Showing posts with label BBC One. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BBC One. Show all posts

Wednesday, 24 August 2016

Meet One of Us star Joanna Vanderham: she’s had an Emmy nod and five hit TV shows at 25


Meet One of Us star Joanna Vanderham: she’s had an Emmy nod and five hit TV shows at 25



Meet One of Us star Joanna Vanderham: she’s had an Emmy nod and five hit TV shows at 25

By 
Joanna Vanderham has an air of sleeves-up, get-it-done practicality, spliced with mercurial beauty, winning mischief, and a deep passion for her work. However, she starts our interview by giving a really dodgy housekeeping tip – when I realised I’d got chewing gum on my skirt, she offered the following advice: “I’m sure you can iron it off. No, wait, is that wax?” She is instantly believable in all things, on screen and off, but don’t believe her on chewing gum.
In One of Us, she plays Claire, a nurse whose cherished brother has been murdered, along with his new wife. As she supports her mother and other brother – as well as the neighbours, who were parents to her dead sister-in-law – it’s plain that she is the lodestar of the group, its unwavering moral north: everyone else is either too immature or too messed up.

One of Us
So it’s a new gear in her six-year career, which started fast – her first
 job, a lead role in 2011 Sky1 drama
 The Runaway, earned her an International Emmy nomination
– and only got faster. She’s played
 the arch, high-class beauty (in Dancing on the Edge), the grafting, 
plucky beauty (in The Paradise), and
 the heroine in Banished and The Go-Between, but she hasn’t, until now,
 been the grown-up of the piece.
She gives a fascinating, big-hearted but small-gestured performance, especially in her scenes with Juliet Stevenson, who plays her mother. “At the start of filming,” she says, “I’d been thinking, ‘How do I get on with Juliet?’ And she grabbed my arm, and said, ‘I think I’ll hold on to you.’ And that was it. For three months, she held my arm. We were each other’s rock, you can see it in the episodes, when she goes to sit down, I’m right there with her.”
She makes a face that I decode as, “Does that make us sound like luvvies?” and continues: “Juliet was quite good at making sure we’d all discussed what had happened before each scene, how each of us were feeling, she created intense mini-rehearsals before each scene... but at the same time, she’s such a big child. We spent so many hours discussing how awful our jeans were.”
One of Us
And they certainly were – the least flattering denim you’ve seen on TV since Jeremy Clarkson left Top Gear. Which is part of the charm: it’s a very intense drama, with many very visually striking moments, characters making life-changing decisions, standing in a barn, lit from behind, like Reservoir Dogs.
Vanderham – born in 1991 in Scone, a village in Perthshire – takes an unstudied, unguarded delight in her work: “I have an overwhelming urge to tell stories. I don’t know why. I don’t know where it comes from.”
She has none of the blasé patina that people get when they come from a showbiz family. Her mother, a cardiovascular specialist in Dundee, “made me promise that if I hadn’t made it by the time I was 28, I would retrain. I don’t know what ‘made it’ means, in her view. And I don’t know why 28. But I wouldn’t ever want to give up.”

