Tag Archive for 'Helen Mirren'

Hearting Helen Mirren

Here’s a quote that Helen Mirren gave to the NYTimes’ Carpetbagger (who is now a woman- Melena Ryzik) getting on the bandwagon for Kathryn Bigelow, The Hurt Locker and also for Avatar:

“I think they’re both spectacular films, from either end of the spectrum of what is possible to do with film,” she said. “I guess because ‘The Hurt Locker’ was directed by a woman; I’m a big supporter of that. It’s a fantastic film — visceral, fabulous filmmaking. Proper filmmaking.”

Rock on Helen.

I am very excited to see her playing a Mossad agent in The Debt. Anyone have an idea on a release for that film.

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Tags: Helen Mirren, Kathryn Bigelow, The Hurt Locker

See Helen Mirren Onstage Onscreen

phedreYou can get your fill of Helen Mirren in Phedre which is now playing in London at a bunch of movie theatres across the country this Thursday, June 25th.  Tickets are $20.  Love this idea.  Theatre on the big screen.

Here’s a description of the play:

Consumed by an uncontrollable passion for her young stepson and believing Theseus, her absent husband, to be dead, Phèdre confesses her darkest desires and enters the world of nightmare. When Theseus returns alive and well, Phèdre, fearing exposure, accuses her stepson of rape.
The result is carnage.

Here’s the list of where it will be playing.  Venues are in the following states: California, Colorado, Connecticut, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Vermont, Virginia.

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Tags: Helen Mirren, Phedre

Mary Stuart: Interview with Director Phyllida Lloyd

phyllida-lloyd

Phyllida Lloyd copyright Joan Marcus

One of the big differences for me between theatre and TV and film is the electricity.  There is electricity in a theatre when everything and everyone is crackling.  And it’s even better when they know it.  That’s the kind of electricity I felt when I recently saw the revival of Mary Stuart which was imported from the Donmar Warehouse in London.

We’ve all seen the movies and TV series about Elizabeth I and her rivalry with cousin Mary Stuart most notably by Helen Mirren and Cate Blanchett.  But most of those stories were told from Elizabeth’s perspective and Mary was a side player.

In this updated revival of Friedrich Schiller’s 1800 play directed by Phyllida Lloyd (Mamma Mia!) Mary Stuart is given equal weight.  Janet McTeer takes on the role of Mary and Harriet Walter is Elizabeth.  Many Americans may not know these women but you do so at your own peril.  They are in my opinion typical British actresses- unafraid, engaging and spectacular.   McTeer is more well known having had leads in several films (Tumbleweeds), but I remember her best for her Tony Award winning performance as Nora in A Doll’s House.  Walter has been on the English stage and if you see British films you will definitely recognize her.  She also has a small part in the upcoming Cheri.

Both women are fantastic but McTeer has the more showy role.  Her performance is big and desperate as Mary fights for her life and in contrast Walter is constrained by her role as monarch.  These are two women leaders struggling for their lives and souls surrounded by calculating men who are jockeying for their own positions. (I loved that the women were in period dress and the men were in contemporary suits.  Just highlighted how different the men and women were.)

I loved the production more than the play itself, not surprisingly, it is based on a play from 1800. Phyllida Lloyd uses all her expertise as a director of opera and gives us a production of an almost 3 hours play that is taut and visually interesting especially because it uses minimal sets and has very little color.

If you want to see a story about women, directed by a woman and amazing actresses at their finest, Mary Stuart is the show for you.

Phyllida Lloyd kindly took some time to answer questions about the production and being a female director:

Women & Hollywood: Why do you think there is the (false) impression that two women can’t star together in a show as rivals and not be rivals off stage?

Phyllida Lloyd: Maybe men would prefer to imagine them in the chaos of a catfight than in a powerful union of friendship and creativity!

W&H: The play was written in 1800 yet reflects current ambivalence about women and power, especially how men deal with it.  We here in the states are particularly attuned to it from out recent election.  Why is the play still so relevant today?

PL: Aside from the gender issue, the play deals with the ethics of government – what price homeland security, how to take a potentially unpopular decision and still remain in favour with your electorate. It also portrays two women being ‘managed’ by a group of seemingly eternal bureaucrats. the women actually have massive amounts in common but are never allowed to get to a point of capitalizing on it peacefully. Mary Stuart like many powerful women is demonized for her sexual history, Elizabeth is forced to remain a virgin in order to hold on to the power she has.  They are neither able to live their lives like the men around them without jeopardy or reproach.

Harriet Walter and Janet McTeer copyright Joan Marcus W&H: You are one of the few women who has been successful in opera, film and theatre.  Why aren’t more women able to achieve success?

PL: In Europe it is not so unusual for directors to move between opera, theatre and film and I have at least three girlfriends I can think of who have directed in all three genres.  In the theatre in the UK  women are at the very top of the tree as freelance directors.

I have been very lucky and I think it all goes back to state subsidy for the arts.  I gained my training and confidence and credentials in the not for profit world and in England that does not mean on the fringe of things.  It means right at the centre. It is that experience of handling big projects , big groups of people if you like that led to a commercial musical and then to Hollywood.  In the UK there are however – just as in the States – less women directing huge budget musicals, running big institutions and obviously directing anything but lower budget movies.- which says something about  how when the economic stakes get high girls are seen as a greater risk.

In the not for profit world I never felt that being female was an impediment.  I was however given my break into commercial theatre by a female producer Judy Craymer and women – in particular Donna Langley  president of production at Universal – were crucial in giving Mamma Mia a home in Hollywood.

Continue reading ‘Mary Stuart: Interview with Director Phyllida Lloyd’

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Tags: Harriet Walter, Helen Mirren, Janet McTeer, Momma Mia