Jeremy Irons to Adjudicate at Kerry Film Festival

NEWS
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Jeremy Irons to Adjudicate at Kerry Film Festival

The Kerry Film Festival, which is celebrating ten years of bringing film to the people of Kerry, today announced the adjudicators for the 2009 Kerry Film Festival, which runs from October 31st to November 7th.

The adjudicators that will judge this year’s Kerry Film Festival short film competitions are:
Jeremy Irons, Michael Fassbender, Simon Brown and James Christopher.

“The Kerry Film Festival is delighted to announce its line up of adjudicators,” said Jason O’ Mahony, Director, Kerry Film Festival. “From Jeremy Irons, an Oscar winning actor and one of the finest actors of all time; to Michael Fassbender, who set the film world alight with his unflinching portrayal of Bobby Sands in Steve McQueen’s HUNGER, a role which, for my money at least, should have seen him win an Oscar; to James Christopher, one of the most respected film critics in the world and Chief Critic on The Times in the UK for many years; to Simon Brown, a fantastic Irish animator, who was lead animator on the recent Ice Age films and also worked with James Cameron on the upcoming AVATAR, every member of the adjudication panel is at the very forefront of their chosen profession and we’re absolutely thrilled that they have decided to help adjudicate the 2009 Kerry Film Festival.”

“This will be the tenth year of the Kerry Film Festival and both the quantity and quality of the films has risen year on year,” continued O’ Mahony. “And we felt it was important to have an adjudication panel of the very highest standing to adjudicate the short films. We’re hugely grateful to all the adjudicators for giving so selflessly of their time and for agreeing to adjudicate at this year’s Kerry Film Festival.”

The adjudicators have the unenviable task of selecting the best films from this year’s selection. Close to five hundred films were submitted to the 2009 Kerry Film Festival, up significantly on the total number of films submitted last year and more than double the number of films submitted in previous years.

For a brief Bio on the Adjudicators please see below:

Jeremy Irons
Jeremy Irons is one of today’s most respected actors and has been honored for his work on stage, screen and television. He won an Academy Award and a Golden Globe Award for his chilling portrayal of Claus von Bulow in REVERSAL OF FORTUNE and won an Emmy, a Golden Globe and a Screen Actors Guild Award for his performance in ELIZABETH I.

From roles in THE MISSION and David Cronenberg’s DEAD RINGERS to roles in David Lynch’s INLAND EMPIRE, Ridley Scott’s KINGDOM OF HEAVEN and THE MERCHANT OF VENICE with Al Pacino, Irons has displayed a talent and acting range that has seldom, if ever, been matched.

Michael Fassbender
Michael Fassbender exploded on the Film world with his unflinching portrayal of Bobby Sands in Steve McQueen’s Cannes Film Festival Camera D’or winning HUNGER. He is one of the hottest young actors on the planet with acclaimed directors lining up to work with him. Last seen in Quentin Tarantino’s INGLORIOUS BASTERDS, Michael, who grew up in Killarney, is a most welcome addition to the Kerry Film Festival Adjudication Panel.

Simon Brown
Simon Brown grew up in the countryside of Co. Clare, Ireland where he read books about the space-time continuum and practiced painting. It was an ideal background for his work as a visual effects artist which has led him around the world to London, California, New York and New Zealand. He’s worked on many films including MATRIX REVOLUTIONS, STAR WARS – REVENGE OF THE SITH, ICE AGE – THE MELTDOWN and the upcoming AVATAR. Simon has just been accepted into the prestigious American Film Institute Conservatory for their directing program where he will further develop his craft.

James Christopher
James Christopher is a distinguished author and critic who has contributed to numerous newspapers. He was deputy theatre editor of Time Out Magazine, theatre critic for the Sunday Express, and for many years chief film critic of The Times. He has been the subject of several BBC documentaries. His book on Elizabeth Taylor: The Illustrated Biography is a much-loved staple. He lives in Essex but has spent many happy weeks in Kerry, notably Camp on the Dingle peninsula.

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Jeremy Irons at Josephine Hart’s Poetry Hour

from Londoner’s Diary – Evening Standard

01 October 2009

• JOSEPHINE Hart’s Poetry Hour at the British Library last night featured Dame Eileen Atkins and Jeremy Irons reading T S Eliot’s Four Quartets. Appreciative members of the audience included Hart’s agent Ed Victor, actor Max Irons, former Home Secretary Kenneth Baker and TLS editor Sir Peter Stothard.

