Showing posts with label voiceovers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label voiceovers. Show all posts

Sunday, 10 March 2013

Ewan McGregor: 'Islands on the Edge' launch, and car commercial debut




Ewan McGregor Adds Voice to ‘Islands’
From Variety:
Wildlife docu to be launched at MipTV
Scottish thesp Ewan McGregor, who features in Bryan Singer’s latest pic Jack the Giant Slayer, provides the voiceover for a wildlife docu filmed in the Hebrides islands off the Scottish coast, which will be launched at Cannes television mart MipTV.
The four-parter, with the working title Islands on the Edge, is distributed by ITV Studios and is produced by U.K. shingle Maramedia.
The series uses state-of-the-art camera technology and was made by a team of filmmakers whose credits include the BBC’s “Frozen Planet” and “Yellowstone,” both strong sellers at international markets. The latter, narrated by Peter Firth, aired in the U.S. as a two-hour special on Animal Planet.
The Hebrides are a collection of small islands off the west coast of Scotland populated by red deer, otters, gannets and eagles. In the nearby Atlantic, dolphins, basking sharks and seals can be seen.
In common with “Yellowstone,” “Islands on the Edge” was filmed over the course of a year.
“Islands on the Edge” is a Maramedia production for BBC Scotland and is due to bow this spring in the U.K.
MipTV runs April 8-11.
Source (including photo): Variety


Watch James Gray direct Ewan McGregor and Vinessa Shaw in a car commercial
The Playlist has come across the following video clip for an ad being produced for French auto company Citron, from director James Gray. Instead of actually advertising anything, or being pulse-pounding as theatrical teasers are, this is the complete opposite, taking viewers behind the scenes into the production, which stars Ewan McGregor and Vinessa Shaw. Ambient music plays over edited footage of TV monitors, a production crew at work, and the actors sitting around a table on set. Not a French car to be found. Watch the video for yourself and see how excited you find yourself for the actual commercial.
Read more, and watch the video, at Cinema Blend

Wednesday, 6 February 2013

David Tennant: project news and updates

 photo tumblr_mhhhn0xeBU1qhlfm8o4_1280.jpg  
Penguins - Spy In The Huddle
David Tennant narrates the three part nature documentary Penguins - Spy In The Huddle which will be broadcast on consecutive Mondays from 11th February at 9pm on BBC One. The programme uses state of the art camera techniques to film penguins in their natural environment in Antarctica and Peru.
More information here
Source: David Tennant on Twitter

The Escape Artist
The BBC have confirmed that David Tennant will star in The Escape Artist, a series of three one hour programmes which will air during 2013 on BBC One. Written by Spooks writer David Wolstencroft, it is about a junior barrister who gets a notorious prime suspect acquitted in a murder trial with chilling results. Ashley Jensen, Toby Kebbell & Sophie Okonedo will also star in the drama.
Filming started on Thursday 31st January and is expected to last until March.
More information here
Source: David Tennant on Twitter

Also reported by Radio Times

Red Nose Day 2013 trailer
See the trailer here
Source: David Tennant on Twitter

Every Seventh Wave
The BBC Media Centre website now has a page about Every Seventh Wave which premieres on BBC Radio Four at 2.15pm on Thursday 14th February.
More information here
Source: David Tennant on Twitter


Richard II
The Royal Shakespeare Company have announced that they will soon release an iPad app which will feature their Winter Season 2013 including Richard II (starring David Tennant).
More information here
Source: David Tennant on Twitter  

Doctor Who
David Tennant was interviewed throughout the BBC America programme Doctors Revisited: The First Doctor which premiered on Sunday 27th January. The video is now available to view worldwide on YouTube (see here).
Source: David Tennant on Twitter

A photo of David Tennant is on the cover of The Doctor Who Quiz Book (50th Anniversary Edition) which can be purchased from this link for a kindle. David is also on the cover of The Doctor Who Quiz Book (The 10th Doctor edition) which can be purchased from this link also for a kindle.
Source: David Tennant on Twitter

Diary Dates
Wed 6 Feb - Winner of the Best Preschool Animated Series in the Kidscreen 2013 Awards will be announced in New York. Tree Fu Tom is nominated.
Thurs 7 Feb - Booking opens for Shakespeare's Circle Members (membership is £100+) for Richard II in Stratford-Upon-Avon.
Fri 8 Feb - David Tennant's episode of Shakespeare Uncovered will have its first US broadcast on PBS at 9pm.
Source: David Tennant on Twitter 

