Fremantle Banner Signs First-Look Deal With ‘August: Osage County’ Producer Patrick Daly’s Caledonia
Caledonia Productions, the banner of Patrick Daly, the theater and film director whose feature credits include August: Osage County, Una and Galveston, has signed a first-look deal with Passenger, headed by its founder Richard Brown (This England, True Detective, Catch-22).
The two-year deal with Passenger, which now sits within Fremantle’s Global Drama division, will see Daly and Brown collaborate on select existing Passenger and Caledonia film and television projects in addition to building a new slate of projects to co-produce. Fremantle will handle global distribution.
Both Passenger and Caledonia are based in New York and London.
“I have known and admired, Richard Brown and Fremantle’s Christian Vesper for many years, so when this partnership opportunity arose, it really was an easy decision to make,” said Daly, whose 15 years’ experience in producing theatre in the U.S. and U.K. has included productions of Lucy Kirkwood’s Chimerica, Katori Hall...
The two-year deal with Passenger, which now sits within Fremantle’s Global Drama division, will see Daly and Brown collaborate on select existing Passenger and Caledonia film and television projects in addition to building a new slate of projects to co-produce. Fremantle will handle global distribution.
Both Passenger and Caledonia are based in New York and London.
“I have known and admired, Richard Brown and Fremantle’s Christian Vesper for many years, so when this partnership opportunity arose, it really was an easy decision to make,” said Daly, whose 15 years’ experience in producing theatre in the U.S. and U.K. has included productions of Lucy Kirkwood’s Chimerica, Katori Hall...
- 6/26/2023
- by Alex Ritman
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Dolly de Leon, who recently earned rave reviews for her work in Ruben Östlund’s “Triangle of Sadness,” has signed with Jennifer Beaton at Gersh. The signing comes after de Leon scored some serious Oscar buzz after “Triangle of Sadness,” a darkly comic exploration of class and inequality, which debuted at Cannes, where it won the Palme d’Or. Variety called de Leon’s performance “scene-stealing,” and added that “her every line has so far prompted cheers in press and public screenings alike.”
“Her committed turn not only makes her the defining supporting performance of the year thus far, but also, if enough Academy members make a note to focus on quality (and not simply name recognition as they can often do), she could be the frontrunner walking into awards season,” predicted Variety awards guru Clayton Davis.
De Leon is managed by Fusion Entertainment. “Triangle of Sadness” was acquired by Neon for North American distribution.
“Her committed turn not only makes her the defining supporting performance of the year thus far, but also, if enough Academy members make a note to focus on quality (and not simply name recognition as they can often do), she could be the frontrunner walking into awards season,” predicted Variety awards guru Clayton Davis.
De Leon is managed by Fusion Entertainment. “Triangle of Sadness” was acquired by Neon for North American distribution.
- 7/25/2022
- by Brent Lang
- Variety Film + TV
Exclusive: Fusion Entertainment has signed veteran Filipino actress Dolly de Leon, who got her long-overdue international breakout role in Ruben Östlund’s Palme d’Or-Winner Triangle of Sadness, for management across all areas.
Triangle of Sadness, which was acquired by Neon for North American distribution and will also be released by other prestige distributors around the world, was enthusiastically received by audiences and critics alike.
Of de Leon and Triangle of Sadness, Deadline’s Pete Hammond raved “the film has the goods to compete in several categories including Picture, Director, Screenplay and, without question Best Supporting Actress for Filipino star Dolly de Leon..at this point (she) has to be a front-runner to win.”
Classically trained in the theater, de Leon is a well-known actress in the Philippines whose credits go back to the early 90’s. In film and TV, de Leon has worked with highly-regarded Filipino directors Lav Diaz...
Triangle of Sadness, which was acquired by Neon for North American distribution and will also be released by other prestige distributors around the world, was enthusiastically received by audiences and critics alike.
Of de Leon and Triangle of Sadness, Deadline’s Pete Hammond raved “the film has the goods to compete in several categories including Picture, Director, Screenplay and, without question Best Supporting Actress for Filipino star Dolly de Leon..at this point (she) has to be a front-runner to win.”
Classically trained in the theater, de Leon is a well-known actress in the Philippines whose credits go back to the early 90’s. In film and TV, de Leon has worked with highly-regarded Filipino directors Lav Diaz...
