Tag Archive | "Gavin and Stacey"

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Tuesday's Edinburgh news

Posted 3 days ago at 08:04 | 4 comments |

Doctor Who

  • Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss to write contemporary Sherlock Holmes stories
  • A Doctor Who movie?

Awards

  • Edinburgh gives plaudits to Doctor Who and Gavin & Stacey

Film

Radio

Canadian TV

British TV

US TV

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Today's Joanna Page: Very Annie Mary

Posted 29 days ago at 10:00 | Post a comment |

Joanna Page in Very Annie Mary

Today's Joanna Page is Very Annie Mary, a little movie set in Wales that features just about every Welsh actor in existence. It stars Rachel Griffiths, an Australian actress who impressed everyone right up until she joined the cast of Brothers and Sisters, as Annie Mary, the frustrated (in every sense) daughter of Pavarotti-impersonating baker Jonathan Pryce. 

She wants to help her best friend, the seriously ill 16-year-old Bethan Bevan, get to Disneyland and singing in a talent contest might be the only way to get the money. And despite being 22 at the time, Joanna Page played that sick teenager.

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Today's Joanna Page: Billy Liar

Posted on July 21, 2008 at 12:21 | 4 comments |

In a return to its roots, Today's Joanna Page eschews the excitement of the review and the intellectual delight of the polemic in favour of pure pictures, since it's time for the 2004 touring production of Billy Liar, which I obviously didn't see (even though it began its run at Bromley's Churchill theatre).

I can't even comment on the story, since although I've seen the movie version, it was so long go, all I can remember are about three images from the whole thing. And I haven't seen the TV series. Or read the book.

Oh dear.

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Thursday's British-German crossover news

Posted on July 17, 2008 at 07:02 | 4 comments |

Doctor Who

  • Journey's End most watched TV programme of the week
  • Catherine Tate injures ankle, cancelling first night of Under the Blue Sky

Film

Radio

British TV

Canadian TV

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Today's Joanna Page/Lambert Gold: The Cazalets

Posted on July 14, 2008 at 13:25 | 1 comment |

Joanna Page in The Cazalets

Today's Joanna Page - and also, in a blog crossover first, Lambert Gold - is The Cazalets, a mini-series from 2001 based on 'The Cazalet Chronicles' by Elizabeth Jane Howard.

Now, you may - or may not - have noticed that in many TV programmes there feature a certain group of people called 'women'. More often than not, particularly in period dramas, they're there to serve specific plot functions: to encourage/discourage the hero; to make tea; to bring up the children; and to be decorative and fallen in love with.

However, many noted scholars, intellectuals and TV producers are coming to the conclusion that these secondary characters could have emotions and feelings of their own; they could have their own viewpoints and opinions; they could even, in time, become the heroes - 'heroines' perhaps? - of some stories.

It was one such rebel faction, led by actress Joanna Lumley and producer Verity Lambert, who decided in 1998 to adapt 'The Cazalet Chronicles' as a mini-series. Convinced that a story of the various women and girls in the Cazalet family during the 30s and 40s could be as interesting as any similar tale about men, they scratched together co-funding from the BBC and WGBH.

An at-times grim tale that shows all the miseries that could befall even well-off women back in the 'good old days', the only real problem with the 2001 production is that they never had a chance to finish it.

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Monday's reassuringly brief news

Posted on July 7, 2008 at 08:54 | 8 comments |

Doctor Who

Film

British TV

US TV

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Today's Joanna Page: Bye Bye Harry

Posted on July 3, 2008 at 14:48 | Post a comment |

Joanna Page and James Thornton in Bye, Bye Harry 

Today's Joanna Page is Bye Bye Harry, a British road movie released in 2006, of which she was the star, and that you will never have seen. Ever. Until now.

We've been jumping all over the place chronologically, here, so let's recap the inexorable career rise of Ms Joanna Page. After leaving RADA in 1999, she went straight to the National Theatre for The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie. She continued to do well in the theatre, with roles in a series of medieval mystery plays, The Mysteries, As You Like It, What the Butler Saw, Aladdin, Doomsday, Camera Obscura, and Billy Liar (with Ralph Little), among others.

The world of film beckoned, too, with bit parts in Miss Julie and This Year's Love, and larger parts in From Hell, Very Annie Mary, Love Actually, and Gideon's Daughter.

And on tele, there were important roles in David Copperfield, The Cazalets, The Lost World, Ready When You Are Mr McGill, Making Waves, Mine All Mine and To The Ends of the Earth. She even found time to fit in a few radio plays and a music video in all that, too.

