Archive for September, 2009

Magazine Section Complete

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

Hey Everyone!

I have been working on the new gallery today. I have designed a new theme, and kept on working on re-adding the pictures from the previous gallery back. I am happy to say that the Magazine Scans section of the gallery is now complete. Including tons of photos that my wonderful friend Mariana has exclusively scanned and donated to this site. I didn’t tag them because I want to provide you guys with untagged pictures, but if you do re-post them I ask that you please credit this site. All of the scans are from various magazines talking about the upcoming airing of Jane Austen’s Emma, in which Romola plays the title character.

- Magazine Scans

New Photoshoot

Monday, September 28th, 2009

Hello Everyone!

I’ve been going crazy over at the gallery the last few hours today, hehe. I found a gorgeous set of photos from a This Is London article about Romola’s role in the upcoming Jane Austen’s Emma. These photos are GORGEOUS! Go and check them out!

- 031 (MQ) (x4)

Romola Garai is perfect as Jane Austen’s Emma

Monday, September 28th, 2009

Here is a nice read about Romola in the upcoming Jane Austen’s Emma.

On camera, Romola Garai is a luminous goddess, but in person she tones it down, wearing her beauty lightly. You could walk past her without looking twice.

When I meet her in The Bar at The Dorchester hotel, where she has just finished her photo shoot, she has changed into her own clothes – tomboyish chinos and a T-shirt – and the only sign of her previous incarnation are her eyes, incongruously smudged with make-up. Am I looking sultry?’ she laughs.

At only 27, she has an impressive CV, having lit up films such as I Capture the Castle, Vanity Fair and Atonement. She has acted with the RSC and on the West End stage, and now she has the lead role in two major new productions: a miniseries of Jane Austen’s Emma with Jonny Lee Miller and Michael Gambon for the BBC; and Stephen Poliakoff’s Glorious 39 with Julie Christie and Bill Nighy. (more…)

Revlon New Color Collection

Monday, September 28th, 2009

Hello Everyone!
I have added some new photos to the gallery. They are from an old event, back in 2003. But it was the first time I see them. They are from the Revlon New Color Collection when Romola was starting to promote Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights. They are in HQ and I hope you enjoy them.

- October 1: Revlon Launches New Color Collection Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights (HQ) (x4)

Glorious 39 Interview

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

I just found a lovely article and interview with Romola, Bill Nighy and Stephen Poliakoff. The article is very long so here is one of her answers. A link to the rest of the article can be found below.

CS: I’m interested in the cast’s connections to this time. Bill, you probably have parents that went through this, but Romola, when you read the script or learned about it, what kind of resonance did you have with it? Was this an interesting subject for you?
Romola Garai: Yeah, I mean, for me very much so. My father’s family are Hungarian Jews who emigrated first to New York and then to the U.K. So similarly to see them is obviously a very personal investment in the fact that Britain has taken on the mantle of the great protector, especially with regard to the Holocaust. Obviously it wasn’t ever as simple as that, specifically to do with the policy of appeasement. I was thinking what was really apparent in the script to me in terms of what Stephen is saying is being a thriller, but a psychological thriller, not something that’s just a plot, you know, it’s very much based in psychological fear like all of Hitchcock’s great films. The fundamental fear of Anne is that your family doesn’t really love you. That’s the kind of great Freudian fear at the center of it and that was something I think children who are adopted specifically fear. I don’t think that that’s such a psychological, a deep-rooted psychological fear that people have rarely addressed in film before.

CS: How about playing an actress from the ’30′s? Did you do some research in the differences in behavior or was that all in the script?
Garai: Yeah, obviously the films of Hitchcock were very important as a kind of reference point in terms of the material. They were also important to me because that were the kind of films that Anne had placed more cards in. So, it was useful, you know, not only to getting a sense of the kind of film that Stephen was making, but also in terms of character research.

Source: ComingSoon.net