Sunday, September 26, 2021

CELEBRATING 70 YEARS! : BANKSY'S COMING FOR DINNER .. AUGUST 8 PRODUCTIONS .. UK .. 2009 ..


 AUGUST 8 PRODUCTIONS

Presents

BANKSY'S COMING FOR DINNER

Starring

JOAN COLLINS as Self

PERCY GIBSON as Self

TARA NEWLEY as Self

TAMARA BEKWITH as Self

STEPHEN K. AMOS as Self

ANN MITCHELL as Self

PAUL DEFREITAS as Self

HELEN LEDERER as Cook

NICKOLAS GRACE as Butler

BRYAN LAWRENCE as Banksy

Written & Directed by Ivan Massow


Experience the clash of celebrity, as Hollywood royalty Joan Collins and husband Percy Gibson meet Banksy, the most famous living artist in the world. 'Banksy's Coming For Dinner' is a film within a film and questions the very nature of reality at every level.

(c) 2009 .. August 8 Productions .. 61mins .. Color ..

Entertaining is an art for Joan & Percy!

This 2009 production stars Joan in a staged reality feature, inviting the audience to attend a dinner party hosted by Joan & Percy at their country estate for the renowned artist Banksy. However everything is not what it seems! Along for the ride is Joan's daughter Tara, her good friend Tamara Bekwith & Paul DeFreitas and actress Ann Mitchell and comedian Stephen K. Amos.. In the kitchen comedienne Helen Lederer plays the cook, with Joan's good friend Nikolas Grace as the butler.. Even Banksy is played by an actor, although entertaining, the film is more of an experiment and its always great to see Joan in full form... 


Caught on film - when Banksy had dinner with Joan Collins..


A

new film records the unlikely meeting between Joan Collins and the mysterious artist Banksy.

Banksy is flavour of the moment. At the weekend, Bristol City Museum opened a show of 100 of the graffiti artist's works, causing a great stir in his home town. By the end of the day, London, too, will be gossiping about the night Banksy had dinner with Joan Collins.

A year ago, in full-length black sequined fishnet gloves, the star welcomed the street artist to dinner at her opulent Oxfordshire country seat on a glorious June evening. The night's extraordinary events are documented in a new film, Banksy's Coming to Dinner, which is being screened for the first time today.

You see the artist, his face pixellated and voice distorted to preserve his anonymity, being taxied from London to Collins's home with Tamara Beckwith, who sips nervously from a bottle of mineral water. When he arrives, Banksy presents Joan and her husband Percy with an artwork involving an aerosol can ("Perhaps we should get it signed," they whisper). Later, he leaves the dinner table when he loses patience with the other guests.

It's an unsettlingly comic film, like the reality TV show Come Dine With Me but instead of real people we have sort-of celebs circling each other uneasily. Guests include comedian Stephen K Amos, actor Ann Mitchell and an exuberant gay man (he turns out to be an agent called Paul de Freitas). Plus Joan's daughter Tara. She has to join the party when Amos's girlfriend is a no show ("Mummy will go mad!").

His film is, Massow says, a spoof on reality TV, and a comment on the sensational/celebrity nature of the contemporary art world. Banksy, with his fame, the arguably inflated prices his works command and his enigmatic persona, is its perfect poster boy.

Joan's rare invite to the dinner...


The pixellated star is not really Banksy but Massow didn't let the rest of the cast in on the secret. "I really thought it was Banksy," Joan Collins tells me from her villa in the South of France, though she understood the dinner party was a set-up. "Tamara wasn't sure, and we did wonder why he had come to dinner with me." In fact, the actor was Bryan Lawrence, who used to be in The Bill.

"Joan was the perfect match for this idea of art celebrity," says Massow. "She didn't mind biting the hand that feeds her."

In fact, Massow didn't set out to make a film about Banksy or the art world. His intention was to make a film with Joan, who will host the star-packed launch party tonight at the Mayfair Hotel.

"What we really wanted to do was a remake of Whatever Happened to Baby Jane, with me in the Bette Davis part," Collins confesses. "But there were problems with the estate."

That idea didn't work out but it took Massow to LA, where the idea for making the Banksy film was born. He moved into the house on Malibu beach where Samantha stays in the Sex and the City film and began to hatch the plot. "I've done lots of things, I've even made shampoo. I wanted to work with Joan, so why not? I've known her for 20 years and we worked hard on this," says Massow who is now back in London living in a flat in Covent Garden. Over months, the project morphed into what Collins calls a "cod reality show".

