Showing posts with label Sean Biggerstaff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sean Biggerstaff. Show all posts

Tuesday, 29 January 2013

Sean Biggerstaff and Patrick Doyle doodle for charity

 

Several Harry Potter actors contributed pieces of art for the 2013 National Doodle Day, proceeds for which go to benefit the Epilepsy Action charity organisation.

Previews of the doodles from Sean Biggerstaff (Oliver Wood), and Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire original score composer Patrick Doyle can be found below. The doodle auction will take place, via eBay, on February 8, 2013.8, 2013.



Sean Biggerstaff


Patrick Doyle



Quote:
Adrian Rawlins says: “Great cause, and a great idea. Thank you”

Bonnie Wright says: “The awareness and money raised on national Doodle Day for Epilepsy Action is amazing, lets keep it up!!”

Fiona Shaw says: “To doodle is to take a line for a walk and never raise your hand so it doodles you and a little creature emerges - and a lot of chaos, not art but something”

Mark Williams says: “I once sat in the snow in Brixton with a woman having a petit mal and I will never forget her helplessness and mine.”

Patrick Doyle says: “This is my favourite doodle when on the phone”

Sean Biggerstaff says: “Can't imagine why my art only sells when its for charity… Anyway, good luck!!”
Source: Snitchseeker

Sunday, 5 August 2012

National Theatre of Scotland says “Join us and meet the Wicker Man”

From the National Theatre of Scotland blog:
Calling all bloggers, vloggers, tweeters, instagrammers, film buffs and fans of Loch Parry’s premier amateur dramatics company.

Join us at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe for an exclusive event for social media users with Appointment with the Wicker Man

This is a one-off opportunity to photograph and film a scene from the show and meet the cast before enjoying the afternoon’s performance for free.

Co-written by and starring one of Scotland’s most popular performers, Greg Hemphill (Chewin’ the Fat) with Sean Biggerstaff (Harry Potter) and featuring a top line-up of Scottish comic talent, Appointment with The Wicker Man, is a new musical adaptation and an affectionate spoof homage to Robin Hardy’s cult film classic.

The event takes place at the Assembly Rooms, George St, Edinburgh on Tuesday 7th August, at 12.45pm for a 1pm start. Participants will receive a complementary ticket to the performance at 3.10pm.

Find out more about the show and watch the trailer here. http://www.nationaltheatrescotland.com/content/default.asp?page=s880

Join in the conversation by using the Twitter hashtag #WickerMan

Places are limited so if you would like to attend please register in advance by emailing eve.nicol@nationaltheatrescotland.com

Appointment with The Wicker Man is on at the Assembly Rooms, Edinburgh, 1 – 26 Aug (not Mondays), 3.10pm.
Source: National Theatre of Scotland

Monday, 18 June 2012

National Theatre of Scotland at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe 2012


The National Theatre of Scotland will be presenting two productions at this year’s Edinburgh Festival Fringe. Appointment with The Wicker Man returns after a successful Scottish tour earlier this year, with Greg Hemphill and all the original cast,  as does Molly Taylor’s, Love Letters to the Public Transport System, following Scottish tour dates and an acclaimed run as a work in progress in 2011. Both productions are being presented at the refurbished Assembly Rooms on George Street.

Since the National Theatre of Scotland’s launch in 2006, the Company has presented  six productions at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe: Black Watch (2006); Venus As A Boy (2007); Architecting (2008); Beautiful Burnout (2010) and The Wheel and The Strange Undoing of Prudencia Hart last year. All winners of  either a Herald Angel or a Scotsman Fringe First.

Read more (with video) at National Theatre of Scotland 

Also reported (with listings) by All Media Scotland 

Sunday, 19 February 2012

Sean Biggerstaff: interview and music vid

Interview: Sean Biggerstaff, actor 
The Wicker Man musical is a strange concept, but for Sean Biggerstaff, it’s no more weird than the hysteria that met his best-known role, writes Susan Mansfield. Sean Biggerstaff laughs as he describes the process by which he joined the cast of An Appointment With The Wicker Man. “Read the script. Laughed a lot. Said yes. It was an absolute no-brainer. Turned up at work on the first day and it’s been a hoot and a holler ever since.” 

