samedi 2 novembre 2013

Charles will be in The science of Doctor Who on BBC2

Thu 14 Nov 2013 21:00 : BBC 2

For one night only, Professor Brian Cox takes an audience of celebrity guests, including Charles Dance and Rufus Hound, and members of the public on a journey into the wonderful universe of the Doctor, from the lecture hall of the Royal Institution of Great Britain.
Presenter :  Brian Cox
Participant : Matt Smith
Participant : Charles Dance
Participant : Rufus Hound

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b03hybnv

jeudi 31 octobre 2013

Charles will be in Speeches that shook the world

on BBC 4 : Wednesday Nov 6 at 21:00 pm
and repeat : Thu 7 Nov : 02:30
Speech-making is the art of persuasion. Well-honed rhetoric appeals not just to the mind, but to the heart and, deeper down, in the guts. Examining the speeches that provoked radical change, surprised pundits or shocked listeners, poet Simon Armitage dissects what makes a perfect speech.
....
 Simon discusses the nuts and bolts of speech writing with Vincent Franklin, aka the blue sky thinking guru Stuart Pearson from The Thick of It, and gets tips on powerful delivery from actor Charles Dance.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b03f3v3w
  
 
 

mercredi 30 octobre 2013

Charles and late Lou Reed

Charles Dance with Michael Colgan, Lou Reed, Helen Morse, Fergus Linehan and Barry McGovern during Beckett readings at NIDA in Sydney for the 2007 Sydney Festival.

dimanche 27 octobre 2013

From Sydney Herald Tribune....Patrick promo

'I don't get enough chances to play comedy'
October 19, 2013

The English actor, best known now for his role in Game of Thrones, admits on the set of horror film Patrick that he's actually quite up for a laugh.
Outside, it's a simmering hot summer's day. Inside, in a gloomy hospital building, Charles Dance is having a moment of quiet anger. He's sardonic, dismissive and utterly contemptuous.
He's at Docklands Studio, on the set of a new Australian film, Patrick. Dance plays Dr Roget, the ruthless head of an experimental clinic that's taking all kinds of liberties in the treatment of its patients.
That quiet anger is all for the camera. After his work for the day is finished, he's genial, expansive and full of stories.
Patrick is the first feature from documentary filmmaker Mark Hartley, who wrote and directed Not Quite Hollywood, an exploration of some of the often disreputable or undervalued genre features made in Australia in the 1970s and '80s.
the first film in a range of ways. The original producer, Antony I. Ginnane, is on board in the same role. Aphrodite Kondos, part of the 1978 wardrobe team, is costume designer.
Dance, who plays Tywin Lannister in the hit TV series Game Of Thrones, knew nothing of the original film, unlike his co-star, Rachel Griffiths, who recalls being terrified when she saw it on TV.
Griffiths, who plays Matron Cassidy, the woman who does Dr Roget's bidding, clearly recalls Julia Blake's performance in the first version. ''She brought so much more than was on the page, and she didn't play it as if she was in a horror movie.''
Dance says briskly that he liked Justin King's remake script, he enjoyed meeting Hartley, and the idea of leaving an English winter to shoot during the Australian summer was very appealing.
But it's a genre movie, he says. ''It's not Dostoyevsky or Chekhov, but it's a pretty good script. It's meant to intrigue and frighten people, and at times to make them laugh. There's a black humour to it.''
His character is convinced that the immobile Patrick is the key to groundbreaking medical research, without ever realising what his patient is really capable of, and he's desperate to make quick progress, before his funding runs out.
On set, Dance gives Hartley several options, as he runs through that withering putdown of the new nurse at the clinic.
''We don't have the budget or time to go with many takes,'' Dance says later, ''but I'll try to do something different every time, if I can.''

Dance's films have included Plenty, directed by Fred Schepisi, in which he starred opposite Meryl Streep, and Alien 3. He's been in Gosford Park and the 2005 TV adaptation of Bleak House and has played Ian Fleming, Eistenstein and D.W. Griffith.

His approach to choosing roles has taken him to some interesting locations. ''If you took a map of the world, and stuck a flag in all the places I've been, there'd be a lot of flags,'' he says.
In the 1990s, he spent four months living on an icebreaker in the Bering Sea for a film called Kabloonak, in which he played the documentary filmmaker Robert Flaherty, preparing to shoot Nanook Of The North.
''We ran out of winter in Russia,'' he says, ''so we picked it up in Arctic Canada a year later. And in between, I did a film with Arnold Schwarzenegger (Last Action Hero), and a low-budget British film with Stephen Poliakoff (Century).''

In between shooting for Game Of Thrones from May to October, he's open to all kinds of possibilities.
''These days I tend to get offered quite austere, Machiavellian characters, but every now and again something comes along and you think, 'Ah, yes, a leap of faith'
He gets out his iPhone and shows me a picture of his character, Floyd, in a short-lived TV comedy show called Common Ground.
As Floyd, a former rock'n'roll tour manager who has grown old disgracefully, he wears a black singlet and has tattoos.
''I don't get enough chances to play comedy,'' he says, a little wistfully.

In any case, he loves to work. There are things he can talk about, but others he prefers not to go public with. ''I'd love it if somebody had the nerve to remake Death In Venice'', and soon. ''He's a character I'd love to play, before I get too old.''
There's a literary classic he's particularly keen to adapt, but he doesn't want to go public about it, in case someone else gets the idea.
He's directed one feature, Ladies In Lavender (2004), starring Maggie Smith and Judi Dench, for which he also wrote the screenplay.
He tends to read fiction, he says, ''with one eye on it as a film''. He has a few directing projects and options in the air, some he has initiated and others that have been sent to him.
His character's relationship with Matron Cassidy in Patrick changes in the remake, thanks to the urging of co-star Griffiths. When she read the script, Griffiths wasn't keen on the idea of the nurse as ''the unnoticed devotee, burning underneath with love''.
........
after it's about Rachel Griffiths
http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/movies/i-dont-get-enough-chances-to-play-comedy-20131017-2voaw.htm

jeudi 24 octobre 2013

At the premiere of Saving Mr. Banks

                                                       at the May Fair Hotel.
"More than 100 guests, including stars, publicists and even representatives from Buckingham Palace joined HFPA members at the association’s first London party and get-together at the May Fair Hotel.
Steve Coogan, Charles Dance, Ruth Wilson, Eddie Redmayne and many other movie and television stars mingled with the guests and the 30 HFPA members who were in London to attend the premiere of Saving Mr. Banks "