The White Queen

[David Oakes // Juan Borgia]

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  1. Miss.ChatterBox
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    E difficile soprattutto. XD
     
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  2. Filippa Lillonza II
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    Sì, sicuramente.
     
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  3. Filippa Lillonza II
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    Bene ho guardato la quarta puntata e so che è la cosa meno intelligente da dire ma c'era il TIPO DI MERLIN e io sono morta.

    Comunque rinnovo il mio totale amore per Margaret, Jasper e Henry Tudor.
     
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  4. Miss.ChatterBox
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    Henry mi piace
    eva. Finché è piccolo. Poi ho letto TWP.
     
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  5. Filippa Lillonza II
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    Mi dispiace ùù
     
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  6. Miss.ChatterBox
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    Philippa Gregory e Rebecca Ferguson sulle donne di potere del XV secolo (e sul loro guardaroba). // Philippa Gregory and Rebecca Ferguson on the 15th century girlpower and costumes.

    CITAZIONE
    Girl power isn't confined to just our modern times: Starz's "The White Queen" takes the events of the 15th century Wars of the Roses and focuses on the women who were instrumental in the drawn-out conflict for the English throne.

    In a new featurette, Phillippa Gregory, whose "The Cousins' War" novels serve as the series basis, and the cast discuss the influence its female characters wielded at the time.

    "One of the themes of the series is about women really conquering the instances they're born into and making a life for themselves," Gregory said in TheWrap's exclusive premiere of the featurette, "Women in a Man's World."

    "The White Queen" follows three women -- Elizabeth Woodville (Rebecca Ferguson), Margaret Beaufort (Amanda Hale) and Anne Neville (Faye Marsay) -- affected by forces out of their control who learn that in their families' quest for the throne, they can become significant players.

    "The traditional history shows you women who are simply victims or someone's wife or mother and my novels tell the story of these extraordinary women who were as active and influential in this period as the men," Gregory continued.

    Find out what else Gregory and The White Queen's cast had to say about the series' female characters in the video below.

    Qui per il video. // Here for the whole video.

    CITAZIONE
    England’s Wars of the Roses rage again, on the BBC series The White Queen, based on Philippa Gregory’s novel cycle “The Cousins’ War”; it premieres here this month on Starz. The eponymous heroine, Elizabeth Woodville, is played by Rebecca Ferguson, 29, who happens to be neither blonde nor British. A natural brunette with a British mother, Ferguson has from the age of 15 acted on TV as well as the big screen in her native Sweden, where she lives outside Stockholm with her boyfriend and their son. The formidable Janet McTeer is her ambitious mother in the series, and King Edward IV is Max Irons, son of the actors Jeremy Irons and Sinéad Cusack. Ferguson recalls how she got her first English part: “I fly to London, and my first meeting is a chemistry test with Max, and then it’s an emotional roller coaster until I get the role. Max and I had a magical click from day one, and then we were each other’s support for six months.” Of her sumptuous wardrobe she says, “The dresses are all handmade, and when so much time and effort go into something that you’re wearing, it feels very regal.” The 15th-century locations are in Bruges, not London. “This is a story based on the female perspective of what went on during a famous time in history,” says the actress. “It’s a thriller—vibrant, sexy, intense. And it’s real. It’s incredible what they went through then—terrifying if you think about it.” Ferguson has just finished The Vatican in Rome with director Ridley Scott, and she co-stars with Dwayne “the Rock” Johnson in the upcoming Hercules: The Thracian Wars—“a potpourri of different things,” she says, “which I love.”

    ZDcCj9Qs



    [x]

    Edited by Julia_Katina - 1/9/2013, 09:09
     
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  7. Miss.ChatterBox
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    Faye Marsay e Aneurin Barnard sul set. // Faye and Aneurin on set.

    PnuNOufs

     
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  8. Filippa Lillonza II
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    Non sapevo che la Ferguson fosse accasata. Ho sempre un pò pensato - dalle foto lol - che sbavasse dietro Max Irons ma tutto è possibile.
     
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  9. Miss.ChatterBox
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    No no. Da quello che so ha un fidanzato di vecchia data. u.ù
     
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  10. butterfly-fly
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    She is cool - she has a son and a long-term boyfriend :D
    I think just when you film for half a year in a foreign country you just become close with your costars, like a family.

    Lu, my power went out yesterday and I started to read TWP (because I printed it). WTF! it's even worse than I thought.
     
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  11. Miss.ChatterBox
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    CITAZIONE
    Lu, my power went out yesterday and I started to read TWP (because I printed it). WTF! it's even worse than I thought.

    Stop now that you are still in time.
     
