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Thandiwe Newton

It's official!! Thandie is in Guy Ritchie's new movie!
Credit to variety
Cast set for Ritchie's 'RocknRolla'
Butler, Ludacris join Dark Castle crime tale
By MICHAEL FLEMING, MICHAEL FLEMING

Ritchie


Butler

Dark Castle Entertainment has set Gerard Butler, Tom Wilkinson, Thandie Newton, Chris "Ludacris" Bridges and Idris Elba to star in "RocknRolla," the crime tale Guy Ritchie wrote and is directing.
Production began June 19 in London. Joel Silver is producing with Ritchie, Steve Clark-Hall and Susan Downey. Warner Bros. will distribute.

Story concerns a Russian mobster who orchestrates a crooked land deal, putting millions of dollars up for grabs and attracting all of London's criminal underworld.

The film, budgeted at less than $20 million, will be done in the fast-paced, low-budget style of Ritchie's early films, "Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels," and "Snatch."

Steve Richards and Navid McIlhargey will exec produce, and Lauren Meek will be associate producer.
 
Thandie on the set of the Chronicles of Riddick
Credit Everett Collection
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From Thandie's Harper's Bazaar UK shoot-she was on the cover.
Credit Harper's Bazaar UK, Ebay, JedRoot and IPJ
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^ somethings up with her hair/make-up in those pics, shes beautiful but she looks haggard.
 
Those pics could have been taken after she had one of her kids.
Pregnant with oldest daughter Ripley at the opening of a health food store.
Retna and Famous
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Pic from "In Your Dreams" a movie about date r*pe. This movie is where Thandie met her husband Ol. He was the writer of the film.
Credit Everett Collection
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Shes got the freshest face; always so radiant. I hope to see new pictures from events etc, can't wait to see what outfit she wears next!
 
Cute pic of Thandie and her hubby Ol backstage at the Baftas
Credit Richard Young
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From monsters and critics
Thandie Newton's Guy role

Jun 28, 2007, 7:00 GMT
Thandie Newton and rapper Ludacris have joined the cast of Guy Ritchie's new gangster film 'RocknRolla'.
The movie - about British gangsters who get involved with the Russian mob - began shooting in London earlier this month.
It will also star '300' star Gerard Butler as a crafty but shady businessman and 'Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind' actor Tom Wilkinson, whose character is one of London's main old-school gangsters who finds himself quitting crime because of foreign mobsters.
Newton will play Butler's love interest - an accountant linked to the criminal underworld - while Ludacris is cast as an American musician trying to make it big in London.
Ritchie has written the script for the film, which will cost about 10m to make - a low budget by Hollywood standards.
The British filmmaker's wife, Madonna, is also rumoured to be appearing in the movie.
(C) BANG Media International
 
From about.com

"The Truth About Charlie" stars Thandie Newton as a young woman desperately searching for answers about her husband's murder and a missing fortune. Mark Wahlberg costars as the mysterious 'helping hand' who is ready to assist her in her search for the truth.

Writer/producer/director Jonathan Demme admits the chance to see Thandie Newton in the role of Regina Lampert (originally played by Audrey Hepburn in "Charade") was the key motivation behind making "The Truth About Charlie."

"I was really keyed to making another movie with Thandie. She's truly a great young actress: charming, deep, incredibly smart, funny, so totally classy, and ready to try anything as an artist, really fearless, and equipped with a remarkably imaginative point of view on character and story," said Demme, adding, "When I saw 'Charade' again, I immediately felt that here was a superb vehicle for this exceptionally gifted and thus-far underutilized actress."

THANDIE NEWTON (Regina Lampert)

Were you familiar with the original "Charade?"
The first time I ever saw "Charade" was at Jonathan's [Demme] house. He said, "Come and watch this great old movie with me." We watched the film and he said, "Don't you think that would make a great update?" I thought it would. [He asked], "With you in that part?" I said, "Oh please, shut up." Then two years later, we were doing just that. That's why I would pull him aside on the film set and go, "Oh my God, can you believe this is happening?" I mean, maybe that's what people who sort of go into a business together feel like, that all of this is happening. I'd also feel freaked out sometimes because everybody [was] there. I thought, "Oh my God, this was just an idea that germinated in the den of your house while we were watching a video."