Massow did actually ask Banksy to take part. "Did he think for one minute that Banksy, who has protected his identity for two decades, would reveal it in a film by a first-time director!" laughs one art world insider.

Joan arrives for premiere party at The Mayfair

Nonetheless, Banksy's people seem suitably irritated. "We want nothing to do with that association. I don't really understand what it's all about," barked Banksy's PR, Jo Brooks, down the phone.

That Collins agreed to take part in a "cod reality show" indicates how persuasive Massow can be. She knows him through her son, the painter Sasha Newley. "My agents really didn't want me to do it," she says. "But then they never want you to do anything they haven't found for you, and I like challenges. It was totally unscripted at points, much less than a reality show, and I was just playing the role of grand lady of the manor."

Was it fun to do? "It was fabulous." Was there any tension around the dinner table? "Not until Tamara and Tara started talking about Ann being a lesbian."

Not everyone was as willing to contradict their agent as Collins. "Christopher Biggins said yes," says Massow. "But then his agent said no. He'd just come out of the jungle after I'm a Celebrity ... and there was something about jeopardising his situation with ITV."

Meanwhile, below stairs in the film, we find comedian Helen Lederer, another friend, playing an intransigent cook. "I've done the real Come Dine with Me, and that is really stressful: two cameras on you while you're cooking in real time - the recipes seemed to get longer and longer. For Banksy, we forgot we were being filmed, and started bitching about the others. It's all on tape somewhere."


Banksy's Coming to Dinner shares much with "real" reality TV, including the genre's insubstantial quality, its longueurs and a constant wonderment that you're watching it at all. You may find yourself praying, as I did, that the dinner won't include a dessert course.

It leaves you with little, except the memory of Collins' expertly lipsticked smile and the feeling that her and Percy really do get along rather well.

In the film Massow comments on the art scene he left behind ("conceptualism was going up its own arse and we needed real art - that is why I like Banksy") and we learn that Joan Collins is allergic to shellfish.

We also discover that Banksy's work is not to the actress's taste. "I'm into Impressionists and portraiture," says Collins. "Graffiti doesn't fit with the way I live." But just for a moment, when she held that spray-can sculpture and pondered its value, perhaps she could have been swayed.


'Banksy's Coming For Dinner' was available on DVD in the UK at the time of release in 2009, but this release is no longer available, but you can see the cover above....

Saturday, September 25, 2021

CELEBRATING 70 YEARS! : OZZIE .. MAINLINE PICTURES / DAYBREAK PACIFIC .. NEW ZEALAND .. 2001 ..


 

Mainline Pictures


Presents
A Daybreak Pacific Group Presentation

OZZIE

Starring
JOAN COLLINS as Max Happy
RACHEL HUNTER as Beth Morton
RALPH MOELLER as Tank Emerson
SPENCER BRESLIN as Justin Morton
PETER ROWLEY as Buzz Maroni
BRUCE ALLPRESS as Charlie Foster
ANTON TENNET as Darryl
STEVEN RILEY as Ngundi
JOHN LEIGH as Gilbert
ROSE MCIVER as Caitlin

Director Of Photography - Neil Cervin
Screenplay by Michael Lach / Lori O' Brien
Edited by Douglas Braddock
 Music by Florian Appl
Produced by Chuck Binder / Dale G Bradley/ Grant Bradley
Directed by William Tannen

(c) 2001  Mainline Pictures  89mins

When Ozzie, a cute koala is kidnapped from his Australian home by two goons working for toy tycooness Max Happy, a madcap adventure begins! On a flight back to America, Ozzie escapes the clutches of the terrible two and seeks a hiding place in the backpack of a clever eight year old, who takes Ozzie to Los Angeles. With the heavies on his trail, join the hunt for Ozzie!


Joan with Dir William Tannen
This New Zealand shot family adventure is a fun romp with Joan the definite highlight of the proceedings..Joan camps it up as the owner of a toy factory, who could definately give Cruella De Ville a run for her money. There is not much background to this film, but Joan was
delighted to spend some time in New Zealand and she always enjoys a good tongue in cheek comedy role. 

Rare shot of Joan outside her trailer on set

A review of the film from Digitally Obessed is as following...