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  12. butterfly-fly
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    QUOTE
    Stop now that you are still in time.

    No point, there is already bad taste in my mouth.

    And her style has gone from bad to worse, I mean, why she keeps repeating that Lizzy was in love with Richard every single page...50 pages in I got that PG! I do not have amnesia, what with all that's repeating that doesn't even add anything to the plot...oh, yes, and we are also constantly reminded of Eddy and Elizabeth's sexcapades, having read TWQ I'm well aware of this topic either.
     
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  13. Miss.ChatterBox
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    Gotta love Irina and her nose for everything cracky. X
     
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  14. Julia_Katina
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    CITAZIONE (Miss.ChatterBox @ 29/8/2013, 12:29) 
    Faye Marsay e Aneurin Barnard sul set. // Faye and Aneurin on set.

    PnuNOufs


    Che carini! :3 Comunque non ho mai pensato ci fosse qualcosa fra Rebecca e Max: forse perché non ho seguito bene la coppia, le loro interviste in comune, le foto insieme e via dicendo, ma non m'è parso di notare alcun feeling particolare fra di loro, al di là del semplice rapporto che, in genere, si instaura fra due colleghi di lavoro.
     
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  15. Miss.ChatterBox
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    La caduta di Riccardo III: causata da una fragola? // Was the downfall of Richard III caused by a strawberry?

    CITAZIONE
    The king's actions in the summer of 1483, when he unexpectedly put aside his twelve-year-old nephew and became King of England, are considered to be out of character. Could a food allergy have triggered the series of events that lead to the fall of the House of York?

    Thanks to the efforts of two famous Philippas, one of England’s most controversial medieval kings has been catapulted to the forefront of discussion. Ricardian Philippa Langley, who campaigned to exhume her hero’s bones from a Leicester car park and novelist Philippa Gregory, author behind The White Queen TV adaptation, have brought the events of the Battle of Bosworth into homes across the nation. With Richard III’s sympathetic portrayal by Welsh actor Aneurin Barnard and Langley’s forthcoming book on the dig, co-authored with Michael Jones, this fresh interest gives no sign of waning. Yet despite the debates, burning questions about the man remain unanswered.

    Many theories have been offered to explain Richard’s actions in the late spring and early summer of 1483, when he unexpectedly put aside his twelve-year-old nephew and became King of England. Even his devotees will admit that there are several areas in which he appeared to act out of character. One of the most contentious is the fate of the Princes in the Tower, with some unable to accept that a man bound by the motto “loyaulte me lie” could order the murders of his brother’s young sons. Viewers of The White Queen recently saw Gregory’s own personal theory about the substitution of the younger boy and the culpability of Henry VII’s mother Lady Margaret Beaufort. When it comes to understanding Richard’s actions, there will never be as dramatic an answer as that which the discovery of his body provided about his scoliosis. We are not about to unearth the lost Richard III diaries, so his true motives can only be guessed at, across a divide of five centuries.

    It is possible, though, to map various interpretations over the known facts of the events of 1483. Following the premature death of his brother, Edward IV, Richard intercepted the young Edward V en route to London, imprisoned and executed the boy’s guardians, rounded on his friends, declared his uncrowned nephew illegitimate and accepted the throne himself. This may have been the actions of a man whose ambitions drove him from the start or reactions to perceived threats by those he considered his enemies. One of the turning points came in mid June, when a Council meeting at the Tower ended in the impromptu execution of the staunchly loyal Yorkist Lord Hastings. This scene, in fact, the entire character of Hastings, was omitted from The White Queen TV series, which is perhaps indicative of the ambiguity of his role and incompatible with a sympathetic portrayal of the king. Perhaps though, there was a very simple explanation indeed, which only hindsight and modern medical understanding can unravel.

    The initial account of the meeting comes from chronicler Thomas More, whose bias against Richard is known, but who was active in the household of John Morton, Archbishop of Canterbury, present at the meeting. William, Lord Hastings, had been a close friend of Edward IV; he was loyal to the family and in particular, to the next generation. As late as 20 May, Hastings had been appointed Master of the Mint and Richard confirmed him in his role as Chancellor. When he attended the Council meeting of 13 June then, it appears to have come as a complete surprise to all present when Richard turned against him. It may not have been something Richard himself planned.

