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Bienvenue sur Whoopsy Daisy, le forum des amoureux de la littérature et de la culture anglaise ! Pour profiter pleinement de notre forum, nous vous conseillons de vous identifier si vous êtes déjà membre. Et surtout n'hésitez pas à nous rejoindre si vous ne l'êtes pas encore !
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Je viens d'apprendre la mort de ce grand monsieur.....je suis attristée par cette nouvelle, un nouveau chagrin après la mort de David Bowie....
Arwen Bookworm
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Jeu 14 Jan - 17:31
Je suis atterrée par la mort d'un si grand acteur/réalisateur/artiste. Je sens que je vais me replonger dans sa filmographie (en commençant par Die Hard et Harry Potter) pour me remettre de cette affreuse nouvelle. Il n'y a plus que ça à faire, hélas !
Dernière édition par Arwen le Jeu 14 Jan - 17:40, édité 1 fois
Diana Bookworm
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Jeu 14 Jan - 17:33
Pour pouvoir se rappeler Alan Rickman avec un sourire, voici une courte vidéo où il était invité au talk Show de Jimmy Fallon. Pour bien comprendre, Benedict Cumberbatch avait imité à la perfection la voix d'Alan Rickman quelques jours auparavant
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sandie Bookworm
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Jeu 14 Jan - 18:18
Pas grand chose à ajouter à ce que vous avez dit excepté que je n'arrivais pas à croire quand je l'ai lu... Et effectivement, 2016 craint pour l'instant avec tous ces grands acteurs et chanteurs qui disparaissent (et en aussi peu de temps en plus )
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Marmeladedelivres Star-crossed lover
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Jeu 14 Jan - 19:03
Triste nouvelle
Emjy Bookworm
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Jeu 14 Jan - 19:18
Merci beaucoup pour cette vidéo, Diana. Je la connaissais déjà, c'est une de mes préférées de l'acteur. Il avait beaucoup d'humour. De lui, je retiendrais aussi son merveilleux film The Winter Guest.
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Emjy Bookworm
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Jeu 14 Jan - 19:45
Le très bel hommage d'Emma Thompson à son ami :
Citation :
Alan was my friend and so this is hard to write because I have just kissed him goodbye.
What I remember most in this moment of painful leave-taking is his humour, intelligence, wisdom and kindness. His capacity to fell you with a look or lift you with a word. The intransigence which made him the great artist he was—his ineffable and cynical wit, the clarity with which he saw most things, including me, and the fact that he never spared me the view. I learned a lot from him. He was the finest of actors and directors. I couldn’t wait to see what he was going to do with his face next. I consider myself hugely privileged to have worked with him so many times and to have been directed by him. He was the ultimate ally. In life, art and politics. I trusted him absolutely. He was, above all things, a rare and unique human being and we shall not see his like again.
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Miss Virginia Bookworm
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Jeu 14 Jan - 19:53
C'est magnifique.
Rebus Star-crossed lover
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Jeu 14 Jan - 19:57
Quelle triste nouvelle...
Summerday Bookworm
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Jeu 14 Jan - 20:07
Triste nouvelle... j'etais abasourdie et émue de lire cette nouvelle.
Maribel Byronic Hero
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Jeu 14 Jan - 20:45
Merci Diana pour la vidéo. Il est encore plus difficile de croire à sa mort en le voyant en entrevue comme cela...
Le mot d'Emma Thompson est très touchant.
Je crois que je vais moi aussi revoir quelques uns de ses films. J'ai revu Die Hard, Harry Potter et Love Actually dernièrement, mais j'ai maintenant envie de découvrir ceux que je n'ai encore jamais vu comme Le majordome ou Les jardins du roi. J'aimerais aussi revoir Blow Dry, que j'ai vu il y a très longtemps, mais dont je ne me rappelle plus trop.
J'avais beaucoup apprécié Snow Cake (très émouvant, avec Sigourney Weaver), Bottle Shock, Truly Madly Deeply et bien sûr en Colonel Brandon. Au moins, il nous a laissé une grande filmographie.
Elwing Reindeer Jumper
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Ven 15 Jan - 9:34
J'ai chialé comme une cruche.
