Tag Archives: Mirren

Helen Mirren, Liev Schreiber among stars condemning calls for Israel Eurovision ban – The Times of Israel

  1. Helen Mirren, Liev Schreiber among stars condemning calls for Israel Eurovision ban The Times of Israel
  2. Celebrities Sign Open Letter in Support of Israeli Inclusion in Eurovision Contest – Israel News Haaretz
  3. Helen Mirren, Gene Simmonds and Boy George sign letter supporting Israel’s inclusion in Eurovision Euronews
  4. Scooter Braun, Emmy Rossum and Helen Mirren Among 400 Stars Supporting Israel’s Inclusion in Eurovision Variety
  5. Boy George, Sharon Osbourne, Gene Simmons & More Sign Letter Rejecting Attempt to Bar Israel From 2024 Eurovision Song Contest Billboard

Read original article here

Dame Helen Mirren Presents Adele with Sherry Lansing Leadership Award | Women in Entertainment 2023 – The Hollywood Reporter

  1. Dame Helen Mirren Presents Adele with Sherry Lansing Leadership Award | Women in Entertainment 2023 The Hollywood Reporter
  2. Adele admitted she was ‘ready for a drink’ while picking up coveted award from Dame Helen Mirren The Laconia Daily Sun
  3. Adele dazzles in pinstripe suit as she leads the glamour with Dua Lipa and Camila Cabello at The Hollywood Rep Daily Mail
  4. Adele Explains the Large Gaps Between Albums & Her Policy on Fame While Accepting Leadership Award Just Jared
  5. Adele Accepts The Sherry Lansing Leadership Award | Women in Entertainment 2023 The Hollywood Reporter

Read original article here

Helen Mirren responds to ‘Jewface’ backlash over Golda Meir and reveals she thinks she has Jewish ancestry bec – Daily Mail

  1. Helen Mirren responds to ‘Jewface’ backlash over Golda Meir and reveals she thinks she has Jewish ancestry bec Daily Mail
  2. Helen Mirren Rails Against “Authoritarians” Telling Writers They Can Only Tell Stories About Their Own Race Or Religion Deadline
  3. Helen Mirren addresses Golda controversy: ‘I told the director that I’m not Jewish’ The Guardian
  4. Helen Mirren defends Bradley Cooper’s prosthetic nose in ‘Maestro’ The Times of Israel
  5. Helen Mirren Responds to Criticism of Her Role as Israeli Prime Minister in ‘Golda’ Just Jared
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Helen Mirren Rails Against “Authoritarians” Telling Writers They Can Only Tell Stories About Their Own Race Or Religion – Deadline

  1. Helen Mirren Rails Against “Authoritarians” Telling Writers They Can Only Tell Stories About Their Own Race Or Religion Deadline
  2. Helen Mirren addresses Golda controversy: ‘I told the director that I’m not Jewish’ The Guardian
  3. Helen Mirren responds to ‘Jewface’ backlash over Golda Meir and reveals she thinks she has Jewish ancestry bec Daily Mail
  4. Helen Mirren Responds to Criticism of Her Role as Israeli Prime Minister in ‘Golda’ Just Jared
  5. Helen Mirren defends Bradley Cooper’s prosthetic nose in ‘Maestro’ The Times of Israel
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Helen Mirren puts on an elegant display in a houndstooth coat as she steps out of CBS Studios in NYC – Daily Mail

  1. Helen Mirren puts on an elegant display in a houndstooth coat as she steps out of CBS Studios in NYC Daily Mail
  2. Helen Mirren Brings Grandson to Movie Premiere in Adorable Family Snapshot Parade Magazine
  3. Helen Mirren, ‘Shazam! Fury of the Gods’ star, brings grandson to red carpet premiere for sweet family outing Fox News
  4. Helen Mirren Was Nervous During Her First Scene in Shazam! 2 Superherohype.com
  5. Helen Mirren’s plunging black dress and headband wow at premiere but we can’t get over her grandson’s matching hairstyle Yahoo Life
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Helen Mirren Skips ‘Golda’ Casting Controversy Question at Presser, While Co-Star Lior Ashkenazi Asks Journalists Who Should Play Jesus Christ – Variety