Ewan McGregor: 'Jack The Giant Slayer' set visit, and 'Wild Scotland' narration news

SET VISIT: Jack the Giant Slayer with Ewan McGregor and Nicholas Hoult




We travel to London to visit the set of Jack the Giant Slayer
 
From Movie Web:
We travel to London to speak with Ewan McGregor, Nicholas Hoult, director Bryan Singer, and more on the set of Jack the Giant Slayer
There's just something very special about arriving on a location and seeing a massive castle set right before your very eyes. Actors are riding into a courtyard on horseback, in full medieval armor, that unmistakable sound of horses galloping on soft earth permeating the atmosphere around us. These are the first images and sounds I took in on the set of Jack the Giant Slayer back in August, 2011. I had traveled from the urban jungle of Los Angeles across the pond to Longcross Studios in Surrey, U.K., just an hour or so outside of London, but it felt like much more than an hour outside of London. It felt like centuries outside of the city, and it would get even better once we went inside this enormous castle set.

The scenes we first saw being shot takes place towards the end of the movie, when the warriors of Albian are gathering in Cloister Castle to prepare for their epic battle with the giants. This isn't an everyday occurrence for these fine citizens. The giants were thought to be creatures of myth for years, when, one day, Jack (Nicholas Hoult) unwittingly unlocks the gateway between the land of giants and our world. Naturally, a battle ensues, with the 25-foot-tall giants, who want to reclaim the land they lost centuries ago. During a break in the production, Nicholas Hoult spoke about how his character isn't quite your typical hero, with several obstacles he has yet to overcome.

"He's a dreamer. He's a young farmer. He hasn't had an easy upbringing and then he's kind of catapulted onto this epic mission and falls in love with a princess. He's an average hero - well, average guy who becomes a hero. He's a good guy, which is nice, playing a good guy for once, but he's fairly laid back. He has to overcome quite a few of his fears of heights and thunder and all these sorts of things along the way. But, yeah, he's just an average guy."

Since Jack isn't our typical hero, the princess he falls for (and tries to save from the giants), Isabelle (Eleanor Tomlinson), is not your garden-variety symbol of royalty. The actress explained how Isabelle isn't a conventional princess, how she was born into this life she didn't exactly want.

"She's definitely not typical. That's kind of what I love about her. She has this side to her, which is really fiery. She didn't want to be a princess. She was just born into this life. As amazing as it is, it's not necessarily what she wants. She feels a bit trapped, I think. Her relationship with her father, after her mother died, is coming under a lot of pressure, because he's the king and he doesn't understand her. She just wants to be a normal girl. She wants to fall in love for love, not for the kingdom. She's got that temper, that spark about her, which is different from other fairy tales, I think."

Nicholas Hoult as Jack in Jack the Giant Slayer
Nicholas Hoult as Jack in Jack the Giant Slayer
 
After watching several takes of the riders coming into the castle, we were taken inside this enormous exterior set, which may have been the most immense set I've ever been on in my five years of visiting movie sets. We walked past these big vats of molten lava, that the archers use for flaming arrows. We also saw another set extension past the castle set, that shows us some of the giant's homeland. Naturally, everything was bigger, including a huge net that Jack gets captured in.

We also got to see a more humorous scene with Nicholas Hoult and Eleanor Tomlinson that pokes a bit of fun at the dynamic between the humans and the giants. Both Jack and Isabelle are seen coming out of two fake kings robes inside the castle. While it may just be a simple shot, it's fun to see little bits of humor sprinkled throughout such an epic adventure.

Our assembled press corps also got to speak with is Ewan McGregor, who plays Elmont, the leader of the elite soldiers known as the Guardians. Dressed in an elaborate costume with spiky hair (I'm not sure what they used for hair gel in these days...) and an intricately maintained mustache, Ewan McGregor seemed to exude the pomp and circumstance that comes with such a regal character. Given Jack's peasant nature, Elmont doesn't quite know what to make of young Jack when they first meet. The actor described Elmont's first encounter with Jack, during a scene where the townsfolk are enjoying a pantomime based on the giant's legend.