- 6/29/2022
- by Valerie Complex
- Deadline Film + TV
Exclusive: British playwright and screenwriter Nina Raine has been tapped to write the limited series adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Tender Is The Night novel for Hulu. The project, from Colin Callender’s Playground Entertainment, has been in development at Hulu since 2018.
Tender Is The Night, which was published in 1934, was Fitzgerald’s fourth and final completed novel. It tells the story of promising young psychiatrist Dick Diver. He meets 16-year old Nicole Warren, who suffers from schizophrenia, before marrying her and moving to the French Riviera, where they start a glamorous life of partying with friends.
However, Diver’s life soon takes a turn after investing in a clinic in Switzerland, being accused of seducing the 15-year daughter of one of his patients and driving his wife to jealousy (and a car accident). He moves to Berlin, when he finds out his father dies, and on his way back from America,...
Tender Is The Night, which was published in 1934, was Fitzgerald’s fourth and final completed novel. It tells the story of promising young psychiatrist Dick Diver. He meets 16-year old Nicole Warren, who suffers from schizophrenia, before marrying her and moving to the French Riviera, where they start a glamorous life of partying with friends.
However, Diver’s life soon takes a turn after investing in a clinic in Switzerland, being accused of seducing the 15-year daughter of one of his patients and driving his wife to jealousy (and a car accident). He moves to Berlin, when he finds out his father dies, and on his way back from America,...
- 1/24/2020
- by Denise Petski
- Deadline Film + TV
Exclusive: UK-based Eon Productions has hired theater, film and TV producer Patrick Daly to oversee production and development of the company’s theatrical projects.
Eon, best known in the film world for its longstanding production of James Bond movies, has been a big player on Broadway and the West End in recent seasons with involvement in, among others, Once and The Band’s Visit, both Tony Award winners for best musical.
Daly will serve as Eon’s Overseeing Consultant in charge of production and development across all theatrical projects. He will continue to run his own company, Caledonia Productions, launched last year to produce and develop a slate of upcoming stage and screen projects.
Prior to launching Caledonia, Daly was Vice President/Producer at Jean Doumanian Productions for 12 years.
“We are incredibly lucky to now have Patrick on board to oversee our theater projects,” said Eon producers Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli.
Eon, best known in the film world for its longstanding production of James Bond movies, has been a big player on Broadway and the West End in recent seasons with involvement in, among others, Once and The Band’s Visit, both Tony Award winners for best musical.
Daly will serve as Eon’s Overseeing Consultant in charge of production and development across all theatrical projects. He will continue to run his own company, Caledonia Productions, launched last year to produce and develop a slate of upcoming stage and screen projects.
Prior to launching Caledonia, Daly was Vice President/Producer at Jean Doumanian Productions for 12 years.
“We are incredibly lucky to now have Patrick on board to oversee our theater projects,” said Eon producers Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli.
- 10/19/2018
- by Greg Evans
- Deadline Film + TV
A Drama Desk award-winning play about the importance of community is looking for actors for a West Coast production this fall. “Tribes,” written by Nina Raine, is about Billy, the only deaf child in a hearing family who is introduced to the deaf community by Sylvia, a young woman on the brink of losing her hearing. The Anaheim, California production is currently seeking male and female talent aged 20–30 to play several principal roles, including Billy and Sylvia. The actor playing Billy should be a deaf actor with fluency in American Sign Language. There are also two supporting roles available for a male actor and a female actor, both ages 50–70 to play Billy’s mother and father, respectively. There is an open casting call on July 5 and July 6 in Anaheim, California. Rehearsals begin Aug. 8 and the show runs Sept. 30–Oct. 22 at Chance Theater. Pay is $600 for the total production run of 16 performances.
- 6/27/2017
- backstage.com
The Guthrie Theater begins its production of Nina Raine's Tribes tonight, October 5. Winner of the 2012 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Play and a 2010 Olivier Award nominee for Best Play, Tribes is a provocative, poignant family drama that illuminates the fascinating interplay of sound and communication, perception and true understanding. Wendy Goldberg Guthrie Dollhouse directs this regional premiere that begins performances on the McGuire Proscenium Stage tonight.
- 10/5/2013
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
The Guthrie Theater today announced casting for its production of Nina Raine's Tribes. Winner of the 2012 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Play and a 2010 Olivier Award nominee for Best Play, Tribes is a provocative, poignant family drama that illuminates the fascinating interplay of sound and communication, perception and true understanding. Wendy Goldberg Guthrie Dollhouse directs this regional premiere that begins performances on the McGuire Proscenium Stage on Friday, October 5.
