Max Irons in DuJour Magazine

Max Irons is featured in the August 2013 issue of DuJour Magazine.

Culture
Irons In The Fire

With The White Queen, Max Irons emerges as the clear successor to an acting dynasty

By Adam Rathe
Photographed by Annelise Howard Phillips
Styled by Paul Frederick

SOURCE

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Strange things happen when Max Irons sleeps.

“I’ve been having the most vivid dreams, involving all real people, really clear and believable dreams,” the 27-year-old actor says, staring intently to make it clear he’s serious. “Some nice, some not.”

Blame melatonin for what’s going on at night with the jet-lagged actor, who’s on a jaunt to New York from his home in London. His other dreams, however, the ones that are coming true, can only be attributed to hard work—and more than a pinch of good luck.

In August, the period dramaThe White Queen (adapted from the Philippa Gregory novel) will debut on Starz, beaming Irons’ fetching mug into millions of homes. Following that is an Antonio Vivaldi biopic with Irons as the Italian composer, and Posh, a look at an Oxford secret society, from An Education director Lone Scherfig. Indeed, Irons seems poised to become that most dreamed-about thing: a serious, successful actor.

“It wasn’t a calculated step,” Irons, who starred in Twilight creator Stephanie Meyer’s The Host earlier this year, says. “I was recently up for a large part in a franchise, a very well-established franchise, and I said, ‘I can’t do it.’ No matter how you spin it to me, it was a version of the two parts I played before [in Red Riding Hood and The Host]. I’m very grateful these films got my foot in the door, but if I do it again, I’ll want to quit acting.”

Enter Edward IV, the first king of England to come from the House of York. “When this came along, it felt like a different direction,” Irons says of his role in The White Queen. “It was this really fascinating piece of English history. And there’s development of the character: You meet when he’s 22 and young and powerful and you see him—I don’t mean to spoil anything—on his deathbed. It felt like something I could get my teeth into.”

It certainly is. During the series’ first season, Irons’ Edward—who, like the actor, was known for his height and good looks—progresses from the tenderfoot monarch whose reign, beginning in 1461, was bloodied by the War of the Roses to a seasoned king presiding over a peaceful land until his untimely death at the age of 41. Along the way, the series’ titular regent, who is Edward’s wife (played by Swedish stunner Rebecca Ferguson), complicates matters as a powerbroker in her own right.

To untangle the story’s knotty web of ancient aristocrats, Irons had his work cut out for him. “There is, relatively speaking, not much information on this particular king,” Irons says. “I had to go into a bookshop and track down his journey. What I love to research is what everyone was up to. You know it was very conniving, backstabbing way of life. People were constantly after you, so consequently you’ve got to know what everyone in the room was up to.”

That feeling probably isn’t too unfamiliar to Irons, who, as the son of actors Jeremy Irons and Sinead Cusack, has grown up in the public eye. Irons says while he can ride the Tube and go where he likes virtually undetected, it still isn’t easy following in the footsteps of prominent parents. “I became an actor at 17, and whether or not I like to acknowledge it on a conscious level, my parents are very successful actors—there is no way around it, ” he says. “Which is difficult for a son because you want to impress your family and I’ve realized I never truly will. I’ll never amaze them.”

Although stardom might be old hat for his family, Irons is still wide-eyed enough to appreciate the experience. “I have to do it for me, I have to amaze myself,” he says. “I’m on sets surrounded by people on horses, people in armor and they’re all following me because I’m the king. This is an amazing moment; I’m not letting this moment drift by and then trying to amaze someone later by reporting back. I’m living life, I’m living the life I’ve created.”

Indeed, the decisions that Irons is making now will shape what he hopes will be a decades-long career. And if Edward IV can teach him anything, it must just be how to survive life as a movie star.

“He was cheeky and charming and dangerous,” Irons says of the young king, “but he could get away with it.”

Jeremy Irons to Appear at the Literary and Debating Society of NUI Galway

Jeremy Irons will participate in the Launch of the 167th Session of the Literary and Debating Society of NUI Galway.

When: 12 September 2013 @ 7:00 pm – 10:00 pm
Where: The Kirwan Theatre – The Concourse – NUIG Galway

The Society is honoured to have Mr Jeremy Irons as the inaugural
speaker of the 167th session of the Society.

Mr Irons will be joined by British actor and television writer, Mr Rob Heyland and both men will address the Society on the responsibility of the privileged to help shape our societies.
The Auditor will chair the meeting and the address will be followed by a question and answer session leading into a period of Private Members’ Time.

