Вчерашняя клёвая фотка Debbie Stockwell @debbiestockwell Tonight I finally met Robert Sean Leonard. Only taken 20 years! Fantastic in To Kill a Mockingbird @BarbicanCentre https://twitter.com/debbiestockwell/status/614211336810180614 Очёчки и колечко Про футболку и байку я даже молчу А что там на кепке налеплено?
Robert Sean Leonard - he's a man I would put my life in his hands, and almost have on occasion (с) H. Laurie
Сообщение отредактировал Ginger82 - Пятница, 26.06.2015, 08:29
Anna Hutchinson @afhutch Fab day- met with original cast kids of To Kill a Mockingbird - @richkidcampbell are you up for full cast reunion?
Слушай, а мне кажется, что мальчик в бордовой рубашке раньше тоже был в составе, хотя я могу и ошибаться. Cause we were never being boring, We were never being bored
Fab day- met with original cast kids of To Kill a Mockingbird
Какая классная фотка Прелесть просто
ЦитатаShepa ()
Слушай, а мне кажется, что мальчик в бордовой рубашке раньше тоже был в составе, хотя я могу и ошибаться.
Так это и есть фото оригинального состава просто здесь не все (они и договариваются на встречу полного каста на 6 июля). Детки-то как подросли (особенно Люси Хатчинсон - а была вот такуууууусенькая крошечка ). И Элеонор Уортингтон-Кокс выглядит здесь имхо постарше своих 14 - вполне себе дева Роберт сзади как всегда полуприсядью
THE ORIGINAL CAST 2013 Calpurnia – Michele Austin Tom Robinson – Richie Campbell Mr Walter Cunningham / Judge Taylor – Christopher Ettridge Nathan Radley / Mr Gilmer – Tom Godwin Bob Ewell – Simon Gregor Heck Tate – Stephen Kennedy Link Deas – Phil King Maudie Atkinson – Hattie Ladbury Stephanie Crawford / Mrs Dubose – Julie Legrand Atticus Finch – Robert Sean Leonard Mayella Ewell – Rona Morison Reverend Sykes – Joe Speare Boo Radley – Daniel Tuite Scout – Lucy Hutchinson, Izzy Lee, Eleanor Worthington-Cox Jem – Gus Barry, Callum Henderson, Adam Scotland Dill – Harry Bennett, Sebastian Clifford, Ewan Harris
THE CAST 2015 Scout - Jemima Bennett, Rosie Boore, Ava Potter Jem - Harry Bennett, Billy Price, Arthur Franks Dill - Leo Heller, Milo Panni, Connor Brundish
Atticus Finch - Robert Sean Leonard Boo Radley - Christopher Akrill Reverend Sykes - Geoff Aymer Mayella Ewell - Victoria Bewick Nathan Radley/Mr Gilmer - David Carlyle Maudie Atkinson - Natalie Grady Heck Tate - Jamie Kenna Link Deas/Musician - Luke Potter Calpurnia - Susan Lawson-Reynolds Tom Robinson - Zackary Momoh Bob Ewell - Ryan Pope Walter Cunningham/Judge Taylor - Christopher Saul Stephanie Crawford/Mrs Dubose - Connie Walker
Robert Sean Leonard - he's a man I would put my life in his hands, and almost have on occasion (с) H. Laurie
Сообщение отредактировал Ginger82 - Воскресенье, 28.06.2015, 14:39
я думала нынешнего. Я посмотрела, вообще получается, что кроме Роберта вообще весь состав поменялся. А у Harry Bennett была другая детская роль.
ЦитатаGinger82 ()
Элеонор Уортингтон-Кокс выглядит здесь имхо постарше своих 14 - вполне себе дева
Это мягко говоря.. была такой симпатишной девочкой, а теперь выглядит как начинающая "порно" звезда. Cause we were never being boring, We were never being bored
получается, что кроме Роберта вообще весь состав поменялся
Да, но кроме Роберта и детишек у всех остальных роли второ- и третьестепенные, так что это не критично.
ЦитатаShepa ()
А у Harry Bennett была другая детская роль
И да. Кстати, имхо, это говорит в его пользу - знать две разных роли. Правда, не знаю, как они по-объему в спектакле. В книге Джема, кажется, больше, чем Дилла. Интересно, как сложится? Может он вырастет и лет через 30 еще и Аттикуса сыграет?
ЦитатаShepa ()
Это мягко говоря.. была такой симпатишной девочкой, а теперь выглядит как начинающая "порно" звезда.
