Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Variety cover story, Envelope screening, new TToE poster and articles about Eddie


Remember this fitting session with Eddie Redmayne? 
Well, it turned out quite nicely for the cover of Variety for 
their awards season launch. Yes, very nicely. (x)




How Eddie Redmayne Became Stephen Hawking in ‘The Theory of Everything’
Excellent article by Ramin Setoodeh published today



 This is my new favrite Eddie Redmayne photo by Robert Maxwell.(x)

And then of course, we have Chapter Four. This black hole at the beginning of time. Space-time singularity.

...“What’s really interesting about Eddie is that what turns him on are really tough, tricky roles,” says Working Title co-chair Eric Fellner. “But he’s an incredibly good-looking man. So he can be a movie star too.” Redmayne won’t classify himself that way. “A movie star is someone who has to open a film to gazillions of dollars,” says the actor, who lives in London with his fiancee Hannah Bagshawe. “I’m just trying to pay my mortgage.”...
...Kristen Stewart, who co-starred with Redmayne in the 2008 indie “The Yellow Handkerchief,” says he thrives on taking risks. “We had a great time together,” Stewart says. “This is not a word I use a lot, but it describes him perfectly. He is a fucking lovely man. And he’s astounding as an actor. He’s the type of actor, and guy, you want to go on an adventure with.”...

LA Times The Envelope Screening Series at ArcLight Sherman Oaks on Monday

estherkkimemotional, beautiful, honest and genuine - #Mondaynight #movie #screenings #LAtimestheEnvelope #thetheoryofeverything #felicityjones #eddieredmayne #sogood #best way to start the week!! #thankyou (via)


jmiranda181Gah, this man is so talented! I can't even wink my right eye and somehow he has managed to perfectly portray Stephen Hawking in #TheTheoryofEverything #EddieRedmayne #ilovenerds #cosmology #singularity #bigbang


The Film Experience:
Does Eddie Redmayne in "Theory of Everything" = Daniel Day Lewis in "My Left Foot"?
by Nathaniel R on Oct 27, 2014
...But, jumping ahead... who will win?
On twitter today I was briefly discussing this with Kris & Jenelle and found them both sympathetic to my notion that Redmayne has a rather underdiscussed but considerable advantage in that he is enormously charming in person. When races are tight, charm counts for a lot. I've seen him in public thrice, met him once, and this charm is highly visible. What's more his charm never tilts toward cockiness but toward genuine-feeling humility. That's quite a trick if you stop to think about how actors build successful careers...
Enormous self-confidence is a key ingredient in big careers. The humility is also a very good trick if you're a young male actor in a town that prefers their male actors to be firmly established before they're worthy of large honors. Too cocky and people think 'you haven't earned it yet, upstart!'
I'm currently of the belief that Eddie Redmayne will win though I know a lot of people, like Daniel who I also spoke with on twitter today, think this is crazy and that he's too young and underfamous for Oscar's Kind of Hollywood annual prize. Daniel's contention, which I'm sure is shared by many, is that Daniel Day Lewis -- the most common reference point for a Redmayne win since DDL was Redmayne's same age and also played a severely disabled man who made impressive contributions to the world -- was considerably more acclaimed and famous then than Redmayne is now when he won.
I'm hear to argue, as someone who lived through the rise of DDL and was there from the ground floor, that this is not really the case... Read more here
...the similarities in the careers to date are kind of spooky- crazy...

                                                                    (x)

New poster from Universal Pictures

Article by Clemency Burton-Hill published in the London Evening Standard today:
F*** what did I just say to Stephen Hawking: Eddie Redmayne on meeting the physicist for new film The Theory of Everything
As Eddie Redmayne takes on the biggest role of his career, he talks falling apart in the presence of a great man and how the professor has killer timing.
As Eddie Redmayne downs his tea I notice three girls standing by a tower of funghi, surreptitiously trying to take his photograph. “Whatever Eddie’s got, that’s what you spend your life looking for,” says his agent Dallas Smith, who saw him in Twelfth Night and signed him on the spot. “He had a unique presence, even completely untrained, the sort of magnetism that only great actors have. The fact he had gone to Eton and Cambridge was meaningless. He had the most astonishing natural acting ability. You can’t teach that.”
Tom Hooper, who directed Redmayne in Les Misérables, concurs. “Eddie has the most prodigious gift, and it’s got to a point where his talent transcends the whole discussion,” he says. “There are plenty of people who went to Eton. There is only one actor like him.”
Redmayne, who is about to appear as Stephen Hawking in The Theory of Everything, is in many ways an unlikely actor. “I’ve no idea where any of it comes from,” Michael Grandage says. 
“I’m not sure he does. Ask him!”... read more
Eddie Redmayne’s Portrayal of Stephen Hawking in ‘The Theory of Everything’ 
...Redmayne studied with a dancer for four months to understand how his body worked. Hawking has a motor neuron disease which confines him to a wheelchair. Redmayne admitted that “trying to teach your body to do things it’s not used to doing; it’s a bit like training for a marathon.”
That tedious time period required him to study his body in an unusual way. He said, “I ended up literally doing a chart of every muscle that was going and where the voice was, things like whether he was on one stick, two sticks, which chair he was in, what glasses he was wearing, so I would have a way to jump in and out.”...


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