Launch1-212x300

The following is from www.literaryanddebating.com :

With a background as a British television actor including The Professionals and One by One, Mr Rob Heyland turned his mind to observing and writing with involvement in such shows as Foyle’s War, Have Your Cake and Eat It and Ultimate Force. Regarded highly as a prolific social thinker, Mr Heyland’s insights and vision is something to look forward to.

With a career that has included The Lion King, The Man in the Iron Mask, Brideshead Revisited and The Borgias, Mr Jeremy Irons is hugely influential as a dignified and eloquent giant of screen. His
commitment to public discourse, his determination to stand publicly for person-focused society and his work with Evidence for Development make this event an exciting launch to a great session.

Come early as crowds are expected and places are limited.

Come along and let the games begin!

Jeremy Irons and the Music of Ales Velas

ACTOR JEREMY IRONS ENJOYING THE MUSIC OF ALES VELAS IN NEW YORK

Actor/director Jeremy Irons remembers being in Lima, Perú, about thirty years ago. Though this is his first encounter with some Peruvian repertoire.

This was filmed in Bear Mountain State Park in Peekskill, NY on Tuesday 30 July 2013.

After recording what is to be part of a PBS series about motorcycle routes in the U.S. Golden Globe & Academy Award winner (best actor) Jeremy Irons joins Pasache Music to talk about his visit to Perú about thirty years ago and producer Oscar Pasache decided to improvise and sing Volvamos A Ser Novios (Félix Pasache) as a way to proudly share one of his father’s masterpieces, part of a rich Peruvian repertoire of waltzes.

https://www.facebook.com/video/embed?video_id=10153094508435187

Jeremy Irons Opens Union Hall Festival by the Sea

Jeremy Irons was on hand in Union Hall, on Sunday 21 July 2013, to officially open the Union Hall Festival by the Sea.

For a full gallery of photos by Emma Jervis click HERE.

Coverage by The Southern Star newspaper of Skibbereen, Ireland

Jeremy also spent some time in Glandore and sailing his boat the Willing Lass around Glandore Harbour.

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Jeremy Irons Attends Bvlgari Saint-Tropez Opening

SAINT-TROPEZ, FRANCE – JULY 16: Juliette Binoche, Hilary Swank and Jeremy Irons attend the Official Opening of Bulgari’s Boutique in Saint-Tropez on July 16, 2013 in Saint-Tropez, France. (Photos by Venturelli/WireImage for Bulgari)

Hilary Swank and Juliette Binoche dazzle as they join Jeremy Irons for the official opening of Bvlgari’s new store on the French Riviera from The Daily Mail

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Jeremy Irons at West Cork Emergency Services Cycle Event

Jeremy Irons was on hand in West Cork, Ireland on Saturday 13 July 2013, to help kick off the West Cork Emergency Services Cycling event.

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Jeremy Irons with The City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra

Jeremy Irons joined Mark Kermode and the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra on 9 July 2013 for an evening of music from film.

Review: Mark Kermode & the CBSO, Film Music Live, Symphony Hall, Birmingham

Jeremy Irons appeared alongside Mark Kermode in his 50th birthday celebratory concert on stage with the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra on 9 July at Symphony Hall Birmingham.

Jeremy’s film music choices:

Brideshead Revisited
French Lieutenant’s Woman
The Mission
Reversal of Fortune
Trashed

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Jeremy Irons Hosts Horticultural Show for Watlington in Bloom

From The Henley Standard

watlington in bloom

ACTOR Jeremy Irons hailed Watlington’s “scruffiness” during the town’s horticultural show on Sunday.

About 350 people attended the show, which was organised by Watlington in Bloom and held at a barn in Hill Road belonging to Irons and his actress wife Sinead Cusack.

The show, which was the first to be held in Watlington for more than two decades, took place at the same time as an open gardens afternoon.

Irons, who presented the prizes with his wife, said: “I have always thought that part of Watlington’s charm is that it is on the edge of being scruffy.

“It’s not a toy village like something you might find in the Cotswolds but it’s rather nice because of that.

“It’s a working village — people are busy and don’t always have time to look after some of the alleyways, so sometimes they get a bit overgrown and you have to hack your way through them with a machete.

“However, with a little amount of effort on all our parts, it can be lifted out of scruffiness. It has a wonderful charm and a day like today brings us all together to be surrounded by beautiful plants.