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Jeremy Irons participated in Harold Pinter tribute at Lord’s Cricket Grounds – UPDATED

from guardian.co.uk

Chris Tarrant joins the Harold Pinter Memorial XI

Chris Tarrant, Bill Nighy and Jeremy Irons joined a group paying tribute to the late cricket-obsessed playwright at Lord’s on Sunday 27 September 2009.

The late Harold Pinter’s lifelong love of cricket was celebrated in a series of events at Lord’s on 27 September. A slew of famous faces, including Chris Tarrant, Bill Nighy and Jeremy Irons, will pay tribute to Pinter – who once called the game “the greatest thing that God created on earth, certainly greater than sex” – in aid of the Lord’s Taverners team’s work with young people with special needs. Tarrant kicked off proceedings in the afternoon, playing for a Lord’s Taverners side under former England captain Mike Brearley, against a Gaieties XI, Pinter’s own beloved team. Theatrical readings in the evening saw Irons take to the stage with Tim West to perform an excerpt from No Man’s Land, and Brearley reading from The Caretaker. Those interested in owning a likeness of Pinter could bid for an oil portrait of the playwright painted by artist Joe Hill. Proceeds from the events will go towards the purchase of a new minibus for transporting sports-mad kids from Pinter’s native Hackney.

* guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2009

Programme from the evening's events from cricketwife.com

Programme from the evening's events from cricketwife.com

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Jeremy Irons returns to EPCOT

For the 2009 EPCOT International Food and Wine Festival, the Jeremy Irons narrated film “Seasons of the Vine”, a now extinct attraction from Disney’s California Adventure, is being shown.

The film is playing inside the former “Making of Me” theater inside the now extinct Wonders of Life Pavilion.

This is the first appearance by Jeremy Irons since he was narrator of Spaceship Earth last on July 7, 2007.

SeasonsoftheVine2

SeasonsoftheVine

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Jeremy Irons narrates The Chronoscope

The Chronoscope is a mocumentary about a beautiful scientist in the 1930s who invents a machine that can see into the past. It was written and directed by Andrew Legge and premiered in Ireland in July 2009.

the_chronoscope_4

The Chronoscope – IMDb

The 20 minute short film was screened at The Flat Lake Literary and Arts Festival on 16 August 2009, at Hilton Park, Clones Co. Monaghan, Ireland.

The Chronoscope tells the story of a female inventor who is kidnapped by the Third Reich after she invents a camera with the power to see into the past. The short film was written and directed by Andrew Legge and produced by Fastnet Films. The film was funded under the Wicklow County Council’s Per Cent scheme and is narrated by Jeremy Irons.

The Chronoscope combines archive and shot footage which was manipulated in Post to evoke the style and atmosphere of the era. Post Production took place at Screen Scene where Allen Sillery worked on the pictures in flame “The director wanted the main character to interact with Hitler, DeValera, Einstein & the Queen. Other newsreel footage from Ireland in the 1930’s had to be doctored by compositing artists, banners & signs relevant to our story. Various chromo-key plates were shot with on set vision-mixers to aid registration & mimic our actors movements to that of whomever they were meant to be interacting with.” Colourist Angella McLellen then graded the pictures on the Nucoda and Simon Thornton finished the project in Online.

The Chronsocope
Company: Fastnet Films
Writer/Director: Andrew Legge
Producer: Ben Keenan/ Morgan Bushe
DOP: Eleanor Bowman
Editor: Eoin McGuirk
Additional Photography and Graphics: Andrew Legge
Online Editor: Simon Thornton
Colourist: Angela McLellan
Flame: Allen Sillery/ Gavin Casey
Music: Jurgen Simpson
Post Production Co-ordinator: Sarah Caraher

Jeremy’s WDYTYA? Episode filmed at Tullylish church

Dromore Diocese church to feature in current BBC television series

By Mark McMahon, Banbridge Chronicle
From The Church of Ireland Gazette – 13 October 2006

jeremyironstullylishchurch
Jeremy Irons (left) is pictured with the Rev Arthur Young outside All Saints’, Tullylish.

