Showing posts with label awards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label awards. Show all posts

Sunday, 31 March 2013

James McAvoy: 'Trance' video review, Olivier Awards nomination for Macbeth


Trance - video review
In an excerpt from this week's Guardian Film Show Henry Barnes, Peter Bradshaw and Andrew Pulver head deep into James McAvoy's noggin with Danny Boyle's new psychological thriller. McAvoy plays am amnesiac criminal who has forgotten where he's hidden a priceless Goya and recruits a hypnotherapist (Rosario Dawson) to help him find it. Trance also stars Vincent Cassel as a ruthless gangster
Watch the video review at The Guardian

Olivier Awards 2013
Stars of the silver screen Helen Mirren, James McAvoy and Rupert Everett in competition for top theatre gongs

The nominations for the 2013 Olivier Awards were announced at The May Fair hotel earlier today, and Mirren was instantly installed among the favourites to secure the best actress award for her latest turn as the Queen in The Audience.
She will come up against Scott Thomas, star of The English Patient, for her performance in Old Times, Billie Piper, who was in The Effect, and Hattie Morahan for A Doll's HouseThe Audience was also nominated for best new play, and Stephen Daldry is in the running for best director.
Another production to open in recent weeks was Macbeth at the Trafalgar Studios, and  it was nominated for best revival as well as a nod for film star McAvoy in the lead role.
He will face Everett, for his role as Oscar Wilde in The Judas Kiss, as well as Mark Rylance for Twelfth Night, Rafe Spall – recently seen in Life of Pi – for Constellations and Luke Treadaway, who starred in The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time.
Read more (including full nominations list) at The Independent

Also reported by Hollywood Reporter and others

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

Robert Carlyle nominated for Canadian science fiction award

Robert Carlyle nominated for Canadian science fiction award

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, 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

Billy Connolly: BAFTA award

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



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

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

Peter Capaldi Interview - Comedy Awards and British Independent Film Awards


Peter Capaldi in Thick Of It at comedy awards
Peter Capaldi and Rebecca Front shared the glory at the British Comedy Awards.
Scots-born Capaldi was named Best TV Comedy Actor for his role as Malcolm Tucker in The Thick Of It, while Front won the Best TV Comedy Actress award for her portrayal of Nicola Murray in the political satire.
Her success meant there was no win for Olivia Colman, who was nominated in the category for two different roles - in Olympic satire Twenty Twelve and the sitcom Rev.
Capaldi saw off competition from Downton Abbey star Hugh Bonneville, who got a nod for his Twenty Twelve role, along with Tom Hollander for Rev and Steve Coogan.

The full list of winners:
Best Comedy Entertainment Personality - Charlie Brooker
Best Sitcom - Hunderby
Best Male TV Comic - Lee Mack
Best Comedy Entertainment Programme - Harry Hill's TV Burp
Best Comedy Breakthrough Artist - Morgana Robinson
Best TV Comedy Actress - Rebecca Front
The Writers Guild of Great Britain - Vic Reeves and Bob Mortimer
Best TV Comedy Actor - Peter Capaldi
Best Female TV Comic - Jo Brand
Best Sketch Show - Cardinal Burns
Best New Comedy Programme - Hunderby
Outstanding Achievement - Sacha Baron Cohen.
Read more at Herald Scotland


Peter Capaldi interview - 2012 British Independent Film Awards


Published on Dec 9, 2012
Stefan Pape from HeyUGuys interviews actor Peter Capaldi who presented Olivia Coleman with her award at the 2012 British Independent Film Awards.
Source: YouTube

Sunday, 2 December 2012

Spirit of Scotland awards

Spirit of Scotland awards to honour nation’s golden year
From The Scotsman (27 November):
It promises to be a glittering occasion to herald the end of a golden year for Scotland’s rich cultural arena.

From Scotland’s Olympic and Paralympic heroes to big-name musicians, artists, film industry figures and business people, 2012 has already been a year to remember.

Now they are set for an evening in the limelight at the lavish Prestonfield Hotel in Edinburgh tomorrow, when it hosts the 15th annual Glenfiddich Spirit of Scotland Awards. The whisky brand’s annual awards, organised in partnership with The Scotsman, have seen the likes of Ewan McGregor, Peter Capaldi, Andrew ­Fairlie, Ian Rankin and Sharleen Spiteri honoured in the past.

This year it is the turn of the likes of singers Emeli Sandé and Julie Fowlis, violinist Nicola Benedetti, authors Ewan Morrison and Janice Galloway, actor Ewen Bremner and screenwriter Paul Laverty to battle it out.