"Although the puppet work on the Koala isn't very convincing and the movie is fairly cartoonish, the most entertaining part of the film by far, is the way over the top presentation of Max Happy by Joan Collins. She's in full on Cruella De Ville mode here, right down to the makeup and hair and Collins always one to chew scenery with a vengeance, acts the part with a crazed gutso. She is a lot of fun to watch, being allowed to run riot! On the whole, Ozzie, like its namesake, is pretty cute and the moral is solid, but isn't very laboured'' ..



'Ozzie' was available on dvd in various European countries but never got a proper dvd release in the USA or UK.. 


French release dvd cover

Friday, September 24, 2021

CELEBRATING 70 YEARS! : FOOTBALLERS WIVES .. ITV / CARLTON TELEVISION .. UK.. 2006 ..


 

Carlton Television & Shed Productions
Present

FOOTBALLERS WIVES

Starring

ZOE LUCKER as Tanya Turner
GILLIAN TAYLFORTH as Jackie Pascoe Webb
PETER ASH as Darius Fry
LAILA ROUASS as Amber Gates
JESSE BIRDSALL as Roger Webb
SARAH BARAND as Shannon Donnelly Lawson
HELEN LATHAM as Lucy Milligan
BEN RICHARDS as Bruno Milligan
CRAIG GALLIVAN as Callum Watson
LUCIA GIANNECCHINI as Urszula Rosen
PHINA OROUCHE as Liberty Baker
ANGELA RIDGEON as Trisha Watson
JAY RODAN as Paulo Bardosa
CHUCKY VENICE as Tremaine Gidigbi
NICHOLAS BALL as Garry Ryan
Special Guest Star
JOAN COLLINS as Eva De Wolffe

Executive Producers -  Brian Park & Liz Lake
Produced by Cameron Roach
Based on the Book 'Footballers Wives Tell Their Tales' by Shelley Webb

Season 5 - Various Episodes ..


At Earls Park Football Club the drama is more intense off the pitch! Even more so with the glamourous Eva De Wolffe, the chief of Glam magazine who is having a relationship with Earl Park's latest signing Paulo Bardoso turns up and goes head to head with the back biting Tanya Turner who sets her sights on him! Will Tanya score with Paulo? Will Eva tackle conniving Tanya? Who will referee!!


My Footballers' Wives diary, by Joan Collins...


My agent Peter Charlesworth calls me in the South of France enquiring if I want to guest-star in Footballers' Wives. I have seen the show and think it could be fun, depending on the role.

"They'll tailor it for you," he says. "Well, let's wait and see," I reply. The outline of the script arrives a few days later. I like it and say yes.

I meet the two producers, Brian Park and Cameron Roach, for lunch at The Ivy. Christopher Biggins shrieks across the room: "Oh, darling. So you are doing Footballers' Wives?"

Biggins is the ears and eyes of London, so I tell the producers that if they'd wanted to keep my role a secret, the cat was now out of the bag. They want me to play Eva De Wolffe - an evil, rich, manipulating bitch who runs Glam magazine. "I think I can play that sort of role," I tell them, "but it may be a stretch."

Back in NY. The script arrives and it's quite good. There's a good deal of Alexis Carrington Colby in dear Eva - why change the habits of a lifetime? All is agreed and Percy [Joan's husband] and I will fly to London on October 3.

Stylist Sarah Arthur brings 30 outfits to my London flat. Some are chic, some god-awful. Spend six hours trying on clothes - a record even for a devout shopper like me.

Decide on five 'looks', including a truly devilish black leather jacket and pencil skirt with red blouse. Then off to Philip Treacy for hats (£2,600 for a straw hat - how does Camilla manage?). Then to Neil Cunningham's atelier for the grand evening dress.

I'm suffering from jet lag (in the past ten days Percy and I have been in London, Glasgow, Wales, London, LA, San Diego, LA, New York and back to London) so collapse for a long nap afterwards.

Joan on set with Zoe Lucker & Jay Rodan

Up early to promote the show on ITV's Loose Women only to discover-there are two limos outside. We pick the one that seems to know who we are, but as we head through Parliament Square we get a panic call from the Footballers' Wives office. Apparently the other car was also for us.

How many cars can a woman have? These guys must be dripping with money! Pity the salaries don't reflect that. English TV salaries are a joke compared with American ones. How actors survive I can't imagine. I thoroughly enjoy making my opinions known on Loose Women.

Then it's off to meet Alyn, the makeup man, and Jan Archibald, who does my hair. Eva will basically be Alexis with longer, lighter and looser hair. Claudette Colbert had the same hair and make-up throughout her career, so I don't see why it won't work for me.

