Showing posts with label carey mulligan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label carey mulligan. Show all posts

My Boy Jack

MY BOY JACK will be on PBS January 2nd, 2011

Adapted for a play by David Haig in 1997, My Boy Jack is the name of a famous poem by author Rudyard Kipling written for his son John who was lost in World War I.

Daniel Radcliffe, David Haig, Kim Cattrall, Carey Mulligan

Wikipedia: As The Great War begins, 17 year old Jack Kipling (Radcliffe), the only son of the famous English writer and poet Rudyard Kipling, declares his intention to join the Royal Navy to fight against the Germans. His father (Haig), who encourages him in his ambition, arranges several appointments for him to enlist in both the army and navy. However, Jack's poor eyesight prevents him from passing the medical examinations, and both he and his father are devastated. However, Rudyard uses his influence with the military establishment to eventually secure Jack an officer's commission as a Second Lieutenant in the Irish Guards regiment. Both Jack's mother Carrie (Cattrall), and sister Elsie (Mulligan), disapprove of this post, as they don't wish for him to be deployed on the front lines.


Video: Highlights of 2010 BIFA awards


Quick peek at the awards held this past week for the British Independent Film Awards (BIFA)

Featuring: The King's Speech (winner of 5 awards), Colin Firth, Carey Mulligan, Helena Bonham Carter, Liam Neeson, Rosamund Pike and Joanne Froggat among others...





Joanne Froggat
(Downton Abbey) who won Most Promising Newcomer for her role in "In Our Name".

Helena Bonham Carter was honoured with the Richard Harris Award for outstanding contribution to British film

Carey Mulligan won Best Actress for Never Let Me Go, an award that she won last year for An Education

Liam Neeson was awarded The Variety Award which recognizes an actor, director, writer or producer who has helped to put the international spotlight on the U.K. Past recipients include Michael Caine last year, and Helen Mirren, Richard Curtis, Michael Sheen and Keira Knightley in earlier editions.

BIFA's official website


The Great Gatsby

The American classic by F. Scott Fitzgerald may be getting an update if Australian director Baz Lurhmann has his way...

Casting news from THR:
Carey Mulligan has been officially offered the role of Daisy Buchanan, the starring female role in Baz Luhrmann’s (Moulin Rouge, Australia) adaptation of The Great Gatsby, set up at Columbia.

Luhrmann has been meeting with actors and conducting table reads over the past couple of months in order to find the right mix for his cast, with Leonardo DiCaprio and Tobey Maguire pegged to play Jay Gatsby and Nick Carraway, respectively.

Update: Joel Edgarton has been cast as Tom Buchanan, Daisy's husband

In the novel set in the moneyed society of 1920 Long Island, N.Y., Buchanan is Gatsby’s love, a shallow woman whom Gatsby lost due to his being poor.

According to reports, Mulligan received a phone call from Luhrmann, who told her she won the part, while on the red carpet the Fashion Council Awards in New York.

Baz said regarding the film: "If you wanted to show a mirror to people that says, 'You've been drunk on money,' they're not going to want to see it. But if you reflected that mirror on another time they'd be willing to. People will need an explanation of where we are and where we've been, and 'The Great Gatsby' can provide that explanation."

Update (March 2011): Baz Luhrmann still planning to film movie but not right away

Carey Mulligan - My Fair Lady update & Vogue cover


Carey Mulligan is currently in Toronto at tiff, the film festival, promoting Never Let Me Go and gave an update regarding the remake of My Fair Lady.

"It's not happening this year," she replied. "I've definitely spoken about it, and I would love to do it if it happens, but it's just not happening right now."

"I read the script and the script is incredible. Emma Thompson wrote it. It's telling the story again, in another way and not trying to sort of copy anything and not trying to take away anything from that version of it. It's just telling it in a new era to a new generation of people."