“This year has been an enormous success for Watlington in Bloom and I hope we will build on it next year.”

Cusack told the crowd: “I don’t think the barn has ever looked as pretty as it does today, so all you kids and everyone who made these beautiful arrangements of flowers deserves to be congratulated. It is a fantastic array of excellence.”

Classes were judged by Peter Thompson, Watlington’s mentor for the Britain in Bloom competition, and John White, a judge from Chalgrove.

Jenny Stillwell won best entry with a spray of flowers. Kerris Hennstridge and Lara Spicer won best children’s entry with their miniature gardens. Diana Kean won overall best in show and Linda Nicholson was runner-up.

The demand for the open gardens was so great that the group ran out of programmes. Eighteen venues were open to the public during the afternoon, including the town’s old burgage plots and private gardens.

Tim Horton, chairman of Watlington in Bloom, said the group would now consider holding the events annually.

“A lot of people said they loved seeing the horticultural show back in the town and I think whatever we do in the future it was nice to have that response,” he said. Just under £1,000 was raised by the two events but Mr Horton said: “The real intention was to celebrate the town and have a really good day.”

He thanked Tom and Gill Bindoff for setting up the show and Watlington in Bloom co-ordinator Terry Jackson and her husband Keith for their help throughout the weekend. Pat Fewell, who organised the open gardens event but was unable to attend as she was recovering from an operation, was thanked in her absence.

Watlington is to compete in the national final of the large village category of Britain in Bloom this summer after achieving its greatest success yet in the regional competition last year.

The regional judging will take place on July 15 and the national judging on August 6.

Mr Horton said: “We are now heading for our true tests. Clearly we have many tasks to do but will have no complaints about watering daily if the sun shines like it did at the weekend.”

Published 08/07/13

Jeremy Irons to Open Union Hall Festival

From The Southern Star

Union Hall (photo by Kestutis Anuzis)

Union Hall (photo by Kestutis Anuzis)

By Louise Roseingrave

THE COUNTDOWN for cast off is on with just two weeks to go before Union Hall Festival by the Sea.

Sponsors, organisers and villagers gathered for the festival launch last week, welcoming the announcement that Jeremy Irons will officially open the festivities on July 21st.

The British actor’s appearance will follow a Gathering Mass in the church, a family sports day and a fancy dress parade through the village, led by the Millstreet Pipe Band and St Fachtna’s Silver Band. The ten-day summer gathering offers a packed schedule showcasing the best of what the village has to offer.

Scrumptious

From scrumptious local produce to fishermen angling for the best catch, with a little sport, magic, music, busking, kids’ games and dancing thrown in, organisers are confident that both visitors and villagers alike will find something to write home about.

A bumper ten days of activities kicks off with Crowley’s Hall reunion dance on Friday, July 19th. Lovers who shared a first kiss after meeting at the venue can take a romantic trip down memory lane. Perhaps a few new love matches will fall into step with music by Eddie Lee.

The line-up includes a busking competition with €500 prize, live street music for some open air fun, cookery demonstrations on the causeway, local produce stalls, a rowing regatta, a football skills blitz and the list goes on and on. Festival spokesman Willie O’Donovan said the scope of events surpassed all expectation.

Celebration

‘The scale of the programme over ten days offers something for all ages and all interests. We aimed to capture the village spirit with this celebration and the way the community and sponsors rowed in to help has been fantastic,’ he said. Since fishing is synonymous with Union Hall, Glenmar Shellfish MD Mel Bendon said he was delighted to support the festival.

‘The village is known for its community spirit as much as its fishing. There’s something special about it and we are excited to be able to welcome visitors to experience it,’ he said.

John O’Connell of West Cork Distillers is among the local producers set to quench a certain thirst among liqueur lovers with his handcrafted Drombeg whiskey.

‘The fact that our products are made here in the village provides a unique selling point for us. People all over the country know Union Hall as a little village by the sea and it’s always a talking point. We’re happy to be able to give something back to the community by supporting what should be a really great summer festival,’ he said.

Keep an eye on the Facebook page ‘Union Hall Festival by the Sea’ for updates.

Jeremy Irons at Paris Fashion Week

Jeremy Irons was in Paris, France on Friday 28 June for Fashion Week to attend the Berluti presentation.

Jeremy Irons and Sinead Cusack arrived in Paris via the Eurostar train at the Gare du Nord station:

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