    At this point, Richard had the reins of power in his hands, but only temporarily. After Edward V had been crowned, he would take more of a backseat and the boy’s maternal Wydeville relations would come to the fore. The dowager Queen Elizabeth, the “White Queen”, was safe in sanctuary at this point, her brother Anthony in prison at Pontefract and the coronation set to go ahead on 22 June. But something that day happened which changed everything. According to More, Richard entered the Council meeting smiling and remarked that he would like some strawberries from Archbishop Morton’s garden. He then left, to return around 90 minutes later a changed man, fretting, frowning and chewing his lips. Into his mouth, Shakespeare places the accusation of witchcraft, with his arm “like a blasted sapling, wither'd up” at the bidding of the ex-Queen and Hasting’s mistress. He then turned dramatically on the Lord, ordering his immediate execution. Traditionally, the “bewitched” arm has been seen as an excuse for the removal of someone who would have opposed Richard’s ambition but this owes a lot to hindsight. Remembering that we can never fully understand the workings of the medieval mind, Richard may have genuinely believed himself to be the victim of witchcraft and that his life was in danger. Whatever the Protector’s intentions were at that time, the culprit may actually have been his own breakfast.

    More’s account may hold the key. It is possible that the dish of strawberries produced a genuine allergic reaction which caused Richard’s arm to wither and other physical symptoms to develop. Food allergies and intolerances have only been understood in recent years, with increasing recognition of the erratic way these can develop and their dramatic results. The allergic reactions caused by the proteins in strawberries can produce tingling limbs, breathing difficulties and red, puffy, itchy skin. These symptoms usually occur within two hours of eating the fruit, which is compatible with the timescale of the meeting. Symptoms begin with swelling of the lips and tingling in the mouth and More’s account has Richard fretting, frowning and “knawing at his lips”. Internal distress, breathing difficulties following the closing of bronchial tubes and congestion can follow. Sufferers also experience itching, with limbs becoming red, puffy and blighted. According to NHS information, this can affect one side of the body and is consistent with Richard being afflicted in one arm only. Nor may he have experienced any previous adverse reactions to strawberries. Food allergies can emerge even after an individual has eaten a particular dish for years but when the body’s tolerance level is reached, the symptoms are triggered. Before the advent of modern production and storage, fruit was seasonal and therefore, a rare treat, even for the rich. It is quite possible that Richard had a latent allergy to strawberries which emerged with the first crop that June, causing the sudden physical responses in his body.

    How would a medieval mind have explained this sudden dramatic affliction? Fifteenth century people of all classes were deeply superstitious and believed that magic could be used to good and evil ends. Elizabeth Wydeville and her mother Jacquetta had both been accused and cleared of sorcery in 1469-70 although Richard’s own brother Clarence also claimed that they conspiring against him through the medium of magic in the 1470s. It cannot be ruled out that, anticipating attacks from the Wydeville clan, Richard believed himself to have fallen victim to poison or enchantment. He stated that witchcraft had “wasted his body”. Perhaps he genuinely believed it had.

    The fear Richard appears to have felt on 13 June was a decisive turning point. It changed the tone of his Protectorship and upped the ante in terms of violence. At this point, Anthony Wydeville and his fellow prisoners Grey and Vaughan were still alive. If Richard had not consumed the fruit and suffered the reaction he did, believing himself the victim of a conspiracy, he may not have believed their deaths were necessary. Edward V’s coronation was still planned to go ahead on June 22 and the Princes in the Tower were seen playing in the Castle grounds around this time.

    This Council meeting may, in fact, have been the beginning of the end for Edward V. As Hastings is dragged away in Shakespeare’s version of the scene, he foresees the doom of Richard’s regime: “miserable England! I prophesy the fearful'st time to thee, that ever wretched age hath look'd upon.” The seeds of discord were sown as a result of Richard’s misinterpretation and treatment of Hastings. Buckingham and Stanley witnessed the event and the latter may have even suffered minor injuries whilst attempting to defend his friend. Buckingham would rebel in autumn 1483 and Stanley’s troops turned against the King decisively at Bosworth. Historian and author David Pilling suggests that the execution of Hastings may well have caused Richard’s previously loyal adherents to see him in a new light and fear for their own safety. If nothing else, the meeting sealed the fate of Edward V and of his Wydeville uncle Anthony. Michael Hicks, author of several books about the period, states that this meeting was the point where the crisis broke. Richard’s interpretation of witchcraft caused him to react with a level of violence that transformed a tense situation into a crisis.

    The truth of this matter will never be known. With so much of Richard’s motivation and action seeming inconsistent during this volatile time, the possibility of an allergic reaction could explain the sudden escalation in fear and violence that Hasting’s death represents. That in turn, led Richard to act brutally against his relatives, incurring the mistrust of his friends. Could it be that the humble strawberry was the catalyst that brought down the House of York?

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897 replies since 25/1/2013, 00:42   18069 views
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