Give Alyn 10 pairs of eyelashes I bought in NY for $45 (£25) - he is stunned by how cheap they were. Everything there seems to be half the price that it is in Britain.

He gives me cash on the spot - very nice and sooo unusual. Most production companies are tight as ticks and make you wait months before they reimburse you, if at all.

When I did Guiding Light in America a few years ago, the fat female producer gloated about deducting car expenses out of my salary, even though they were supposed to pay. It wasn't worth the aggravation of a lawsuit.

Off to meet Eva's nemesis, the shockingly naughty Tanya Turner, played by Zoe Lucker. She's such a fabulous bitch on the show -so common, coarse and cheap - that I wonder if there'll be a touch of that in person.

I give a lot of thought to what to wear and finally decide on the suit I bought at Saks last month - lightweight grey tweed with contrasting lapels, belt and knee-length skirt. No tights, as my legs are tanned, and, of course, a hat - the white felt one I bought at the St Tropez market for a few euros, but looks really expensive (sorry, Philip).

Arrive at San Lorenzo at one minute past one (not late, not early, just right). Zoe and the two producers Brian and Cameron are waiting at the bar. The two bitches are about to meet.

A paparazzo outside asks for a photo, promising it will be featured prominently. Zoe is pretty, quite tanned (real or fake?) and is wearing a black pantsuit with beaucoup de cleavage. We pose for the photographer before lunch and get on like a house on fire.

Many actors and actresses I've worked with have shown palpable antipathy at the first meeting, but Zoe is warm, funny, smart and chic - not at all like Tanya.

She has amazing nails - white-tipped French-manicured, about 2in long.

"How do you wash your hair?" I ask. "Very carefully," she replies. "They're fake and I can't wait to take them off at the end of each season."

It's quite rare for two prominent actresses to enjoy each other's company so much, but we certainly do.

Shoot an important scene with Paulo, in which I fall over because Tanya has sawed my stiletto heel.

He's supposed to rush to my side to help me and find out if I'm all right. Frankly, he doesn't look the least concerned and the director has to ask him for several takes. Back home again 12 hours later, with a sore bum.




I'm beginning to become concerned that Paulo is too inexperienced to play such a complex and tortured character.

We shoot the airport scene in a gorgeous office building in Docklands that's been empty for years (what a waste). My character, Eva, catches Paulo with Tanya at airport arrivals. After a tiny altercation, I leave to organise the bags, while he stays behind and furtively kisses her.

When I bark: "Paulo, I'm waiting!" in my best grand-bitch manner, he doesn't even flinch, which I find odd because he's supposed to be terrified of me. We discuss this with David, the director, but on the next take Paulo still meanders over with a casual expression.

If he doesn't become more cowed, the whole storyline doesn't lead to the climax it needs. I speak to the producer about this and he agrees.

I'm called for 2.15pm. I'm thankful for not having another early morning, but I don't set foot on set until 7pm. I'm a bit agitated as it is the annual gala evening of The Shooting Star Children's Hospice, of which I'm a patron. I'm auctioning a lunch with Zoe and me on the set of Footballers' Wives, so I can't miss it.

I'm supposed to be there at 10pm and the assistant director assures me we will stop shooting then, but there are miles of scenes to go and I can't see how they'll make it.

Percy and my daughter Katy hang around in the Winnebago eating chocolates and drinking tea. Finally I'm called on set to play a restaurant scene with Tanya and Paulo.

He plays it rather well and we do some interesting improvisation - things are looking up. We now seem to be shooting the scenes in one take, so I'm wondering what took so long before.

We break at 9.55pm. Percy and I rush over to The Dorchester in time for the auction, where lunch with Zoe and me commands the highest bid - £30,000. I am thrilled.

Joan with Jay ( Paolo ) shooting restaurant scene..


The director spends so much time thinking about the shots each morning that we end up rushing big scenes to finish on schedule.

Today I have four tricky scenes, and by 6.30pm we still haven't started the final two. If they hadn't filmed me picking up a set of keys from every conceivable angle in the morning, we'd have more time for the truly meaty moments.

For the last scene - I'm in a bathrobe being massaged by a young hunk - I'm not even given enough time to take off my elaborate makeup and replace it with simpler makeup and turban - infinitely more believable. It's all rush, rush, rush.