Maribel Byronic Hero
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Ven 15 Jan - 14:43
Tous les témoignages s'entendent pour dire combien il était généreux, loyal, etc. Ça me rend encore plus triste qu'il soit parti si tôt.
Evanna Lynch (Luna dans HP) a partagé un long message que j'ai trouvé très sincère et touchant. Elle raconte qu'elle ne lui avait jamais vraiment parlé durant le tournage, car le personnage de Rogue, qu'il gardait même entre les scènes, l'intimidait. Ce n'est que plus tard, lors d'un dîner caritatif, qu'elle a eu une vraie conversation avec lui. Elle a été émerveillée de savoir qu'il se rappelait son nom, mais qu'en plus il lui accorde sa pleine attention durant tout le dîner durant lequel ils ont été assis côte à côte. In the hour I sat with him, he managed to be completely present, kind, attentive and curious about someone who did not expect or look for that from him. It says a lot about him, how nice a person he was and what discipline it must have taken to stay in character so much. It must have been hard to play Snape and to have to alienate himself from everyone. It must have been hard to have to stop smiling at people. And uncomfortable to make others so uncomfortable. There aren't that many actors that would go to such lengths for the integrity of their character.
Voici le message, en spoiler.
Spoiler:
I don't have many stories to share about Alan Rickman because, truthfully, I was terrified of him as Snape and throughout the course of the films I always gave him a wide berth. But I wanted to share the brief but significant encounters I had with him. He was probably the only cast member who met my fangirl expectations because everybody else broke character to be nice to me and make me feel welcome to the Potter family, and also to be themselves, while he remained impassively, Snape. So I assumed he WAS Snape and made myself small whenever he went gliding past in those big, shadowy black robes. Among the only people who didn't keep their distance were the throngs of children he used to bring to lunch in the canteen. It was odd that any of the adult actors would lunch in the canteen, but odder still that Snape would, surrounded by a group of giddy little girls and boys. I was told that they were his friends' children and that NO, I would not be allowed to bring that many guests, and nor would anyone but that nobody fancied the task of telling Alan he shouldn't invite his friends' eager young children to the studio on a weekly basis. Thus we all enjoyed the bizarre sight of Snape in his all-black, bat-like glory sitting head and shoulders above a gang of unnaturally unfazed children. For me, these glimpses of Snape chatting quite amiably to young people was the only hint that there was an Alan in there too and that he was in fact very, very nice. It wasn't until a few years later that I had the chance to meet Alan as himself. It was at a charity dinner and our nameplates were next to each other. I started to panic quietly and I even asked another guest would he like to take my seat! But an organiser insisted we sit at our assigned seats and I steeled myself for the most awkward dinner conversation of my life!! I sat down and much to my shock he greeted me warmly and by name. My real name! That put me at ease and after that I was quite happy for him to feign intense interest in his dinner plate rather than make casual chit-chat with me. But he did keep talking to me, asked lots of questions and seemed genuinely interested in my interests and projects. The conversation got round to acting quickly and at the time I was stressing about the pressure I felt to already be a successful actress and that I'd run out of time to make mistakes. I was aware I was talking about myself so I kept trying to shift the conversation back to him but he just wanted to help. He told me he hadn't known what he'd wanted to be out of school, that he'd gone to art school first to be a graphic artist and had come to acting a few years later when he applied for drama school. As an actress, already having to lie about my age at 24, it seems mad that Alan only found his vocation and began his acting journey at 26 and turned out to be…Alan Rickman. But when I told him that I was worried if I didn't figure myself out quickly I would miss the most important opportunities and never get them back, he simply told me that I was focusing on the wrong thing. He said not to worry about getting 'there' and instead to focus on feeding my soul and following my heart from place to place. And then he gave me the loveliest acting advice I've ever gotten. 