  1. Helen Mirren Skips ‘Golda’ Casting Controversy Question at Presser, While Co-Star Lior Ashkenazi Asks Journalists Who Should Play Jesus Christ Variety
  2. ‘Golda’ Director Guy Nattiv Tackles Debate Over Casting Of Non-Jewish Actress Helen Mirren For Lead Role In Golda Meir Biopic Deadline
  3. ‘Golda’ director on decision to cast Helen Mirren: ‘She’s got the Jewish chops’ The Times of Israel
  4. ‘For me, she had the Jewish chops to play Golda’: director of Golda Meir film addresses casting Helen Mirren The Guardian
  5. Berlin Review: Helen Mirren in Guy Nattiv’s ‘Golda’ Deadline
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

‘Golda’ Director Guy Nattiv Tackles Debate Over Casting Of Non-Jewish Actress Helen Mirren For Lead Role In Golda Meir Biopic – Deadline

  1. ‘Golda’ Director Guy Nattiv Tackles Debate Over Casting Of Non-Jewish Actress Helen Mirren For Lead Role In Golda Meir Biopic Deadline
  2. Golda review – lifeless Meir biopic hides Helen Mirren’s talent in a cloud of cigarette smoke The Guardian
  3. ‘Golda’ Review: Helen Mirren Makes a Commanding Golda Meir in Square but Serviceable Biopic Hollywood Reporter
  4. Helen Mirren Skips ‘Golda’ Casting Controversy Question at Presser, While Co-Star Lior Ashkenazi Asks Journalists Who Should Play Jesus Christ Variety
  5. ‘Golda’ director on decision to cast Helen Mirren: ‘She’s got the Jewish chops’ The Times of Israel
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

‘1923’ review: Harrison Ford and Helen Mirren saddle up for another ‘Yellowstone’ prequel



CNN
 — 

The growing “Yellowstone” universe has developed a pretty clear formula, which starts with an older movie star espousing square-jawed western values, surrounding them with a younger cast and the trappings of a soap opera. With Harrison Ford and Helen Mirren saddling up “1923” takes the star quality to the next level, putting a shiny bow on a pretty basic package.

Prolific writer-producer Taylor Sheridan opens the Paramount+ series with a literal bang, framing this chapter of the Dutton family saga – joining the even-earlier prequel “1883” – with ominous narration that says, “Violence has always haunted this family. … And where it doesn’t follow, we hunt it down. We seek it.”

Ford’s patriarch Jacob Dutton isn’t looking for trouble, but he still appears destined to find it, running a massive Montana cattle ranch in the period a few years after World War I and during Prohibition, a time when cowboys ride horses into town and tether them next to parked cars.

Dutton has a problem, though, with locusts having ravaged grazing land, and cattle and sheep ranchers vying for what’s left. If there’s going to be a range war, the main culprit will be an ill-tempered sheep owner (“Game of Thrones’” Jerome Flynn), who doesn’t respect Dutton’s fences or welcome suggestions that he sell part of his flock.

At home, meanwhile, Dutton’s wife Cara, an Irish immigrant allowing Mirren to rock that accent, presides over the ranch, which includes schooling a young woman that when it comes to priorities, cattle come before her wedding plans.

“You have to want more than the boy,” Cara explains. “You have to want the life too.”

More than “1883,” “1923” represents an intriguing period, with post-war economics, the recent memory of a pandemic and the looming prospect of the Depression a few years down the road all adding to the intrigue, as touches of modernity collide with cowboy values.

