Sunday, 20 July 2008

Moffatt turns down Spielburg

By Dave West, Media Correspondent (Digital Spy)

Moffat pulled out of 'Tintin' for 'Who'
Steven Moffat pulled out of a lucrative deal to write a second Tintin movie in favour of taking over from Russell T. Davies on Doctor Who, it has emerged.

Moffat has written the first Tintin and was contracted to pen a second under a two-film deal said to be worth £1 million.

Moffat said Steven Spielberg, who is creating a trilogy based on the comic book character, is a fellow Who fan and respected his decision.

"I know a lot of people won't understand it but I've been dreaming about writing for Doctor Who since I was seven," he told the Mail on Sunday. "There are no bad feelings between Spielberg and me, but Doctor Who has to come before Hollywood.

"I was under contract to do the first two of the three Tintin films. I completed the first one and then the Hollywood writers' strike happened and I couldn't work. I was offered the Doctor Who job and accepted immediately. I hope you won't make what happened sound too dramatic."

Moffat, whose first series in charge will air in 2010, added: "I talked to Steven and he understood completely. Steven is a fan and he understood my passion for the series completely."

Saturday, 19 July 2008

The Stolen Earth Figures

Images for the upcoming Stolen Earth Gift set have been revealed by Character Options. The gift set contains four figures in total; Supreme Dalek, Crucible Vault Dalek, Tenth Doctor and Davros. The Stolen Earth gift set is speculated for release this Autumn to follow on from the previous Series four figures.


(Below -courtesy of The Doctor Who Site)






New radio controlled deadly Daleks to invade a store near you!

An impressive 9.4 million people tuned in to the nail-biting Doctor Who series four finale, which had viewers glued to their screens to watch the Doctor defeat the Daleks and their creator Davros.

Now avid addicts of the show can add the Doctor’s deadliest foes to their collection in the form of a 5-inch and 12-inch radio controlled Davros and Supreme Dalek.

Developed by Character Options in partnership with BBC Worldwide, the detailed Daleks are due to launch in the autumn and are set to be at the top of every fan’s Christmas list.

The Doctor’s ultimate enemy in the last episode of the series, the 12-inch radio controlled Davros has full movement control and utters phrases such as the chilling “Welcome to my new empire, Doctor".

The 12-inch radio controlled Supreme Dalek, is a must for all Doctor Who collections. It has automated head and eye movement, a poseable gun arm, as well as intoning those well-known Dalek phrases.

Still as scarily realistic, the 5-inch radio control Supreme Dalek and 5-inch radio controlled Davros are ideal for recreating those final scenes.

Also being launched is an incredible Stolen Earth Gift Set, which features 5-inch action figures from the series four finale, including Davros, a Supreme Dalek, a Crucible Dalek and the Doctor.

For fans who can’t wait until autumn, the highly anticipated action figures from series four are making their way into shops now.

The 5-inch figures comprise the Tenth Doctor with five Adipose, the Doctor’s latest companion Donna Noble, a Pyrovile Priestess, Sigma Ood, Natural Ood, Sontaran Commander Skorr and Sontaran Trooper.

Doctor Who fans will be wowed by the phenomenal detail that these realistic figures capture and can recreate exciting scenes from the TV series, including Donna’s first encounter with the Adipose in episode one ‘Partners in Crime’ and her rescue from the temple of the Pyrovile Priestess in ‘The Fires of Pompeii’.

There’s also a host of series one, two and three figures in the shops now - each with a detailed new accessory. Fans will find figures such as Rose Tyler with an ice extinguisher, Slitheen with a skin suit and Captain Jack Harkness with a revolver, and many more.

Friday, 18 July 2008

Journey's End Makes Doctor Who History


10.5 Million watch Journey's End

July 18, 2008

Christian Cawley

Final figures have been released by BARB for the week featuring the final episode of season 30 of Doctor Who, and these reveal adjusted figures for Doctor Who to account for time shifting and repeat broadcasts.

As a result, an astonishing 10.57 million viewers watched Jouney's End. This marks the first time in Doctor Who's 45 years that an episode has been the most-watched programme during the week of broadcast, and it even beat into second place coverage of the men's Wimbledon final by almost two million. (Of course a Briton in the final would have had a very different effect...)

This also marks the third occasion since the series revival in 2005 that it has broken the 10 million viewers barrier. Opening episode Rose was watched by 10.81 million (higher, but not the most watched programme that week), while the 2007 Christmas Special Voyage of the Damned yielded an audience of 13.31 million.

Thursday, 17 July 2008

Catherine Tate injury forces opening night to be cancelled

Under the Blue SkyTate stars in the play with Francesca Annis and Chris O'Dowd

The first public performance of a West End play starring Catherine Tate was cancelled because the actress injured her ankle.