Whatever the mysterious criteria were, she is pretty certain to have met them. Apart from her apparently effortless TV success, she has also played Desdemona with the RSC, a performance for which she won some stunning reviews that have made apparently no dent in her self criticism. It was a daunting role.
“A 1,200-seat theatre – we started tech [rehearsals], and I walked on stage, and my throat closed up, and I started to cry. I had a little anxiety attack, which I’ve never had in my life. I’d like to do that part again. I want another go. I’ve learnt a lot since last year.”
She’s currently starring alongside Ralph Fiennes in Richard III at the Almeida Theatre in north London, as Lady Anne, who famously dies pretty early but has to come back at the end as a ghost. “There are fabulous stories about the ghosts all going to the pub, and coming back pissed. Sometimes I almost forget my cue and come up a very breathless ghost.”
Richard III
She has no career role model, as such, but will make an exception for Grace Kelly. “She acted in 11 films, won an Oscar and then married a prince. She didn’t do too badly.” I raise an eyebrow at the idea that she would give this up to marry anybody, prince or not, and she says: “This is my idea of modern feminism: men and women are not the same, we’re equal in different ways, and if that means I earn more than you but you want to open the door for me, great.”
It’s good she doesn’t want to marry someone more succesful than her, I say, as that would seriously shrink her pool. “Thanks. Wow. That is beyond depressing.” I insist that it’s a compliment, the inevitable result of having done so much so young.
“We’ll see what happens. Those thoughts have crossed my mind. But you can’t worry about it because that’s a waste of energy, isn’t it? Just as I can’t worry about the fact that you’ve just cursed me to be permanently alone.”
She has a wonderful dialectical quality to her, carefree but intense, confident enough to take risks but careful and modest. There isn’t much light nonchalance in her performance in One of Us, but her range and magnetism are becoming ever clearer.
She hates watching herself on screen: “I had to remake my showreel earlier this year, and I was going, ‘I can’t believe this was recorded. Please can this never be witnessed again.’ I got six minutes out of my six-year career and thought, ‘This’ll do.’” It’s a comically harsh and utterly wrong judgement, but fortunately, the world thinks differently.
One of Us starts on BBC1 at 9pm tonight

Tuesday, 23 August 2016

One Of Us - meet the cast and Radio Times review

One Of Us - meet the cast



One Of Us - meet the cast

By 
There's a storm brewing in Scotland in BBC1's British crime thriller One of Us – and we're not just talking about the weather.
Childhood Sweethearts Grace Douglas and Adam Elliot lie brutally murdered in their Edinburgh home. Their families, close neighbours in the remote village of Braeston in the Scottish Highlands, are distraught. With a storm raging outside the murderer arrives on their doorstep, badly injured.
Here's your who's who guide...
John Lynch
Who does he play? 
Bill Douglas, father to the murdered Grace and married to Moira, Grace’s mother.
Where do I recognise him from? 
Lynch’s acting career spans four decades – take your pick from The Secret Garden, crime drama The Fall, Lassie, and his portrayal of a troubled footballing genius in Best. 
Joanna Vanderham
Who does she play?
Claire Elliot, compassionate care home worker and sister to the murdered Adam.
Where do I recognise her from?
She played a beautiful society girl in Dancing on the Edge and has held prominent roles in What Maisie Knew, The Paradise and period drama series Banished.
Juliet Stevenson 
Who does she play?
Louise Elliot, Mum to Adam, Claire and their brother Rob. She’s estranged from her husband and has a frosty relationship with Moira Douglas that borders on animosity. 
Where do I recognise her from?
Bend It Like Beckham, Emma, Infamous, Being Julia, The Village and the ever-popular Truly, Madly, Deeply.
Julie Graham
Who does she play?
Moira Douglas, the mother of Grace and wife of Bill.
Where do I recognise her from?
The Bill (she’s appeared in three roles in the long-running crime drama), Survivors, The Bletchley Circle and sitcom Benidorm.

Joe Dempsie 

Who does he play?
Rob, the eldest sibling of the Elliot clan.
Where do I recognise him from?
He appeared in all three miniseries offshoots of 2006 drama This is England. You’ll also recognise him from Skins and his Game of Thrones role as muscular blacksmith Gendry.

Georgina Campbell

Who does she play?
Rob’s girlfriend Anna.
Where do I recognise her from?
She's the protagonist in unsettling drama Murdered by My Boyfriend, which is based on a real-life story of domestic abuse, and has also appeared in After Hours and black comedy series Flowers.

Gary Lewis

Who does he play?
Alastair, a worker on the Douglas farm.
Where do I recognise him from?
The Scot boasts an impressive résumé and has appeared in the likes of Gangs of New York, Billy Elliot, Filth, and Outlander.

Cristian Ortega

Who does he play?
The taciturn younger brother of Grace, Jamie has an unhealthy fixation on Claire.
Where do I recognise him from?
Ortega is making his screen debut so you probably don’t.