Yet as with Sheridan’s other shows, while the pioneer spirit can be stirring mileage varies in terms of the peripheral players and detours. Here, those include a way-out-in-left-field subplot involving a Dutton scion, Spencer (Brandon Sklenar), spending his post-war years hunting in Africa; and a young Native-American woman (Aminah Nieves) enduring abuse at a Catholic school.

To say the series might benefit from a more focused approach ignores the way Sheridan has constructed his shows, populating Paramount’s mountain with the dreary “The Mayor of Kingstown” and more recently “Tulsa King.” The multifaceted storytelling serves the added bonus of lightening the load on his veteran stars, who provide marquee sizzle without having to be in every scene. (The durable Ford will be wearing another hat in the next Indiana Jones sequel, but his gruff character actually brings to mind his supporting role in “Cowboys & Aliens.”)

“Yellowstone’s” popularity frankly seems somewhat out of whack with its modest charms, and Paramount and Sheridan’s willingness to vigorously mine that fertile vein is going to yield diminishing returns eventually.

Just by landing Ford and Mirren, “1923” has already struck the mother lode from a promotional standpoint. And even if not all the subplots click, it’s the kind of combination that ought to keep them down on the farm for a while.

“1923” premieres December 18 on Paramount+ in the US and Canada, and December 19 in the UK and Australia.

Read original article here

Harrison Ford & Helen Mirren in ‘Yellowstone’ Spinoff – The Hollywood Reporter

The hourlong pilot of Paramount+’s 1923, the only episode of the Yellowstone prequel made available to critics, is less a template for a compelling ongoing series and more a very loose assemblage of things that are apparently fascinating creator Taylor Sheridan this week.

Indigenous reeducation schools! The Tsavo Man-Eaters of Kenya! Grazing rights!

1923

The Bottom Line

Ford and Mirren are good, but the plot needs corralling.

Airdate: Sunday, December 18 (Paramount+)
Cast: Harrison Ford, Helen Mirren, Marley Shelton, James Badge Dale, Darren Mann, Brandon Sklenar, Jennifer Ehle, Aminah Nieves, Jerome Flynn, Timothy Dalton
Creator: Taylor Sheridan

Maybe the pieces of 1923 will come together eventually and perhaps they’ll even come together quickly — again, I’ve seen only one episode — but in the short run, it’s unlikely that Sheridan’s carefully cultivated core audience will care. Between the star-studded cast led by Harrison Ford and Helen Mirren, the familiar wide-open Big Sky vistas and periodic totemic recitations of the name “Dutton,” 1923 immediately offers plenty to be curious (and potentially irritated) about.

Ford and Mirren play Jacob and Cara DUTTON — any and all mentions of the last name “Dutton” feel uttered in all-caps as dramatic irony shorthand for adding “You know, like in Yellowstone in 100 years” — owners of a thriving cattle ranch in Montana. Since Ford and Mirren are playing a couple realizing the hardships of what they hoped was a remote utopia, 1923 is clearly a Mosquito Coast prequel as well.

Jacob arrived in 1894 and found himself raising his brother James’ — the “Like Tim McGraw in 1883!” is implied — sons John (James Badge Dale) and Spencer (Brandon Sklenar). Also in the busy Dutton clan is John’s son Jack (Darren Mann), eager to be part of the family’s ranching legacy and to marry the slightly more prim-and-proper Elizabeth (Michelle Randolph).

Folks at the Montana Livestock Association are worried about a lack of grazing space for their cattle and about the incursion of sheep run by the local sheepherders, led by Jerome Flynn’s Banner — a rivalry that ties back to the old country (or old countries, since it’s a clash between Scots and Irish).

Meanwhile, out in the presumably Montana wilderness, we meet Teonna (Aminah Nieves), an Indigenous teen facing abuse at a residential boarding school run by the stern Father Renaud (Sebastian Roché) — I’m choosing to believe that the “Renaud” means that the series is also a prequel to The Chocolate War — and overseen by the vicious Sister Mary (Jennifer Ehle).

And then there’s a storyline off in Africa, where an initially unidentified mustachioed man is hunting big game and repressing the trauma of his service in the Great War.