Biggerstaff, cast in the role of PC Rory Mulligan, a TV cop drafted in to help the Loch Parry Players stage The Wicker Man, has the straightest part in the show. 
“Much like Edward Woodward (in the original cult movie), who was quite a normal person finding himself in amongst all this madness and reacting to it, that’s the main part of my job as well. I joyously get to react to the great comic performances going on around me.” 

It’s now ten years since Biggerstaff, 28, made his last appearance as Oliver Wood, captain of the Gryffindor quidditch team in the Harry Potter movies, yet it is still the job for which he is best known. When his part was cut from the third film, an online petition gathered more than 50,000 signatures to the slogan “It’s the Wood that makes it good.” 

Now, eating a cheese toastie in the costume fitting room at the National Theatre of Scotland’s rehearsal space, he shakes his head as if he’s glad those days are over. 

“When you turn up in Leicester Square and there are 5,000 people screaming your name and holding placards, that’s just weird. It’s hard to find a place for it in your brain that makes any sense. I’m not really comfortable in that sort of situation.” 

Biggerstaff grew up in Maryhill, the son of a fireman and a community worker. When he was 14, he was spotted in Scottish Youth Theatre by Alan Rickman, who was looking for two Scottish boys to cast in his film of Sharman Macdonald’s The Winter Guest. Rickman was so impressed that he asked his own agent to represent Biggerstaff, leading swiftly to his casting in Harry Potter. The films did bring some opportunities, he says, some of which he turned down. 

“I’ve always been fussier than I can afford to be. I don’t just want to do whatever it takes to be successful, I want to do what I consider to be good stuff. If I’m not engaged in something, it doesn’t matter what it is and who’s doing it.” 

He comes across as very grounded, choosing to base himself in Glasgow, playing guitar in Glasgow-band Wrongnote: “It’s good to have a foothold in reality, a base somewhere that’s always been a base. Sharman Macdonald once said she needs life to write, she can’t write if she’s just in theatre all the time. I’m the same way, I think. I’ve always felt that if my life was all about the job, I wouldn’t be so good at the job.” He pauses. “That might be unutterable w*** – but I have just uttered it!” 

Biggerstaff has been acclaimed in independent films, such as Cashback, directed by Sean Ellis, and spent part of last year in Switzerland making a film about Mary Queen of Scots. Does it irk him that he’s still known for Harry Potter? “You’ll never hear me whingeing about it because it was the biggest thing since The Beatles, and to be part of that was a really rare and unique privilege. But for me, it was two tiny five-minute parts I did when I was 17, 18 – and I’ve done tour de forces that no-one’s ever seen or remembers.” 

The “proudest moment” on his CV is Consenting Adults, a BBC4 movie about the Wolfenden Committee whose report, in the 1950s, led to the decriminalisation of homosexuality in Britain. Biggerstaff played Jeremy Wolfenden, the gay son of the committee chairman (played by Charles Dance). “He was a dream to play, and I had the feeling that we were documenting something that was genuinely important.” 

He doesn’t mention that he won a Scottish Bafta for the part. When I do, he looks sheepish. “Yeah. Uhuh. To be brutally honest, I like that people like it, but having a bit of metal on a mantelpiece doesn’t really make that any better. Awards are weird. I think giving actors awards is quite a silly business.” He stops, looking uncomfortable. “No offence to the people at Bafta Scotland, who I know and like.” 

 An Appointment with the Wicker Man marks his return to the stage for the first time since 2005 when he appeared in Sharman Macdonald’s The Girl with the Red Hair, at the Lyceum, and his first musical since his days in Scottish Youth Theatre. “That’s the interesting thing about being an actor. I would never think, ‘I want to do a musical,’ but I’m having a perfectly nice time. It’s a bit of a cheat – you can step in and get the thrill without actually having to put the years of slog in to be successful at it!” 