- 8/26/2013
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
Photo Flash: Jonathan Groff, Guillermo Diaz and More Attend Tribes Opening at Ctg's Mark Taper Forum
Tribes celebrated its Opening Night on Sunday, March 10 at the Mark Taper Forum. Written by Nina Raine, the Ctg and Barrow Street Theatre production is directed by David Cromer in the play's West Coast Premiere. Celebrities such as Guillermo Diaz, Jonathan Groff, Deidre Hall, Ian Harding, Jane Kaczmarek, Alan Mandell, Ron Perlman, Jeff Perry, Nina Raine playwright, Peter Roth, Joan Van Ark and Charlayne Woodard attended the opening festivities, and BroadwayWorld has photos below...
- 3/12/2013
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
Steppenwolf Theatre Company Artistic Director Martha Lavey announced today the 201314 Subscription Season, including two world premieres, an American premiere and two Chicago premieres. The season begins in Steppenwolf's Downstairs Theatre with Zinnie Harris's The Wheel, directed by ensemble member Tina Landau. Up next, ensemble member Austin Pendleton directs Tribes by Nina Raine. In the Upstairs Theatre, ensemble member Yasen Peyankov directs Russian Transport by Erika Sheffer. In April 2014, ensemble member Amy Morton directs the world premiere of The Way West by Mona Mansour. And in July 2014, the season concludes with the world premiere of The Qualms by Bruce Norris, directed by Pam MacKinnon.
- 3/6/2013
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
Transformers actor to play troubled brother who abducts a mobster in next year's staging of Orphans
Shia Labeouf is preparing to make his debut on Broadway.
The Transformers star will appear opposite Alec Baldwin in a revival of Lyle Kessler's 1983 drama Orphans, in which two brothers plot to kidnap a mobster, at the Schoenfeld theatre. Previews start on 19 March. Labeouf will play Treat, the elder and more controlling of the brothers, while Baldwin will play the old-school gangster Harold. Casting for Phillip, Treat's brother, has not yet been finalised. All three characters are orphans.
Baldwin is something of a Broadway veteran, having debuted in Joe Orton's Loot opposite Zoe Wanamaker in 1986. He has since played Stanley Kowalski in A Streetcar Named Desire and Macbeth, as well as starring in another Orton farce, Entertaining Mr Sloane, off-Broadway.
Kessler's play, which has been credited with Pinteresque undertones by critics in the past,...
Shia Labeouf is preparing to make his debut on Broadway.
The Transformers star will appear opposite Alec Baldwin in a revival of Lyle Kessler's 1983 drama Orphans, in which two brothers plot to kidnap a mobster, at the Schoenfeld theatre. Previews start on 19 March. Labeouf will play Treat, the elder and more controlling of the brothers, while Baldwin will play the old-school gangster Harold. Casting for Phillip, Treat's brother, has not yet been finalised. All three characters are orphans.
Baldwin is something of a Broadway veteran, having debuted in Joe Orton's Loot opposite Zoe Wanamaker in 1986. He has since played Stanley Kowalski in A Streetcar Named Desire and Macbeth, as well as starring in another Orton farce, Entertaining Mr Sloane, off-Broadway.
Kessler's play, which has been credited with Pinteresque undertones by critics in the past,...
- 12/12/2012
- by Matt Trueman
- The Guardian - Film News
New York -- Matt Lauria of Friday Night Lights and Parenthood will star opposite Zosia Mamet of HBO's Girls in the Off Broadway production for McC Theater of Paul Downs Colaizzo's play Really Really. David Cromer, who staged the smash 2009 Off Broadway run of Thornton Wilder's Our Town and more recently scored another success in the same theater with Nina Raine's Tribes, will direct. Story: 'Friday Night Lights' Actors Zach Gilford, Matt Lauria Talk About Moving On The play begins in the aftermath of a wild undergrad party, when morning-after gossip about the characters played by Lauria and Mamet rips through a
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- 12/11/2012
- by David Rooney
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Tribes Barrow Street Theatre Run extended through January 6, 2013
Something is in the water on Barrow Street and when David Cromer drinks it, phenomenal theater happens. Tribes opened on March 4 this year, but shows no signs of aging. If its presence has escaped your awareness up to this point, as it had for this reviewer, then you have a treat in store for you. This is one of those ever-so-rare, all-around powerful pieces where a stellar cast, brilliant directing, commanding script, and beautiful design all work together to make for a theatrical experience that is likely to stay with you for years to come, continuing to outshine more trivial diversions.