Was it daunting to take on the Audrey Hepburn role?
No. What I thought when he said, "You in that role," I genuinely did think, "Oh, yeah, right." It wasn't until a good six months later that he said, "'I want you to do this and I want you to read this updated version that I've done." I very quickly read a new version - "The Truth About Charlie." I didn't have time to reference back to the other one. It was very different, [with] different characters and so on.

I take my job very seriously and I don't tend to look outside of what I'm doing. I tend not to look at what other actors have done to inspire what I'm doing either. I concentrate solely on the piece. I was aware that I was playing Regina Lambert, not playing Audrey Hepburn playing Regina Lambert. Maybe I was in denial because I was playing a role that she played, and that's as close as I'm ever going to come to Audrey Hepburn, is to play a role that she played. That in itself is an amazing thing.

Was there any discussion of trying to make sure you're different from Hepburn?
When I read the new "The Truth About Charlie," I was aware that there were a few lines that were the same. I never went back to "Charade." I thought that had to be left alone so that I could be free and fresh to interpret it from my point of view. It was never referred to, ever. If there are any similarities, they're accidents, or [we] decided we wanted to draw from that film some great lines or situations. But all that said, I heard [Demme] do an interview recently where he made a point that the best set pieces in "Charade," he decided to absolutely do new stuff. Like the great orange scene in the club when they're passing through. That would've been great but they did that - and they did it beautifully. He wanted to try and use that as a challenge to do something equal. Then he came up with the Tango, because Jonathan wants to be challenged. I don't think he's interested in just taking a film and using it in every way.

Have you developed a shorthand working with Jonathan Demme?
I suppose so. Yes, in that I'm not afraid of what he might say or of disappointing him. None of that worries me because we have this kind of baseline of respect and he's a great, great friend. You can tell, I'm sure, that he's a great friend, a great person to have in your life.

The two films were so different that it was hard to know if we were really working the same way. "Beloved" had a certain set of demands and we didn't actually know each other very well on "Beloved." I kept my distance from everybody because it was quite a hard part to play. I just felt it was easier for me just to withdraw and only be there when I had to be 'Beloved.' With this film, we were just all hanging out together all the time. Jonathan and I were really good friends and had been for years. I would sometimes pull him aside and say, "Can you believe we're making this film together?" It just seemed like we got away with it because we're really good friends.

Why was the nudity necessary, and how comfortable were you with it?
Because it was Jonathan, I knew that there would be nothing. You think that you've seen a lot more in that scene, but you've actually seen nothing at all. In "Charade," there's a scene where Cary Grant has a fully clothed shower. [Demme] wanted to just flip it and have me having a nude shower. I wondered why, but Jonathan's not exploitative and it's not gratuitous.

I think the other reason why it was important is that Regina, at that point, is so trusting and so glad to have someone that she can kind of rely on. He really seems to be the business, this guy. He's gonna really help her out and she's got nothing else and no one else. On the one hand, he's in the living room going through her stuff - that's the moment when you realize that actually he is probably as much of a threat as anybody else - and she's there naked in the shower. It's just the juxtaposition of her absolute vulnerability and his exploitativeness. I knew at the time you were going to get that. And also just her naiveté. She's there washing in the shower and not thinking that there's an audience out there who's going, "Oh, God, she's nude in the shower." And there's the fact that you don't see anything, so I was comfortable with that.

Was shooting this film different from your average film?
It was different. Sometimes I wasn't even aware of what they were doing, because we were having to shoot quickly in daylight. We were having to shoot quickly because in 10 minutes, the train was going to come and loads of people were going to come in. We were really relying on what was happening at the time in Paris. We didn't want to control crowds or do anything like that because you don't have to have a permit. You don't have a fixed camera in Paris. So that was different, but I was primed a little bit for that with Bertolucci where, similarly, a lot of it was handheld and we were out in the streets. I was very comfortable with that.