'People think that they're watching this' he said waving his hand in front of his face, 'but really they're watching this' and he pounded his fist on his heart centre. After dinner, I thanked him for the advice though for some reason he rejected the notion that he'd given me any advice (I don't know why) but whatever it was, it truly stuck with me and it made me start living differently, being more in tune with my heart, listening and following its rhythms and wishes and surrendering the need to control my life. After that meeting I thought about him a lot and what a truly lovely, kind, generous person he was. For someone as established, wise and revered as he, the greatest gift you can give someone is your full attention and presence in the moment. Most people of his measure of talent and intellect are extremely busy and are anxious for you to know this. You start to talk to them and their eyes are already darting to the other corners of the room, their fingers reaching for their phone where a million more interesting people are pinging away at their inbox. They can't afford to spend their precious time and entire mental facilities just on you, so mostly they just give you a bit, just for a few minutes. But Alan Rickman was not that at all. In the hour I sat with him, he managed to be completely present, kind, attentive and curious about someone who did not expect or look for that from him. It says a lot about him, how nice a person he was and what discipline it must have taken to stay in character so much. It must have been hard to play Snape and to have to alienate himself from everyone. It must have been hard to have to stop smiling at people. And uncomfortable to make others so uncomfortable. There aren't that many actors that would go to such lengths for the integrity of their character. There were deep and heart-breaking reasons why Snape didn't smile, why he is such a loner and the most stubbornly emo adult ever. I so appreciate the fact that he cared that much about his character, that he didn't dismiss Harry Potter as a 'kids film', a handy job and a sizeable paycheck. He loved and honoured Snape the way all beloved characters deserve and he made the Harry Potter world that much more real for us. I can't quite believe he's not here anymore. I somehow still think actors are immortal like the characters they play but then they leave us. Please honour his memory and what he gave us by talking about and sharing stories and continuing to celebrate his legacy so then he will be here, as we like to say, 'Always'.
Miss Woodhouse Bookworm
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Ven 15 Jan - 15:29
Les témoignages affluent et ça fait du bien de vous lire les filles car le nombre de nazes qui me demandent "mais c'est qui alan rickman??"
et il n'a pas joué que le rôle de Severus Rogue !!!!
bref....
Emjy Bookworm
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Ven 15 Jan - 19:04
Il y a beaucoup d'hommages rendus par ses pairs mais j'avais envie de partager avec vous celui de l'acteur Sean Biggerstaff, qui a été découvert par Alan lui-même :
Citation :
In 1994 I, an 11-year-old idiot, walked into a rehearsal room in the Old Athenaeum in Glasgow and was welcomed by the fucking Sheriff of Nottingham in a voice which made the room tremble. We sat down and my audition started, reading straight off the page dialogue so unavoidably brilliant that all you needed to do was read it straight off the page.
I did not get the part. I was too young. I did, however, receive a long, hand-written letter from Joyce Nettles, the casting director, thanking me for auditioning and expressing regret that it hadn’t worked out. The only time this has ever happened. I think Alan may have had something to do with that. Two years later he was back, looking to cast the same parts in the film version of the same play. Now I was not too young and in the Winter of 1996 I spent two months (off school!) in the beautiful East Neuk of Fife, making a goddamn movie directed by Alan Rickman, written by Sharman MacDonald starring Emma Thompson, shot by Seamus McGarvey etc etc etc, working with all manner of brilliant people, some of whom are close friends and occasionally colleagues to this day. Just sickeningly lucky. When I left school and wanted to try and do this sort of thing for a living, Alan arranged a meeting with his agent. The first audition that agent got me was for Harry Potter. When I arrived at Leavesden Studios for the first time and met David Heyman for the first time, he told me he’d just had a call from Alan telling him how wonderful I was and that he’d be mad not to hire me. He hired me. When we got on set, (That set. That fucking glorious world of Jo Rowling’s mind brought to life so that we could walk around in it and touch it and be part of showing it to the entire world.) Alan introduced me to practically every great British actor I’d ever heard of. Telling them, “this is my boy.” When I told him how much I’d enjoyed the production of Private Lives he was in, he invited me and my best mate to New York to stay with him for a weekend and see it again. He booked shows for us to see every night, he took us on boat rides, he showed us the Big Apple. When my friend Donny wrote a play that he wanted me to be in, I sent it to Alan, hoping for some advice on where we might get it put on. He received it when he was stepping on a plane. When he landed he emailed me back, having read the whole thing and loved it. Two days later we received a printed copy of the play with mountains of suggested edits, cuts and thoughts scrawled across it in his handwriting, and a two page letter with praise for Donny and advice on who to take it to. He did the same for the next four drafts. This. