Showing posts with label British Actor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label British Actor. Show all posts
Thursday, January 14, 2016
British actor Alan Rickman dies at 69
Veteran British actor Alan Rickman, who played the role of Professor Snape in the Harry Potter films among many others, has died aged 69, his agent said on Thursday.
Rickman was well known for his film portrayals of villainous characters including the Sheriff of Nottingham in Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, and was also a leading stage actor. British media said he had been suffering from cancer.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Friday, November 13, 2015
Radcliffe of 'Harry Potter' fame gets Hollywood star
Congratulations Daniel Radcliffe! #HollywoodWalkofFamepicture source: Alberto E. Rodriguez
Posted by DanielJRadcliffe.tk on Thursday, November 12, 2015LOS ANGELES, United States - British actor Daniel Radcliffe, who rocketed to fame in the "Harry Potter" films, said Thursday he was "in awe" as he got his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
"A few months ago, I was walking along here with a couple of friends and just becoming sort of in awe and slightly overwhelmed by the names I was going to be joining," said the 26-year-old, who was presented with the 2,565th star.
"Growing up in England, you hear the word Hollywood and right after, you picture the sign on the hill, you picture these stars."
Radcliffe, who played the boy wizard in the wildly popular eight-film blockbuster "Potter" franchise before moving on to more adult roles, was in Los Angeles to promote his new movie "Victor Frankenstein."
In the film, which opens in the United States later this month, he plays assistant Igor to the mad scientist obsessed with creating life, portrayed by James McAvoy.
Radcliffe is one of the rare child stars to have successfully maintained his career as he moved into adulthood.
He has starred in a number of films since finishing up as Potter, including "The Woman in Black" and "Kill Your Darlings." He also had a cameo in this year's comedy hit "Trainwreck."
Radcliffe has appeared on Broadway, notably in the musical comedy "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying" and the psycho-drama "Equus," in which he stunned fans by disrobing on stage.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Friday, June 26, 2015
Patrick Macnee, star of 1960s TV show 'The Avengers', dead at 93
LOS ANGELES, United States - Patrick Macnee, the British actor who rose to international fame as the star of the popular 1960s television spy series "The Avengers," died Thursday at his home in California. He was 93.
The Briton -- who earned legions of fans for his portrayal of eccentric but suave secret agent John Steed, armed with only his trusty umbrella-sword -- died of natural causes with his family at his side, his son Rupert said on the actor's website.
The actor -- whose full name was Daniel Patrick Macnee -- also performed on stage, in both London's West End and New York's Broadway, and served in the Royal Navy during World War II.
Born in 1922 into a wealthy family in London and educated at Britain's exclusive Eton school, Macnee spent years after the war taking minor roles on stage and screen, including in Laurence Olivier's 1948 film version of "Hamlet."
But his turn as Steed -- which began in 1961 -- would bring him international fame.
Macnee, sporting a smart suit and a bowler hat, starred alongside a bevy of beautiful women -- most notably Diana Rigg in the role of the glamorous, uber-fashionable Emma Peel.
The actor often said in interviews that he insisted on his character not using a gun, because of the violence he had witnessed in World War II.
The series went off the air in 1969 but was briefly rebooted in the 1970s as "The New Avengers," with Joanna Lumley -- who would later star in "Absolutely Fabulous" -- as Purdey, one of his sidekicks.
The series returned to life again in 1998, in a big-screen version with Ralph Fiennes as the stylish steed, and Uma Thurman donning Peel's leather cat suit.
Macnee had an off-camera, voice-only role. But the film suffered from withering reviews.
Other notable roles for Macnee included 1980s appearances in "This is Spinal Tap," Rob Reiner's razor-sharp rock movie parody, and in the James Bond film "A View to a Kill" alongside Roger Moore's super-spy.
Moore remembered the actor on Twitter, saying: "So very sad to hear Pat Macnee has left us. We were mates from 1950s and I have so many happy memories of working with him. A true gent."
On US television, he had guest spots on several long-running series such as "The Love Boat," "Frasier" and "Magnum, P.I."
He stopped acting in the early 2000s.
Later in life, he advocated stricter gun controls, according to his website.
Macnee spent the last 40 years living in California, and died at his home in Rancho Mirage.
"He was at home wherever in the world he found himself. He had a knack for making friends, and keeping them. Wherever he went, he left behind a trove of memories and good wishes," said the statement on his website.
Macnee was married three times. All three wives predeceased him. He had a son, Rupert, and a daughter, Jenny.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Friday, January 16, 2015
Rising star Redmayne eyes Oscar after Globe win
LONDON -- There may be no shortage of British talent in Hollywood, but all eyes in Britain are now on Eddie Redmayne, the newcomer hoping to add an Oscar to the Golden Globe he has just won.
The 33-year-old has been nominated in the best actor category for his role as theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking in "The Theory of Everything," the world's most famous living scientist crippled by an advanced form of motor neurone disease.
He is also nominated for a BAFTA award next month.
Among his fellow Oscar nominees is his friend and fellow British thespian Benedict Cumberbatch, who also played a troubled genius, Alan Turing, in "The Imitation Game."
Redmayne has won plaudits for his theater work over the past decade, and has had parts in a number of big films, but this was his first leading man role -- and it has propelled him into the big league.
The film tells the story of Hawking and his wife Jane, starting in the 1960s at Cambridge University -- before he was diagnosed at the age of 21 with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).
