All Stars of Tomorrow articles – Page 19
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Features
Stars of Tomorrow One-to-One: Len Rowles meets Iain Smith
Veteran producer Iain Smith has moved between the UK and Hollywood with consummate ease over his career. He tells Star of Tomorrow and aspiring producer Len Rowles the secrets of his success.
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Features
Stars of Tomorrow One-to-One: Fodhla Cronin O’Reilly meets Damian Jones
With films ranging from Belle to Absolutely Fabulous: The Movie under his belt, producer Damian Jones — now working on an AA Milne project with Simon Curtis directing and Margot Robbie and Domhnall Gleeson in the leads — talks to Star of Tomorrow Fodhla Cronin O’Reilly.
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Features
Florence Pugh, Stars of Tomorrow 2016
ACTOR: “In terms of sibling rivalry, I don’t think you could get much worse,” says Florence Pugh of the fact her older brother (Toby Sebastian) and sisters (Arabella Gibbins and Rafaela Pugh) are also actors.
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Features
Morfydd Clark, Stars of Tomorrow 2016
ACTOR: Morfydd Clark has a “typical Welsh story” about how she caught the acting bug.
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Features
Barney Harris, Stars of Tomorrow 2016
ACTOR: Barney Harris can recall the moment he caught the acting bug. He was in his school’s production of Jerusalem when it all clicked.
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Tom Taylor, Stars of Tomorrow 2016
ACTOR: “It’s been a bit of a rollercoaster,” says Tom Taylor, which is putting it mildly.
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Features
Jodie Comer, Stars of Tomorrow 2016
ACTOR: “A lot of auditions that I go in for, they ask, ‘You can lose that, can’t you?’,” says Jodie Comer with a laugh, but she actually doesn’t mind the fact she rarely gets to use her Scouse accent.
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Features
Arnold Oceng, Stars of Tomorrow 2016
ACTOR: Arnold Oceng arrived in London from Uganda at the age of one, and wasted little time in getting his first professional role, aged six.
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Features
Hannah John-Kamen, Stars of Tomorrow 2016
ACTOR: Back in June, Hannah John-Kamen landed a key role in her biggest project to date, Steven Spielberg’s adaptation of Ernest Cline’s bestselling novel Ready Player One, and she does not think it will ever sink in.
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Features
Leah Harvey, Stars of Tomorrow 2016
ACTOR: Despite the fact 22-year-old Londoner Leah Harvey just graduated from LAMDA this summer, she has already shot a lead role in Michael Winterbottom’s next feature and is starring in Phyllida Lloyd’s The Tempest at London’s Donmar Warehouse with Lloyd’s Henry IV yet to come.
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Features
Sope Dirisu, Stars of Tomorrow 2016
ACTOR: Despite acting since the age of 11, life could have turned out very differently for Sope Dirisu.
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Features
Anthony Boyle, Stars of Tomorrow 2016
ACTOR: After leaving school at 16, Anthony Boyle was doing “anything and everything I could” as an actor when a teacher at the Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama saw him perform at the Lyric Drama School in Belfast and invited him to audition.
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Features
Eleanor Worthington-Cox, Stars of Tomorrow 2016
ACTOR: At 10 years of age, Eleanor Worthington-Cox shared the lead role in stage musical Matilda, going on to jointly win an Olivier award for best actress.
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Features
Molly Windsor, Stars of Tomorrow 2016
ACTOR: At the age of 11, Molly Windsor earned plaudits for her lead role in Samantha Morton’s Bafta-winning The Unloved.
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Features
Len Rowles, Stars of Tomorrow 2016
PRODUCER: Having recently left Pathé to join London production outfit Wildgaze Films as head of development for film and television, producer Len Rowles is thrilled by her new role.
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Features
Billy Lumby, Stars of Tomorrow 2016
WRITER-DIRECTOR: Billy Lumby discovered cinema through the likes of Buñuel, Tarkovsky, Godard and Lynch while bed-ridden with an illness for several months as a teenager.
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Features
Eva Riley, Stars of Tomorrow 2016
WRITER-DIRECTOR: Having studied photography and film at Edinburgh Napier University, Eva Riley decided to devote herself to film-making after first dabbling in shorts.
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Features
Brady Hood, Stars of Tomorrow 2016
WRITER-DIRECTOR: Growing up in his Yorkshire family home, writer-director Brady Hood recalls regularly settling in for a film night, often involving gritty social-realist dramas such as Alan Clarke’s Scum, which he was allowed to watch despite its violent content.
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Features
Fodhla Cronin O’Reilly, Stars of Tomorrow 2016
PRODUCER: Ireland-born Fodhla Cronin O’Reilly moved to England to study film production after starting out as a special-effects trainee on productions including The Wind That Shakes The Barley.
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Features
Sam Yates, Stars of Tomorrow 2016
DIRECTOR: Despite carving out a successful career as a theatre director - including The El Train starring Ruth Wilson - Sam Yates says he always had “an instinct” to get into film.