What was different, though, was we had to sort of rush through and do things so quickly that I kind of lost sight of what we just did. [I thought], "Was it good? Did I get that?" There was the scene in the wheel with Tim Robbins, which was honestly the coldest day of my life. Oh God it was horrible, and Jonathan wasn't even there. He was in another little car talking through a walkie-talkie at the end of each shot. It was kind of you're on your own and that was very different. I haven't experienced [that] before. There were other times like that where they were shooting long-lens and Jonathan was miles away. If I was lucky, I could reach him on a walkie-talkie.

What was it like to work with Mark Wahlberg?
He brings many different people, actually, which is interesting for the casting of Mark in this film. I would say to Mark, "Who are you going to be today?" because I just never knew. He's got a number of different attitudes or personas, and he's not aware of it. I'm quite inquisitive and I don't just see what's there. I tend to want to get deeper. I suppose I would try with Mark, but all you get is the kind of surface personality that would change.

Is that Mark Walhberg or his character?
For the character, obviously, that would be the same too, so it was kind of disconcerting. Whether he was doing that because of the film or because that's just him, I was never sure. We worked in very, very different ways, which was refreshing. It's always nice to not know what to expect and just sort of wing it, especially when you haven't rehearsed because Jonathan doesn't like to rehearse. Mark is very, very low key. He doesn't want to talk; he just wants to do it. I just wanna chat and, because we haven't rehearsed, just talk about the scene. It did make me question whether talking was just kind of throwing up a smokescreen. Why not just get in there and do it and be more exposed? He didn't like a lot of chat. His preparation was impeccable. Sometimes I would go, "Oh, what's my line?" and he could tell me, which is embarrassing. I wouldn't have expected that he would be like that.
 
from dark horizons
By Paul FischerWednesday April 27th 2005 3:11PM
Relaxed, quietly elegant and tired after her recent round of interviews, Thandie Newton has reason to be enthused, both professionally and personally. She has a four-month old baby, her second child, and she is winning early Oscar buzz for her riveting performance in Crash. "It's nice to be talking to you about a film I actually love", she says, laughingly.

"Crash" , an ensemble drama delving into the cultural divide of Los Angeles, casts Newton as Christine, the beautiful light-coloured wife of TV producer Thayer (Terrence Howard). Christine is subjected to a humiliating body search by a bigoted cop (Matt Dillon), who is channeling all his anger for the lack of medical treatment his ill father is getting, into his job. Though the film explores the dark underbelly of Los Angeles, Newton says that she was attracted to this film far beyond her American character. "I was affected by the script on such a gut level, and I don't feel like it was (particularly Christine anyway) specific to L.A. or any country," the actress explains. "I think it's a dilemma which you could find yourself in, no matter where you're from. It's just about notions of betrayal, defending yourself, physical exploitation and all of these things, all of which I just felt very strongly about. But when I read the script as always, which has sometimes been a problem for me, I responded to the piece as a whole. I thought it was a really accomplished piece of writing, could be potentially a really dramatic and entertaining film, as well as having these very important themes, but not in an overbearing 'take your medicine' kind of way. I just thought that it really managed to be a lot of things all at once. I think I heard about the film about a year-and-a-half before it was shot, and there wasn't even a cast together, so it wasn't until we actually got around to costume fittings that I thought, 'Oh, my God, I'm gonna have to portray this character in these scenes, and that is heavy.' "

Newton concedes that she was initially wary, about shooting the film, in particular the tough, emotionally raw sequence, featuring co-star Matt Dillon. The actress says she was wary, "because it's just such a vulnerable position to be in as a woman. Also the scene next to the car wasn't sort of explicit the way it was written, I don't know why, so when it came to shooting that scene Paul [Haggis, director] took Matt and I aside and said, 'I need this to go very far. I just think that it needs to go to the limits'. When a scene isn't written explicitly you obviously project what you imagine would be good and right to have in that scene and I really didn't think it would be that much. So, it was very you know big deep breath and look at Matt Dillon and talk to him and, you know, 'you're great and we're just acting out roles' but it was very confronting," Newton concedes.

