
Colin Firth
Image by: The Weinstein Company
Academy Award winner Colin
Firth is going back to his roots by playing yet another gay man. A pioneer in
the "who cares, it’s only acting" school of thought when it comes to portraying
non-hetero characters – he did it when nobody else was, in the 1980s, with
Apartment Zero and then several more times in films like A Single Man,
Mamma Mia! and Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy – Firth will soon step into
the shoes of the late great playwright and composer Noel Coward. The project is
called Mad Dogs and Englishmen and will focus on the true story of Coward’s
two week cabaret stint at the Desert Inn in Las Vegas back in 1955. Much like
the recent My Week With Marilyn, the concentrated time frame of the story
will examine Coward’s relationships with his agent and his piano teacher. And
we trust that those were fascinating friendships, otherwise there’d be no
movie about it. Right? In pre-production now, it’ll be heavily marketed to a
highly specific subset of moviegoer sometime in on or before 2014. Musicians
are difficult to pin down.
Triple threat rhymes with
Rupert Everett. Sort of.
Rupert Everett is currently
wisecracking his way across arthouse theater screens as the Victorian-era
inventor of the vibrator in the Hugh Dancy/Maggie Gyllenhaal comedy Hysteria.
And if it seems like period pieces suit the actor these days then that’s
because they do, with his upcoming project, The Happy Prince, promising to
keep him in old-fashioned costumes for just a little bit longer. Everett will
write, direct and star in the film as Oscar Wilde (during which phase of the
controversial, quotable playwright’s life is somewhat uncertain, since fellow
gay Brit actor Stephen Fry already portrayed him in the ’90s biopic Wilde).
And the triple-threat has already lined up an impressive cast of co-stars:
Emily Watson, Tom Wilkinson and, reteaming with his ’80s cast-mate from
Another Country, Colin Firth, who’ll portray Wilde’s friend Reginald Turner.
Call this one pre-pre-pre-production for the moment: There won’t be a single
camera pointed at a single waistcoat until summer of 2013.
Elizabeth Banks reaches for
her revolver
She’s a franchise baby for
now, with The Hunger Games giving Elizabeth Banks her highest profile role to
date as Effie Trinket. But in between installments of that blockbuster series,
the 30 Rock regular plans to keep you laughing – even as you
cringe – in a comedy about... killing your co-workers. Alan Ball,
Oscar-winning creator of American Beauty, Six Feet Under and True Blood,
has cast Banks in his latest movie, What’s the Matter With Margie? The dark,
darker, darkest comedy, slated for a 2013 start date, will focus on an abused
office worker who’s been dumped on for the last time by her co-workers and
resorts to planning their murders. Think Office Space meets Heathers meets
Psycho (or Horrible Bosses, come to think of it). Just don’t think about
taking any impressionable cubicle-mates on opening weekend.
Harold & Kumar meet the
Cartoon Network
The minute John Cho and Kal
Penn became claymation figures in A Very Harold & Kumar 3D Christmas it’s
almost certain that light bulbs went off in the heads of the weird people in
charge over at Cartoon Network’s "Adult Swim" programming branch. "Of course!"
the collective mind must have exclaimed, "What better delivery system for
stoner delight is there than cartoons? And who’d make a better cartoon than
America’s favorite stoners?" Which is how Harold and Kumar became the latest
upcoming series you’ll have to stay up very late to watch (or just DVR) on
basic cable. The green light’s on for a batch of episodes (coming, who knows,
soonish probably); Cho and Penn will voice their White Castle-loving characters
and it’s pretty much a lock that a certain gay actor who’s very good at playing
a drug-addled womanizer who only pretends to be gay to get closer to the ladies
will join in the mayhem from time to time. That would be Neil Patrick Harris,
by the way. Keep up.
Romeo San Vicente has pretended to be a lot of things to get what he wants. And he always gets what he wants.