They keep congratulating me because I'm so fast, but I feel slightly taken advantage of. "Thanks," I smile. "But I'm not too happy about filming

an entire page of dialogue in a single take because it's five minutes to quitting time."

This is more pressure than Dynasty but not nearly as much as Guiding Light, where the actors were shoved around like mannequins and learned up to 40 pages of dialogue for each day's shooting. This is heaven compared with that.

For the big auction scene, where Eva outbids Tanya for Paulo, we do about 9,000 set-ups from every angle.

Spend much time sitting in my chair in a large Philip Treacy hat with massive feathers, talking to Chucky (who plays footballer Tremaine Gidigbi) and Phina (who plays his on-screen girlfriend Liberty Baker), who are funny and really cool.

They are surprised by my surprise that no one has stand-ins to take their places while the technicians fiddle with lights and cameras. Actually, I do have a stand-in, but I'm too embarrassed to use her.

Auction scene all day long. Have an interesting scene with Zoe, where I get to use the f-word. "We're only allowed one f-word per season," says Cameron, the producer, "and we're giving it to you." I'm honoured.

Arrive at Roger Moore's birthday party at Lundens restaurant at 9pm and everyone (Michael and Shakira Caine, the Forsyths, Michael Winner et al) is already seated - very embarrassing. Leave apologetically at 10.45 to try to get at least seven hours' shuteye. They all know what it's like.



Today is stunt day. We've all been nervous because I have to slap Zoe hard, throw a martini in her face, then attempt to strangle her. I've "slapped" people hundreds of times on camera and I'm quite good at faking it.

The trick is to whip the hand so fast by the actor's face that the camera can't capture that it hasn't connected. Zoe helps admirably, snapping her head back with split-second precision, each time yelling: "S***! You bitch!"

It's quite different from the time June Allyson had to slap me for The Opposite Sex. She didn't pretend, walloped off my earrings and eyelashes, and gave my cheek such a bruise that I couldn't work for three days.

We start the stunt before lunch and do so many takes that by 7pm we still have loads more to do, and I've only done one long shot of me strangling Zoe. We giggle like schoolgirls through rehearsals. Zoe is a true professional, a really lovely person and great fun. It's always good to make a new friend from each movie or play and I think Zoe's the one on this one.

Percy and I ask her for dinner when we return to London - I'd really like to continue the friendship.

We are supposed to finish shooting the martini-throwingwall-strangling, bitch-slapping scene before lunch but miss that deadline by a mile.

Director David wants me to throw the martini into the camera lens while still glaring at Zoe. I tell him my aim is appalling and she'll probably get it in the face instead.

Zoe is wearing a suede jacket - the only one - so even if I had perfect aim it would splash the jacket. "I tell you what," says David. "Just as you say your line, we'll slide a plastic barrier in front of Zoe's face and you'll throw it at that."

"You've got to be kidding!" Zoe and I shriek. They finally decide to do what I suggested in the first place - cut camera before throwing the martini, cover the lens with a waterproof, put an X next to the camera where Zoe was, and I chuck the martini and spit my line at the X. It works perfectly, natch - that's what we always did on Dynasty.

The last part of the scene is rather flat. Paulo has a long speech in which he is supposed to emerge from the semi-hypnotised state Eva has had him in for years. "It's over, Eva, finished,

I'm never seeing you again, blah, blah, blah." But Paulo seems to have a problem. There's no difference in him being under Eva's spell and breaking free of it. This is such a great acting opportunity - to change from deeply troubled and brainwashed to freedom and independence - but I don't think he makes it work.

It's a challenging scene, so maybe even Robert de Niro couldn't have cut it. I try to make up by doing a full Bette Davis swoosh after screaming: "You're a pathetic excuse for a man -you deserve each other. You're both ten-a-penny, but there'll only ever be one Eva De Wolffe, and don't you forget it!" Tara-ra!

After the break we film an earlier scene where Paulo gets out of the pool at breakfast and nuzzles my neck. I am surprised to see he has skinny legs because I always thought footballers had strong, muscular legs, but who am I to question the great minds of casting directors?

I guess it would be slightly distasteful these days to ask actors to drop their trousers while auditioning, but they've been asking actresses to do it for years.

My assistant Paul, who is driving-today, gets lost in the wilds of Hackney en route to the Empire theatre, where we're shooting the pivotal opera-box scene.

