Tuesday, April 27th, 2010 at
7:15 pm
Comedian and actress Victoria Wood is to star in a TV drama about the early years of Morecambe and Wise, playing Eric Morecambe’s mother.
The BBC drama chronicles the comedy duo’s path from the child talent circuit to mainstream adult success.
The actors who will play Morecambe and Wise as children and adults have yet to be announced.
Doctor Who star Matt Smith is also set to appear in a BBC drama about the novelist Christopher Isherwood.
Isherwood wrote A Single Man, which was adapted into the 2010 Oscar-nominated film starring Colin Firth.
Precocious
The television play will chart how the writer left his domineering mother (played by Lindsay Duncan) for the decadent climate of 1930s Berlin.
Wood who won best actress and best single drama at the Baftas in 2007 for Housewife, 49, will take on the pushy role of Eric Morecambe’s mother Sadie.
Morecambe was a reluctant child performer next to precocious star Ernie Wise, but went on to become the funnyman of the comic pairing.
The screenplay is by Peter Bowker, whose other credits include Blackpool and Occupation.
The new dramas have been announced as part of extra investment in BBC Two which will roll out over the next three years.
Transmission dates for the dramas are due to be announced at a later date.
Tuesday, March 16th, 2010 at
6:14 am
I haven’t read the book, so just watched the movie with a blank canvas (no pun intended). At the end we see Colin Firth emerge with a burnt scarred face and he goes down to the cellar to the portrait -but wasn’t this destroyed in the fire along with Dorian? Didn’t he die? The ending was quite confusing.
Sunday, March 14th, 2010 at
3:14 am
Or is it something more? I know they’re charming and all, I find them attractive myself… But what do you think is it exactly?
Thursday, March 11th, 2010 at
10:14 am
That split screen madness I did for actress and supporting actress is never as much fun for men so I’m foregoing due to time constraints. But needless to say I was very happy for Jeff Bridges (long time coming/The Dude abides), loved watching him tear up while he listened to Michelle Pfeiffer’s Fabulous Baker Boys memories and I was almost even happier to see that Colin Firth (my personal fav this year) seemed so happy for Bridges, just beaming from the audience.
While we’re on the subject… the film experience ballot if you could only hold the Oscars once a decade (GOD FORBID!):
Nathaniel’s Choice For Best Actor 2000-2009
- Daniel Day-Lewis, There Will Be Blood (the Oscar winner)
- Johnny Depp, Pirates of the Caribbean (nominated, lost)
- Heath Ledger, Brokeback Mountain (nominated, lost) – my decade winner
- Viggo Mortensen, Eastern Promises (nominated, lost)
- Mickey Rourke, The Wrestler (nominated, lost)
I think that’s what it would be. Hard to narrow it down that much. Depp’s complete genius as Capt. Jack Sparrow has been unfortunately depreciated by calcifying returns to the same role but I will never dispute nor stand for others doubting his creativity the first time round. Maybe if reconsidered, Mortensen would have to step down for Sean Penn (Milk) or Bill Murray (Lost in Translation) or Christian Bale (American Psycho) or… well, you get the point. It’s always a close call for that fifth spot.
Here’s my favorite of Oscar’s winners this past decade.
With apologies to Denzel Washington in Training Day… King Kong aint got shit on him. Best Actor wins are much kinder to me than Best Actress wins. Even though my #1 in any give year is almost never shared with Oscar, fairly often they do choose my 2nd or 3rd favorite of the year. And that’s good enough when it comes to Oscar. How often does the Best Actor winning performance work wonders for you?
Oscars in Review: worst & weirdest moments, most wonderful moments and all 09/10 awards season posts
Tuesday, December 8th, 2009 at
5:35 pm
Reuters – For more than 20 years, Colin Firth has been the movie industry’s go-to, buttoned-up English man.
Tuesday, December 8th, 2009 at
4:59 pm
Not only was John Lennon a musical genius, but he was also very funny. Lennon was highly inspired by The Goon Show, which was a British radio comedy that featured the comedic likes of Spike Milligan and Peter Sellers. You could see Lennon’s comedy stylings in such films as Hard Day’s Night, Help, and the psychedelic kookiness of The Magical Mystery Tour