Jeremy Irons Attends Juno and the Paycock Opening Night

Jeremy Irons was among VIP guests at the first night in the Abbey Theatre for a new production of Juno And The Paycock by Sean O’Casey, directed by Howard Davies and with a cast including Sinead Cusack and Ciaran Hinds. He was joined by Sean O’Casey’s daughter, Siobhan, and RTE personalities Pat Kenny and Joe Duffy, Richard Boyd Barrett, British ambassador Mr Julian King and President Mary McAleese.

Sinead Cusack and Jeremy Irons at the Opening Night of Juno and the Paycock. Photo copyright Kieran Harnett

Audio of Sinead Cusack and Ciaran Hinds on RTE News at One

 

The Borgias Behind the Scenes Season 1

From Balint Regius’s Gallery  – Photos taken in 2010 from behind the scenes of The Borgias season one.  The photos were taken on locations in Soponya, Komárom, Budapest and Etyek in Hungary.

Unfortunately, it seems, he did not get any photos of Jeremy.  David Oakes, Francois Arnaud and Colm Feore do appear in some of these photos, however.

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Max Irons at Gucci Museum Opening

FLORENCE, ITALY – SEPTEMBER 26: Actors Emily Browning and Max Irons attend the Gucci Museum opening on September 26, 2011 in Florence, Italy. (Photos by Jacopo Raule/Getty Images for Gucci)

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Jeremy Irons at the Zurich Film Festival

25 September 2011 – Jeremy Irons attended the Swiss premiere of Margin Call at the Zurich Film Festival.

Photos via @thelazymarmot on Twitter/Twitpic, Getty Images, muriel hilti/tilllate.com, Sven Bänziger for NZZ.ch, Aleksander for usgang.ch and veroshappytravels.com

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The Lion King Directors on Working with Jeremy Irons

Read the full interview at Flickering Myth Movie Blog

Friday, 23 September 2011

Special Features: Q&A with The Lion King directors Rob Minkoff and Roger Allers

Flickering Myth was one of a number of sites invited to take part in a virtual roundtable interview with Rob Minkoff and Roger Allers, co-directors of The Lion King, to discuss the 3D re-release of the animated Disney classic, ahead of its arrival in the U.K. on October 7th.

The resulting two-hour Q&A covered a whole range of topics including the making of the original film, its recent conversion to 3D, traditional animations vs. computer animation, the future of the industry and much more.

Here are the excerpts which pertain to Jeremy Irons:

Q:  Can you share with us some memories of working with Jeremy Irons?

Roger Allers: Jeremy is a gentleman and a brilliant actor. He always gave us extra interpretations of lines which were fantastic.

Q:  I think that Scar is the best villain of all Disney`s movies.What do you think about Jeremy Irons voice performance?

Roger Allers: I think I’d put Jeremy’s performance up on the top of all time best vocal performances.

 

Q&A: Jeremy Irons Talks About The Borgias

Q&A: Jeremy Irons Talks About The Borgias
By Anna Carugati
Published: September 21, 2011

With a voice that is rich, deep, mellow, sometimes unsettling, always convincing, and smooth as a glass of good cognac, Jeremy Irons is a prolific and versatile actor who won the Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance as Claus von Bülow in Reversal of Fortune. He has often played complex, conflicted, sometimes less-than-ethical characters, most recently Rodrigo Borgia, Pope Alexander VI, patriarch of the infamous and powerful family at the height of the Renaissance, in Showtime’s series The Borgias. Irons, who has also won two Golden Globe Awards, a Primetime Emmy and a Tony, took time out from filming the second season of the series to speak with World Screen.

WS: How did you become involved in the project?

IRONS: I was approached by [the director] Neil Jordan, who told me he was writing a series. He’d had a film for a long time he was trying to get made about the Borgias; finally, he decided he would offer it to a television company as a series. So for the first time in his life he was writing a television series and he asked me if I would be interested in playing Rodrigo, who becomes Pope Alexander VI. I said, “Let me think about it,” and I did some research and discovered that Rodrigo was an immigrant from Spain. He was a very large man. I’m not a large man, so I said to Neil, “You really should get somebody who looks more like him,” He said, “No, no, no, no, it’s all about power and the abuse and use of power. You know all about that. You can do that. No one knows what Rodrigo looked like.” So I thought, I’d love to work with Neil. We had talked about it a lot in the past; he is a consummate filmmaker. In the past I had done a program about F. Scott Fitzgerald for Showtime and they had aired Lolita and I’d been very affected by the way they show their product—they take a lot of care about it. So that was all good. The idea of a five-month stint [it takes five months to shoot a complete season of The Borgias] and doing something possibly for future years worried me a little bit, but I had been watching how better and better work was being done on American television. Some of the series are really splendid in the way they are made. So I thought, why not? Let’s go for it. That’s how it came about.WS: Rodrigo Borgia is nothing if not complex. What appealed to you about his character?
IRONS: It’s interesting, he was a newcomer amongst the Roman families. He was very powerful and, like many of the rulers of that time, very Machiavellian, as we would now call it. When Rodrigo died he was vilified by a succeeding pope and [then developed] a bad reputation, not only Rodrigo as a pope, but the whole family. When you delve into the history books and the biographies, you discover that that was not necessarily the truth. One book in particular I was researching listed all the adjectives that had been used to describe Rodrigo. They were extraordinarily broad in spectrum. He was a great church organizer. He was quite concerned and quite successful about strengthening the Vatican, which was in a very weak position when he became pope. He was wonderful company, great bon viveur, a man of great appetite for food and for women and for all of life, really, in that Spanish and Mediterranean way. And on the other end there was the fornicator, the murderer and the assassin and a lot of very negative adjectives. And I thought, this is very interesting, let’s try and find out what makes this man—either good or bad—[behave the way he does]. A man who, while being head of the church with an explicit belief in God, a man of his time, also managed to have 12 children and many lovers. I thought that is a very interesting character to try to weave through. From my research, reading as widely as I could, a lot of it writing that was written while he was alive, Neil and I together really tried to create this powerful man who loved and lived hard, and who I suppose in modern eyes, probably behaved quite badly on occasion.