Newton says working on a film on such intense intimacy with an actor, may well have been a disaster had she and her co-star not gone along, admitting that such a relationship, in a scene such as this, goes beyond mere trust. "What if he'd been just a piece of crap, we hadn't got on, who enjoyed my discomfort or... or if I hadn't liked him and I'd enjoyed his discomfort. But more often than not in fact, I love the actors I work with. I can hear horror stories about people and have a great time working with them, so I think it's all really down to the situation and the atmosphere of what you're doing at the time. On this film, it was clear that everyone was doing it because they really felt committed to the material and we all have the same objective. It wasn't money or ego, everyone has four or five scenes, and you practically had to kind of drive yourself to set."

Newton has seen Crash once, with her husband, screenwriter Oliver Parker, at home on DVD. "We were both stunned when we saw it, and we didn't really speak much about it after. I think I need to see it again to gain more perspective." Married to Parker since 1998, the couple recently celebrated the birth of daughter Nico, their latest arrival. Motherhood remains a stark contrast to the kind of on screen intensity we see from her in the likes of Crash. "It means I can switch off very easily, and it keeps everything in perspective," Newton says. My work, emotionally, could have been the most powerful so far: where else do you experience extreme emotion like that? In life no way, but I experience extreme emotion like that with my kids all the time; that level of passion, love and desperate need to be with them and protect them. It's incredible." Newton, who tries to be selective when choosing a film, says it's a priority to spend as much time as possible at home with her family, "which is great in choosing material. I'm only going to be away from them for a certain amount of time so that the project has got to deliver on all these bases. Financially it's got to be not Crash - but lucky that was only like a week's work." Newton says that that if her husband is not working as much, she'll pick a big studio film, such as a Chronicles of Riddick. "Those decisions are all based on my life at home."

While Riddick didn't exactly generate critical raves, Thandie is unconcerned by perceived failures. "The thing is, I really think that I'm a good actor and I really value. So I can do something that I don't think is artistically that impressive or interesting and I still think that I'm going to be able to work again. I don't have that kind of fear, or think that a film is going to destroy my career, because the truth is, I've got more to give. It might be more difficult to get the next gig, but... I'm in it for the challenge, and it's never easy for me to get films because I don't do enough." Newton says, that as passionate as she is about acting, her career is not everything. "I'm not planning the right tactics. I think that you can do that, it's a real game that you can play, definitely, and you've got to do those magazine covers, get to those parties, meet and greet those people, but I just can't do it. I don't have that incentive, and I don't have the energy for that. I'm much more self reflective." Asked where that comes from, Newton pauses. "I think it's to do with having started out really young in this business and realising early on that my happiness did not lie with the business, quite the opposite. I had certain difficult times which I had to deal with which actually made me very skeptical about the film industry and as a result of that I looked away from it for my happiness and ended up meeting my husband. So in a weird way it's been a really good thing because it means I use the film industry as a pleasure for work and that kind of thing and it's not a pursuit to make me feel happy in my life.

Though 19, when she made an auspicious debut in John Duigan's Flirting, the now 33-year old, says she is pleased that 14 years later, Newton is still working. "I'm delighted that I am, because I think that there is a shelf life for people. You know, there are people, if you look at them, any actor, ebbing and flowing and disappearing - where are they now and I just feel like it's been a really lovely constant. I've done some things I'm really proud of and have worked, consistently and it's fantastic. I think that this is the best way it could be for me, and I've got two kids. I can't believe it, and I'm still able to work."

As to whether or not she can be persuaded to return in Vin Diesel's proposed continuation of the Riddick saga, Newton smiles, ever so sweetly. "I'm open to just about anything. 'Just about' anything."
 

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