Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In 2014, Redmayne starred as Stephen Hawking in The Theory of Everything, a role for which he won the Academy Award, BAFTA, Golden Globe, and Screen Actors Guild Award for Best Actor, depicting the debilitating challenges of ALS. [50] [51] Hawking was very pleased by the portrayal, stating "I thought Eddie Redmayne portrayed me very well. At ...
In 2015, he played William Shakespeare's Hamlet at the Barbican Theatre. His screen work includes television appearances in Heartbeat (2000), Silent Witness (2002) and Fortysomething (2003) before starring as Stephen Hawking in the television film Hawking (2004). He has played Sherlock Holmes in the crime drama series Sherlock since 2010.
Ian Davies (born 8 October 1964), better known by his stage name Ian Hart, is an English actor.His most notable roles have been in One Summer (1983), Backbeat (1994), Land and Freedom and Nothing Personal (1995), Michael Collins (1996), Liam (2000), as Professor Quirrell in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone (2001), as Ludwig van Beethoven in Eroica (2003), My Mad Fat Diary (2013–2015 ...
For Whom the Bell Tolls is a 1943 American epic war film produced and directed by Sam Wood and starring Gary Cooper, Ingrid Bergman, Akim Tamiroff, Katina Paxinou and Joseph Calleia. The screenwriter Dudley Nichols based his script on the 1940 novel For Whom the Bell Tolls by American novelist Ernest Hemingway .
Royal Wives at War: Narrator TV film Stella: Ian Meyer TV series My Grandfather's War: Himself BBC TV documentary about the International Brigades during the Spanish Civil War [15] 2017 Inspector George Gently: Michael Clements TV series (1 episode: "Gently and the New Age") 2018 Requiem: Aron Morgan TV mini-series (6 episodes) Father Brown ...
Flanagan was born and raised in Dublin, the daughter of Rosanna (née McGuirk) and Terence Niall Flanagan. [4] Her father was an Irish Army officer and Communist who had fought in the International Brigades in the Spanish Civil War against Franco's Nationalists. [5]
As Géza Korvin, he made his Broadway stage debut in 1943, playing a Russian nobleman in the play, Dark Eyes. [3] After signing a movie contract with Universal Pictures, he changed his stage name to Charles Korvin. [citation needed] He worked steadily through the 1940s, including appearing in three films with actress Merle Oberon.
They encounter one another once again a year later in Spain, while both are covering the Spanish Civil War, and staying in the same hotel on the same floor. Initially, Gellhorn resists romantic advances made by the famous Hemingway, but during a bombing raid, the two find themselves trapped alone in the same room, and they are overcome by lust.