Ewan McGregor as Elmot in Jack the Giant Slayer
Ewan McGregor as Elmot in Jack the Giant Slayer

"He's a bit dubious about Jack to begin with, I think. My character's main job is to look after the princess, during peacetime, that's my main lookout. It strikes me, and I've never discussed it with anyone, but the Guardians are the kind of royal soldiers, the top knights. But during the peacetime at the beginning of the film they're in charge of the security and safety of the royal family. So, myself and Eddie Marsan's character, it seems that we are in charge of looking after Isabelle, the princess. She's a very reluctant princess and she's always trying to slip off into the kingdom and have a life. She wants her freedom, in a way. She's a bit of a reluctant princess, so she's quite difficult to look after. And so my first encounter with Jack is when she's given us the slip. We find her at the beginning of the film, there's a pantomime going on about this fable of the giants who live in the sky. It was really nicely put together by Warwick (Davis) who has an agency of small and very big people, so he used all his actors and he directed this pantomime that we shot in this lovely, old circus tent. We find Isabelle there, she's watching the show. At that point, when we come into the tent, everyone bows down because we represent the king, except for Jack, who doesn't bow down because he's taken by surprise. So my first introduction to him is that he's somebody who's not very respectful to us and I'm a bit dubious about what he's after with the princess as well. But as the story unfolds and, once the beanstalk has appeared and the princess has disappeared, he comes along with us, with the Guardians, the kind of search party for her. Slowly, he keeps proving himself over and over."

Ah yes, the beanstalk. Part of me was hoping to see a massive, 100-foot tall beanstalk on the set, but, alas, it was not there. Nicholas Hoult described shooting the sequence where Jack's uncle's house shot up into the sky after the beanstalk sprouted.

"That sequence is really cool. They built Jack's uncle's house in the studios and then had it on a rig where the whole house would shake and the floorboards would explode. There was like a ram in the floor. I would be running to try to get to Ellie and it hit me in the stomach, lift me up and then I get thrown out through the roof. It was a lot of fun to do all that and there's a bit of dialogue in that scene as well. So that was that sequence and then the princess is trapped inside the house with the beanstalk growing and lifting up into the sky, so Jack's trying to get in to save her and help her. I'm giving away quite a lot of the story."

Nicholas Hoult as Jack and Eleanor Tomlinson as Princess Isabelle in Jack the Giant Slayer
Nicholas Hoult as Jack and Eleanor Tomlinson as Princess Isabelle in Jack the Giant Slayer
 
Nicholas Hoult also spoke about working with Ewan McGregor and Eddie Marsan, and how Jack has always looked up to their Guardian characters.

"I kind of become, not part of them, but on the mission with them and obviously this is an exciting thing for Jack because they're the lead soldiers that he looks up to and wanted to be at a young age. It's a lot of fun doing those things with those guys. Eddie's like one of the funniest people, and Ewan as well. They're very relaxed on set and easy to get along with. We have fun. There's some funny scenes. Yeah, so it's lots of fun those days, we're all climbing the beanstalk."

Ewan McGregor also shared an intriguing scene where a giant attempts to cook Elmont into a form of pastry.

"There's another moment where a giant rolls me in pastry to put me in the oven. The actual rolling in pastry was a technical challenge for the special effects team. They made a body mold of me and then made the back mold that I could lie in and then the front mold clamped over me, Velcroed over me, so I was held in place on an arm. Then, that was lowered onto the pastry. As the giant rolls me over like this, the rig rolled over and then the pastry wrapped around me."

Perhaps my favorite part of the entire visit was getting to spend a considerable amount of time with director Bryan Singer, who I've been a fan of since his critically-acclaimed 1995 drama The Usual Suspects. First off, there are several set visits I've been on where we don't even get to see or talk with the director at all. Not only did we get to speak with the filmmaker at length, but he showed us a lot of very cool bits of footage, including a few items that will likely make its way onto the Blu-ray and DVD special features.

