best television actress for her role as Paddy Meehan. Earlier this year, series two of Lip Service, the show about a group of lesbians living in Glasgow starring Laura Fraser, was screened on BBC Three. Fraser also appeared alongside David Tennant, who, post-Doctor Who, returned home to make the four-part drama about a dad cracking up, Single Father. He was nominated for two acting awards for his performance. More recently, BBC One’s series about teachers in a challenging comprehensive school environment, Waterloo Road, has relocated from Rochdale to Greenock. And more recently still, Douglas Henshall has been announced as Detective Jimmy Perez, star of the BBC One two-part crime drama, Shetland, to be filmed you know where.

OK, so Scottish television does give good cop. But it is also giving us a lot more than that.

Clip from BBC Drama 'Field of Blood'


David Tennant - 'Single Father' trailer


'Lip Service' - Series 2 Launch Trailer - BBC Three


'Waterloo Road' - Series 8 Trailer - BBC One


Source: The List

Sunday, 28 October 2012

Douglas Henshall: '55 Days' interview, reviews, Press Night

Douglas Henshall in 55 Days (Photo: Catherine Ashmore)
Q&A: Douglas Henshall
From the cult 90s series Lipstick On Your Collar to sci-fi favourite Primeval, the critically acclaimed Scottish actor Douglas Henshall is rarely off our screens. Luckily for us, he’s also a stage favourite and following his last outing opposite Kristin Scott Thomas in 2011’s West End production of Betrayal, he’s back at the Hampstead theatre in a very different role, this time portraying infamous politician and soldier Oliver Cromwell in Howard Brenton’s 55 Days, a drama set during one of the most turbulent periods of English history.

As the cast prepares for a hopefully less turbulent period, the show’s official opening tonight, we challenged Henshall to our quick-fire quiz and discovered a secret kitchen habit, how his mother is responsible for the proudest moment in his career and why a pink palace always wins him over.

What first sparked your interest in performing?
Watching my friends who were in a youth theatre in my home town of Barrhead [in Scotland] and it looked like fun so I went along to audition.

In 55 Days you play Oliver Cromwell who famously supported the trial of King Charles I. If you could put anyone dead or alive on trial now, who would it be? 
Margaret Thatcher for all the obvious reasons, closely followed by Tony Blair.

If you were in politics, which law would you pass straight away and why?
That all big corporations should pay their fair share of tax.

Have you done a lot of research for 55 Days and the period it is set in?
The play is incredibly well researched and I took almost everything I needed from the play. Most biographies of Cromwell are very dry and fact-based and aren’t based on him as a man.

Are you taking inspiration from anyone in particular to play the role?
Cromwell is inspiring enough.

Stage or screen? 
They are both equally attractive in their own way.

What is your favourite city in the world? 

Buenos Aires. Anywhere where the presidential palace is pink has to have something going for it.

What has been your proudest moment of your career so far?
Being at the RSC was a very big deal for my mother. She was delighted that I was in Stratford-upon-Avon and thought I had finally made it. So for the amount of pleasure that it gave my mum, I would say that would be one of the best moments.

What advice would you like to impart on the world?
None!

What could you not be without?

My wife.

Do you have any passions people might be surprised to hear about?
Cooking. I make the best chicken soup this side of Golders Green.

Where do you head after a performance? 

Home.

How would you like to be remembered?

Over a drink.

What would you choose as a last meal?
My mother in law’s sea bass.

If you weren’t an actor, what would you be?

A tennis player.

What ambitions do you have left to achieve? 
Too many to mention…
  • 55 Days - Hampstead Theatre
  • Age Suitability: General
  • Genre: Play
  • opening night:
  • box Office: 020 7722 9301 
Source (including photo above): Official London Theatre

Reviews:
The Arts Desk
Rev Stan's Theatre Blog 
London Evening Standard 
What's On Stage
The Times (full article here)