Based on a memoir by Jane, played by fellow Oscar nominee Felicity Jones, it charts how their relationship changes as his health declines and his fame grows, until their marriage fell apart in the early 1990s.
Redmayne was not on the first choice to play Hawking. But he managed to arrange a meeting in a pub with director James Marsh, where he drank too much beer out of nerves and secured the part without an audition.
Immersing himself in the role, he spent four months visiting people with motor neurone disease at a clinic in London and reading everything he could by Hawking.
The result is a physical transformation that has been compared to Daniel Day-Lewis's Oscar-winning performance in "My Left Foot."
Hawking has reportedly said there were moments watching the film when he thought he was watching himself, and he gave the ultimate seal of approval by allowing the director to use his trademark computerized voice.
Redmayne said he was "terrified" that Hawking might not like it, but that it was an honor to spend time with him -- even if the first meeting started badly.
Lost for words, the star-struck actor blurted out that they were both Capricorns, to which Hawking replied: "I'm an astronomer, not an astrologer."
Chiseled good looks
The son of a London banker with four siblings, Redmayne took acting classes from a young age and was a child extra in the West End production of "Oliver!".
He attended the elite Eton school alongside Prince William and studied History of Art at Cambridge -- the same university where Hawking still works.
Barely a year after graduating, Redmayne had a part in an all-male production of "Twelfth Night" by Shakespeare's Globe theater, and by 2004 had won his first theater award.
A few years later he picked up both a Laurence Olivier award and a Tony award for his role as artist Mark Rothko's fictional assistant Ken in the play "Red."
He has also appeared in a number of hit films including "The Good Shepherd," "Elizabeth: The Golden Age" and "The Other Boleyn Girl." He also played Marius in the Oscar-winning 2012 musical "Les Miserables."
Like Cumberbatch, Redmayne is blessed with chiseled good looks that always had the potential to make him a star, and indeed, has seen him model for luxury brand Burberry.
Both men have a legion of fans on Twitter, dubbed respectively the "Redmayniacs" and the "Cumberbitches," undaunted by Redmayne's recent marriage and Cumberbatch's impending nuptials.
While the Hawking biopic has won him an Oscar nomination, the next film on his CV is set to send Redmayne's profile stratospheric.
Next month will see the release of the latest offering by "The Matrix" trilogy's Andy and Lana Wachowski, the sci-fi movie "Jupiter Ascending," in which Redmayne plays a villain with a six-pack.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Saturday, July 12, 2014
British 'Harry Potter' actor David Legeno found dead in US park
NEW YORK - British actor David Legeno, who appeared as a werewolf in the "Harry Potter" films, was found dead by hikers in a remote area of Death Valley, California police said on Friday.
The Inyo County Sheriff's Office said the body of Legeno, 50, was found early on Sunday morning and a helicopter was used to transport it from the area.
"It appears that Legeno died of heat related issues, but the Inyo County coroner will determine the final cause of death. There are no signs of foul play," the sheriff's office said in a statement.
The burly, London-born, professional boxer and martial arts expert played Fenrir Greyback the ferocious werewolf in several of the "Harry Potter" films. He also appeared on television and in a string of movies, including "Snow White and the Huntsman," "Snatch," "Centurion" and "Batman Begins."
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Saturday, March 30, 2013
Harry Potter actor Richard Griffiths dies aged 65
LONDON - British actor Richard Griffiths, best known for his roles in Harry Potter and the cult film "Withnail & I", has died aged 65, his agent said on Friday.
The portly star of stage and screen, one of Britain's best loved character actors, died on Thursday from complications following heart surgery, his agent Simon Beresford said.
Griffiths will be forever remembered by fans of cult classic "Withnail & I" as the amorous Uncle Monty, although he reached his biggest audience as Uncle Vernon Dursley in the Harry Potter films.
Daniel Radcliffe, who played the boy wizard in the blockbuster Potter series, led the tributes to Griffiths who he said had offered him "encouragement, tutelage and humour".
"Richard was by my side during two of the most important moments of my career," Radcliffe said in a statement.
The first was in August 2000, when Radcliffe was filming his first ever shot as Harry. "I was nervous and he made me feel at ease," the actor recalled.
"Seven years later, we embarked on Equus together. It was my first time doing a play but, terrified as I was, his encouragement, tutelage and humour made it a joy," Radcliffe said.
"In fact, any room he walked into was made twice as funny and twice as clever just by his presence. I am proud to say I knew him."
Beresford said the late star "brightened my days and enriched the life of anyone he came into contact with".
"Richard gave acting a good name. He was a remarkable man and one of our greatest and best-loved actors. He will be greatly missed," he said in a statement.
Nicholas Hytner, who directed Griffiths in one of his biggest hits in Britain, The History Boys, said he was "the life of every party".
Griffiths won several awards for his theatre role as an inspirational teacher in The History Boys in London and New York, and later won a Bafta nomination for his role in the film version.
"His performance in The History Boys was quite overwhelming: a masterpiece of wit, delicacy, mischief and desolation, often simultaneously," said Hytner, the director of the National Theatre in London.
"But that was just one small part of a career that spanned Shakespeare, cutting-edge new plays and major work in film and television."
The actor, from Yorkshire in northern England, was awarded an OBE for services to drama in 2007.
source: abs-cbnnews.com
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