David Cromer proves once again that he is one of the most promising directors in the American Theatre with the living, breathing work that has been brought to fruition on this stage. Under his steady hand, these aren't characters, they are people.
Something is in the water on Barrow Street and when David Cromer drinks it, phenomenal theater happens. Tribes opened on March 4 this year, but shows no signs of aging. If its presence has escaped your awareness up to this point, as it had for this reviewer, then you have a treat in store for you. This is one of those ever-so-rare, all-around powerful pieces where a stellar cast, brilliant directing, commanding script, and beautiful design all work together to make for a theatrical experience that is likely to stay with you for years to come, continuing to outshine more trivial diversions.
David Cromer proves once again that he is one of the most promising directors in the American Theatre with the living, breathing work that has been brought to fruition on this stage. Under his steady hand, these aren't characters, they are people.
- 10/26/2012
- by C. Jefferson Thom
- www.culturecatch.com
Bruce Norris' darkly comic play "A Parallelogram" and Sebastian Berry's "The Steward of Christendom," starring Brian Dennehy, are among the five productions slated for Center Theatre Group's 2013 season at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles, Ctg Artistic Director Michael Ritchie announced on Wednesday. The season also includes Nina Raine's off-Broadway hit "Tribes," directed by David Cromer; a revival of August Wilson's "Joe Turner's Come and Gone," directed by stage and screen actress Phylicia Rashad; and a revival of Joe Orton's "What the Butler Saw," directed by Anna D. Shapiro. "A...
- 8/22/2012
- by Kasia Anderson
- The Wrap
Due to popular demand, the producers of Off-Broadway’s “Tribes” have extended the show’s run at the Barrow Street Theatre through Jan. 6, 2013. “Tribes” is the story of a young deaf man whose life as the only non-hearing member of his family is upended when he meets Sylvia, who is slowly losing her hearing as well.The cast features Theatre World Award Winner Russell Harvard, Susan Pourfar, who won Obie, Theatre World, and Clarence Derwent awards for her performance, Jeff Still, Emmy-winner Mare Winningham, Will Brill, and Gayle Rankin. “Tribes” was written by Nina Raine and directed by Lucille Lortel and Obie Award winner David Cromer. Since its debut in March, the play has won a slew of awards, including a Drama Desk Award for Outstanding New Play, the New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Foreign Play, and the Off Broadway Alliance Award for Best New Play.
- 7/17/2012
- by help@backstage.com (Laura Meltzer)
- backstage.com
The 2012 Drama Critics Circle aAards were presented at a cocktail reception last night, May 14, at Angus McIndoe Restaurant. Sons of the Prophet, written by Stephen Karam, won the New York Drama Critics' Circle Award Nydcc for Best Play of the 2011-2012 season. The award for Best Foreign Play went to Tribes, written by Nina Raine. Once received the award for Best Musical. BroadwayWorldd brings you photos from the ceremony below...
- 5/15/2012
- by Walter McBride
- BroadwayWorld.com
The New York Drama Critics Circle met on May 7, 2012, at the offices of Time Out New York magazine, to determine the winners of its 77th annual awards. The overall results were Best Play Sons of the Prophet Stephen Karam, Best Foreign Play Tribes Nina Raine, Best Musical Once Enda Walsh, Glen Hansard and Markta Irglov and Special Citations Signature Theatre Company Mike Nichols for his contribution to the theater. Below you can see a breakdown of the voting process, showing who voted for what shows.
- 5/8/2012
- by BWW Special Coverage
- BroadwayWorld.com
Sons of the Prophet, written by Stephen Karam, today won the New York Drama Critics' Circle Award Nydcc for Best Play of the 2011-2012 season. The award for Best Foreign Play went to Tribes, written by Nina Raine. Once received the award for Best Musical. The selections were made at the 77th annual voting meeting of the organization today at the offices of Time Out New York in Manhattan. Special Citations were awarded to Mike Nichols and Signature Theatre Company. The awards will be presented at a cocktail reception to be held on Monday, May 14, at Angus McIndoe Restaurant.