WS: Are there still parallels from the Borgia reign to certain realities in our world today?
IRONS: I certainly see them. The seat of power is a very complicated place, whether it be Washington or Brussels or wherever. I don’t think people change. I’ve always felt that [throughout] history, reading what people have said and what people have thought, their ideas may change as they build on each other’s, but I don’t think people are any different, and the way power is used and abused is really no different. The methods may be different but still, if we decide from a seat of power to get rid of somebody, that person is got rid of. We still spin or lie, however you’d like to call it, to cover our tracks. I don’t think the wielding of power has changed at all.

WS: What challenges does a TV series present to you as an actor that are different from the challenges that shooting a feature film would present?
IRONS: Well, one of the great gifts of television is that one has more time. We’ve had nine hours to tell the story that we have transmitted [in the first season]. We are going to have ten hours to transmit the second. If it goes to four seasons, which it might well do, there will be 39 hours to tell the story of 12 years, which means that you can go into much greater depth. You can play the inconsistencies. You can have the luxury that you don’t have in a feature film—which in a way is more like a short story—to go into depth of character and depth of story. And although with The Borgias there are many stories happening and so everybody gets their allotted time, you are still able to have the luxury of a greater amount of time than you do in a film. So that is one of the main advantages. The challenge is that it’s a long haul; it’s five months. Fortunately, we are shooting in Budapest, which is a very nice place to shoot. I like that I have the occasional couple of days to sort out my life. So I would say that the challenges are just keeping your concentration up, keeping your enthusiasm up. One of the great things is that over [the course of a season] we have four directors, so one of the challenges is adapting to the new way the director will work. But all in all it’s a very pleasurable job, actually.

WS: Throughout your career you have often played roles that were conflicted or not completely ethical. What sort of roles appeal to you?
IRONS: I’ve had some great opportunities but I’ve always known that I wanted characters that really interest me, who don’t necessarily add up immediately, who have enigmatic qualities, who have the complications which we as human beings have. It’s very rare, apart from people like Shakespeare or Harold Pinter or some of the great dramas, that you get characters who are flawed as we all are and yet possibly good at times, who have many layers. That’s what I always try to look for, people who interest me…. It’s sort of a gut instinct that I have when I read something. In a way, one of the joys of acting is you have an opportunity to explore someone else, and it’s quite nice to explore someone who is a fascinating character. That’s what I’ve always looked for, apart, of course, from always wanting good directors and good production, so that one’s work is backed up. And then, of course, good sales at the end, so that hopefully one’s work is seen. Too much drama is made, especially in film, which is really interesting and which never really gets out there, unfortunately. With DVDs we have a longer run, but it’s terribly important that the work we do does get seen, otherwise we are wasting our time.

WS: Can you reveal anything to us about season two of The Borgias or is it a guarded secret?
IRONS: Season two will probably move a bit faster. We’ve spent a long time in season one setting up the whole situation, and now the characters are off and flying. You’ll see new characters, but that’s probably about all I can say.

WS: What other projects are you involved in?
IRONS: The picture Margin Call, which I made with Kevin Spacey, is based loosely around the Lehman Brothers collapse, which I think will be an interesting film. I have a picture I just finished called The Words, which will probably be coming out next spring. I’m looking forward to the re-release in 3D of The Lion King [Irons was the voice of Scar], which will be fun for everybody.

And after this I’m going off to make Henry IV parts one and two, which will be for British television, directed by Richard Eyre. It will be nice to get back to some Shakespeare. And then I’m off to make a picture with Bille August, the director I worked with in The House of the Spirits, and then a picture called Night Train to Lisbon. That’s what I have in store. I can’t see a lot of time out, but that’s how I like it.

 

Jeremy Irons in Vs. Magazine Fall/Winter 2011

UPDATED: 20 September 2011 – HUGE HIGH-RESOLUTION SCANS!!