55 Days - Press Night photos and reviews
Douglas Henshall and Mark Gatiss
Wednesday (24 Oct) was Press Night at Hampstead Theatre for 55 Days. Guests included Penny Smith, Zoe Wanamaker and Stephen Fry.
★★★★ The Guardian
‘The real pleasure lies in seeing a pivotal moment in English history presented with such fervent dramatic power’
★★★★ The Times
‘Douglas Henshall, gives us a still, burning, troubled Cromwell, part politician, part zealot, jabbing at Bible verses. Mark Gatiss, beaky and disdainful with a camp Morningside diction, beautifully delivers Brenton’s 17th-century rhythms, especially in Charles’s authentic lines’
★★★★ The Telegraph
‘At its considerable best, the play depicts the political process with clarity and vigour’
★★★★ Independent
‘The only figure in seventeenth century costume is Charles I, rivetingly played by Mark Gatiss with a Scots burr, an ironically edged sense of total entitlement, and a gasping stammer of revulsion and fear whenever he has to pronounce the words “people” and “parliament”’
★★★★ Financial Times
‘Absorbing and rich, 55 Days is a rewarding warning against revolutions that turn 360 degrees’
★★★★ Daily Mail
‘Douglas Henshall’s Cromwell is an unexpected creation. Mr Henshall makes him almost a male model at times, fussing about his own blond hairdo and turning up his jacket collar to look just so’

Source (including photo above, and more): Hampstead Theatre 

Sunday, 14 October 2012

Douglas Henshall: 'The Secrety of Crickley Hall' airdates, 'Shetland' interview, and '55 Days' rehearsal photos


The Secret of Crickley Hall
BBC America has announced that it will be showing The Secret of Crickley Hall, in which Douglas Henshall stars as Augustus Cribben, on October 28th 2012. The Three-hour event “The Secret of Crickley Hall” premières Sunday, October 28, 8:00pm ET/PT.

There will be a BAFTA TV preview of The Secret of Crickley Hall on Saturday November 3rd 2012, 4.30pm at the Broadway Cinema in Nottingham, followed by Q and A with Director Joe Ahearne. The event is part of the Mayhem Horror Festival, which takes place from October 31st till November 4th 2012.
More info here

A DVD of the drama is expected to be released in the UK on November 5th, which the BBFC has rated a 15. 


Source: Livejournal





Douglas Henshall – My Autumn

This versatile actor has worked all over the world – but he was blown away by the welcome in Shetland

Filming Shetland went really well. I enjoyed working there very much because of how friendly, welcoming and accommodating all the people were. They couldn’t have done any more for us – we did some Up Helly Aa scenes and the people who participated in that were amazing. They looked fantastic in all their gear. All the people who helped us with locations were great, too.

I had never been to Shetland before, it had always been a kind of mythological place for me. One of the nice things about my job is that you get to go to places. I hope we make another Shetland drama because then I’ll get to go back there. Everybody who was involved wants there to be another one, so fingers crossed. I think it’ll be good – we certainly all did everything we could to make it work.

My character is different to most TV detectives. He’s a pretty happy, solid guy just trying to do his job. He’s not battling any demons.

I stayed in the Kvelsdro Hotel in Lerwick (check), which was great. We didn’t get much time off while we were there, but we did have one great night in Lerwick Boat Club where a lot of musicians came and played. We sat and listened and also had a bit of a hooly and it was fantastic. I’ll remember that for a long time.

Now I’m looking forward to doing some theatre in the autumn. I’m appearing in the Howard Brenton play, 55 Days, at the Hampstead Theatre in London. I play Oliver Cromwell. There’s nothing quite like live theatre, but I wouldn’t say I have a preference between theatre, TV and films. I like the variety.

Autumn’s always a time to look forward to. It’s my favourite time of year, in fact, with all the fantastic colours – especially in Scotland.

I do quite a lot of travelling, and I’ve been to some fantastic places. I went to Buenos Aires with a production of Macbeth, and that was a city I really liked. Any city where the government building is pink has to have something going for it. I also made a film in India, and that’s the most extraordinary place. I’d like to go back there again.

I’m not sure where I’ll be going next – I’ll just have to wait and see. Hopefully I’ll get some time to relax. I like playing poker – it’s nice to have to use your mind in a completely different way. It takes me out of myself. I also like to play a bit of tennis, and do a bit of cooking, but most of all I just like to spend time with my friends.