Mulligan went on to say that Wright is not directing and that it will instead by directed by John Madden (Shakespeare in Love, Mrs. Brown, Captain Corelli's Mandolin). And regarding her singing abilities, she said: "I can hold a tune, but not amazingly."[source]

Turns out that Mulligan is a Gleek! She was reportedly turned down after sending an audition of herself singing Belle and Sebastian's Write about Love. "I want to be in Glee, but I'm told I'm not famous enough to be a cameo."

I also read about the original ending for An Education and happy they didn't include
"I want you back — you’re still my Minnie Mouse, I’m still your Bubble-Lub.’ !!!

Images of Carey have also surfaced of her upcoming cover of October's issue of Vogue.
See video here of her photo shoot. (Thanks to Vic for heads up on the Vogue cover at Jane Austen's World)

Think there's a bit of hat overkill myself... but I do love Carey!









Emma Thompson discusses "My Fair Lady" screenplay

I know there are many who aren't fond of anyone remaking the classic My Fair Lady starring Audrey Hepburn and Rex Harrison but here's an article with Emma Thompson discussing some of the ways that she's approaching her screen adaptation...

"I didn't treat it as an icon in my mind," says the screenwriter. "I just looked at it and said: 'How could it be improved?' So I was very cheeky."

That cheekiness began with a much tougher look at Eliza's father, the boozy Alfred P. Doolittle. Quite simply, Thompson views him as a manipulative and calculating slave trader.
Audrey Hepburn
"He's more brutal," she explains of her interpretation. "It's a very terrible thing he does, selling his daughter into sexual slavery for a fiver. I suppose my cheekiness is in saying: 'This is a very serious story about the usage of women at a particular time in our history. And it's still going on today.'?" She admits, "Yes, OK, it's a wonderful musical, but let's also look at what it's really saying about the world."

It's no surprise, then that Thompson doesn't much like the iconic 1964 Oscar-winning film directed by George Cukor.

"I find it chocolate-boxy, clunky and deeply theatrical," she begins. "I don't think that it's a film. It's this theater piece put onto film. It was Cecil Beaton's designs and Rex Harrison that gave it its extraordinary quality. I don't do Audrey Hepburn. I think that she's a guy thing. I'm sure she was this charming lady, but I didn't think she was a very good actress. It's high time that the extraordinary role of Eliza was reinterpreted, because it's a very fantastic part for a woman."

Carey Mulligan
That fantastic part is headed Carey Mulligan's way, according to Thompson, while all sorts of people are pitching for Higgins.

Can we expect more songs -- new songs -- in the revise?

"No, God almighty," Thompson snaps back. "It's so-o-o-o long. It's incredibly long. The audience can expect less songs!"

As Thompson began to dig deeper into what she thought would make her retooled "My Fair Lady" more relevant, she found herself psychologically drawn to George Bernard Shaw's "Pygmalion," the play on which the musical is based, and "intrigued with Shaw's shrewd take on the ins and outs of human foibles. What Shaw did in 'Pygmalion' was say, 'Be careful what you wish for because this could happen.'

"His attitude was very much more clear-eyed and cynical about what Higgins was up to," Thompson stresses. "And it certainly was not something that could have led to a romantic entanglement. Shaw was a great champion of women, and yet there were also the problems that he shared with his fellow man at that time. Women were not considered to be the intellectual equal to men."

That said, "My Fair Lady" is a romance for romantics.

"So my job was to pull that into a not necessarily more modern but a more emotionally connectedly visceral piece so that Higgins and Eliza's relationship becomes absolutely central in a slightly different way," concludes the screenwriter. "My version exists in the real world."

The burning question: Will Thompson the screenwriter give Thompson the actress a role in the film?

"I have quietly nudged the housekeeper, Mrs. Pearce, in my own direction," she offers, and then goes on to joke, "and if they do decide to cast me, I have a whole slew of new songs for her that I've written -- just to build her part up a bit. And, by the way, Higgins goes off with Mrs. Pearce in the end."

Very cheeky stuff indeed.