Source: Scotsman
 

Nice & Sleazy Open Mic: Sean Biggerstaff  
Sean Biggerstaff from Wrongnote performing in the basement bar at Nice N Sleazy's in Glasgow. The Acoustic Open Mic Night there every Monday is skilfully hosted by Gerry Lyons to create a friendly welcoming vibe - highly recommended as a night out. Of this performance, Sean says "the song is Serve You by the late Chris Whitley who is, subjectively, the greatest artist who ever lived. You should listen to him doing it!" 

 

Source: YouTube

Sunday, 12 February 2012

Social Media Call for "An Appointment with The Wicker Man"

Social media users are invited to take pictures and film footage of the National Theatre of Scotland’s production of An Appointment With The Wicker Man on Friday 17th February at 11.45am for a 12pm start at the Macrobert Arts Centre, Stirling.

This is an exclusive opportunity to photograph and film two scenes from the production and to meet the famous Loch Parry Players. The cast and creative team will also be available for interviews.

Based on the cult film, An Appointment With The Wicker Man is co-written by Greg Hemphill and Donald McLeary and directed by Vicky Featherstone.

The cast includes Greg Hemphill and Paul Riley who worked together on Chewin’ The Fat and the spin off Still Game. They are joined on stage by Sean Biggerstaff who played Oliver Wood in the Harry Potter films.

The full cast is Sean Biggerstaff, Jimmy Chisholm, Greg Hemphill, Johnny McKnight, Sally Reid, Paul Riley and Rosalind Sydney.

Places are limited so if you would like to attend please register in advance by emailing andrew.neilson@nationaltheatrescotland.com

The first twenty people to register will be given a free ticket to see the whole show on Friday 17th February at 7.30pm.

In the meantime why not tweet about production using the hashtag #wickerman or find out what happens at a social media call.

The National Theatre of Scotland’s production of An Appointment With The Wicker Man is supported by Bank of Scotland and tours to His Majesty’s Theatre, Aberdeen from 21-25 Feb, Theatre Royal, Glasgow 28 Feb-3 March, Eden Court, Inverness 6-10 March and The Alhambra, Dunfermline 21-24 March. More information at www.nationaltheatrescotland.com

Source National Theatre of Scotland

Sunday, 15 January 2012

Sean Biggerstaff as Robert Burns



The National Theatre of Scotland recently tweeted a link to this video of Sean Biggerstaff as Robert Burns as part of their Five Minute Theatre project in 2011


It's a not entirely serious imagining of the moment when William Shakespeare and Robert Burns meet each other in some other dimension and discuss poetry, girls and the connections between the two.

Performed by Barrie Hunter, Sean Biggerstaff
Directed by Robert Dawson Scott

Source: National Theatre of Scotland

Tuesday, 10 January 2012

Greg Hemphill on how The Wicker Man inspired his new play



Still Game star Greg Hemphill has got the fear.

The Still Game and Chewin’ The Fat star is in rehearsals with the National Theatre of Scotland for An Appointment With The Wicker Man, a play he wrote with Donald McLeary.

Their take on the 1973 creepy classic – once dubbed “the Citizen Kane of horror movies” with one of the most memorable and nightmarish endings in film – has singing, dancing and jokes.

Someone is going up in flames and Greg just hopes it isn’t him.

He said: “Somebody asked, ‘Do you think people will be picketing outside because you have put jokes in it?’ I said, ‘Yes, I would probably picket it myself because I love it.’

“There will be humour in it but we are not making fun of the film.

“I would call it a celebration of the movie. It is to The Wicker Man what Mamma Mia is to Abba, bearing in mind The Wicker Man is a horror.

“We want to give the audience frights, laughs and a good time and celebrate the music, score, story and fantastic ending.

“It will play like a horror comedy. The Wicker Man is all about the ending. You want people to come and enjoy the ride.”

An Appointment With The Wicker Man is set on a remote Scottish island, where the Loch Parry Theatre Players’ production of The Wicker Man is disrupted when their lead actor goes missing and they ask a TV detective from the mainland to step in and save their production.