Director Bryan Singer holding court on the set of Jack the Giant Killer
Director Bryan Singer holding court on the set of Jack the Giant Killer
 
While the director was rather eager to show us footage, the method in which this footage materialized was, initially, somewhat bizarre. He would just start talking to no one in particular ("Can I have the pre-vis? Back it up to right there. Play the sound.") and, seconds later, his wish would be presented on the monitors in front of his. It took me a minute (probably more) to realize that he had a PA speaker nearby, and everything he was saying was going to someone else, who would play the footage he requested on our monitors. After showing us some pre-vis (a.k.a. pre-visualization) footage of a giant, the filmmaker explained how he is using Simul-Cam technology on the set.

"We pre-cap, or performance capture all the giant's action earlier and then we have all that information of what the actors did and put it in the computer and then we actually project the actor's performances on the set, which is called Simul-Cam. James Cameron used a little in Avatar in some of the scenes that involve humans and those other characters together. We use a lot more of it because we more humans interacting."

Eleanor Tomlinson also spoke about how using the Simul-Cam technology, which allows the actors to see the CGI giants they are acting against on the set, is a a very helpful tool.

"It's hard work. It's really hard work, but it's really interesting. We have this camera, I think it's called a Simul-Cam, and when you play it back, you can see the giant in the scene you just shot. It's incredible. You're reacting to a tennis ball that's way up there, then when you watch it, it's this huge giant's face on it. Wow. That's cool. I just can't wait to see it when it's all edited together and the special effects are all crystal clear. It's going to be, hopefully, amazing."

Nicholas Hoult, Eleanor Tomlinson, Ewan McGregor, and Ian McShane prepare to battle the giants in Jack the Giant Slayer
Nicholas Hoult, Eleanor Tomlinson, Ewan McGregor, and Ian McShane
prepare to battle the giants in Jack the Giant Slayer
 
Bryan Singer explained how Simul-Cam helps him frame these huge CGI shots the right way, by seeing these virtual creations through his monitors on the set, instead of months later in post-production.

"I think it's helpful. In the old days they were just putting the camera there and having actors act to tennis balls and hope that they're framing up. What's helpful is I know what to do with the camera because I see the giant in the camera, I'm operating it live on the set. The actor's can't, they see tennis balls, but I can through the lens, I know to tilt up like that if I want to capture that. When I'm shooting it, I'm seeing a giant chasing them, yeah I pan up to the giant, I know my plates will be usable, because then I have the giant."

While the filmmaker is quite accomplished, Jack the Giant Slayer represents a lot of firsts for Bryan Singer, which he candidly revealed, along with his disdain for a certain pet.

"First 3D, first fairy tale, first movie with fully rendered CG characters, creature characters, first movie that takes place in a time before there was electricity, first movie with horses, third movie with cats. They're very difficult to direct. They look everywhere but where you want them to look."

Bryan Singer shared the difficulties of shooting his first 3D movie, how he has to control the camera motion, and much more.

"In 3D, it changes the way you shoot, in a way, I mean if, especially when you're shooting live action 3D elements. I mean for James Cameron, he's in the virtual world with a movie like Avatar, so you have a lot you can, you can adjust those things. But when you're dealing with shooting a lot of live action, in 3D, you're committed to your, your interaxial. How much 3D you're giving the audience and also, if the camera's moving around too much it strobes. If you get people too much into the side of the frame here, they look like a blob that's sort of there and it's kind of aggravating. It's compositional. I can't just pop two cameras in. I have to be more committed to the shots."

One of the slain giants in Jack the Giant Slayer
One of the slain giants in Jack the Giant Slayer
 
Despite the changes that need to be made behind the camera when shooting for 3D, Ewan McGregor didn't have any problems with the 3D setup.

"I don't think it's as slow as people think. This film has been very slow, but I couldn't blame the 3D for it. Early on maybe there was more problems with it. Though sometimes there are problems because each camera is, in fact, two cameras and sometimes the 3D, like one eye will go out. I don't pretend to understand it all completely, but each camera represents our eyes so it's a slightly different angle on the scene. They have to play with the perspective of that, so there's the focus but also the convergence, I think it's called. Occasionally, one of the eyes will go out, but really not that much. I haven't found it to be that slow. In actual fact, that seems to be the nature of it. Again, I've never discussed this with anyone, but it seems to me that we do less coverage on a scene. The 3D has more of a sense of everybody in the scene, so if there's a shot with 4 or 5 people in it, you're already sort of in your own shot because of the 3D feel. It seems to me that we've had less close-ups and less coverage. So if this 3D is slower, which I don't think it is really, then we save time with the lack of coverage."