They are among the nominees in the eight categories to be recognised at the gala ceremony, with the public voting on a shortlist revealed in The Scotsman over the past few weeks.
But the panel of judges who drew up the short-list decided to remove one tricky dilemma by ruling that all of Scotland’s gold-medal winners in London should share the sport award.
This means yet another honour for previous Spirit of Scotland award winners Sir Chris Hoy and Andy Murray, but further recognition for the likes of rowers Katherine Grainger and Heather Stanning, and canoeist Tim Baillie.

However the results of the other seven categories are a closely-guarded secret, as is the prestigious “Top Scot” honour, won last year by Dr Gordon Rintoul, director of the National Museum of Scotland. The honour has been previously won by serial adventurer Mark Beaumont, author JK Rowling, football manager Walter Smith and Sir Chris Hoy.
The awards will be presented by another Top Scot winner, broadcaster Kirsty Wark.
Nominees in the food category include the founder of Edinburgh coffee shop, Artisan Roast, Gustavo Pardo, and food writer, Lady Claire MacDonald.

An award will also be given to the business nominee who epitomises Scottish entrepreneurial spirt and another for environmental endeavour.

Authors Ewan Morrison, Kirsty Gunn, Janice Galloway and Ali Smith are all up for the writing award. Screen nominees include Paul Laverty, writer of The Angels’ Share, actor Bremner, Kelly MacDonald, voice of Merida, heroine of Disney-Pixar’s Brave, and the new artistic director of the Edinburgh Film Festival, Chris Fujiwara. Among nominees for the art category is veteran painter John Bellany.

The music nominees include violin virtuoso Benedetti, Gaelic singer Fowlis, Johnny Lynch aka The Pictish Trail and Aberdeen pop sensation Sande.

Ian Stewart, editor of The Scotsman, said: “What makes these awards so special is the fact they recognise people from across the wealth of Scotland’s rich cultural arena."
Source: Scotsman



SPIRIT OF SCOTLAND WINNERS
Sports: Shared between Olympic gold winners Tim Baillie (canoeing), Scott Brash (equestrian), Katherine Grainger (rowing), Sir Chris Hoy (cycling), Andy Murray (tennis) and Heather Stanning (rowing) and Paralympic gold winners Neil Fachie (cycling), Craig MacLean (cycling) and David Smith (rowing).
Art: Robert McDowell, the man behind Summerhall, the acclaimed new arts venue created at the former vet school in Edinburgh.
Writing: Ewan Morrison. The Glasgow author has published two acclaimed books and is about to see his best-seller Swung turned into a big-screen film.
Environment: Allan Watson Featherstone, the executive director of the charity Trees for Life.
Food: Gustavo Pardo, the founder of the celebrated Edinburgh coffee emporium Artisan Roast.
Business: Lucinda Bruce-Gardyne. Inspired by her son being diagnosed with a gluten intolerance, which led to writing the book How To Cook For Food Allergies, the entrepreneur went on to to create a gluten-free bread.
Music: Julie Fowlis. The Gaelic singer from North Uist reached a whole new audience after being chosen for the soundtrack of the hit Disney-Pixar film Brave.
Screen: Kelly Macdonald.
After a hugely varied career, the actress shone in the lead role of rebellious princess Merida in Brave.

Source: Scotsman

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
 

Billy Connolly: Outstanding Contribution BAFTA, and birthday tributes

Billy Connolly is still going strong at 70

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

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

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

Billy Connolly's acceptance speech can be seen here

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

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

Sunday, 4 November 2012

Alan Cumming

'Any Day Now' theatrical poster unveiled
The Dec. 14 release, a dramedy based on a true story, is set in 1979 Los Angeles and revolves around a gay couple who wish to adopt a child with special needs.
The Hollywood Reporter is pleased to exclusively début the first theatrical poster for Travis Fine's Any Day Now, which Music Box Films -- the small distributor best known for handling the American release of the Swedish Girl with the Dragon Tattoo films -- will put into limited release on Dec. 14 and then push for Golden Globe nominations in the musical/comedy categories.

The film, a dramedy based on a true story, is set in 1979 Los Angeles. It revolves around a gay couple -- one member of which is flamboyant and comfortable in his skin (Tony winner and two-time Emmy nominee Alan Cumming of The Good Wife) and the other whom is still semi-closeted and not (Garret Dillahunt of Raising Hope) -- who wish to adopt a boy with Down Syndrome (newcomer Isaac Leyva) who has been abandoned by his drug-addicted mother.
The film premièred back in April at the Tribeca Film Festival, where it won the audience award. It subsequently picked up other audience awards at the Provincetown, Woodstock, and LA Outfest fests. Cumming's performance has attracted especially strong notices.
Source (including image): The Hollywood Reporter


