Sam Heughan's alcohol brand Sassenach Select Spirits has taken home another award, but this time for his new Tequila.
27.01.2022 - 15:32 / dailyrecord.co.uk
Outlander is set to return to our screens in just over a month and fans are beginning to get just a little excited.
Following the season six trailer release, the showrunners at Starz have also revealed the episode titles, leaving fans to dissect just what each could mean for our cast.
However, one title really stood out and it led to certain groups believing it could be a hint at something very significant.
Episode Six is titled 'The World Turned Upside Down', which obviously could mean something truly dramatic is in store for the status quo for the Fraser's Ridge crew.
But could it also be something to do with a very famous figure from America's past? One that was heavily involved in the Revolutionary War and also the subject of a recent Broadway hit?
Posting in response to the Official Outlander page title reveal on Twitter, one fan wrote: "Do I spy a Hamilton reference?!"
Another added: "If episode six is a Hamilton reference I'm even more excited and scared. This season is gonna take us for a wild ride."
The title, of course, is also the name of a song on the Battle of Yorktown from the Broadway smash Hamilton, and it's got fans excited that both of these universes could collide in episode six.
The battle which takes place in 1781, would be just a little bit further into the Revolutionary War than we'd expect as much like Book 6, A Breath of Snow and Ashes, the current Outlander time is still in the early 1770s.
However, it doesn't rule out the Founding Father making an appearance much like fellow American leader George Washington (played by Simon Harrison) did.
Book fans aren't convinced though, with one responding: "Sadly, I would be shocked, as he isn't in the books. However, they haven't stuck completely to them so it is
Sam Heughan's alcohol brand Sassenach Select Spirits has taken home another award, but this time for his new Tequila.
Snail Mail has shared a new demo of her ‘Valentine’ title track to celebrate Valentine’s Day – listen to ‘Adore You’ below.Lindsey Jordan released her second album last year via Matador, and will head out on a rescheduled UK and European tour later this year.The new demo version of ‘Valentine’, titled ‘Adore You’, sees a more lo-fi, scratchy initial version of the song, which eventually ended up as a widescreen rock anthem.Check it out below.The US singer-songwriter was forced to delay the run of shows in support of her latest album album after undergoing vocal cord surgery.“I’ve been struggling with my vocal health more and more each year. I lose my voice after a couple [of] days of singing,” she said at the time, adding that a doctor subsequently discovered “massive polyps”.The musician will touch down in the UK on June 23 for a performance at The Ritz in Manchester before making stop-offs in Glasgow (June 24), Bristol (28), London (29) and Brighton (30).An additional European concert in Lyon, France is scheduled for July 5 before Snail Mail heads back to the states in August.Tickets purchased previously remain valid for the new shows.
John Hopewell Chief International CorrespondentAdding to its notable lineup in Latin American movies, Paris-based sales agent MPM Premium has taken international sales rights to “Fogaréu,” from writer-director Flávia Neves, part of Brazil’s new wave of female filmmakers, which is one of the most exciting developments the country’s cinema currently has going for it.MPM Premium is introducing the film at this week’s Berlin Festival, where it world premieres in Panorama on Feb. 15.First glimpsed at 2020’s Ventana Sur project market, “Fogaréu” shares a sense of attitude and a feminist agenda and a visual verve with fellow Brazilian Ventana Sur titles “The Pink Cloud,” Iuli Gerbase’s a sci-fi character-driven thriller, and “The Joy of Things,” Thais Fujinaga’s portrait of motherhood, also playing at the same market.
Naman Ramachandran Kino Lorber has acquired U.S. rights to writer-director Ajitpal Singh’s debut feature, “Fire in the Mountains,” which premiered in the World Dramatic Competition of the Sundance Film Festival in 2021.A powerful feminist tale set in a tourist homestay in the Himalayan foothills of northern India, the film centers around a woman (Vinamrata Rai), the sole breadwinner of the household, who scrimps and saves for her son’s medical treatment, while her alcoholic husband believes that an expensive shamanic ritual is the answer to all their woes.The film is produced by Alan McAlex and Ajai Rai of prolific Indian arthouse producers Jar Pictures alongside Mauli Singh and Amit Mehta.
Julia Garner is having quite a year!First, the actress returned to the screen in her Emmy-winning role as Ruth Langmore on, capping off the first episodes of the crime drama's fourth and final season with a meme-worthy scream and a promise to exact revenge on the drug kingpin who murdered her cousin, Wyatt.«It's always funny because… by the time it comes out, I forget like, how intense it was,» Garner told ET recently of the revelations that set up 's final episodes, due out later this year.«You’re just going to have to wait,» she teased. «It gets more intense. It gets very intense. The ending of season [4A], the first half, was just the beginning of the intensity, that ending.»While fans wait for more , Garner can next be seen playing a completely different but equally compelling role: convicted fraudster Anna Delvey, in Shonda Rhimes’ true-crime limited series, . A far cry from Ruth's Southern drawl, the actress had to master a complicated accent in order to portray the German expat, who pretended to be an heiress as she conned hundreds of thousands of dollars out of New York’s high society and financial institutions. Garner first started by learning “a German accent and then Russian and then put it all together,” she explained, adding that she had to subtly layer in a British accent. And because Anna spent so much time in New York City and interacting with Americans, “musically it shouldn’t sound European.
Tim Burgess has announced that he’ll be hosting a special 25th anniversary listening party tonight (February 10) for Blur‘s self-titled 1997 album.The Charlatans’ frontman has been hosting listening parties for a multitude of albums on Twitter since the UK went into its first coronavirus lockdown back in early 2020.This afternoon he announced that Blur members Alex James and Dave Rowntree, as well as producer Stephen Street will be joining him and his followers tonight for a listening party to celebrate the band’s fifth album turning 25.‘Blur’ was originally released on February 10, 1997, and featured the singles ‘Beetlebum’, ‘On Your Own’, ‘M.O.R.’, and the iconic anthem ‘Song 2’.
Olympics but now appears poised to take Hanyu's crown.“You can never really count out any of these athletes. The competition’s not one program," Chen said. "Whatever happens in the short program is not indicative of what will happen in the free program.”Both NBC and USA Network plan to air live coverage of the free skate in prime time.
Olympics but now appears poised to take Hanyu's crown.“You can never really count out any of these athletes. The competition’s not one program," Chen said. "Whatever happens in the short program is not indicative of what will happen in the free program.”Both NBC and USA Network plan to air live coverage of the free skate in prime time.
The 2022 Razzie Awards nominations are here.
Jo Koy’s movie Easter Sunday, which was scheduled to open roughly two weeks before Easter weekend on April 1, is heading to Aug. 5.
Star Jones was one of the original panelists when “The View” launched back in 1997, and she returned to the show for the Friday, Feb. 4 edition.
Tyson Fury's heavyweight title defence against Dillian Whyte is finally going ahead, with Friday's purse bids bringing an end to a lengthy negotiation saga.
"It's starting, the storm, the war," reveals Caitriona Balfe's character Claire Fraser in the latest Outlander clip from season six. "It's almost here."
Editors note: When we think of Robert De Niro and Italy, it’s easiest to focus on the Sicilian town of Corleone, because of his Oscar-winning turn in The Godfather: Part II. But De Niro wanted to focus on Naples, which director Paolo Sorrentino brought to life in The Hand of God. De Niro was so moved, he wrote a guest column for Deadline on why the film touched him so dearly.
Outlander's Sam Heughan claims he ate contraband haggis during a trip to the United States for a BAFTA Burns night.
Cast of Outlander past and present have reunited in Seattle for a special Outlander convention.