Just as latent scars from the Civil War were central to the psychology of 1883, World War I is as pervasive to the backstory of 1923 as Prohibition and the looming Great Depression are to its unavoidable future. It’s all tied together with Sheridan’s trademark fixation with man’s inherent sadistic disregard for … well, everything. As Isabel May recites in the series opening voiceover, “Violence has always haunted this family,” which in this case feels like a mighty big understatement. As Sheridan presents it, violence is foundational to the DNA of the American dream, a strain of our ingrained identity that we’re capable of inflicting on the land, the people who previously occupied the land and one that we’re capable of exporting globally as well.

The more diffuse the 1923 pilot gets, the more speculatively concerned I get.

When it’s just on the solid footing of all things Dutton — grimly determined older men, rebellious and potentially troublesome younger men, and the confident and supportive women around them — the 1923 pilot is thoroughly watchable. Director Ben Richardson is a regular within the Sheridan universe as both director and cinematographer, and he’s an expert with this world’s visual grammar, even the parts of it that irk me, like the far-too-tidy production design throughout. He knows how to turn on a dime from picturesque shots of horses small against the towering sky and herds of livestock moving across the vast plains to tight close-ups of scruffy men and bustled women opining about the nobility of the land and whatnot. The TV critic in me wants to emphasize — not that the Taylor Sheridan groupies care — that every single thing that 1883 and 1923 attempt to do was done better and more efficiently in Amazon’s The English.

Ford, easing comfortably into the character actor phase of his career that he’d probably have preferred began back in the ’80s, growls with portentous weight and gets somber value out of every inch of his craggy face. Introduced rifle-in-hand, but still conveying ample necessary sentiment, Mirren is a fine foil, though she boasts the sort of troweled-on, exaggerated accent that one might dare to quibble with were it not being executed by one of the unimpeachably great actors of our time (see also Dame Judi Dench in Belfast). Thus far, Dale (and onscreen wife Marley Shelton) feel generally underutilized and Timothy Dalton, who chews scenery in the show’s trailer, hasn’t made his first appearance.

The stuff at the residential school is just nonstop sadism and, while I’m sure it’s accurate sadism and I’m sure there’s value in teaching insulated Yellowstone viewers about these schools, the scenes feel like exactly the sort of exploitative reproducing of trauma — by white writers and directors, no less — that concerns viewers when slavery or the Holocaust are treated comparably. Perhaps once that storyline becomes more than verbal abuse, whippings, blood and tears, it will be more convincingly integrated. Oh, and Ehle is wildly overqualified for this “barbaric nun” role, so I hope Sister Mary gets more interesting in a hurry.

And as for the scenes in Africa? Well, I get that Sheridan saw The Ghost and the Darkness and read some Hemingway, but so far the show’s self-serious take on colonialism borders on silly, and two things in the final five minutes that were supposed to be shocking made me laugh out loud in ways that definitely were not intentional.

The unevenness has its advantage, though: Most of the 1923 pilot is a mismatched enigma, but the pieces I like make me more curious than I ever was about Yellowstone or 1883. After watching only one hour, I guess my review boils down to, “We’ll have to wait and see.”



Read original article here

Helen Mirren says her ex Liam Neeson is an ‘amazing man’

Helen Mirren has spoken fondly about her relationship with ex-boyfriend Liam Neeson as she explained they ‘loved each other very, very much’.

The actress, 77, was in a relationship with the actor, 70, for five years between 1980 and 1985 and even lived together for four of the years.

Speaking in a new interview about their past, Helen said: ‘We were not meant to be together in that way, but we loved each other very, very much,’ she told the outlet. ‘I love him deeply to this day. He’s such an amazing guy.’

Former flame: Helen Mirren has spoken fondly about her relationship with ex-boyfriend Liam Neeson as she explained they ‘loved each other very, very much’

Helen spoke exclusively to the new AARP The Magazine about some of her past loves and how they all ‘had to have a shirt made by me’.