Zoe and I share the only dressing room, while Paulo gets p***** off because he has to sit in the auditorium with the extras. He becomes quite arrogant, saying: "Why does she (meaning me, not Zoe) have a changing room and not me?"

"Because Joan has a huge ball gown to change into," the assistant director icily explains. Paulo does not seem placated.



We read through the scene where he is supposed to choke on his champagne when he sees Tanya in the opposite box while sitting with me. "I'm not doing that," he says, "it's ridiculous."

"So what will you do when you see Tanya?" asks David.

"You'll see. But I'm not spitting into my champagne."

So we sit in our box sipping champagne and David asks Paulo if he's noticed Tanya yet, since he hasn't shown any apparent reaction ( Footballers' Wives prides itself on being OTT).

After several shots, I suggest how he might react when he sees Tanya, but he gives me a dismissive, withering look, worthy of Alexis, which I find quite rude. Acting protocol dictates that if an actor gives another a suggestion (and I don't condone it unless the situation is dire, which this was fast becoming), one doesn't have to take the advice, but it should be acknowledged as a gesture of goodwill.

One of the producers tells me: "I can't believe that. I saw it all on camera. There you were, giving him advice, and he practically ignored you."

I shrug: "He's young. He'll learn, I guess."

"He'd better," says the producer, "otherwise he won't be on this show much longer."

Later we film a scene in the corridor outside Zoe's box, where I find the two of them almost in flagrante, and I become cutting and sarcastic. Zoe reacts beautifully, while Paulo's response is only to sink his head into his hands. No emotion, no reaction - another wasted opportunity.

So ends my sojourn on Footballers' Wives. It was a hoot and I enjoyed it enormously, in spite of the lack of sleep. The cast are great with one tiny exception, and the crew are a terrific bunch of professionals.

The producer presents me with a bunch of flowers and says he hopes I'll be back - me too.

They should not have heard the last of Miss Eva De Wolffe.



The series was available in individual seasons on dvd, but these releases are no longer available.. However you can order the complete series from Acorn Media at the following link ...

ORDER FOOTBALLERS WIVES COMPLETE SERES ON DVD HERE..


Tuesday, September 21, 2021

EVENT ALERT : WELLBEING OF WOMEN SPARKLING LUNCH .. FORTNUM & MASON .. NOVEMBER 8 2021 ..


 Join us for an exclusive sparkling lunch with the iconic Dame Joan Collins as she introduces her new book, My Unapologetic Diaries.Wellbeing of Women is delighted to invite you to join us for our first lunch in person since 2019, with Hollywood legend, Dame Joan Collins, on Monday 8th November 2021 at Fortnum and Mason.Guests will enjoy a sparkling reception, followed by a delicious lunch in the beautiful Diamond Jubilee Tea Salon.

Eve Pollard OBE will talk to Dame Joan Collins about her new memoir, My Unapologetic Diaries. These uncensored diaries chart Dame Joan’s glamorous life from encounters with members of the Royal Family to honest insights of other celebrities at parties of dinners. The diaries are intimate and funny, and Joan pulls no punches.The event will also provide an opportunity to raise funds, via a fabulous raffle and sales of Joan's book, for Wellbeing of Women’s vital work to save and change the lives of women, girls and babies through research, education, and advocacy.

We very much hope you will be able to join us for what promises to be a highly enjoyable and entertaining afternoon.Dame Joan Collins is a legend of the screen and stage and best known for playing Alexa Carrington on long running television show Dynasty. She was recently back on our screens in Ryan Murphy’s American Horror Story. She is also a best-selling author of seventeen books.

Joan at the 2016 lunch with Eve Pollard
Eve Pollard OBE is a journalist and media commentator, and was only the second woman ever to
edit a national newspaper. Eve can justly be dubbed ‘the first lady of Fleet Street’ with a varied and colourful career that has seen her rise from junior reporter to editor in the male-dominated world of old-school newspaper journalism. Starting out in women’s magazines, Eve rose to edit both the Sunday Mirror and Sunday Express, as well as magazine supplements for many of the national Sunday papers. Returning to women’s titles she also launched Elle magazine in the US as its first editor-in-chief. Today, Eve is a regular reporter on BBC1’s The One Show. She also frequently appears on radio and TV from The News Quiz to You and Yours, This Morning to Have I Got News For You, Loose Women to the Daily Politics. Eve is also a published novelist and biographer.

Sunday, September 19, 2021

CELEBRATING 70 YEARS! : HOTEL BABYLON .. BBC .. UK .. 2006 ..


