From BAFTA to DGA, the Latest Winners this Awards Season
With the Oscars upon us, the awards season is almost over! But the last trek to the Academy Awards include many guild awards and of course, BAFTA! So here.s the latest congratulatory awards list of the winners from BAFTA to DGA, from Annie to Ace and everything in between!
Your full BAFTA winners (winners are highlighted):
Best Film
Birdman Alejandro G. Iñárritu, John Lesher, James W. Skotchdopole
Boyhood Richard Linklater, Cathleen Sutherland
The Grand Budapest Hotel Wes Anderson, Scott Rudin, Steven Rales, Jeremy Dawson
The Imitation Game Nora Grossman, Ido Ostrowsky, Teddy Schwarzman
The Theory Of Everything Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Lisa Bruce, Anthony McCarten
Director
Birdman Alejandro G. Iñárritu
Boyhood Richard Linklater
The Grand Budapest Hotel Wes Anderson
The Theory Of Everything James Marsh
Whiplash Damien Chazelle
Leading Actor
Benedict Cumberbatch The Imitation Game
Eddie Redmayne The Theory of Everything...
With the Oscars upon us, the awards season is almost over! But the last trek to the Academy Awards include many guild awards and of course, BAFTA! So here.s the latest congratulatory awards list of the winners from BAFTA to DGA, from Annie to Ace and everything in between!
Your full BAFTA winners (winners are highlighted):
Best Film
Birdman Alejandro G. Iñárritu, John Lesher, James W. Skotchdopole
Boyhood Richard Linklater, Cathleen Sutherland
The Grand Budapest Hotel Wes Anderson, Scott Rudin, Steven Rales, Jeremy Dawson
The Imitation Game Nora Grossman, Ido Ostrowsky, Teddy Schwarzman
The Theory Of Everything Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Lisa Bruce, Anthony McCarten
Director
Birdman Alejandro G. Iñárritu
Boyhood Richard Linklater
The Grand Budapest Hotel Wes Anderson
The Theory Of Everything James Marsh
Whiplash Damien Chazelle
Leading Actor
Benedict Cumberbatch The Imitation Game
Eddie Redmayne The Theory of Everything...
- 2/9/2015
- by Manny
- Manny the Movie Guy
The winners of the Directors Guild of America Outstanding Directorial Achievement Awards for 2014 were announced tonight during the 67th Annual DGA Awards at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza in Los Angeles. Alejandro G. Iñárritu won the DGA’s Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Feature Film for Birdman. Actor Jane Lynch hosted the ceremony before an audience of more than 1,600 guests. Presenters included (in alphabetical order): DGA President Paris Barclay; Chadwick Boseman; Pierce Brosnan; Glen Charles; Les Charles; Bradley Cooper; Alfonso Cuarón; Julie Delpy; Jodie Foster; Taraji P. Henson; January Jones; Michael Mann; Lea Michele; Don Mischer; Bill Murray; Katey Sagal; Steven Spielberg; Barbra Streisand; and DGA First Vice President Betty Thomas. BMW is the Exclusive Automotive Sponsor of the 67th Annual DGA Awards. The winners of the 2014 DGA Awards for Outstanding Directorial Achievement are: Outstanding Directorial Achievement In Feature Film Alejandro G. IÑÁRRITU Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue...
- 2/8/2015
- by Josh Abraham
- Hollywoodnews.com
The Royal Court Theatre announces a new season of work today, Friday 27 June, including new plays from Molly Davies, Zinnie Harris, Rory Mullarkey, Tim Price and Jack Thorne a debut play from first-time playwright Diana Nneka Atuona a collaboration between scientist Chris Rapley, playwright and director Duncan Macmillan and director Katie Mitchell and a new production for young people and their families - Enda Walsh's new adaptation of Roald Dahl's The Twits.
- 6/27/2014
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
The Shed at the National Theatre, London
Rhys Ifans is superb as a rough sleeper caught up in the Occupy demonstrations in Tim Price's commendable play
For an article marking the National Theatre's 50th birthday, I recently asked a number of theatre-makers what they'd do if they suddenly found themselves running the place. Playwright Polly Stenham's plan particularly struck me: she said she'd run an Occupy event, turning the theatre into a forum for protest and political change.
With this searing 70-minute monologue by Tim Price, in which a rough sleeper, Danny (Rhys Ifans), finds himself caught up in the protest camp that occupied the area around St Paul's Cathedral – and many people's hearts and minds – through the winter of 2011, we are a step closer to seeing Stenham's wish fulfilled. This is visceral political theatre, lampooning inequality at every level: the economic imbalance between the 99% and the 1%; and...
Rhys Ifans is superb as a rough sleeper caught up in the Occupy demonstrations in Tim Price's commendable play
For an article marking the National Theatre's 50th birthday, I recently asked a number of theatre-makers what they'd do if they suddenly found themselves running the place. Playwright Polly Stenham's plan particularly struck me: she said she'd run an Occupy event, turning the theatre into a forum for protest and political change.
With this searing 70-minute monologue by Tim Price, in which a rough sleeper, Danny (Rhys Ifans), finds himself caught up in the protest camp that occupied the area around St Paul's Cathedral – and many people's hearts and minds – through the winter of 2011, we are a step closer to seeing Stenham's wish fulfilled. This is visceral political theatre, lampooning inequality at every level: the economic imbalance between the 99% and the 1%; and...
- 12/29/2013
- by Laura Barnett
- The Guardian - Film News
The actor on his collaboration with Jake and Dinos Chapman, how Irish folk singer Fionn Regan inspired his tattoo, and the war film he thinks is the best ever made
Born in Pembrokeshire, Rhys Ifans made his earliest screen appearances as a presenter on Welsh-language television. After a brief stint as a founding member of psychedelic rock band Super Furry Animals, Ifans launched an acting career. He was Bafta-nominated for his breakthrough role as Hugh Grant's flatmate, Spike, in the 1999 film Notting Hill, before winning the award for his portrayal of Peter Cook in Not Only But Always. He also starred in the film adaptation of Howard Marks's autobiography, Mr Nice, and counts the villainous Lizard in The Amazing Spider-Man among his notable big-screen roles. Ifans has made several stage appearances, including roles in Under Milk Wood and Volpone at the National Theatre, where he is currently starring in Protest Song,...
Born in Pembrokeshire, Rhys Ifans made his earliest screen appearances as a presenter on Welsh-language television. After a brief stint as a founding member of psychedelic rock band Super Furry Animals, Ifans launched an acting career. He was Bafta-nominated for his breakthrough role as Hugh Grant's flatmate, Spike, in the 1999 film Notting Hill, before winning the award for his portrayal of Peter Cook in Not Only But Always. He also starred in the film adaptation of Howard Marks's autobiography, Mr Nice, and counts the villainous Lizard in The Amazing Spider-Man among his notable big-screen roles. Ifans has made several stage appearances, including roles in Under Milk Wood and Volpone at the National Theatre, where he is currently starring in Protest Song,...
- 12/22/2013
- by Leah Harper
- The Guardian - Film News
National Theatre, London
Rhys Ifans brings a whiff of danger to a heartfelt solo piece on the Occupy movement and homelessness
On your way to the National Theatre you will almost certainly spot some of London's rough sleepers, who number almost 6,500 people according to on-the-ground charity Broadway. In Tim Price's urgent, heartfelt monologue, Danny is one of these rough sleepers, a man who likes order but whose life has become chaotic through addiction, marriage breakdown, and the loss of a child.
Danny is played superbly by Rhys Ifans, who brings a whiff of danger and something imminently combustible to this erratic, angry, lonely man. Passersby may see him, maybe even give him money, but "people don't touch me," he says, explaining that he takes care not to brush by people for fear of seeing the revulsion in their faces.
But then something happens to Danny that stops him feeling...
Rhys Ifans brings a whiff of danger to a heartfelt solo piece on the Occupy movement and homelessness
On your way to the National Theatre you will almost certainly spot some of London's rough sleepers, who number almost 6,500 people according to on-the-ground charity Broadway. In Tim Price's urgent, heartfelt monologue, Danny is one of these rough sleepers, a man who likes order but whose life has become chaotic through addiction, marriage breakdown, and the loss of a child.
Danny is played superbly by Rhys Ifans, who brings a whiff of danger and something imminently combustible to this erratic, angry, lonely man. Passersby may see him, maybe even give him money, but "people don't touch me," he says, explaining that he takes care not to brush by people for fear of seeing the revulsion in their faces.
But then something happens to Danny that stops him feeling...
- 12/20/2013
- by Lyn Gardner
- The Guardian - Film News
From the Nutcracker to American Psycho, from Mary Poppins to Kurt Vile, our critics pick their must-sees of the festive season
If you wish it could be Christmas every day
Nutcrackers, various
You know it's Christmas in the ballet world by the number of Nutcrackers touring the world's stages. In the UK alone, there are close to a dozen doing the rounds, but the top three remain the Royal Ballet's exquisitely traditional version, the sparky family friendly production by Birmingham Royal Ballet, and English National Ballet's – with the best snow scene of them all. Royal Opera House, London (020-7304 4000), 4 December to 16 January; Birmingham Hippodrome (0844 338 5000), to 12 December; London Coliseum (020-7845 9300), 11 December to 5 January.
Father Christmas
Does Father Christmas use the loo? Does he secretly long for summer? Does he have strong views on the size of chimneys? You bet he does. Raymond Briggs's gorgeous picture book gets a heartwarming makeover for under-sixes.
If you wish it could be Christmas every day
Nutcrackers, various
You know it's Christmas in the ballet world by the number of Nutcrackers touring the world's stages. In the UK alone, there are close to a dozen doing the rounds, but the top three remain the Royal Ballet's exquisitely traditional version, the sparky family friendly production by Birmingham Royal Ballet, and English National Ballet's – with the best snow scene of them all. Royal Opera House, London (020-7304 4000), 4 December to 16 January; Birmingham Hippodrome (0844 338 5000), to 12 December; London Coliseum (020-7845 9300), 11 December to 5 January.
Father Christmas
Does Father Christmas use the loo? Does he secretly long for summer? Does he have strong views on the size of chimneys? You bet he does. Raymond Briggs's gorgeous picture book gets a heartwarming makeover for under-sixes.
- 11/25/2013
- by Lyn Gardner, Michael Billington, Andrew Clements, Alexis Petridis, Judith Mackrell, John Fordham, Brian Logan, Stuart Heritage, Mark Lawson, Jonathan Jones
- The Guardian - Film News
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