Какая ты строгая Обыкновенный же подросток-переросток с несколько сомнительным вкусом
Robert Sean Leonard - he's a man I would put my life in his hands, and almost have on occasion (с) H. Laurie
Интервью Ivening Standart с шикарной фоткой! Robert Sean Leonard interview: 'If I had my way, I would just do theatre, if it paid better. I love it' He’s famous for his screen work with Hugh Laurie in House, but Robert Sean Leonard — currently appearing at the Barbican Theatre — is at home on stage, he tells Fiona Mountford
It’s lucky for London that Robert Sean Leonard, the American film star best known for his role in Dead Poets Society, is indulging in his first love. “If I had my way, I would just do theatre, if it paid better. I love it. The hours are great, I can see my kids all day long, you don’t have to be at the theatre until 7.30pm and you’re home by Letterman,” he says. “I love the writing, I love Shaw, I love O’Neill, I love Stoppard, I love Shakespeare. Love love love in a way that gave me that first glow which brought me to this business.”
Leonard, who is also famous as Hugh Laurie’s stoic sidekick, Wilson, in the long-running TV series House, is about to reprise his role as Atticus Finch in the stage adaptation of To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee’s seminal novel of racial hatred in the Deep South. After a run at the Open Air Theatre, Regent’s Park, two years ago (“where we lost only one show to rain!”) the production now transfers to the Barbican, perfectly timed to coincide with the publication next month of Lee’s “lost” novel Go Set a Watchman, reported to be essentially the first draft of Mockingbird.
Leonard, 46, admits that initially he didn’t feel the project was a great idea. “I didn’t see the point of putting it on stage because the movie’s so good and the book’s so good. The first day [of rehearsals] I came home and thought, I’ve made a terrible mistake.” So why did he do it? “My wife wanted a summer in London! Also, it scared me. I never knew what that meant but it is true, the things that make you nervous are usually the things you will grow doing and maybe even enjoy the most. I didn’t think it would work. But I was wrong, it did.”
It most certainly did; in my own review I referred to Leonard’s “wonderfully rumpled humanity”. Yet two years ago, he talked about having to wrestle with the ghost of Gregory Peck, star of the much-loved 1962 film, in front of 1,200 spectators each night. It turned out to be a benign ghost, I presume. “It did,” he says enthusiastically. “I knew Philip Seymour Hoffman pretty well and we talked about this role. Phil was famously the one who searched for the dark underbelly of whatever he was doing and I thought that would be such a funny way to play Atticus, as a secret drunk or whatever.” He pauses. “There’s no reason to search for the dark underbelly of Atticus as there is none. It’s a narrow path to play this role that I walk. You can’t just ignore Gregory Peck’s performance. I think you’re being petulant if you do.”
Leonard is affable, diffident and highly literate about film and theatre; he is also, I suspect, far too bright to play the Hollywood fame game. I’m initially wary of mentioning that other H-word, as in previous interviews he has been adamant about how very little he enjoyed the rigours of filming the eight-series global juggernaut that was House. I try a different tack: what was it like emerging from what was at one point the most syndicated television show on the planet? “Hold on, what did you call it?” says Leonard. There is, it appears, an issue with the idea of global juggernaut-ery. I offer him the magnet I bought in a street market in Kiev a few years ago, which shows Laurie’s Dr House holding a large sandwich next to the phrase, “The best drugs are Ukrainian ones”. “Holy mama! I should send this to Hugh,” he says.
Ukrainian idiosyncrasy dealt with, he starts to talk. “There’s a line from The Seagull, when Nina asks Trigorin what it’s like to be famous and he says, ‘Well, I don’t know. It’s one of two things: either I’m not as famous as you seem to think I am or it’s something you just don’t feel.’ He’s right. I don’t feel famous, I never have. When I was doing House I was getting up at 3.30am and driving an hour-and-a-half to go talk to Hugh Laurie about Lisa Edelstein’s [Cuddy] ass and then getting back in my car and driving home. I never watched it. When I was younger I never believed it when actors said this, but it’s just not fun.”
So after eight series it must have been a relief to step off the treadmill? “Look, I was proud of the show. I thought it was good.” I thought you didn’t watch it? “I have to admit I’ve seen a few. I wasn’t embarrassed by it and I have plenty of friends who are on TV series who are, so I knew the difference.” Leonard is also refreshingly frank about the pecuniary rewards of network television. “The money’s great. My wife and I were having children and I really wanted to have security financially, which I’d never had doing theatre. When you do Long Day’s Journey into Night you feel a little selfish because you think, I’m making four dollars a week so I’m clearly doing this for my own jollies. I felt a little noble going to do House because I was earning money for my family, which a good father does.”