Douglas, who hails from Renfrewshire, plays the lead role of detective Jimmy Perez in Shetland, a two-part drama written by David Kane, and adapted from the books by Ann Cleeves. Perhaps best known as the academic action man Nick Cutter in Primeval, his many other TV credits include South Riding, The Silence and Collision. Shetland will air on BBC 1 soon – keep an eye on the schedules.


55 Days : In Rehearsals
Photo gallery at Hampstead Theatre

Sunday, 16 September 2012

Douglas Henshall: 'Doors Open' U.S. premiere

BBC Worldwide & Ovation team up for 'Doors Open'
Ovation has inked its first co-production pact with BBC Worldwide Americas for the TV movie Doors Open, starring Stephen Fry and Douglas Henshall

Doors Open is produced by Fry's Sprout Pictures for ITV1 in association with Ovation. The movie will make its U.S. début in the second quarter of 2013. It is based on a 2008 crime novel by Ian Rankin. 

Doors Open is a complex, fun script with many twists and turns,” said Kris Slava, the senior VP of programming and production at Ovation. “Dougie Henshall leads a first-class cast, and of course, we’re huge fans of Stephen Fry—he brings intelligence and sparkle to everything he touches. The art theme lands this film squarely within Ovation’s wheelhouse, but what really sold us on the project was the script. Based on one of Ian Rankin’s non-Rebus novels, it’s both a fast-paced art caper, and a good love story. It will play well to a U.S. audience, and we are delighted to be a part of it.” 

Matt Forde, the executive VP of sales and co-productions at BBC Worldwide Americas, added, “This co-production deal was a terrific opportunity for us to bring an innovative network and an acclaimed producer together on a great project. With its riveting story line and star cast, Doors Open is sure to thrill audiences in the U.S.”

Source: World Screen

Also reported by the Douglas Henshall blog on LiveJournal: 
"Doors Open" will be shown in the U.S. on Ovation during the second quarter of next year. ITV has not yet said when it plans to show the drama in the UK, but it is thought to be this Autumn. 
Shetland is now scheduled for late November/early December. 

According to theatre PR, rehearsals for 55 Days began on Monday 10th September. 

Source: Live Journal

Sunday, 2 September 2012

Douglas Henshall to star in '55 Days'


55 Days: full casting announced
Mark Gatiss’ King Charles I will be joined by Douglas Henshall who shall be taking on the role of Oliver Cromwell in Howard Brenton’s new play, 55 Days, which explores the dramatic aftermath of the English Civil War. The full cast will be as follows: Abigail Cruttenden, Daniel Flynn, Matthew Flynn, Richard Henders, Simon Kunz, Gerald Kyd, John Mackay, Jordan Mifsud, Gerard Monaco, Laura Rogers, Tom Vaughan-Lawlor, Jem Wall and James Wallace.

Directed by Howard Davies, 55 Days depicts the culmination of the mid-seventeenth century. In these dangerous and dramatic times, in a country exhausted by Civil War, the great men of the day were trying to think the unthinkable: to create a country without a king.
Read more at Hampstead Theatre


More details from the Douglas Henshall blog at Live Journal:
Douglas Henshall will be joining Mark Gatiss in Howard Brenton’s new play, 55 Days at The Hampstead Theatre from October 18th 2012. Dougie is taking on the role of Oliver Cromwell and Mark Gatiss wil play King Charles I. The play explores the dramatic aftermath of the English Civil War.

The full cast will be as follows: Abigail Cruttenden, Daniel Flynn, Matthew Flynn, Richard Henders, Simon Kunz, Gerald Kyd, John Mackay, Jordan Mifsud, Gerard Monaco, Laura Rogers, Tom Vaughan-Lawlor, Jem Wall and James Wallace.

Directed by Howard Davies, 55 Days runs from October 18th, 2012 until November 24th, 2012. Book tickets here.

Douglas Henshall previously appeared at The Hampstead Theatre in 2004, playing the role of Thomas Huxley in Darwin in Malibu.
Source: Live Journal



Also reported by What's On Stage


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