So by 2005/6, a starring role in a movie looked inevitable. Indeed, in his review of The Mysteries for The Independent, right at the start of her career, Robert Butler prophetically wrote, "As Eve, Joanna Page looks as if (now she's eaten that apple) she will be the love-interest in a movie very soon."

And then it arrived: No Snow which soon became Bye Bye Harry. She's the female lead – arguably the lead. It's a British road movie, a 'dark' rom-com by experienced comedy writer Graham Alborough . It's got noted director Robert Young at its helm. It's got two of the country's biggest rock stars in supporting roles. And when it was released, it featured at the country's leading film festival. 

So why haven't you heard of it until now? And why had you probably not heard of Joanna Page until Gavin & Stacey?

Problem is, I've been linguistically tricky. See, although I said it was a British road movie – and indeed it is, according to the British Council – I pulled a fast one. The bulk of the financing came from Germany and Slovakia. When I said "the country", the country I actually meant was Germany, the rock stars I mentioned were Bela B Felsenheimer and Til Schweiger (very big in Germany), and the film festival I mentioned was the Berlin film festival. 

And it's never been released anywhere else. Not France, not Belgium, not the Netherlands. It's certainly never been shown in Britain. And although you could get a version dubbed into German on rental in Germany, you couldn't get the original English language version until two weeks ago – on import from Amazon.de

So without fear of contradiction, may I present for your delight the very first, most comprehensive, most definitive and probably very last English language review of Bye Bye Harry aka Liebling, wir graben Harry aus.

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Wednesday elementary news

Posted on July 2, 2008 at 07:21 | 2 comments |

Film

Radio

Theatre

British TV

US TV

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Today's Joanna Page: Love Actually

Posted on June 27, 2008 at 12:22 | 5 comments |

Joanna Page as Judy in Love Actually

Today's Joanna Page is Richard Curtis's Love Actually.

Curtis has dominated British comedy, whether it's been on television or in the cinemas, for nearly three decades now. Following an early stint writing for Not the Nine O'Clock News in the 70s, he started to bestride us like a laughing, Islington-loving colossus the following decade with The Black Adder, its three sequel series and a couple of one-off spin-offs. Within a few years, he became the moving force behind Comic Relief and managed to notch up a couple of movies, including The Tall Guy, starring Jeff Goldblum and Emma Thompson.

In the 90s, he stormed through again, first unleashing Mr Bean on us all, before choosing to take over the world and introduce Hugh Grant to us all with Four Weddings and a Funeral. He went on to write Notting Hill and the screenplay for Bridget Jones's Diary. He also spent 13 years laughing at country folk for the mysteriously successful The Vicar of Dibley.

Love Actually, released in 2003, was his first attempt at directing a movie. It's kind of a composite rom com version of Crash (or a sicklier version of This Year's Love, which also featured Jo Page) in which just about every possible facet of love is explored through the inter-connected lives of various people around the world. With an incredible cast of stars, it is occasionally touching, sometimes funny, and usually irritating. But it has Joanna Page in it - provided you don't buy the censored DVD - so we'll forgive it.

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Your nominations for the British Dharma (or Greg)?

Posted on June 20, 2008 at 14:45 | 5 comments |

Dharma and Greg

As you may recall from yesterday's news, ITV is going to remake US sitcom Dharma & Greg. In case you never watched it, it was about a straight-laced lawyer with rich parents, and a happy-go-lucky yoga instructor with hippies for parents who meet, marry on their first date then try to forge a life together.

Now clearly it would be hard to do a direct translation of the show: there aren't that many hippies left in Britain for starters. So they're going to have to do some script work.

So today's memic questions are: how do you think they're going to convert it to a British sit-com? Why have they chosen Dharma & Greg to convert? And since ultimately Dharma (as played by the highly kooky Jenna Elfman) was the star of the US sitcom, not Greg, who do you think will be – or should be – the British Dharma?

Over to you my friends, although I feel all the questions can be answered quickly and easily if you remember ITV are doing this – and the Beeb still haven't confirmed for a third series of Gavin & Stacey

PS Please remember that all my conspiracy theories are always wrong.

Here's the start of the first episode, just as an aide memoire:

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Today's Joanna Page: Very Annie Mary

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Asides

  • Today's celebrity spot was Andrew Davies, spotted entering Golden Square in London

  • The Daily News will return on Monday 18th August, assuming there is any news. It's summer!

  • What do you think the German version of Sunday's UK v Germany Top Gear challenge will look like? Do you think they filmed different challenges?

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  • The Cazalets
  • Remember Me (Sapphire and Steel)
  • Love Actually
  • Gideon's Daughter
  • Mine All Mine
  • To The Ends Of The Earth
  • Porterhouse Blue
  • The Andromeda Strain - The Mini-Series
  • Gods Behaving Badly

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