The play parodies the plot of the original –starring Edward Woodward, Britt Ekland and Christopher Lee – which followed a policeman travelling to a remote island to search for a missing girl who the strange islanders claim never existed.

Greg’s show was originally intended to be a straightforward stage adaptation of the film – remade in 2006 starring Nicolas Cage. But NTS artistic director Vicky Featherstone suggested doing a play within a play. Greg said: “The story of the movie parallels the Loch Parry players, finding out what happens to their missing actor Roger Morgan. They are sort of intertwined and the line gets blurred between the two.

“The humour comes from this rag-tag group of amateur drama players trying to put on a horror movie.

“I think audiences don’t have to know the film back to front to understand what’s going on with our story.”

Greg, 42, who is married to actress Julie Wilson Nimmo, with whom he has two sons, has come to know The Wicker Man intimately. In preparation for writing the play, he watched the film 10 times, bringing his total number of viewings to around 30. But it’s been no hardship. He said: “A lot of films, when you watch them a lot, get less scary. But The Wicker Man never fails to unnerve you.

“I first saw it in 1986. I remember being horrified by the end. I didn’t think movies ended that way.

“As writers, we have nothing but respect for the film. It is a perfect story with an amazing ending.

“If you flip it comedically, it’s a joke – you have a great story followed by a punchline. In my opinion, it has the greatest ending in cinema history.

“But because it relies so heavily on this punch-to-the-stomach finale, there is not necessarily a value in adapting it slavishly. A surprise ending is only good at the time. It is going to lose its impact so we had to come up with something else which salutes it. That was our challenge.”

An Appointment With The Wicker Man, which stars Jimmy Chisholm and Harry Potter actor Sean Biggerstaff, will also see Greg teaming up with his Chewin’ The Fat and Still Game co-star Paul Riley.

Despite the reunion, a return to Still Game is unlikely.

Greg said: “You would be an arrogant fool to say it’s never happening again but it’s unlikely because I am not a fan of programmes that go away and come back.

“Comedy is lightning in a bottle. It speaks to a generation, to a certain time. I think when you bring shows back, you almost upset the apple cart with the audience.

“Sometimes the journey is better than the arrival. But who knows.”

Greg’s partnership with McLeary, who also writes Radio 4 comedy Fags, Mags And Bags and stars as Mickey John on CBeebies show Me Too!, has seen them write two films, now in development.

They are also due to film a pilot for their new sitcom, Blue Haven.

But first there is the burning ambition of An Audience With The Wicker Man to deal with. Greg said, laughing: “It says on the poster, ‘Someone’s going to burn for this’ – and it could well be us writers.”

An Appointment With The Wicker Man is on at His Majesty’s Theatre, Aberdeen, from February 21 to 25; at Theatre Royal Glasgow, February 28 to March 3; Eden Court, Inverness, March 6 to 10; and the Alhambra, Dunfermline, March 21 to 24.

Source: Daily Record

Sunday, 1 January 2012

Sean Biggerstaff on stage in National Theatre of Scotland’s production of An Appointment with The Wicker Man



BBC Still Game and Chewin’ the Fat actors Greg Hemphill and Paul Riley are to re-unite for the National Theatre of Scotland’s production of An Appointment with The Wicker Man in 2012. The production is co-written by Donald McLeary and Greg Hemphill, who is also appearing as Lord Summerisle, and opens at His Majesty’s Theatre, Aberdeen on 21st February before touring Scotland.

Greg Hemphill and Paul Riley worked together on Chewin’ The Fat and the spin off Still Game in which Greg played Victor and Paul the part of Winston. They will be joined on stage by Sean Biggerstaff who is known for playing Oliver Wood in the Harry Potter films and has won a Scottish BAFTA for the BBC4 film Consenting Adult.

Regularly popping up at the top of “Best Horror Film of all Time” lists, The Wicker Man is regarded as a cult film classic. An Appointment with The Wicker Man, directed by Vicky Featherstone, is an all-singing-and-dancing love letter to a unique and timeless cult masterpiece.

