Jeremy Irons is featured in the September 2012 issue of Vogue.

Jeremy Irons is featured in the September 2012 issue of Vogue.
Fantastic new photos of Jeremy for BMW Magazine, photography by Istvan Labady and styling by Ali Toth and Aniko Virag.
Jeremy Irons, William H. Macy, Edie Falco and Laura Dern were part of Bravura Television, a panel discussion, moderated by Tad Friend, at the 2011 New Yorker Festival on 1 October 2011 at 4:00 p.m. EST.
A Few Things Jeremy Irons Doesn’t Like by Meredith Blake for the New Yorker Festival blog.
The Secret to Great TV Explained by Kevin Lincoln for the Business Insider
Jeremy Irons, Laura Dern, Edie Falco, and William H. Macy all agree on at least one thing: cable television’s time has come.
Photos via @gbenaharon on Twitter and Neilson Barnard/Getty Images.
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 is interviewed in the August 2011 issue of Saga Magazine.
‘I don’t think I will ever be that famous. I don’t think it’s good for an actor – I’d rather be with my family’

Jeremy Irons
He’s about to star as arch-villain Cardinal Borgia in a new TV series, but the charismatic and likeable Jeremy Irons reveals that these days he is more concerned about another role – that of being a father.
Words: Gabrielle Donnelly
There is never an inkling of a doubt, when you are in conversation with Jeremy Irons, that you are in the presence of a Thespian. For starters, there’s the look – the swept-back salt and pepper hair, the darkly dramatic features highlighted by the knotted scarf, the huge, elegant hands waving gracefully in the air.
Then there’s the voice – resonant and beautifully modulated, the carefully honed instrument of a meticulously responsible owner. But most of all there’s the conversation. It swoops and swerves as it encompasses fabulously famous people, glamorous geographical byways, positively polychromatic opinions and some truly gorgeous anachronisms. (‘I am not,’ he announced to me once, ‘the sort of disapproving father who sends his sons telegrams.’) Telegrams!
He is never, ever, dull.
In a world where conformity is increasingly, and dispiritingly, the norm, Jeremy is an unapologetically unreconstructed luvvie who will
as happily give you his views on the current state of organised religion (‘I’m disappointed in it and I’ll tell you why…’) as reflect on playing Cardinal Borgia, who became Pope Alexander VI, in the Sky TV series The Borgias – ‘it’s the vulnerability that made him interesting to me.’
We are chatting on a sunny morning at the Four Seasons Hotel in Beverly Hills; he’s in LA for some promotional activity, but has a pad in New York and five other homes, including a pink castle in Ireland. Most of the time, he and his wife, the actress Sinead Cusack, flit between the Oxfordshire town of Watlington and the castle near Ballydehob, in County Cork.
‘I’m a jobbing actor,’ he says with some pride. ‘I always have been. I do theatre, television, movies; I’ll do anything anybody suggests if it tickles my fancy. I mean, I like to be paid, but if someone offers me a good character in a good story, I really don’t mind where it’s played.
‘I’ve done a couple of big-budget movies – a Die Hard – and I’ve done a couple of… what would you call them? Sort of… dragony pictures, you know?’ He sniffs at the memory of 2000’s Dungeons & Dragons.
‘Of course, doing a blockbuster is useful because people who make movies think that people who are in movies that make a lot of money will make their movies more money. It’s a clearly unproven thing, but that’s what accountants believe. For me, it’s more about the fun I have on a shoot. On the whole, I prefer smaller-budget films – they’re faster to make. With Die Hard, I’d wait for days while a ship was turned around so that a car could fall on it!’
The full article can be read in the August 2011 issue of Saga Magazine.
Thank you to http://community.livejournal.com/chardwickefans/39360.html for these fantastic scans!
Max Irons is featured in the February/March 2011 issue of Wonderland magazine, interviewed about Red Riding Hood:
From: http://www.latimesmagazine.com/2011/03/the-next-factor.html
Max Irons is featured in an article in the LA Times Magazine, by Leslie Gornstein. Photo by Hedi Slimane.
Max Irons
All right, folks, might as well get it out of the way: Yes, Irons is the 25-year-old son of Jeremy, one of the greatest British actors still breathing. You’d think such an august surname would translate into quite the fall-at-your-feet acting life, especially for a chap who qualifies as irrefutably gorgeous. Alas, that’s not always the case. This month, Irons breaks big as Henry, Amanda Seyfried’s suitor in Catherine Hardwicke’s Red Riding Hood. But getting the role was no stroll through the woods. “I had four auditions and two screen tests,” says Irons, stage-trained like his dad. “I’d be lying if I said there aren’t casting agents more inclined to see you. But if you go into an audition and do a mediocre job, they’ll never forget.”
Max Irons is featured in the March 2011 issue of Nylon Guys magazine.
Click on the photos for larger images:
From Women’s Wear Daily:

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