Alan Cumming film wins CIFF award
The film Any Day Now, starring Alan Cumming and Garret Dillahunt, was one of the winners of the Chicago International Film Festival's Audience Choice Award for Best Narrative Feature. Any Day Now's plot revolves around an abandoned mentally handicapped teenager who a gay couple—a drag performer (Cumming) and a closeted attorney (Dillahunt)—take in. However, once the unconventional living arrangement is discovered by authorities, the men must fight a biased legal system to adopt the child.
The other winner in the narrative department was Quartet, directed by Dustin Hoffman [starring Billy Connolly].
The Central Park Five was the documentary winner. The film looks at the five Black and Latino teenagers who were arrested in 1989 and later convicted of raping a white woman in New York City's Central Park. Each spent between six and 13 years in prison before the actual criminal's confession led to their exonerations.
The festival ran Oct. 11-25.
Source: Windy City Media Group

Sunday, 28 October 2012

Alan Cumming: Making A Difference award, BAFTA Britannia host, 'Beautiful' song vid


Alan Cumming Receives the Making a Difference Award
Published on Oct 19, 2012 by
Judy Shepard presents Alan Cumming with the Making A Difference Award from the Matthew Shepard Foundation at the 11th Annual Bear to Make a Difference Gala and Celebrity Teddy Bear Auction.


The Matthew Shepard Foundation was founded by Dennis and Judy Shepard in memory of their 21-year old son, Matthew, who was murdered in an anti-gay hate crime in Wyoming in October 1998.
To learn more about the Matthew Shepard Foundation and their work, please visit http://www.MatthewShepard.org and http://www.Matthew'sPlace.com.

Source: YouTube

Alan Cumming to host BAFTA's Britannia Awards
Scottish actor Alan Cumming is to return for a fourth time as host of the 2012 Britannia Awards in Beverly Hills, Calif., organizers announced.
Presented by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts Los Angeles, the event is to take place Nov. 7 at the Beverly Hilton Hotel.
"I'm so happy to be back hosting my fourth Britannia Awards," Cumming said in a statement. "It's 15 years since I first came to Hollywood and what better way to commemorate that than to be hosting a celebration of the best of British and Tinseltown. I'm excited to see old friends and raise a few glasses to the best in our business -- and be a bit mischievous too of course."
"We're so pleased that we were able to secure Alan to host this year's awards. We owe thanks to the producers of 'The Good Wife' who were kind enough to rearrange their production schedule to allow for Alan to be with us," said Britannia Chairman Nigel Lythgoe, referring to Cumming's television legal drama, which shoots in New York. "We're grateful that we can do justice to the extraordinary caliber of talent represented in this year's honorees with our esteemed host and presenters."
Steven Spielberg, Harrison Ford and Josh Gad will be among those presenting awards at this year's show.
The Britannia Awards are to be broadcast Nov. 11 on BBC America.

Read more: Entertainment News 

Peppard: See Alan Cumming’s *&%# Beautiful Two by Two encore
With his semi-regular appearance at Dallas’ Two by Two for AIDS and Art, Scottish singer-actor-director Alan Cumming gives more entertainment per pound than anyone since Judy Garland. Appearing as Eli Gold on the hit show The Good Wife, Cumming is a hot commodity. His act is not for the squeamish who mind jokes about vibrators. “That’s right, I said vibrator,” he told the Saturday night Two by Two crowd at the home of Cindy and Howard Rachofsky.
And his encore song, “Beautiful” did include one really profane word—repeated 28 times in less than two minutes. If you think that word might offend, don’t watch the attached video.

Source: Dallas News

Any Day Now interview
The Huffington Post has an interview with Alan about Any Day Now here

Sunday, 21 October 2012

Kelly MacDonald: Best Supporting Actress award


Kelly Macdonald won Best Supporting Actress for her work in Boardwalk Empire in the Crime Thriller Awards on Thursday (18 Oct)
Source: Contact Music

Also reported by Radio Times
The awards can be seen next Tuesday (23 October) on ITV3






 
The Anna Karenina official site has more photos, actor and character bios

Sunday, 14 October 2012

National Television Awards nominations




Scotland's representatives among this year's nominations are - 

Karen Gillan - drama performance female
Denis Lawson – drama performance male
Earthflight – documentary series (narrated by David Tennant)

Source: National TV Awards

Kevin McKidd: Speyside Sessions for Traditional Scot's album of the year


Kevin McKidd @TheRealKMcKidd tweeted earlier this week:
vote for @SpeysideSession for Trad Scot's album of the year scottishcultureonline.com/blogs/nominati… would be cool just to get nominated- go on! Kev x 
Source: Twitter
Link to vote - here

Kelly MacDonald: SAG awards nomination


Kelly MacDonald is among contenders in the Best Film Supporting Actress category of the Screen Actors Guild Awards, according to Gold Derby 
Read more at Gold Derby

Monday, 8 October 2012

Ecstasy wins several awards at the Lady Filmmakers Film Festival in Beverly Hills


Celebrities & Filmmakers Honored at 4th Annual Lady Filmmakers Film Festival in Beverly Hills 
 
Irvine Welsh’s Ecstasy won several awards: 
  • Best Feature Film
  • Best Supporting Actor: Billy Boyd
  • Best Actor: Adam Sinclair
  • Best Supporting Actress: Olivia Andrup
  • Best Actress: Kristin Kreuk
Source: Beverly Hills Courier

Sunday, 2 September 2012

Ewan McGregor: charity single, and film festival award

Ewan McGregor leads celebrities getting behind the STV Appeal single
Hollywood A-lister Ewan McGregor has endorsed the official STV Appeal single, Take You There by Mánran and Michelle McManus. Ewan passed on details of the single to his 121,000 or so Twitter followers.