One of Us review: a clever, chilling and original thriller




One of Us review: a clever, chilling and original thriller

What a clever little thriller this is shaping up to be.
We start with an horrific killing, look straight into the eyes of the desperate drug-crazed murderer of a beautiful young couple Adam and Grace (who is pregnant) and… then what? Where can it go from here?
Well, we go the family that’s what, facing the unbearable unthinkable impact of their grief before another twist. The killer we assumed to be a random attacker hot foots it in a stolen car up to the remote Scottish highlands where the two families live. But before he can carry out whatever nefarious deed he was planning he crashes. The family find him barely alive, realise he is the murderer (he has their postcode written down, so is clearly looking for them, and is wearing dead Adam’s watch) and then imprison him.
Only writers Jack and Harry Williams have yet another twist for us: Rob (Joe Dempsie, below) has been lying and had not called the emergency services. And the killer, who has been caged by the families, is then finished off in the middle of the night, despite the best attentions of Joanna Vanderham's Claire (below), the medic who puts the ethics of her work ahead of her feelings while caring for a man who killed her brother.
But before you can say "who killed him?" and "will they get away with it?" there’s another twist. Louise’s estranged husband Peter, played by Adrian Edmondson, reacts in a decidedly weird manner to the news that his son has been killed: he doesn’t seem to be too bothered. He tells his new wife that there was “no-one” on the phone when he listened to the voicemail. Cue credits.
It’s a strong opener to what promises to be a gripping four-part series with plenty to be resolved.
The Williams brothers have a knack for playing creatively with well-known genres (think their James Nesbitt series The Missing which focused on a missing child but held back until the very end the revelation of whether the youngster was alive or not) and they seem to have pulled it off again.
This is about the murder of a murdererer by the victim's families, which explores the nature of grief and retribution in new and interesting ways.
It reminded me a little of Scandi Noir; not just in the rain sodden beautiful grey and gloomy scenery but in the way the drama focuses on the aftermath of a murder, rather in the manner of those brilliant opening episodes of The Killing series one which was steeped in powerful emotions emanating from a killing. Many of the scenes are also lit from behind – eery, and chilling, all a bit Reservoir Dogs.
A word too for the scenery which does its job magnificently. “It’s just a bit of weather Bill,” says Gary Lewis’ hardened farmhand Alastair at one point but of course it’s more than that. The crashing storms are a fitting metaphor for the emotional life of the characters but director William McGregor does a good job with the visual metaphors. I liked the cutaway to the spider’s web, which echoes a line earlier in the drama and is one of many finely judged visual metaphors for the hell this family now finds itself in.
Of course there are questions to be asked. The plot requires the police to be given a back seat early on. Quite why they hadn’t visited the family yet suggests they may not be up to the job but there is an intriguing set up with Laura Fraser’s character Juliet. She's a detective who deals drugs to help fund an operation for what we presume is her cancer stricken daughter. And with this story she has her work cut out.
Also, the performances are first rate, even if a lot of the acting requires rather a lot of frenetic emoting as this horror story unfolds.
But when we're dealing with frenetic emotion, it's also true to say that Juliet Stevenson (below) is made for the role of howling angry stricken mother Louise, and I also liked the interaction between Juliet Graham ‘s Moira and John Lynch as her husband John. These acting veterans are ably supported by the younger cast.
I'm quite excited at the prospect of episode two and will probably join Louise for a stiff one...
 
One of Us Continues on Tuesday nights on BBC1 at 9pm 


Tuesday, 24 November 2015

BBC Christmas treats include Sherlock, Doctor Who, Call The Midwife, The Making of Dad's Army and Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None

The Sherlock clue only the Chinese can crack: Christmas special gives secret message to 98 million fans of 'Curly Fu' in China and leads this year’s festive TV offerings from Strictly to Doctor Who

  • BBC show will be full of secrets and clues for loyal fans but will also feature extra one in Chinese for Asian viewers 
  • Despite its bans, the programme is watched by 98 million people in China where Holmes is nicknamed 'Curly Fu' 
  • Other shows to feature in festive schedules are Call The Midwife, The Making of Dad's Army and Downton Abbey
  • Poldark star Aidan Turner also set to return to screens in new role in Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None
This year's Christmas special of Sherlock will include a secret message to its millions of Asian fans by making a reference to one of the clues in Chinese.
The BBC show, starring Benedict Cumberbatch, will be packed full of the usual covert messages but will also include an extra one directed at its 98million Chinese fans, whom refer to the detective as 'Curly Fu' and his sidekick Dr Watson as 'Peanut'.
Details of the show - a ghost story entitled The Abominable Bride - were announced yesterday alongside a host of family favourites which the BBC hopes will help it win the battle of the ratings this Christmas.
Other shows in the Corporation's festive programme - most of which have not yet been scheduled - include a seasonal special of Call The Midwife, a Strictly Christmas Special and a much anticipated Agatha Christie film starring Poldark actor Aidan Turner. Meanwhile, ITV is bringing another Downton Abbey Christmas special to our screens, which will be the last ever installment of the hit period drama. 
 The show's Chinese fans have nicknamed Sherlock Holmes (left) 'Curly Fu' and Dr John Watson 'Peanut' 
 The show's Chinese fans have nicknamed Sherlock Holmes (left) 'Curly Fu' and Dr John Watson 'Peanut' 
Despite the love for Cumberbatch thousands of miles away, he admitted he sometimes feels like 'a d***' when he's dressed up for his Sherlock Holmes role
Despite the love for Cumberbatch thousands of miles away, he admitted he sometimes feels like 'a d***' when he's dressed up for his Sherlock Holmes role
Sherlock Script writer Steven Moffat told the Radio Times: 'It's a new story, but if you know the original stories, you'll see that it's fashioned out of quite a few others. As ever with us, we've chosen several and there are loads of references. One of them you have to be able to speak Chinese to get.'
Sherlock is one of a number of British shows which are banned from appearing on the Chinese Central Television network due to its sexual content. But millions of people still stream it online and get their fix of Sherlock Holmes. 
Cumberbatch has earned the nickname 'Curly Fu' due to his hairstyle - the word Fu mean Sherlock - while there is an online forum in the Far East country dedicated to the English actor's character called Baidu Curly Fu Bar.
Dr Watson's 'Peanut' originates from the Chinese translation of Martin Freeman's name, 'Hua Sheng', which sounds like the Mandarin word for nut. 
And Then There Were None (BBC One) 
Poldark star Aidan Turner - whose glistening bare chest and rugged looks won the hearts of women across the country - will return to our screens in a BBC adaptation of Agatha Christie’s bestselling crime novel.
In the three-part drama, based on Christie's book which sold 100million copies worldwide, he will play charming but mysterious mercenary Philip Lombard.
The story, set in 1939, sees ten strangers invited to an isolated island. The guests are killed off in turn, and realise the murderer must be among them. Turner leads an all-star cast that also includes Douglas Booth, Charles Dance and Miranda Richardson. 
Poldark star Aidan Turner will return to our screens in a BBC adaptation of Agatha Christie’s bestselling crime novel And Then There Were None on BBC One
Poldark star Aidan Turner will return to our screens in a BBC adaptation of Agatha Christie’s bestselling crime novel And Then There Were None on BBC One
Aidan Turner in the new BBC adaptation of Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None
Aidan Turner as Poldark
Aidan Turner (pictured right as Poldark) is set to appear in a BBC adaptation of Agatha Christie's novel And Then There Were None (left)
While his millions of female fans may be disappointed that his luscious locks have been cut, Turner admitted he was grateful for the change.
He told Radio Times: ‘I want to keep that look for Ross, and doing a movie where you have long hair and you’re trying to style it differently just doesn’t work. Plus, you can’t get away with hair like that in real life!’
Turner also said filming And Then There Were None had been ‘surreal’ as it involved returning to the Cornish coast, where Poldark was mostly shot.
He said: ‘It was the very first day of the shoot, and I was standing at the edge of a cliff – and I kind of had to check what costume I was wearing! Because all I could see were cliffs and sea and all these familiar sights.’ 
The Many Faces of Ronnie Corbett (BBC Two) 
The schedule will also feature The Many Faces of Ronnie Corbett, a documentary  which follows the life of the comedian – who turns 85 next month – through interviews and archive footage.
The programme touches on his days as an organist and his first screen role in You’re Only Young Twice, while also looks into his partnership with Ronnie Barket in sketch show The Two Ronnies. 
The Great Barrier Reef (BBC One)
Sir David Attenborough will present a new three-part documentary, in which he returns to the Great Barrier Reef sixty years after first scuba-diving there in 1957. This time, the intrepid presenter is using new technology and the latest scientific research to study the area. 
Sir David Attenborough will present a new three-part documentary, in which he returns to the Great Barrier Reef sixty years after first scuba-diving there in 1957
Sir David Attenborough will present a new three-part documentary, in which he returns to the Great Barrier Reef sixty years after first scuba-diving there in 1957