- 5/8/2012
- by BWW Special Coverage
- BroadwayWorld.com
New York -- The New York Drama Critics Circle has named Stephen Karam's Sons of the Prophet, a bittersweet comedy-drama about a Lebanese-American family whose male offspring wrestle with big questions of life, love and pain, as best play of the season. Produced by Roundabout Theatre Company, Karam's play had an extended Off Broadway run late last year. The award for best foreign play went to British writer Nina Raine's Tribes, about a family of English intellectuals whose communication difficulties go far beyond their deaf son. That production is still running at the Barrow Street Theatre Off Broadway.
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- 5/8/2012
- by David Rooney
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Julie Taymor’s back, she’s saved her emails, and she’s not afraid to use them. News broke this week that the fired Spider-Man: Turn off the Dark director filed new documents—which include private emails and recorded conversations—in her $1 million lawsuit against the show’s producers. Let’s just say the papers don’t portray Spider-Man’s composers Bono and the Edge as Broadway’s best collaborators.
Meanwhile, out in Los Angeles, half the town was holding a court of their own at the star-studded (think George Clooney and Brad Pitt) reading of Dustin Lance Black’s...
Meanwhile, out in Los Angeles, half the town was holding a court of their own at the star-studded (think George Clooney and Brad Pitt) reading of Dustin Lance Black’s...
- 3/10/2012
- by Aubry D'Arminio
- EW.com - PopWatch
Tribes (at the Barrow Street Theatre through June 3)Tribes is composed and expressed in so many different inter-meshing vernaculars — educated estuary English, British intellectualese, sign language, Middle Dilettante — Nasa should consider including it aboard its next deep-space probe. Alien races could learn a lot about how humans draw each other suffocatingly close while desperately fending each other off, and how we agglomerate into a incestuous groups, break apart, hybridize, and come back together, changed. They could also pick up some mustardy Britspeak, which is slung around with thrilling aplomb by the electrically talented young playwright Nina Raine (already an Olivier-nominated sensation in London). “There is nothing naffer than titivating a cliché!” is a typical explosion from Christopher (the hellacious Steppenwolf vet Jeff Perry), the mostly harmless gasbag patriarch of a fractious family of Jewish intellectuals: foul-mouthed, fulmination-prone, life-stymied, and love-hungry. (In this particular case, dear old dad is...
- 3/9/2012
- by Scott Brown
- Vulture
Actor Russell Harvard on November 7, 2010 in Hollywood, California. (Getty)
The role of Billy in the new off-Broadway play “Tribes” presents a rich vein for an actor: a deaf adult child confronts hearing parents who have shunned sign language and most of deaf culture, insisting instead that their son rely on lip-reading and at times fragmented speech.
Russell Harvard plays the part in the bitterly comic British family drama by playwright Nina Raine starting previews this week at the Barrow Street Theatre in New York.
The role of Billy in the new off-Broadway play “Tribes” presents a rich vein for an actor: a deaf adult child confronts hearing parents who have shunned sign language and most of deaf culture, insisting instead that their son rely on lip-reading and at times fragmented speech.
Russell Harvard plays the part in the bitterly comic British family drama by playwright Nina Raine starting previews this week at the Barrow Street Theatre in New York.
- 2/18/2012
- by Ellen Gamerman
- Speakeasy/Wall Street Journal
Producers Scott Morfee, Jean Doumanian and Tom Wirtshafter announced today that they are bringing Nina Raine's much-raved-about new comedy Tribes to New York's Barrow Street Theatre 27 Barrow Street at 7th Avenue for its North American premiere. Directed by David Cromer, Tribes will begin performances in mid-February, 2012, and will officially open on Sunday, March 4, 2012. Tickets go on sale beginning December 15th via Smarttix. Casting and creative team information will be announced shortly.
- 11/14/2011
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
Welcome to the new generation of promotional videos: arty, polished and fun to watch. If you can tell what the shows are actually about, that is
Theatre trailers have come a long way in the past few years. Far from the days of basic adverts or smudgy rehearsal photomontages, companies are now producing shorts that Steven Spielberg would be proud of (the National Theatre's War Horse teaser is almost as emotionally manipulative as anything Spielberg might produce). Nosheen Iqbal's call last year on this blog for marketing departments to use more ambition and raise the bar seems, at least in some places, to have been answered: highly produced work is now being created not only by stalwarts such as Sadler's Wells but also specialist companies such as Dusthouse and MisFit Films.