The single has also been supported online by presenter Lorraine Kelly and DJ Scott Mills.

Other stars, including DJ Jim Gellatly, comedienne Janey Godley, showbiz journalist Dean Piper and MSP MP Christina McKelvie, all added their support for the song.

Take You There is available to download and, of the cost, 40 pence goes directly to the STV Appeal to help children in Scotland who live in poverty.

The song has been written and performed by Celtic boyband Mànran and singer and presenter Michelle McManus. Scottish music legend Phil Cunningham produced the single.

The STV Appeal, now in its second year, will raise money to help the thousands of children in Scotland who live in poverty.
Read more – and watch the video – at STV 



Ewan McGregor to receive San Sebastian film festival’s Donostia Award
Scottish actor Ewan McGregor and Oscar-winning US actor Tommy Lee Jones will be honoured with an award in tribute to their careers at the San Sebastian film festival in Spain next month.

McGregor, the 41-year-old Star Wars star, will receive the festival’s Donostia Award, “awarded to a great film personality in recognition for their work and career”, at a ceremony on September 27, they said in a statement.

“Often hailed as one of the finest actors of his generation, Ewan McGregor consistently captivates audiences with a diverse line-up of roles across a multitude of genres, styles and scope,” it said.

“McGregor’s career has been highlighted by a continuous string of bold and daring performances, from his breakthrough role as the heroin-addicted Mark Renton in Irvine Welsh’s Trainspotting, to the legendary Obi-Wan Kenobi in Star Wars saga, to starring opposite Nicole Kidman in the musical Moulin Rouge.”

The actor’s latest film The Impossible, a drama based on a true story of a family’s fight to survive during the 2004 tsunami, will have its European première at the festival after the ceremony to award McGregor the prize.
Read more at Tabloid! 

Also reported by Contact Music and many others

Monday, 30 July 2012

Alan Cumming: outstanding actor award, Macbeth audiobook, Goodspeed Tribute

Alan Cumming named Outstanding Actor at OUTFEST
Tony Award winner Alan Cumming has won the Grand Jury Award at Los Angeles' Outfest for Outstanding Actor in a Feature Film for Any Day Now.
The film, which received the Audience Award for Outstanding Feature Film, features Cumming as a gay man who, along with his partner, takes in an abandoned, mentally handicapped teenager.
Cumming won the Tony Award for his performance as the Emcee in Cabaret. His many other stage credits include Design for Living, The Threepenny Opera, Elle and Macbeth. He currently co-stars on CBS' The Good Wife as Eli Gold, and appeared in the television movie of Annie
Source: Theater Mania 
 
Alan says on his blog:
I just got back from LA where I won the Best Actor award at Outfest for Any Day Now. The movie also won the audience award, as it has at every festval it has screened at: Tribeca, Proveincetown and Seattle. I also won the Best Actor at Seattle. I am really proud of this film and so excited that it will be released late 2012.
The blog also includes this Red Carpet interview with Alan Cumming at the screening of his new film Any Day Now:

 
Read more at Alan Cumming's blog




Alan Cumming Talks Macbeth, Audiobooks
Simon & Schuster Audio earlier this month released the audio edition of Alan Cumming’s amazing solo interpretation of Macbeth.
And now, in the following behind-the-scenes video, Cumming himself talks about his performance, how his interpretation of Macbeth came to be, and the recording of the audiobook.

Source: Publishers Weekly 

Alan also spoke to the "CBS This Morning" co-hosts about playing every role in the production of Shakespeare's Macbeth at New York City's Lincoln Center Festival, and his role in the CBS drama The Good Wife. Watch the video at Metacafe 


Goodspeed Musical's Annual Gala

Alan Cumming will present Tony Award-winning actress Kristin Chenoweth the Goodspeed Award for Outstanding Contribution to Musical Theater at Goodspeed Musical's annual gala.

The fund raising event, which supports the theater's education programs, will be held Saturday, Aug. 11 at The Riverhouse at Goodspeed Station, 55 Bride Road in Haddam, across the river from the Goodspeed Opera House in East Haddam.

Read more at Courant.com 

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