Touchingly, the moments when Leonard becomes most animated are when he talks about his great colleagues-cum-friends Laurie (“You can’t mistake my apathy for working on television for a lack of love for Hugh”) and Ethan Hawke. Leonard and Hawke started out together as idealistic schoolboys in Dead Poets Society in 1989. Does he envy Hawke’s Hollywood success — most recently in the awards magnet Boyhood? “No. I’m so proud of him. I’ve always felt a little bit of an older brother. I don’t envy anyone anything. I’m 46 and I have a three-year-old and a six-year-old and a dog who can’t see because he’s so old and I adore my wife and I love Stephen King books and going for walks and Honey Nut Cheerios. I don’t have an aching need to do much of anything, except be with my family. I don’t know if it says much artistically but I’m happy. So, no, I want Ethan to win every award imaginable.”
Leonard starting acting very young, and somewhat unwillingly at first, at the amateur summer repertory theatre in his New Jersey home town. “Someone saw me playing the Artful Dodger, reluctantly,” he says. “They asked me to come to New York and audition. I was surrounded by a bunch of Glee-style kids and I looked at the ground and mumbled, and I think they must have thought I was Marlon Brando, when in fact I was just embarrassed!” From there things progressed quickly; as a stalwart of the New York stage, he has won one Tony Award (for Tom Stoppard’s The Invention of Love) and been nominated twice more. What advice would he give to a young actor today trembling on the brink of stardom, just as he was 25 years ago? “I wouldn’t,” he says without hesitation. “I can tell you how to get an Oyster card because someone taught me that yesterday. That’s the kind of advice I give and believe in. Beyond that, I can’t help.” Atticus Finch has spoken.
В воскресенье, 5 июля - сразу два эфира Серьезный- о культуре, на радио Charlotte Green's Culture Club - Sunday 5 July 2015, 3pm In Classic FM’s weekly cultural highlights show, Charlotte meets the American actor Robert Sean Leonard. Read more at http://www.classicfm.com/radio....J78y.99
И не такой серьезный (по крайней мере я так думаю) в кулинарно-трепливом шоу Channal 4 - Sunday Brunch Series 4 Episode 21 - Sunday 5 July 2015, 9-30 Даже не представляю себе, что это будет, но уже хочу Кроме него еще двое гостей будут и живой музон http://www.channel4.com/programmes/sunday-brunch/
Robert Sean Leonard - he's a man I would put my life in his hands, and almost have on occasion (с) H. Laurie
Сообщение отредактировал Ginger82 - Вторник, 30.06.2015, 20:58
Robert Sean Leonard on To Kill A Mockingbird, House and turning down Tom Stoppard American actor and 'House‘ favourite Robert Sean Leonard tells us why he prefers stage to screen as ‘To Kill A Mockingbird’ returns to London A heavyweight US actor best known as Hugh Laurie’s co-star in ‘House’, Robert Sean Leonard won rave reviews two summers ago as upstanding lawyer Atticus Finch in the Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre’s ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’. Now ‘Mockingbird’ moves indoors to the Barbican.
Do you have any important backstage rituals? ‘No, I really don’t. I’m not very superstitious at all. I just say “hi” to everybody, have a cup of coffee and then walk on.’
Have you ever had any onstage mishaps? ‘One night in the first run of “Mockingbird”, in the court scene I had a tickle in my throat, and there was a jug of lemonade on the judge’s desk and I went over only to realise it was glued in place. And there are 1,200 people watching me. I picked up a cup and tried to dip it in, but the cup didn’t fit, so finally I just ripped the pitcher off the table with both hands. It was real lemonade. Pretty old lemonade.’
What persuaded you to come over and take the role in the first place? ‘I hesitated because of the shadow cast by Gregory Peck, and also while I knew the book I didn’t know there was a stage version and I didn’t see the reason to do one, like when they did “Psycho” with Vince Vaughn. But in the second preview I thought: Well, all right, this isn’t the movie or the book, it’s something else.’
Did you come back because they promised you a roof this time? ‘I would have come back to do this on a rooftop, I don’t care, it’s one of my favourite things I’ve ever done.’
You’re best know for ‘House’… are you happy with that? “House” was lovely, but thank God for Hugh Laurie: without him I would have put a gun to my head. It was a job and it was a lucky job, and I’m proud of it, but I don’t think I was that good at it, I’m much better on stage.’
So you’re more of a stage than screen actor? ‘I had to say “no” to Tom Stoppard when he was thinking of me for the New York production of “The Coast of Utopia”. I thought: I’ve become my own worst nightmare – I’m a TV actor who turned down Tom Stoppard. I actually started crying and I thought: I can’t do this, I’ve become a Neil Diamond song.’