Among the equipment in his weaponary, Attenborough will use satellite scanning to show the 2,300km expanse of living coral, and revolutionary macro lenses that will capture the reef’s tiniest, normally unseen, life-forms.
Meanwhile, Kate Winslet is narrating the nature documentary Snow Chick which follows a penguin during its first precarious months on ice as it tries to survive in some of the harshest conditions on the planet
We’re Doomed! The Dad’s Army Story (BBC Two) 
This one-off docu-drama will explore how BBC bureaucracy almost stopped the classic sitcom and its stars from ever reaching our screens.
Ahead of the film adaptation of the comedy which due to hit the cinemas in February, the programme, by Stephen Russell, will follow the origins of the cult show, from writer Jimmy Perry’s initial idea in 1967 until the transmission of the first episode in 1968.
John Sessions as the pompous Capt Mainwaring, with his immortal ‘You stupid boy’ catchphrase, in We're Doomed! The Dad's Army Story
John Sessions as the pompous Capt Mainwaring, with his immortal ‘You stupid boy’ catchphrase, in We're Doomed! The Dad's Army Story
Captain Mainwaring – originally played by Arthur Lowe – is being brought back to life by John Sessions while other cast members include Paul Ritter, Julian Sands, Mark Heap and Keith Allen. 
Dickensian (BBC One) 
Other highlights include Dickensian, an ambitious 20-part series that brings the much-loved characters of Charles Dickens - including Fagin and Scrooge, who are seen bumping into one another in the local pub - together in one London street where they concoct a plot for Great Expectations's Miss Havisham to be jilted. 
The production, written by former Eastenders script writer Tony Jordan and filmed in west London, stars Stephen Rea as Bleak House’s Inspector Bucket, Caroline Quentin and Mrs Bumble from Oliver Twist and Tuppence Middleton, as Amelia Havisham. 
Stephen Rea as Bleak House’s Inspector Bucket in Dickensian, an ambitious 20-part series that brings the much-loved characters of Charles Dickens
Stephen Rea as Bleak House’s Inspector Bucket in Dickensian, an ambitious 20-part series that brings the much-loved characters of Charles Dickens
Downton Abbey (ITV)
This year's Christmas special will be the last ever installment of the period drama and will see the scriptwriters tie up numerous loose ends for the characters. Although those behind the programme remain tight-lipped about what is planned, Lady Edith is expected to take centre stage in the finale while Mary is seen getting to grips with married life. 
Call The Midwife (BBC One)
The festive edition of Call The Midwife sees the nuns celebrating Christmas in 1965 with a festive bus trip to see the lights in Regent Street. But disaster strikes when Sister Monica Joan (Judy Parfitt) goes missing. 
The festive edition of Call The Midwife sees the nuns celebrating Christmas in 1965 with a festive bus trip to see the lights in Regent Street. But disaster strikes when Sister Monica Joan (Judy Parfitt) goes missing. Pictured: Sister Julienne played by Jenny Agutter
The festive edition of Call The Midwife sees the nuns celebrating Christmas in 1965 with a festive bus trip to see the lights in Regent Street. But disaster strikes when Sister Monica Joan (Judy Parfitt) goes missing. Pictured: Sister Julienne played by Jenny Agutter
Strictly Come Dancing (BBC One) 
A special on this Saturday night favourite, broadcast from Blackpool, sees Sir Bruce Forsyth return to the fold as six winners and contestants from previous series compete against one another.
The show will include Abbey Clancy, Alison Hammond, Harry Judd, Lisa Snowdon, Tom Chambers and the winner of The People's Strictly for Comic Relief 2015, Cassidy Little.  
Stick Man (BBC One)
Younger generations can enjoy Stick Man, based on the book by The Gruffalo author Julia Donaldson, which follows a stick man on an adventure that sees him chased by a dog and end up on a fire as he tries to get home in time for Christmas.  
The cast involved in the animation include Martin Freeman, Hugh Bonneville, Jennifer Saunders and Rob Brydon.  
Younger generations can enjoy Stick Man , based on the book by The Gruffalo author Julia Donaldson, which follows a stick man on an adventure that sees him chased by a dog and end up on a fire as he tries to get home in time for Christmas
Younger generations can enjoy Stick Man , based on the book by The Gruffalo author Julia Donaldson, which follows a stick man on an adventure that sees him chased by a dog and end up on a fire as he tries to get home in time for Christmas
And some other highlights... 
Stephen Fry is celebrated in a new documentary looking at his contribution to TV, while David Beckham can be seen travelling around the globe playing football on all seven continents in documentary film Beckham: For The Love Of The Game (BBC One).
As well as the new commissions, many of the usual favourites are also returning, with special episodes of Doctor Who (BBC One), Call The Midwife (BBC Two) and Still Open All Hours (BBC One), featuring Sir David Jason.  
Meanwhile, comedy staples including Catherine Tate, John Bishop, Michael McIntyre and Mrs Brown’s Boys (BBC One) also have new offerings. In the latter, Agnes is determined to have a peaceful holiday this year but there's surprises in store when a handsome stranger at the pub believes she is in love of a little festive romance. 
Cookery programmes are also well catered for, with Christmas treats served up by Nigella Lawson and James Martin. 
Still Open All Hours , featuring Sir David Jason as Granville and James Baxter as Leroy (pictured), forms part of the BBC's festive programme
Still Open All Hours , featuring Sir David Jason as Granville and James Baxter as Leroy (pictured), forms part of the BBC's festive programme



