Donald Trump.Meryl Streep, Spike Lee, Bono and Emma Thompson were among the celebrities offering tributes to Tuesday night's award winners.Hearst executive vice chairman Frank A. Bennack Jr.
19.11.2020 - 19:27 / deadline.com
Andreas Wiseman International EditorEXCLUSIVE: Announced deal-making out of the virtual AFM has been deafeningly quiet so far, but Cornerstone Films was among sellers to clock up strong pre-sales, we can reveal.We’ve heard from buyers that two of Cornerstone’s light-hearted Brit pics were among their favourites: Emma Thompson sex therapy comedy Good Luck To You, Leo Grande, and Helena Bonham Carter-Pierce Brosnan rom-com Not Bloody Likely, exploring the story behind the 1914 West End production
.Donald Trump.Meryl Streep, Spike Lee, Bono and Emma Thompson were among the celebrities offering tributes to Tuesday night's award winners.Hearst executive vice chairman Frank A. Bennack Jr.
Gallery: The best TV shows of all time (Espresso) Prince Charming will be played by Rege-Jean Page, Guz Khan has been cast as Buttons, and Jimmy Akingbola will step into the role of Dandini. Filmmaker Richard Curtis, the co-founder of the Comic Relief charity, will executive produce the show, which Matt Lipsey will direct.
The Crown stars Olivia Colman and Helena Bonham Carter are to star in a socially distanced, virtual staging of pantomime classic Cinderella for BBC Two, with Richard Curtis executive producing.
Helena Bonham Carter is weighing on the controversy surrounding The Crown.
Hugh Grant is opening up about the one co-star he's remained close with over the years.While calling into SiriusXM’s, the 60-year-old actor revealed that his co-star Renée Zellweger is «one of the few actresses I haven't fallen out with.» Grant has starred alongside everyone from Julia Roberts (to Drew Barrymore ( and Emma Thompson and Martine McCutcheon «I love Renée,» Grant admitted to Jess Cagle and co-host Julia Cunningham.
Helena Bonham Carter is keen for The Crown to stress the show is”not a drama-doc” and events have been “dramatized”.U.K. Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden hit headlines over the weekend (November 28-29, 2020) with his revelation that he’s planning to write to Netflix to ask them to put a warning on the show, about Britain’s Royal Family, for viewers to make it clear that it’s dramatized.
The calls for Netflix to add a disclaimer to its hit royal seriesThe Crown don't appear to be dying down any time soon. Helena Bonham Carter —who plays Princess Margaret in seasons 3 and 4 —has now added her voice to the growing argument, saying that producers have a "moral responsibility" to tell viewers that it's a drama.
Helena Bonham Carter, who portrayed Princess Margaret for two seasons of The Crown, shared in a new interview that she believes the Netflix show should remind viewers that it is not a documentary.“It is dramatized. I do feel very strongly, because I think we have a moral responsibility to say, ‘Hang on, guys, this is not … it’s not a drama-doc, we’re making a drama,’” the actress, 54, said on “The Crown: The Official Podcast” on the Monday, November 30, episode.
Helena Bonham Carter, who plays Princess Margaret in The Crown, has weighed in on the debate surrounding the Netflix show’s dramatic interpretation of real-life events involving the British Royal Family.
Studiocanal confirmed Wednesday that it has pre-sold the world, apart from the U.S.
Emma Thompson and husband Greg Wise couldn’t be prouder of their “remarkable" adopted son who has landed a job in the police after escaping a war zone.The couple gave child soldier Tindyebwa Agaba a new life in Britain after he witnessed unimaginable horror in his native Rwanda.The 33-year-old is a now proud humanitarian who has just landed a prized job with a specialist arm of the Metropolitan Police, helping refugees just like him.Emma, 61, daughter of Scottish actress Phyllida Ann Law and
Get the stories that matter to you sent straight to your inbox with our daily newsletter.IT’S the queen of all film roles – and Emma Thompson is the latest actress to get the part.The Nanny McPhee star plays Queen Elizabeth in a new TV drama based on Michael Fagan’s Buckingham Palace break-in 30 years ago.Walking the Dogs tells how, in 1982, Fagan got into the monarch’s bedroom and sat chatting to her for 10 minutes.Fagan, 61, has hit out at the show, saying dramatising his “moment of madness”
Naman Ramachandran Veteran Indian filmmaker Shekhar Kapur (“Elizabeth”) has revealed thematic details about his Working Title romantic comedy “What’s Love Got To Do With It?” starring Lily James (“Yesterday”) and Emma Thompson (“Last Christmas”).“It’s a story of identities,” Kapur said. “It’s about cultural clashes and it’s a comedy, but it’s about hiding behind an identity and how identities can become tribal, and how tribalism can lead to clashes and fundamentalism.