Categories Appearances Audio Books Personal and Family Life Poetry

Helen and Damian Read Poetry at Cheltenham Literature Festival

The Love Book: Great Love Poems

by Damianista | Fan Fun with Damian Lewis | October 13, 2014

helendamianpoetry

One of the main poetry projects Helen and Damian support is the Love Book project including a book as well as an app, a brilliant collection of classic and contemporary love poems that vary from Shakespeare to E.E. Cummings to Maya Angelou.

It is always a pleasure to talk about the Love Book project and an absolutely delightful Love Book event that I was extremely lucky to attend in October 2014 at Cheltenham Literature FestivalDamian Lewis and Helen McCrory read Great Love Poemsfollowed by a wonderful book signing by Allie, Damian and Helen!

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Categories Interviews Medea Peaky Blinders Print Media

Helen McCrory: A Class Act

On-stage romance, rude reviews and skinny-dipping with Damian Lewis

by Craig McLean | October 2, 2014 | The Evening Standard

Velvet dress, £805, A.W.A.K.E. at brownsfashion.com. Gianvito Rossi boots, £730 (020 7499 9133)
Velvet dress, £805, A.W.A.K.E. at brownsfashion.com. Gianvito Rossi boots, £730 (020 7499 9133)
The tiny dynamo that is Helen McCrory, who’s twice played Cherie Blair, was a forthright politician in Skyfall and served three times in the Harry Potter films as the malevolent Narcissa Malfoy, is perched just so on a sofa at The Ivy, a big heat patch plastered wonkily on her neck. ‘I hurt it doing Medea,’ she explains. During the rapturously received staging of Euripides’ tragedy at the National, McCrory’s character was required to faint. But one night she hit another actor as she fell, ending up semi-concussed. ‘I went from ranting Greek bitch to Orphan Annie in about one beat,’ she says self-mockingly. But with a long career on stage behind her — among other accolades, she was nominated for an Evening Standard award for the Donmar’s 2002 pro-duction of Uncle Vanya — McCrory knew that the show had to go on. ‘It added a frisson to the evening. Everyone was a bit more interested in my acting after that,’ she hoots.

She’s also the leading lady of the BBC’s Peaky Blinders, the second series of which started last night. The super-stylised gangster drama — violence straight out of Al Capone’s Chicago, fashions and haircuts out of hipster Dalston — is ‘tongue-in-cheek’, as McCrory puts it. But where the first series, quoting creator and writer Steven Knight, was all about opium, this season’s drug is cocaine. ‘One is a sedative, woozy, decadent… Whereas coke is a skanky, speedy, nasty, sweaty, anxious drug that makes everyone think they’re really interesting,’ she says with a sardonic smile. The reason for this narcotic change of pace is, naturally, London. Tommy Shelby (Cillian Murphy) wants to expand the Peaky Blinders’ illegal gambling operation from the Midlands to the capital. ‘This year we see the fragility of all the characters. The cracks are beginning to show as they get out of their comfort zone; as they come down to London.’ The cracks are showing for McCrory’s Aunt Polly, too: in the opening episode we saw her character shifting from hard-as-nails matriarch of the Birmingham razor gang led by Shelby to hard-as-nails matriarch unmoored by the loss of her children.

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Categories Interviews Peaky Blinders Print Media

Helen McCrory: Aunt Polly Returns

BBC Period Drama Peaky Blinders is Back

by Scarlett Kilcooley-O’Halloran | September 30, 2014 | British Vogue

ACTRESS Helen McCrory is well-versed in the virtues of the wardrobe department. With an award-winning career that has spanned over 20 years, she has played Shakespearian queens, ancient Greek protagonists, and a Harry Potter witch to name but a few mesmerising roles, but it is her latest role that is capturing her sartorial imagination right now.

Returning as the strong-willed Aunt Polly in the BBC period drama Peaky Blinders (the story of a family of gangsters running the Birmingham underground scene) for a second series, McCrory has – not for the first time – found her outfits central to how she has been able to develop her character.

The great advantage of wearing Dior or Marchesa is that it’s all been taken care of by people that know more about clothes than you do

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Categories A Little Chaos Bill Interviews Penny Dreadful Personal and Family Life Print Media The Woman in Black, Angel of Death

Helen McCrory Interview: Woman & Home

The Real Me

by Victoria Young | Woman & Home | Autumn, 2014

Helen McCrory talks to Victoria Young about feminism, marriage to a sex symbol – and being a gypsy at heart.

Actress Helen McCrory, 46, has played everyone from Medea to Cherie Blair as well as Polly Gray in Peaky Blinders. She’s married to actor Damian Lewis. They live in London and have two children, Manon, eight, and Gulliver, seven.

I grew up in Africa because my father was a diplomat. So I was lucky enough to grow up in a world without advertising. As a result, I’ve never judged myself on what I was supposed to look like. It’s good and bad. When it came to filming the second series of Peaky Blinders, I decided “I want Polly to look rougher, she should look haggard, life beaten, absolutely exhausted.” I then saw the first episode and remembered the adage, “Be careful what you wish for.”

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