She told the publication: ‘I did make one for Liam, oddly enough.’

Other men who own homemade shirts by Helen, include actor Peter O’Toole and her husband Taylor Hackford, who she has been married to for 25 years.

Ex-files: The actress, 77, was in a relationship with the actor, 70, for five years between 1980 and 1985 and even lived together for four of the years (pictured together in 1984)

Helen branded the shirts ‘very bad’ and laughed when it was suggested that she has her own fashion collection of shirts.  

The screen star is not shy about gushing about her ex and previously couldn’t resist fondly recalling the time she went camping with the actor, during an appearance on The Ellen DeGeneres Show in 2019.

When quizzed by guest presenter Sean Hayes about her love for the outdoors, the British star gushed about ‘liking’ camping with Liam and relayed the story about them two having to share a ‘tiny tent all day’ during a rainy adventure.

Reflecting: The screen star is not shy about gushing about her ex and previously couldn’t resist fondly recalling the time she went camping with the actor, during an appearance on The Ellen DeGeneres Show in 2019

Helen detailed: ‘I once went camping with Liam Neeson, because we used to date. We lived together for four years! (It was) Before Liam was the humongous movie star that he is today.

Telling the story to the excitable audience, the Catherine The Great star continued: ‘We went camping in this tiny little tent, the size of this table, and we drove there in this tiny little car. 

‘Liam is like 6 ft 4in, his head was touching the top, and he was driving like this (making a slouched body shape). We camped in this tiny little tent. It rained all day, everyday. We were camping in Cornwall, then wewent camping in France.’

‘I like camping,’ Helen reiterated, before cheekily adding: ‘Well, I like camping with Liam Neesom anyways, and my husband (Taylor Hackford).

Helen and Liam have spoken about their fondness for each other on various occasions over the years.      

Helen detailed: ‘I once went camping with Liam Neeson, because we used to date. We lived together for four years! (It was) Before Liam was the humongous movie star that he is today’

In January 2018, the Hollywood heavyweights revealed they were head over heels during their four-year romance, with the Taken star even admitting it was love at first sight during their appearance on The Graham Norton Show.

Asked by the cheeky chat show host about their dating days, Helen was quick to insist their romance, which burned between the years of 1980 and 1985, was a lot more serious than the occasional bit of courting.

She affirmed: ‘We didn’t date, we lived together for four years – we were a serious item for a while. Lucky me!’

And Liam was quick to reciprocate Helen’s affections as he confessed he was instantly ‘smitten’ with the actress when they met on the set of 1981 movie Excalibur.

Cute: Helen and Liam have spoken about their fondness for each other on various occasions over the years

Revealing he took an instant shine, the Schindler’s List star explained: ‘Before I met her and we worked together I had read somewhere that if she fancied a guy she would imitate his walk behind his back and I turned around one day and she was doing that to me.

He added: ‘I remember being on the set and standing with Ciarán Hinds as Helen walked towards us dressed in her full Morgana Le Fey costume and we both went, “Oh f**k” and I was smitten.’

But perhaps the most flattering comment came when Liam admitted he had to battle off his fair share of competitors to win Helen’s heart.

Sad: Eight years after his relationship with Helen, Liam met his first wife, Natasha Richardson, who tragically passed away following a freak skiing accident in 2009.

The Irish star divulged: ‘I think Ciarán was too but I was very smitten!’ prompting a blushing Helen to respond: ‘I never knew that. You’ve never told me that before – it’s amazing.’ 

Eight years after his relationship with Helen, Liam met his first wife, Natasha Richardson, who tragically passed away following a freak skiing accident in 2009.

The couple welcomed two children, Micheál, 22, and Daniel, 21, during their 15-year marriage.

While Helen has been married to director Taylor Hackford, 74, since 1997.

Love: Helen has been married to director Taylor Hackford, 74, since 1997

Read original article here