Jeremy Irons is featured in the Fall/Winter 2011 issue of Vs. Magazine.

The magazine itself measures 11.5 by 15 inches. It’s available at Barnes and Noble stores (in the U.S.A.) and it’s supposed to be available until 31st January 2012, although most stores only stock a few copies. The pages on which Jeremy’s photos are contained (pgs. 84-97) have a matte finish and the pages are thicker than typical magazine pages. This issue is definitely worth buying for such gorgeous, high-quality images.

[All photos copyright Vs. Magazine. No copyright infringement intended.]

Photography by Matthu Placek. Words by Whitney Spaner. Styling by April Johnson.

Click on images below for HUGE high-resolution versions. 

UPDATE:  Smaller images (with better color quality) added on 9 October via Jed Root, Inc.

Please do not appropriate these scans to other websites, blogs, etc. without crediting Vs. Magazine, author Whitney Spaner, photographer Matthu Placek and linking back to www.jeremyirons.net

Jeremy Irons in NY Times T Magazine – Hungarian Rhapsody

Hungarian Rhapsody

Culture, Travel   By KATHRYN BRANCH| September 20, 2011, 6:26 pm

Original article HERE

Photo by Monika Höfler

A rich film tradition and low production costs have long brought stars to Budapest, among them Jeremy Irons, 63, pictured here on the shores of the Danube River. Irons made “Nijinski,” his first movie in the capital, in 1980, and returned to make “M. Butterfly,” “Being Julia” and Showtime’s “The Borgias.” When not on set, Irons explores the city’s “wonderful crumbling faded beauty” on his motorcycle. “It’s very hard to find the soul of a city,” he says, but he suggests starting at the Dohany Street Synagogue (011-36-1-413-5500), the Hungarian State Opera (right; opera.hu) and the Western Railway Station (Terez korut at Nyugati ter), designed by the Eiffel Company of Paris. Irons also recommends Cafe Kor (011-36-1-311-0053; cafekor.com), Pomo D’Oro (011-36-1-302-6473; pomodorobudapest.com) and Nobu (noburestaurants.com/budapest), inside the Kempinski Hotel (011-36-1-429-3777; kempinski.com), where he usually stays.

Jeremy Irons Spotted at Budapest Airport

Jeremy Irons, Oscar-winning British actor, and fellow actress Holliday Grainger arrived Tuesday evening, 20 September 2011, at the Budapest Ferenc Liszt International Airport.

Photos © MTI Fotó: Kallos Bea

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Jeremy Irons part of Fairy Tales of Oscar Wilde

A Jeremy Irons – The Authoritative Website exclusive!  Marc Sinden, producer of The Fairy Tales of Oscar Wilde, gives his firsthand account of working with Jeremy Irons on making the recording:

We recorded his story in an audio suite at the BBC Borehamwood Studios. I directed the reading, as I had done for all of the stories included in the 4-CD box set of The Fairy Tales of Oscar Wilde and Jeremy arrived on his enormous motorbike, in leathers, which worried me as I thought that he might ‘squeak’! He didn’t, however, and he was utterly professional and well-prepared, as usual, and we recorded the whole story in three takes. I was delighted that he had invented so many voices for all of the characters in the story and several of them made me laugh out loud! We then had lunch in the commissary and had a wander around the Eastenders permanent set before he roared off on his huge bike, while I waited for Joanna Lumley to arrive to record her story. He really is the most un-‘star like’ actor I know – a real actor – and a wonderfully loyal and sweet friend.”

The Fairy Tales of Oscar Wilde: In Aid of the Royal Theatrical Fund

The recording is now available from audible.com, on CD and from iTunes. Click on the link above to listen to a preview and to order.

The hard copies of the 4x CDs of The Fairy Tales of Oscar Wilde read by various stars (Dame Judi Dench, Jeremy Irons, Joanna Lumley, Sir Derek Jacobi, Sinead Cusack, Robert Harris, Samantha Bond, Geoffrey Palmer, Sir Donald Sinden) and sold in aid of the Royal Theatrical Fund, are now available!

You can get them as 4x CDs from http://www.sindenproductions.com/2010/02/02/the-fairy-tales-of-oscar-wilde/ and either pay by good-old-fashioned cheque for £19.99 + £4.45 p&p per 4x CD set or via PayPal, or as a digital download at http://www.audible.co.uk/aduk/site/product.jsp?p=BK_WHTR_000005UK&BV_UseBVCookie=Yes or now even on iTunes.

http://www.sindenproductions.com/2010/02/02/the-fairy-tales-of-oscar-wilde/

Information courtesy of Marc Sinden

Marc Sinden Productions Group of Companies
inc. The One Night Booking Company

W  www.sindenproductions.com

** See the trailer for the new documentary series Great West End Theatres:
www.greatdocumentariesandfilms.com

T  +44 (0)20 8455 3278

P  1 Hogarth Hill London NW11 6AY

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