Read more at Northings

Sunday, 16 October 2011

Wrongnote is making all the right moves



With singles from their debut album Reach Out, Disconnect getting lots of airtime, and their performance on the BBC Introducing stage at T in the Park in the U.K., Wrongnote has certainly been making many connections with listeners. Frontman Callum Smith and guitarist Sean Biggerstaff (Harry Potter) recently discussed the band, the music, and "conjunctivitis" in an exclusive interview with The Ticker.



Along with Smith and Biggerstaff, bassist Greig Duncan, and drummer Stewart Robison round out the band's lineup. Wrongnote formed in 2008.

"The driving force is basically me," said Biggerstaff, "I've pulled the strings all along, without the others' knowledge, and once I was finally happy with the set up, I condescended to actually join the band."

But Smith paints a different, albeit probably more accurate, picture. "Sean regularly disappeared and re-emerged in a more aggressive form, like conjunctivitis or kidney stones […]the driving force has been a collective idiocy: The idea that, somehow, music is how we can best define ourselves," he recalled.

The same humorous, yet self-effacing attitude can be found in their lyrics. Smith describes the band's sound as "Heavy drums, fidgety bass, jazz chords and post-melody vocals."

The album is certainly eclectic in terms of musical style, which reflects the fact that all band members have different musical influences. "I think the only thing all four members agree on is that Prince is really good," Biggerstaff said.

Reach Out, Disconnect is a fantastically well-rounded album in that it offers listeners a spectrum of songs completely independent from one another stylistically, while still producing a sound that is uniquely Wrongnote.

"Innocent Eyes" and "Coca-Co-Codamol" are alluring and hauntingly melodic tracks, while "Devil Give Misdirection" and "You've Got Some Optic Nerve" are grittier, fast-paced, and aggressive, and yet still maintain that warped melodious quality found in the aforementioned tracks.

The lyrics can be quite raw, "Painkiller/ separate my church from state/ lay my liver out to waste/ I need a taste," and sometimes cryptic.

According to Smith, the songs "are about various forms of deviance" and they involve a mixture of both real experiences and fiction.

"For example, ‘You've Got Some Optic Nerve' really is a love ballad aimed at a games console but ‘Snake. Snake? Snake!' is definitely not about Snakes," he said.

Given that the band members have such different tastes and musical preferences, makes recording and performing quite difficult.

"Our process, if you could even call it that, is volatile and often unpleasant," said Biggerstaff. Smith even admits that the band has deserted more songs than they have completed.

But for now, the system works.

"What keeps us going is the consistency with which the end product, seems to us, to justify the means," concluded Biggerstaff.

One thing they all seem to agree on is the identity of the band: it's about the sound, not the look. "We're set apart purely in the passive sense: We don't concern ourselves with anything other than making noises that we like." Biggerstaff said.

"Maybe it's nice that some people take pride in their appearance and turn up to all the gigs that like-minded people show up at. It's just not us and never will be," Smith added.

Indeed, the album is proof that they're not concerned about following any particular music trends or conventions, which is what makes the album so refreshing to listen to and enjoy. The songs don't fit into any one particular mold and are obviously the result of differing personalities, and yet Disconnect still manages to hit all the right chords.

As for the future, the band plans on playing more festivals and perhaps releasing a single.

"There are also whispers of a second album but that won't be until we're completely happy with our newest batch of songs," Smith said.

Reach Out, Disconnect
is available for digital download on iTunes, Amazon mp3, and on the band's website, where listeners can hear about the latest news and announcements at http://wrongnote.co.uk

Source: The Ticker

Monday, 27 June 2011

Sean Biggerstaff to play T in the Park and National Theatre of Scotland



It's a busy fortnight for Sean Biggerstaff, who played Oliver Wood in the early Harry Potter films; the premiere of the final film, playing with his band at T in the Park, and appearing in one of the National Theatre of Scotland's Five Minute Theatre performances.