 

BBC Presents

HOTEL BABYLON

Starring

TAMZIN OUTHWAITE as Rebecca Mitchell

MAX BEESLEY as Charlie Edwards

NATALIE MENDOZA as Jackie Clunes

DEXTER FLETCHER as Tony Casemore

EMMA PIERSON as Emma Thornton Wilton

MICHAEL ATTWELL as Derek Crisp

MICHAEL OBIORA as Ben Trueman

MARTIN MARQUEZ as Gino Primorola

RAYMOND COULTHARD as James Schofield

IAN BONAR as Dave Wiltshire

DANIRA GOVIC as Tanya Mihajlov

Guest Stars

KEVIN BISHOP as Adam Crisp

GEORGE ROSSI as Lenny

LES DENNIS as Himself

JULIA T WALLACE as Helen Merchant

Special Guest Star

JOAN COLLINS as Lady Imogen Patton

Series 1 - Episode 7

Directed by Keith Boak

Life is never dull for management and staff at Hotel Babylon, what with a mystery hotel inspector, a battleaxe of an auditor not to mention a thief who is stealing from the well heeled guests.. 


This series was a big hit for the BBC, pulling in five million viewers an episode and lasted for four seasons and was based on a bestselling book by Imogen Edwards Jones.

BBC PRESS :

Indulgence, decadence and debauchery – a tantalising insight into the world of the ultimate service industry in an exciting new drama series for BBC ONE.

 

With guest stars including Joan Collins, Steven Berkoff, Rachael Stirling, Anthony Head, Keith Allen, Susie Amy, Lisa Faulkner, Ian Kelsey, Steve Pemberton, AnaMaria Marinca, Les Dennis, Michael Maloney, Liam Cunningham and many more…


Based on Imogen Edwards-Jones' searing exposé of life behind the scenes of the luxury hotel industry in London, Hotel Babylon takes us on a journey beyond the glamour and façade of the smiling faces and glittering chandeliers and into the frenetic, non-stop world of the staff.

 

Outhwaite plays Rebecca Mitchell, the hotel's driven and ambitious General Manager who is determined to keep the profit margins more than above average.

 

Running a tight ship ensures that guests and staff are rewarded. But is work taking its toll on her private life? Head Receptionist Charlie begins to wonder when he suspects Rebecca may actually be living in the hotel and not at home with her husband.


Joan with Tasmin Outwaithe & Max Beesley

 

Beesley plays Charlie Edwards, who introduces us to the world of Hotel Babylon – a world of fantasy and indulgence; a world where you can be who you want to be as long as you have the money to pay for it… and know who to ask!

 

But Charlie has ambitions and when he applies for the job of Deputy Manager he finds stiff competition in the shape of the gorgeous Anna (Emma Pierson), who is desperate to move from a rival hotel.


Other characters in the hotel include Tony (Dexter Fletcher) the colourful and discreet concierge.

 

A good concierge is like a magician - he can organise the best seats to the hottest show in town at the last minute and will take care of any personal crises that happen along the way - ultimately ensuring your visit to Hotel Babylon is as shiny as your credit card!

 

Gino (Martin Marquez) is the flamboyant Head Barman. The bar is his baby and he will stay open all night if it means selling his beloved brandy, not to mention his precious stash of Cuban cigars.

 

Receptionist Ben (Michael Obiora), always on the lookout for the latest boy band checking in, and Jackie (Natalie Mendoza), the straight-talking, stunning Head of Housekeeping who has to deal with the mornings after the night before, make up the rest of the front of house team.

 For Gareth Neame, Executive Producer, it is his first production at Carnival films since leaving the BBC (where he was Head of Drama Commissioning) and becoming the company's Managing Director.

 

He says: "Imogen really tapped into something timely and exciting in her book, exposing the goings-on in front of and behind the scenes in a London five-star hotel; and this series, with sharp writing and an impressive young cast, will have a similar impact on BBC ONE and lift the curtain on a very new workplace for the audience."

 

Jane Tranter, Controller, Drama Commissioning, BBC, says: "The characters in Hotel Babylon are sexy and engaging, and the concept really original. My ambition is that it strikes another fresh, contemporary note for the BBC ONE audience."




 





Scandal on room service

Fun and shenanigans abound in BBC's new hotel drama


Scandal on room service

Fun and shenanigans abound in BBC's new hotel drama