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Tuesday, 22 September 2015

BAFTA Winning Actress Georgina Campbell Cast in ‘Major’ new BBC One drama One Of Us

BAFTA Winning Actress Georgina Campbell Cast in ‘Major’ new BBC One drama One Of Us

Georgina Campbell
Georgina Campbell
Filming has begun on new BBC One modern thriller One Of Us, written by Harry and Jack Williams (The Missing, Tripped). Set in Edinburgh and the Highlands, a host of acclaimed actors will take on roles in this gripping and powerful character-driven drama.
BAFTA winner Georgina Campbell (Murdered By My Boyfriend, The Ark)  will star alongside Juliet Stevenson (The Village, Truly, Madly Deeply) will star alongside Joanna Vanderham (The Paradise, The Go-Between), Laura Fraser (Breaking Bad, Peter & Wendy), John Lynch (The Fall, Sliding Doors), Adrian Edmondson (War And Peace, Prey). Along with Joe Dempsie (Game Of Thrones, Skins) Julie Graham (Shetland, The Bletchley Circle), Gary Lewis (Stonemouth, Filth), Steve Evets (Rev, Looking For Eric) and Kate Dickie (Prometheus, Game Of Thrones).
Living side by side in isolated rural Scotland, the Elliot and Douglas families know each other inside out. However, when two of them are horrifically murdered, their lives are shattered and their relationships, both between and within the grieving families, are tested to the limit.
In the search for answers, skeletons are unearthed and old wounds are reopened, as honesty, loyalty and morality is all brought into question. Everyone has secrets, but when the lines between right and wrong, good and bad, true and false, become blurred, what path do you take, and how do you cope with the lasting and deadly consequences.
Harry and Jack Williams say: “One Of Us is a thriller but also at heart a character piece. So it’s wonderful to have such a talented cast. We can’t wait to see how they bring it to life.”
One Of Us is part of the BBC’s commitment to produce distinctive Scottish output, and complements BBC Scotland productions including Stonemouth (BBC One Scotland & BBC Two), Shetland (BBC One), River City (BBC One Scotland) Sunset Song, Katie Morag (CBeebies), Bob Servant (BBC Four), Murder (BBC Two) and landmark series Highlands (BBC One).

Friday, 29 August 2014