Read more at MovieWeb
 
 
Ewan McGregor to narrate new series 'Wild Scotland'



Ewan McGregor is to join Sir David Attenborough for a series of programmes about the wilderness and wildlife of Scotland.
The show Wild Scotland will feature programmes on the Hebrides and the Scottish midsummer.
Executive producer Neil McDonald said the programmes celebrate "the televisual gift of the Scottish scenery and wildlife for viewers and for the people, behind the camera, that it inspires".
The BBC Scotland programme will feature basking sharks and white-tailed eagles, as well as red deer stags battling to win their mates and seals struggling to protect their newborn pups.
In a recent tweet, McGregor wrote: "2 days narrating #BBCHebrides. It's one of the most beautiful films I've seen.
“Should be seen in Scotland in May. What a treat!"
Another series called Wild Cameramen At Work reveals how the Scottish landscape has inspired a generation of world-class cameramen.
Narrated by Sir David, each week looks at a different theme, ice, land, sky or sea, to illustrate the challenges faced by those behind the camera.
"Scottish viewers will just not have seen Scottish scenery and wildlife reflected in such cinematic majesty before as we have in Hebrides - Islands On The Edge.
"This is the flagship for a season of programmes, which celebrates the televisual gift of the Scottish scenery and wildlife for viewers and for the people, behind the camera, that it inspires.
"Across the season, we are also delighted to have such star names as Ewan McGregor and Sir David Attenborough involved as well as some of the top names behind the camera alongside the main attraction: the landscape and wildlife."
Source: STV


Sunday, 2 December 2012

David Tennant: forthcoming appearances and project updates

Photobucket

  • Diary dates
Sun 2 Dec - Autism-friendly screenings of Nativity 2 Danger In The Manger! in cinemas around the country (UK). Details here

  • Big Issue
David Tennant was featured in The Big Issue on Monday 26 November.
 This link has details regarding how you can buy a copy from anywhere in the world.

  • Nativity 2
During the opening weekend of Nativity 2 Danger In The Manger! it grossed £1.6 million which was double the amount the original Nativity movie earned in its first weekend.
The Guardian (who gave the movie a bad review) has an article titled "A stable start for Nativity 2: Danger in the Manger." It says that the movie was the third most popular movie at UK cinemas during its opening weekend:
1. The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 2, £5,344,598 from 559 sites. Total: £26,979,458
2. Skyfall, £3,809,893 from 550 sites. Total: £89,620,677
3. Nativity 2: Danger in the Manger!, £1,614,675 from 435 sites (New)
The soundtrack of Nativity 2 Danger In The Manger! now available on iTunes.

The Mumsnet Nativity 2 Danger In The Manger! Advent Calendar today has a free download of the song Yes We Can from the movie.

A David Tennant video interview about Nativity 2 Danger In The Manger! from Magic FM can be viewed here.

  • Secret Universe: The Hidden Life Of The Cell

There is now a worldwide link to watch the David Tennant narrated documentary Secret Universe: The Hidden Life Of The Cell.

  • How To Train Your Dragon

The BBC have announced the outline of their Christmas programming and it includes the movie How To Train Your Dragon in which David Tennant has a couple of lines.

  • Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone
A clip of David Tennant reading an extract from Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone has been posted onto Tumblr.

  • Christian O'Connell / Absolute Radio
Christian O'Connell has tweeted that his last show of 2012 on Absolute Radio will be co-hosted by David Tennant and he has described it as an 'Alternative Nativity.' Christian did not specify on which day the programme will air.
Christian O'Connell further tweeted that the show will be on Friday 21st December and that it will be in front of a live audience with people taking part as in a children's Nativity play. He will broadcast how to win a part in the audience next week.


  • Riders of Berk
David Tennant voices a character in the US television series Dreamworks Dragons: Riders Of Berk. More information here
Scotsman.com has an article about David Tennant voicing a character in Dreamworks Dragons Riders Of Berk on US television.

  • The Spies of Warsaw
The Spies Of Warsaw was one of the programmes included in a BBC Worldwide's showcase last night according to a report on Bandt.com. This means that the drama will be broadcast on Australian television.