Оба интервью просто шикарные Роберт как всегда в своем репертуаре "but thank God for Hugh Laurie: without him I would have put a gun to my head." Cause we were never being boring, We were never being bored
Народ предположил насчет простых как грабли американских сандвичей с индейкой Но как можно смотреть на РШЛ на "кухне" и не думать про спасенные Хаусом smoking balls?
ЦитатаShepa ()
Роберт как всегда в своем репертуаре "but thank God for Hugh Laurie: without him I would have put a gun to my head."
а я сразу вспомнила старую цитатку Хью - что он бы без Роберта давно умом тронулся Вчера прошла press night, пошли официальные ревью
REVIEW: To Kill A Mockingbird, Barbican Theatre ✭✭✭✭✭ BRITISHTHEATRE.COM Приведу его полностью - не только за оценку, но потому что оно само по себе шикарное, читать такое - удовольствие
The lanky boy, tousled hair, eager eyes, air gun in hand, surveys the landscape. His nimble, gloriously tom-boyish sister, energy and enthusiasm bustling out of every pore, also plays with her air gun. Their father has refused to teach them the ways of guns, but they want to play anyway. The boy resents his father, a little, maybe more, because he doesn’t do what the other boys’ father’s do. It rankles him.
In the distance, there is movement and the boy stiffens. He looks again. Alarm spreads through his features, down his spine. He tells his sister what he has seen. His calm, sure voice, reminiscent to her of their father’s mellifluous sound, conveys urgency. She looks where he looks. A mad dog is limping towards them. It has not seen or smelt them but the boy knows that if the dog notices them, it will be bad. Holding his ground, he sends his sibling off to get the adults. She resists, unwilling to leave him alone, but then goes.
The lad is scared, but stubborn. He watches intently. Slowly, adults arrive. Then, his father and the sheriff, the man with the town star, carrying a rifle, are there. The two men look – definitely a rabid dog. Father orders son aside, asks the lawman to shoot the dog, end the peril. But the lawman wants the lad’s Father, the one who would not teach his children about guns, to take the shot – because there will only be one chance. Father doesn’t want to do it, but relents under pressure.
He feels the enormity of the responsibility on his shoulders. Everyone is watching him, depending on him, but especially his children. He hesitates, fumbles, drops his glasses, sweat pouring down his brow. The lad looks crestfallen, visibly diminished. Shamed.
The Father takes the shot, quickly, firmly. The target drops immediately. The Father has immaculate aim. The lad looks on in wonder, changed forever, proud now of his Father, and more understanding of the importance of being a gentleman.
This is Timothy Sheader’s utterly astonishing, profoundly beautiful, and intensely gripping production of To Kill A Mockingbird, now playing at the Barbican Theatre. It’s not practically perfect in every way – it is absolutely perfect in every way. In terms of glorious story-telling and superb ensemble acting rapturously telling a richly detailed and extraordinarily resonant – but sublimely simple – tale, there is nothing to touch this production (bar Gypsy) currently playing in London.
Harper Lee’s glorious book, first published 55 years ago, has been adapted for the stage with grace and style by Christopher Sergel. Characters are clearly and deftly established; the dialogue, much of it Lee’s own words, is sharp and lacking entirely the hint of false notes. Every aspect of the adaptation works. It might not cover the whole book, every memorable incident, each memorable character, but it tells Sergel’s version of that story with consummate flair.
The cornerstone of the adaptation sees all but the main four actors read extracts from Lee’s novel, represented in the form of various editions from across the decades. These extracts set the scenes, propel the action, comment on developments. But they do more than that – each actor uses their real voice when reciting text, and this creates and establishes a commonality with the audience, tapping into the audience’s own experiences of reading. Equally, the approach underlines the universality of the core of Lee’s novel – humanity, dignity, tolerance and understanding. And it reminds one of one’s own childhood, of being read to oneself.
This acute sense of childhood is central to the vision of the production. This is reflected in Sheader’s and Designer Jon Bausor’s breathtaking design: corrugated iron sheeting surrounds three sides of the stage, a garden bed between the rusty perennials of country life and the stage area; a blackboard-esque floor allows chalk to be used to sketch out the shapes and feel of the main spaces of the town where the Finch family live; a huge life-like tree, the ultimate symbol of childhood freedom, dominates the stage, it’s limbs strong, the green leaves everywhere affirming life. Along the sides of the stage are chairs, tables, a bed, the other props that, in a simple, child-like way, depict the places where the key events play out.