Source: Variety
-> My Fair Lady (2012)

Carey Mulligan



Carey Mulligan took her first step toward a career in acting by writing to actor Julian Fellowes (the Oscar-winning screenwriter of "Gosford Park") who had spoken at her school. One thing led to another and she got cast as Kitty Bennet in 2005's 'Pride & Prejudice.'"

She's definitely received notice for her role as Jenny in 'An Education'. I found it a bit odd how the press was referring to her as a 'new' actress when we've already enjoyed many of her earlier performances !

Born in Westminster, England in 1985, Carey knew from a young age that she wanted to act. I'm pleased that it's worked out for her so that we get to appreciate her performances! She's the latest entry in my Hall of Fame!

>>article in the Telegraph
>>video interview for An Education
>>video interview regarding nomination for Golden Globes






Pride and Prejudice (1995)


My Boy Jack

Bleak House

And When Did You Last See Your Father?



Just found out that Tom Wilkinson turned down the part of Jenny's father in 'An Education'
which went to Alfred Molina. I would have loved to see Wilkinson in that role
but he will be working alongside Carey in the upcoming This Beautiful Fantastic.


An Education (2009)

It's 1961 and attractive, bright 16-year-old schoolgirl, Jenny (Carey Mulligan) is poised on the brink of womanhood, dreaming of a rarefied, Gauloise-scented existence as she sings along to Juliette Greco in her Twickenham bedroom. Stifled by the tedium of adolescent routine, Jenny can't wait for adult life to begin.

Meanwhile, she's a diligent student, excelling in every subject except the Latin that her father is convinced will land her the place she dreams of at Oxford University. One rainy day, her suburban life is upended by the arrival of an unsuitable suitor, 30- ish David (Peter Sarsgaard). Urbane and witty, David instantly unseats Jenny's stammering schoolboy admirer, Graham (Matthew Beard). To her frank amazement, he even manages to charm her conservative parents Jack (Alfred Molina) and Marjorie (Cara Seymour), and effortlessly overcomes any instinctive objections to their daughter's older, Jewish suitor.

Very quickly, David introduces Jenny to a glittering new world of classical concerts and late-night suppers with his attractive friend and business partner, Danny (Dominic Cooper) and Danny's girlfriend, the beautiful but vacuous Helen (Rosamund Pike). David replaces Jenny's traditional education with his own version, picking her up from school in his Bristol roadster and whisking her off to art auctions and smoky clubs.

Under the pretext of an introduction to C.S. Lewis, David arranges to take Jenny on a weekend jaunt to Oxford with Danny and Helen. Later, using an ingenious mixture of flattery and fibbery, he persuades her parents to allow him to take their only daughter to Paris for her 17th birthday. David suggests that his "Aunt Helen" will once again act as a chaperone. Jack and Marjorie do not know that Jenny has chosen the date and place to lose her virginity.

Paris is all that Jenny imagined it would be, sex with David somewhat less so. On her return to Twickenham, Jenny's school friends are thrilled with her newfound sophistication but her headmistress (Emma Thompson) is scandalised and her English teacher Miss Stubbs (Olivia Williams) is deeply disappointed that her prize pupil seems determined to throw away her evident gifts and certain chance of higher education.

Just as the family's long-held dream of getting their brilliant daughter into Oxford seems within reach, Jenny is tempted by another kind of life.

Will David be the making of Jenny or her undoing?

[synopsis from tribute.ca]

Based on autobiography by Lynn Barber

IMDb

trailer below

(Definitely a Jane Austen connection with these characters: Carey and Rosamund played sisters in P&P, Emma Thompson and Dominic were in S&S (95 and 05), Olivia was in Miss Austen Regrets and Emma, Sally Hawkins (not shown here) was in Persuasion)

Peter Sarsgaard

Carey Mulligan

Peter with Dominic Cooper

Rosamund Pike


Emma Thompson


Olivia Williams

Parents: Cara Seymour and Alfred Molina




Trailer:

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