  • Broadchurch

DavidTennantOnTwitter.com has published an update on Broadchurch filming schedules, including David Tennant arriving on set at 10.30am on Friday, and the news that filming on the drama will now end on Tuesday (4th) and not Friday as originally announced.

greylight5_b on Twitter has posted a photo of shooting in a graveyard during the day for Broadchurch. Apparently David Tennant was involved with the filming (and then filmed that night too!)

On Thursday night David Tennant had a night shoot for Broadchurch. It started at 10pm in Hill Road, Clevedon which Andrew (who emailed us about the shoot) described as "next door to Scoozi restaurant where they had made a mock up hotel opposite what was Seeleys stationers and has now been mocked up as the Echo news office."



Source of all David Tennant news: DavidTennantOnTwitter

Sunday, 4 November 2012

Gerard Butler


Gerard Butler: 'Dragons: Gift of the Night Fury' voice actor
It was recently announced that Gerard will be lending his voice in the half-hour animated special Dragons: Gift Of The Night Fury, based on DreamWorks Animation’s How To Train Your Dragon, airing on December 17 on Fox.
Source: Just Jared

Gerard Butler to star in 'Dynamo'
Gerard Butler is to star in a new soccer movie.

The 300 actor - an avid Celtic fan - has signed up to appear in Dynamo, a true-life tale which chronicles an historic game between an occupied Ukrainian team and their Nazi captors during World War II.

The game - which was dubbed The Death Match - saw the Nazis pit a squad of well-treated German players against a starving group of Ukrainians with the expectation of an easy win. However, their opponents, spurred on by goalkeeper Nikolai Trusevich - who Gerard will play - fought back and ultimately inspired their entire city.

The film is based on Andy Dougan's book 'Dynamo: Defending The Honour Of Kiev' and has a script by Eli Richbourg.The project does not yet have a director in place, but Riviera Pictures, Beau Flynn of FlynnPictureCo., and Jeremy Garelick will produce. Pathé co-developed and will co-produce and distribute the film worldwide.

'Dynamo' will shoot in Europe some time next year.
Source: The National Ledger
Also reported by NME  Indie Wire and many, many more!


'Olympus Has Fallen' release date revealed
It was recently announced that Gerard Butler‘s upcoming film Olympus Has Fallen has been given a release date for April 5, 2013
Source: Just Jared

Sunday, 5 August 2012

Billy Boyd narrates Hobbit stage production

Billy Boyd to narrate the story of the first-ever Hobbit stage production on BBC Radio 4 this Saturday

This Saturday (August 4) at 10.30am, Billy Boyd will narrate the story behind the first ever stage production of of J.R.R.Tolkien’s The Hobbit on BBC Radio 4.

The very first stage production, written by Humphrey Carpenter with music composed by Paul Drayton, was performed at New College School in Oxford in 1967.

Some of the choristers in that first production are now eminent in the musical world: choral conductor Simon Halsey, Opera North’s Martin Pickard and artist’s agent Stephen Lumsden. Composer Howard Goodall watched his older brother Ashley perform. They talk about their memories and of Tolkien’s presence in the audience on the last night.

Thanks to Ringer Andrew for the heads-up.

Update: Ringer HuanCry adds that Radio 4 is also broadcasting a documentary Tolkien in Love the day before.

Source: The One Ring


As this was broadcast yesterday, here's the link to listen again - BBC Radio 4

Monday, 30 July 2012

The Big Music

From Canongate TV:
We're loving this beautiful film, narrated by the actor Brian Cox, made to celebrate publication of Kirsty Gunn’s ambitious new novel, The Big Music.
Published by our good friends at Faber, The Big Music is getting plenty of attention in the press and deservedly so. As the fabulous review in the Sunday Times says, "This novel, like the music it emulates, is thunderous, dissonant and beautiful."



Source: Canongate TV 

Sunday, 27 May 2012

Peter Capaldi: Whisky Stramash | Punk Britannia BBC Breakfast interview



Peter Capaldi performs at forthcoming Whisky Stramash
As the final touches are being put in place for 2012’s most unique whisky event, the inaugural Edinburgh Whisky Stramash, which takes place at Surgeons’ Hall on 26th & 27th May, some details of the cast performing the Jura Murder Mystery have been announced.