Sean Biggerstaff, who played Oliver Wood, the Gryffindor Quidditch captain in the early Harry Potter movies, will be appearing with his band Wrong Note at the BBC Introduces stage at T in the Park on July 10th, just hours after attending the final Harry Potter film premiere in London.

And before that he can be seen in one of the National Theatre of Scotland's Five Minute Theatre performances which will be streamed live online at stv.tv/fiveminutetheatre later this week on June 21.

His performances as Robert Burns in You're Bard, a jokey imagining of what might have happened if Burns had met William Shakespeare, can be seen between 9pm and 10pm, and will later be available to watch as a video at stv.tv and on stv's Youtube channel.

Although Sean only appeared in the first two Harry Potter films, he and many of the characters in the early stories reappear briefly in the final film, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (Part Two) which shows the final dramatic conclusion of Harry's struggles with Lord Voldemort. Co-star Alan Rickman has called the reappearance of so many characters "the cinema equivalent of a pantomime walk-down".

Sean's acting career has continued to flourish; he won a BAFTA for best actor in 2007 for a BBC4 film called Consenting Adults and only last week he appeared in a Miss Marple mystery on ITV.

But as an accomplished guitarist and singer, he has always taken a keen interest in music. The band, Wrongnote, completed its first album last year and has been getting airplay on BBC Radio stations Radio One and Radio Scotland and particularly by Tom Robinson on 6Music

Sean told stv.tv "It's a crazy busy time, just so much going on. I've always fancied the idea of playing at festival and T in the Park is certainly a big one. I'm looking forward to it"

His appearance in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows is brief but he added: "It's been an amazing thing to be a part of and it' great to be able to be there for the final curtain."

Source: STV

A clip from You’re Bard can be viewed on that page

Sunday, 27 February 2011

Sean Biggerstaff in radio play "Good With People"




Radio choices, February 26-March 4
Afternoon Play: Good with People. Radio 4, Friday 4 March, 2.15pm
Maureen Beattie, Paul Chequer and Sean Biggerstaff star in David Harrower’s tale of a small Scottish town, which has turned from being a thriving seaside resort to the host of a nuclear submarine base.

Source: The Stage

Friday, 4 February 2011

Sean Biggerstaff doodles for charity




Sean Biggerstaff is one of many celebrities who have donated hand-drawn art for National Doodle Day 2011, the proceeds from which will go to fund the Epilepsy Action charity, which focuses on epilepsy research and advocacy. All the donated art work will be auctioned on Friday, February 11, 2011.

See Sean's art, and learn more about the project, at National Doodle Day

Thursday, 4 March 2010

Sean Biggerstaff to have a small role in 'Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows'


The List's Paul Dale spoke with actor Sean Biggerstaff at last month's Glasgow Film Festival. Sean talked about his very small role in the last Harry Potter film. I'm not sure if he means part 1 or part 2 of Deathly Hallows, but it's probably part 2.

I did manage to get a chat with the lovely actor Sean Biggerstaff, best known for his role in the Harry Potter films, sex comedy Cashback and superb television film Consenting Adults. Biggerstaff told me he’s got a blink-and-you'll-miss-it part in the last Harry Potter and a load of other stuff going on but for some reason we started talking about theatre.

Biggerstaff, a very fine actor raised on the stage, said he has not been offered anything decent on stage for a long time and that all he got offered were crazy experimental roles which really wasn’t his bag. So on his behalf, I just want to say: ‘Come on you Scottish thespian dic(k)tators in your publicly-funded ivory towers - there’s real gold in them Glaswegian hills, and his name is a curious amalgam of a drab South Lanarkshire town and a stick to assist walking. [The List]

Wednesday, 5 August 2009

Sean Biggerstaff episode of Miss Marple now online



If you missed Sean Biggerstaff in the PBS Masterpiece Theater production of Miss Marple you can now check it out online. The episode entitled Why Didn't They Ask Evans? is only available to viewers in the US, but maybe you could download a hotspot shield if you're outside of the US and really want to watch it. I'm terrible with technology, but I think they do work for some people. Anyway, here's a synopsis of the episode:

In this show, Sean plays Bobby Attfield who finds a man near death sprawled out on a cliff. His final, enigmatic words, "Why didn't they ask Evans?" On a whim, Bobby and his friend, socialite Frankie Derwent, decide to investigate. The amateur sleuths, along with Miss Marple, uncover several enticing clues. [Wizard News]

Source
Source

Friday, 12 June 2009

Sean Biggerstaff answers fan questions



Over at Sean Biggerstaff's official website fans can post questions and every once in a while Sean takes the time to answer them. Some new answers were posted today, and my favorite is a question about fellow Scottish actor James McAvoy:

Do you know James McAvoy?

I just read you interview with The Scotsman, Mon 12 Feb 2007, A rising Scottish star who is definitely not the new James McAvoy.

I didnt know who James Mc Avoy was, so I looked him up on-line. Among other things it mentioned that he worked as a baker during two years in Sainsbury. Did you meet him there?

Really, is he a fellow actor acquaintance?

Jim E. - San Antoni, TX, USA

Jim, No, I don't know Jamesand neither did I know he worked in Sainsbury's. I wonder if he's seen Cashback. I vaguely know his Sister, Joy, who is very nice from bumping into her around Glasgow (We used to live on the same bus route), but that's hardly relevant. Sean

You can head on over to Sean's website to see the rest of the questions and answers.

Source

Thursday, 10 April 2008

Cashback gets official release date

Cashback, starring Scottish actor, Sean Biggerstaff is set to open in theaters in the UK on May 9, 2008. I wrote in an earlier post that the film was to be released at the end of April, but the distributors decided on the official May release date instead. You can watch a trailer of the film below and you can also check out the film's new official MySpace page for the UK release. The page has tons of clips and behind the scenes footage.

Sunday, 2 March 2008

Sean Biggerstaff at the Glasgow Film Festival

Here is the only photo I've been able to find of Sean Biggerstaff's appearance on Feb. 19 2008 at the Glasgow Film Festival. If I find any more I'll make sure I post them.



Photo from www.flickr.com

Thursday, 7 February 2008

Sean Biggerstaff to appear at the Glasgow Film Fest

Sean Biggerstaff's bio-pic Consenting Adults will be screened at the upcoming Glasgow Film Festival, where Sean and the director, Richard Curson Smith will introduce the film in person. It will show on Feb. 19 at Glasgow Film Theatre 2. You can go here to book tickets and for a detailed schedule of the film festival.

Photo from www.glasgowfilmfestival.org.uk

Sunday, 6 January 2008

Sean Biggerstaff's upcoming projects in 2008


It's 2008, and luckily for us Sean Biggerstaff will appear on the big screen as a young lawyer in Hippie Hippie Shake alongside Sienna Miller and the gorgeous Cillian Murphy. According to imdb.com the film is "An account of counterculturalist Richard Neville's misadventures in London at the end of the 1960s." The most information on the web that I've been able to find on the movie is on wikipedia so you can read more here. No word from Universal Studios on exactly when Hippie Hippie Shake will be released in 2008, but shooting did begin in Sept. 2007, and is now in post-production. You can watch a video of Sienna Miller and Cillian Murphy shooting the film on youtube; I tried to find some footage with Sean, but there's nothing, hopefully that will change in the coming months.
Photos of Sean in the movie are hard to find, so thanks goodness for www.seanbifferstaff.co.uk

Saturday, 29 December 2007

Cashback with Sean Biggerstaff finally has a UK release


It has taken a long time for the indie film to be released in its native country, but Cashback will be released in the UK in April of 2008. It is not available on DVD in the UK even though its been released in other countries over the past year. Anyone in the UK who really wants to see Sean Biggerstaff (greatest last name on earth!) as a tortured, artistic insomniac will have to order a copy from another country in Europe. Or try really hard to wait until the end of April.


Related Posts with Thumbnails