It is difficult to imagine a better set design or way of playing this remarkable adaptation.
Sheader ensures the pace never lags, but does not speed through any passage: the sense of the long, hot summers of a Southern American childhood is palpable. Nor does he stoop to cheap sentiment – the tale, it’s highs and lows, is told cleanly, astutely, calmly and warmly. The great images are all there: Atticus outside the Courthouse standing watch over the accused black man, a single lightbulb by his side; his children defusing the anger and intent of the lynch mob; Scout swinging on the tyre; Jem, Scout and Dill all eager to get Boo out of his house; the shooting of the mad dog; poor Tom Robinson shattered, in Court, giving evidence; Atticus hugging Scout hard; Jem with the broken arm, Atticus keeping vigil.
The emotional heart of the story, the vivid, true characters, are laid bare: they are real, tangible, and the world they occupy seems real too. You can just about smell Calpurnia’s cooking or one of Miss Maudie’s cakes emanating wholesome pleasure. It’s an overwhelmingly beguiling experience to undergo this remarkable journey with this remarkable cast.
In a cast where every single person is exceptional, there are some phenomenal stand-out performances. Zackary Momoh is riveting, heart-breaking, as the falsely accused Tom Robinson, his exquisite work in the key Courtroom scene communicating a lifetime spent in misery and contempt, but a man with a gentle, pure and forgiving nature. Christopher Akrill makes Boo Radley entirely plausible, utterly real, and the scene where he gently strokes the head of the stricken Jem is impeccably judged. As Bob Ewell, Ryan Pope is an apocalyptic cocktail of wiry, racist, drunken abuse, almost unbearably realistic.
Connie Walker is splendidly vile, in completely different ways, in the dual roles of Mrs Dubose and the ghastly Stephanie Crawford; Natalie Grady is all delightful homespun geniality as the kindly neighbour, Miss Maudie, and Susan Lawson-Reynolds finds exactly the perfect combination of wrath and maternal love as Calpurnia, the woman who holds the Finch family together.
The three children were utterly remarkable: Rosie Boore, immaculate as the strong-willed, curious and brave Scout; Billy Price, a tangle of adolescent emotion and emerging manhood, is a terrific, spot-on Jem; and Milo Panni makes Dill engaging and damn good fun. They are a terrific trio, full of energy and skill.
Quite rightly, though, the beating heart and all-pervading conscience of the play lies in the assured and measured hands of Robert Sean Leonard, who brings an intensity and gravitas to the role of Atticus which is unbeatable. A gently stern father, a fearless defender of the law and truth, a remarkable advocate and a humble, honest man, Leonard’s Finch is perfection, complete with slightly crumpled lined three piece suit. It’s a magical performance that makes every other cast member’s job that much easier.
Naomi Said and Polly Bennett provide excellent movement, Phil King’s original music is hauntingly evocative and he gives it splendid delivery. Oliver Fenwick lights everything to his usual exacting standards: gorgeous. The full moon is especially wondrous. Ian Dickinson’s sound design is immaculate.
There is nothing not to like here and all but the hardest of hearts will be moved to tears at one or more points throughout the evening. This is the best drama playing in London. It should be compulsory viewing for every child of school age. It should transfer to the West End and then Broadway and play for seasons.
It is pitch-perfect in every way.
by Stephen Collins on 2 July 2015 in News, Reviews, West End
Ревью от любимой DM TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD (BARBICAN) VERDICT: POWERFUL STUFF ✭✭✭✭ DailyMail DM верна себе - отметили за минусы то, чем восхищались в первом ревью и перепутали девочек-Скаутов
Robert Sean Leonard - he's a man I would put my life in his hands, and almost have on occasion (с) H. Laurie
Еще одна запись Selected Shorts. Последние две - из майских чтений в Getty Center, так что надеюсь, скоро услышим и читку самого Роберта, а не только его, ставшее уже традиционным, guest host.
Guest host Robert Sean Leonard presents three stories about people in pursuit of the good life. The first is by Ray Bradbury. Bradbury, author of such classics as The Martian Chronicles and Fahrenheit 451, is famous for taking us to imaginary places—different planets, alternate universes, disturbing rifts in the world we know. But he was also great at capturing the here and now, and the joy and magic of childhood. He does this wonderfully in “The Sound of Summer Running.” The story’s determined young hero wants only one thing: the perfect pair of sneakers. Sean Astin read Ray Bradbury’s “The Sound of Summer Running” at the Getty Center in Los Angeles
Robert Sean Leonard - he's a man I would put my life in his hands, and almost have on occasion (с) H. Laurie
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