The Jura Murder Mystery, an experience at this year’s Whisky Stramash, allows audiences to witness the suspense shortly after the gruesome demise of a fictitious Jura Distillery Manager in a classic whodunnit. Peter Capaldi has been cast as the murdered Distillery Manager who comes to life to tell the story in the production that has been described as “Scoobie Do meets Coronation Street”. 

At the conclusion of the play, audiences will be invited to guess who they suspect the perpetrator to be for the chance of winning a once in a lifetime trip to Jura.

Read more at The Whisky Stramash

Also reported by The Scotsman  









Peter capaldi narrates ‘Punk Britannia’
Episode 1 of 3: Pre-Punk 1972-1976

Narrated by Peter Capaldi, this opener of a three-part documentary series in BBC FOUR's celebrated 'Britannia' strand is scheduled to chime with the 35th anniversary of the Queen's Silver Jubilee and the arrival of punk as national and then international music culture.

Fri 1 Jun 2012 BBC Four 21:00

Read more at BBC 

 
From February, a BBC Breakfast interview with Peter Capaldi


Source: YouTube

Wednesday, 16 May 2012

Sir Sean Connery to narrate 600 years of university history in film







Sir Sean Connery is lending his support to St Andrews University by narrating a film about its history.

The film Ever to Excel is the first cinematic account of the foundation and development of the institution and will be premièred on Wednesday in New York.

Sir Sean, film director Murray Grigor OBE, and principal and vice-chancellor of the University of St Andrews professor Louise Richardson will be in New York for the première.

The university is currently celebrating its 600th anniversary spanning three years from 2011 to 2013.

Sir Sean said: “When Louise Richardson invited me to collaborate on a film to mark our 600 years, as a key part of the scholarship endowment campaign, I readily agreed.

“As our film Ever to Excel began to take shape, I soon came to realise how central St Andrews is to Scotland. And how, in a very real sense, it is to America too.

“I’m proud to be an honorary graduate of a place where good is never good enough. Happy Birthday St Andrews.”

Talented graduates who star in the film also include, Scotland’s First Minister Alex Salmond, novelist Fay Weldon, poet Jay Parini, psychiatrist Kay Redfield Jamison, the writer Alastair Reid, as well as executive director at The Foundation for Tomorrow Meghann Gunderman, and businessman Oliver Sarkozy.

Together with Sir Sean’s narrative their memories and recollections help to tell the remarkable story of how a university came to be founded on the East coast of Scotland in the 15th century and of those who have since left St Andrews to change the world.

The film also includes revealing interviews with staff who taught Prince William of Wales, who is a graduate of the university, as is his wife, the Duchess of Cambridge Catherine Middleton. Both attended the official launch of the university’s 600th Anniversary Campaign of which Prince William is patron.

Source (with preview): STV 
Also reported (with 9 minute trailer) by St Andrews Radio 

Sunday, 29 April 2012

David Tennant - Pirates! news, Shakespeare premiere, Twenty Twelve update


Pirates!
The Pirates! Band Of Misfits was released in the US on Friday 27 April. This is the movie which was called The Pirates! In An Adventure With Scientists in Britain. Even David Tennant has said in interviews that he does not know the reason for the change in name!

However it is not only the name which has changed as some eagle-eyed fans have noticed that a couple of the actors have changed too. For example, Russell Tovey who voices the Albino Pirate is replaced by Anton Yelchin.
David Tennant voices the young Charles Darwin in the Aardman Animations movie.
Read more at David Tennant on Twitter

 

Amazon are now listing the Region 2 (Europe) release date for the movie The Pirates! In An Adventure With Scientists as 24th September.
More information here



 



Shakespeare
Romeo and Juliet will have its first transmission on Sunday 29 April at 8.30pm on BBC Radio Three.  
David Tennant plays Prince Escalus.

More details at David Tennant on Twitter





BBC America to air Olympics mockumentary: 'Twenty Twelve'
BBC America will air a mockumentary series depicting preparations for this year's Olympic Games in London and starring Hugh Bonneville (Downton Abbey).

Twenty Twelve, which will feature Bonneville, Olivia Colman (Tyrannosaur), Amelia Bullmore, Vincent Franklin, Jessica Hynes and Karl Theobald, will have 12 half-hour episodes on BBC America beginning June 30.  

David Tennant (Doctor Who) is the narrator. 

Read more at Chicago Tribune 


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