By Henry Deedes
Thursday, 17 July 2008

DWM Cover 398




Number 1


Number 2


Number 3


Number 4


DWM magazine cover which is released next Thursday. There are FOUR , yes FOUR covers to collect. Put side by side and it looks like they form a giant poster over 4 covers!




Wednesday, 16 July 2008

John Barrowman -Making Of Me

Photobucket


John Barrowman has claimed that parents of gay children should watch his new BBC TV show.

The Doctor Who and Torchwood actor undergoes scientific tests in The Making Of Me to discover if he was homosexual from birth or affected by his environment."When I first started in my career, I thought I'm here to entertain people, nothing more," Barrowman explained. "But as I've got older, my career has gone in a different direction - particularly with Torchwood."Now I get a lot of letters from young people who are either in the position of being shunned by their families or are fearful of coming out.

I thought I could help those people and help everyone understand . . . well, it's a question. Is it nature or is it nurture? If you're a parent with a gay child, watch it."Barrowman recently revealed that he would like to have children with his partner Scott Gill.

John Barrowman: The Making Of Me airs on July 24 on BBC One.

Catherine Tate's Modern Outlook

(thislondon.co.uk)
            Catherine Tate

Independent lady: Catherine Tate does not want to rely on a man

            Catherine Tate

Time lord and lady: Tate as Donna Noble with David Tennant in Doctor Who

            Catherine Tate

Hell's granny: Tate found her foul-mouthed cockney gran character from visiting old people's homes


Catherine tate and I are talking about embarrassing crushes (are there any other kind?). "Ooh," she recalls, her face crumpling in memory. "It's that thing where you're not interested in someone until someone tells you they fancy you. And then suddenly you're 'Oh, right', you start making the case for it, don't you? And then when they go off you, you're left with this awful crush." Tomorrow Tate, 40, opens in the West end revival of David Eldridge's Under the Blue Sky, first seen at the royal Court in 2000 - a bittersweet comedy about the tangled love lives of a group of London teachers. Tate is Michelle, the hilariously promiscuous 38-year-old maths teacher who has just been dumped by the love of her life.

When I told friends I was interviewing tate, things went mad. Men flooded my inbox with sci-fi questions. My credibility soared with nine-year-old girls.

But her fans are worried. Isn't her career going to be a bit of an anti-climax after the nail-biting finale of Doctor Who last week, where her character, the Doctor's assistant, Donna, became the first female to turn into a half time Lord?

"For one brief moment I was the most important woman in the whole of the universe," she tells me. "Oh gosh, I can't thank Russell [T Davies] enough for just making that possible. For many people, I'm sure, what a gamble to take on someone like me who is known, by the vast majority of people, for wearing wigs and comedy teeth." It's easy to forget that tate, dubbed the funniest woman in Britain, is a proper actress. Since the Catherine tate Show first went out in 2004, she has become a national treasure - performing her "is One bovvered?" sketch in front of the Queen and playing mouthy schoolgirl Lauren opposite Tony Blair in that Comic relief Sketch.

But fans needn't worry, she is exactly where she wants to be - back on stage. Yes, she cut her teeth on the stand-up circuit but she also did three years at drama school and a year with both the royal Shakespeare Company and the national. She was terrific in the 2005 West end play Some Girls with David Schwimmer and did a stint in death row drama the exonerated.

"I thank God for my success on TV," she says, "because now theatre people say: 'Would you like to come and do a play?' When i went to drama school that was all I really wanted to do. You don't go there to learn how to act on TV and film."

On screen Tate is a chameleon presence - she can play anything from 15-year-old schoolgirl to 80-year-old gran. But in the flesh she is rather beautiful, with long auburn hair and a porcelain complexion.

She is naturally shy - she loathes being hugged and hates small talk. "I'm not frightened of a bit of silence." And she always keeps that voluptuous figure under layers (big boobs, she jokes, meant she could never run as fast as David Tennant in Doctor Who). But in Under the Blue Sky, she has to strip live on stage. The revenge sex scene with her nerdy teacher colleague in the play is graphic and funny - and very nearly erotic - until it implodes. The last thing she wants is for the sex to look actorly. "You can't be going: 'On this line, I will be undoing the third button of his trousers!'" Tate is in a long-term relationship (with stage manager Twig Clark), with a daughter, Erin, five, but she hasn't forgotten the full horror of London dating. We bond over the scene in Michael Winterbottom's film, Wonderland, where Gina McKee's character has to put her tights on after an awful one-night stand, then sobs all the way home on the bus to Elephant and Castle. We've all been there, I suggest. "That's exactly what it feels like at 10 to six in the morning," she agrees. In this new play she loves her drunken character Michelle, even though tate has never touched alcohol (she hates the loss of control). "She doesn't apologise for having slept with all these people. I think it's very honest and refreshing to have someone who goes, 'Yeah, I have a lot of sex', it just strips away the nonsense. She isn't just there going, 'I haven't got enough time to have a baby!' there's no question of her having given up."