Parishioners at All Saints’ parish church, Tullylish, Diocese of Dromore, will soon make a cameo appearance in Academy Award winner Jeremy Irons’ latest television project. The movie star, whose list of Hollywood films includes The Mission, Kingdom of Heaven and Die Hard with a Vengeance, was recently in Tullylish, Co. Down, to film scenes for the current BBC television series, “Who Do You Think You Are?” The programme follows some well known celebrities as they attempt to trace their family trees and roots.

Jeremy Irons to participate in The Gate Lab Directors’ Symposium

The Gate Lab Directors’ Symposium

The Gate Theatre, in association with Ulster Bank Dublin Theatre Festival, will hold a two-day directors’ Symposium in the Gate Lab, which is part of the theatre’s new wing. This event will allow mid-career directors the valuable opportunity to engage in structured sessions with leading actors, designers, directors, playwrights and producers, which will include Anne Clarke, Ingrid Craigie, Sinead Cusack, Declan Donnellan, Ciaran Hinds, Jeremy Irons, Fiach MacConghail, Patrick Mason, Conor McPherson, Peter O’Brien, David Pugh, Owen Roe, Alan Stanford and Penelope Wilton.
Venue The Gate Theatre Lab
Dates Oct 1 & 2
Times 10am – 5pm
Price €75 (including lunch on both days)
Further information http://www.gatetheatre.ie
Applications laura.macnaughton@gate-theatre.ie

gatetheatre

Watch Georgia O’Keeffe online!

Watch the entire Georgia O’Keeffe movie online now!
georgiaokeeffe
Georgia O’Keeffe | myLifetime.com

Jeremy helps raise funds for a new cricket pavilion

Former PM backs new pavilion

FORMER prime minister Sir John Major was the guest of honour at a dinner to raise funds for Nettlebed Cricket Club’s new pavilion.

It was held at Manor Farm, Nettlebed, the home of Bessie Kelart, last Friday, when 125 guests enjoyed a champagne reception before sitting down to a three-course meal.

Sir John, who was introduced by local actors Jeremy Irons and Simon Williams, entertained the guests with cricket stories before an auction of 15 lots was held, with Tim Eggar acting as auctioneer.

By the end of the evening a total of £21,000 had been raised towards the £80,000 needed to replace the current pavilion, which was built more than 100 years ago.

from http://www.henleystandard.co.uk

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Jeremy irons discusses the joys of cricket

Jeremy Irons: “You can’t get closer to the heart of England”
September 25th, 2009 by Edward Craig in England, Miscellaneous

cricket

Henry Woolf, Jeremy Irons, Indira Varma and Colin Firth - holding a portrait of Harold Pinter

Oscar-winning actor Jeremy Irons discusses the joys of cricket with Edward Craig

I played cricket when I was at school. I suffered indignity after indignity. I used to sit there on the boundary for hours, trying to make grass burn with a magnifying glass. I would make the sandwiches for tea. That was what I did, more of a helper.

We had a Sunday team. Called the Duckhunters, we organised it at school but played outside of school territory. It meant we could get out to cricket grounds that were next to pubs. A great excuse for drinking and the most fun I’ve had in cricket.

I would fancy being a bowler if I played properly. The strain of standing there as a batsman wondering what was going to come down outweighs any pleasure. The gruelling mind game of bowling appeals to me more. You get a second chance and there’s an element of mind control that a bowler has over a batsmen.

Local, rural cricket shows the unchanging quality of British culture. There is something essentially English and calm, ordered and measured, yet with an element of unknown and excitement about village cricket. You can’t get much closer to the heart of England than sitting on a beautiful summer’s day watching cricket.

I hadn’t followed the Ashes this summer. I was in London when we won one of the Test matches, with a friend in St John’s Wood and she thought the world had exploded at one point. She could hear the roar of the audience with each wicket.

There are a few films about sport. In films you have to focus on characters and people and you have situations in sport which allows you to do that. Film is about what’s going on in people’s heads and hearts rather than a particular game. But if we care about the person who is in the game it can make for a good film.

Harold Pinter was very furious about his cricket. I remember seeing his study full of cricket books. It was a very important part of his life.

The portrait of Harold Pinter (pictured with Jeremy Irons and actors Henry Woolf, Indira Varma and Colin Firth at the Olivier Theatre in London) is being auctioned this Sunday (September 27) at Lord’s with all proceeds going to The Taverners. Bids for the portrait can be made via email: pinter@lordstaverners.org