But, for all that polish, I'm still slightly unsure whether theatre trailers are really doing their job – or even what that job is.
Theatre trailers have come a long way in the past few years. Far from the days of basic adverts or smudgy rehearsal photomontages, companies are now producing shorts that Steven Spielberg would be proud of (the National Theatre's War Horse teaser is almost as emotionally manipulative as anything Spielberg might produce). Nosheen Iqbal's call last year on this blog for marketing departments to use more ambition and raise the bar seems, at least in some places, to have been answered: highly produced work is now being created not only by stalwarts such as Sadler's Wells but also specialist companies such as Dusthouse and MisFit Films.
But, for all that polish, I'm still slightly unsure whether theatre trailers are really doing their job – or even what that job is.
- 10/13/2011
- The Guardian - Film News
Cottesloe; Hampstead; Arcola, all London
To celebrate his 80th birthday, Peter Hall has returned to the building he once ran and directed a sweetly autumnal Twelfth Night. His breeches-and-farthingale production, set under a canopy flecked with russet-coloured leaves, doesn't break much new ground – there's hardly a moment when it shows you something you'd never suspected was there – but, at its best, it does better than that: it seems completely natural.
Take Simon Paisley Day's icily exact Malvolio, who walks as if he were skating, and whose head lies so still on his ruff that it could be a severed bonce on a platter. Or his polar opposite, Simon Callow's Toby Belch: pink-faced, wobbly cheeks, a belting old fruit. He is every flabby inch the ramshackle roisterer, who announces the keynote of his unbuttoned, spilling-over performance in his spluttering rejection of the notion that he "confine" himself. Yet just as that looks too easy,...
To celebrate his 80th birthday, Peter Hall has returned to the building he once ran and directed a sweetly autumnal Twelfth Night. His breeches-and-farthingale production, set under a canopy flecked with russet-coloured leaves, doesn't break much new ground – there's hardly a moment when it shows you something you'd never suspected was there – but, at its best, it does better than that: it seems completely natural.
Take Simon Paisley Day's icily exact Malvolio, who walks as if he were skating, and whose head lies so still on his ruff that it could be a severed bonce on a platter. Or his polar opposite, Simon Callow's Toby Belch: pink-faced, wobbly cheeks, a belting old fruit. He is every flabby inch the ramshackle roisterer, who announces the keynote of his unbuttoned, spilling-over performance in his spluttering rejection of the notion that he "confine" himself. Yet just as that looks too easy,...
- 1/23/2011
- by Susannah Clapp
- The Guardian - Film News
Kim Cattrall has been nominated for a coveted theater award. The "Sex and the City" star's turn as Amanda in "Private Lives" sees her considered for the Best Actress in a Play prize at the 11th Whatsonstage.com Awards.
She will face competition from "End of the Rainbow" star Tracie Bennett, Helen McCrory for her role in "The Late Middle Classes", "Ruined" star Jenny Jules, Nancy Carroll from "After the Dance" and "All My Sons" actress Zoe Wanamaker.
The Best Actor in a Play award will be contested by Benedict Cumberbatch from "After the Dance", Kim's "Private Lives" co-star Matthew Mcfadyen, "Hamlet" and "Measure For Measure" star Rory Kinnear, "Deathtrap" and "London Assurance" actor Simon Russell Beale, "The Real Thing"'s Toby Stephens and "All My Sons" star David Suchet.
"All My Sons" received more nominations than any other production, being considered for accolades in six different categories. The most...
She will face competition from "End of the Rainbow" star Tracie Bennett, Helen McCrory for her role in "The Late Middle Classes", "Ruined" star Jenny Jules, Nancy Carroll from "After the Dance" and "All My Sons" actress Zoe Wanamaker.
The Best Actor in a Play award will be contested by Benedict Cumberbatch from "After the Dance", Kim's "Private Lives" co-star Matthew Mcfadyen, "Hamlet" and "Measure For Measure" star Rory Kinnear, "Deathtrap" and "London Assurance" actor Simon Russell Beale, "The Real Thing"'s Toby Stephens and "All My Sons" star David Suchet.
"All My Sons" received more nominations than any other production, being considered for accolades in six different categories. The most...
- 12/4/2010
- by celebrity-mania.com
- Celebrity Mania
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