Under the Blue Sky isn't a star vehicle. Tate was keen to do an ensemble piece and she shares the six-character bill with the likes of Francesca annis and Chris O'Dowd from the IT Crowd.

Considering she is such a powerful force in broadcasting, there is a real modesty
about her. She doesn't dress in a flash way, she always takes her mother to awards ("no one enjoys being Catherine Tate as much as my mother," she says) and she lives in a normal house in Mortlake.

Her mother's family have been florists for generations. Born Catherine Ford, she was raised in the Brunswick Centre, just off Russell Square. Back then it was a gritty council estate. "There was no Carluccio's and French Connection but there was always a sense of community."

Her mother left her father before she was born. She grew up - an adored only child - in a matriarchy. "It's never been a point of reference to look to a man," she tells me today. "It's not always a good thing, I suppose, but I think independence is always preferable to dependence." And yet the young Catherine was a worrier. She suffered from an obsessive disorder connected with word association which meant she was careful not to leave her jumper on the floor, since her mother's name, Josephine, also began with the letter J. But she knew she could make people laugh. "So I subconsciously made myself become the funny one so that would be my label rather than the ginger one or the red-faced one."

She attended Notre Dame high school in Southwark (she is still a regular churchgoer) and loved the theatre. It took four years of applying to study drama at Central School before she got in. After small theatre jobs, TV bit parts and a spell of stand-up, she was spotted at Edinburgh by a casting director who got her the role in the Dawn French sitcom Wild West, which led to BBC2 commissioning The Catherine Tate Show. The great thing about her writing is it is character-driven, rather than relying on boom-boom punch lines. She found her foul-mouthed cockney granny from visiting old people's homes. The neurotic mother she spotted at Peter Jones on the King's Road.

In many ways, it's a miracle the show ever appeared. It was filmed while she was suffering acute post-natal depression after an emergency caesarean. She didn't sleep properly for two years and felt incredibly guilty she couldn't breastfeed properly - until one night, at 2am, when she had lost all hope, a nurse came in and said: "You know what? In 10 years' time when she's at school, it won't matter."

Her partner, Twig, of whom she is very protective, gave up work to help with childcare. Today she says she has lots of friends who could not be more fulfilled being full-time mums. "But I don't think that would have been the choice for me because I like to work. Especially if you're lucky enough to do something you love. I will absolutely say that whatever job I was asked to do, whatever schedule I was asked to work, it is never going to be as hard as looking after a child."

Tate isn't a glass half full person - she jokes the glass isn't even what she ordered. She still worries incessantly - will Erin choke on her Rice Krispies when she's away filming? - and suffers occasional panic attacks. Astrology grounds her. Although she wishes she'd never talked about it now.

"I've become Mystic Meg," she laments. "That's one of the things David and I argue about, because he has no patience with it. But I'd say, well, it's more than a parlour game. I don't mean your stars in the paper - but I am interested in the alignment of the planets and the characteristics of the houses.

"I also know, categorically, unquestionably, when Mercury's in retrograde I'm always late, the trains are delayed and things don't turn out right. And that will happen twice a year," she tells me with wonderful, bleak satisfaction.

Tate is great if inscrutable company. You think you're getting on famously, then she closes down. "That's the poisoned chalice when you're shy, people assume you're arrogant," she admits.

She finds cheeriness exhausting. " Positivity is a great thing, but I genuinely can't communicate with people who START RIGHT HERE [she mimics, raising her voice]. You think: God, bring it down. Mainly because they're usually desperately unhappy. I admire it in one sense because of the sheer amount of effort - and I'm fairly lazy, so I couldn't commit to that kind of endurance test every day. But on the other end of the spectrum, I can't bear people who mope. Moping is horrible."

Her true friends are people who have lived through pain, and it has shaped them. "I've realised I need a gnawing, nagging, anxious doubt when I wake at 4am." But her fears go straight into her sketches. "In any situation - awful, good or average - there's always part of me thinking: 'That would be a good two-shot.'"

London is her passion - "it's in my bones" - and she loves her home comforts. She has a pathological horror of camping. "It's something I would never even consider," she shudders. "Have you heard of this thing called glamping? It's £7,000 for the weekend at Glastonbury so you can have hot and cold running water and a toilet. Go to a hotel!"

What's next? She's a big champion of new writing at the Royal Court and would love to do Shakespeare but is aware casting directors can be snobbish. "But you know, as long as I get the opportunities to work with the people in the industry that I admire, then I'm delighted to be, for 90 per cent of the population, the girl who said: 'Am I bovvered?'"

Under the Blue Sky opens at the Duke of York's Theatre, WC2, tomorrow. Information: 0870 060 6644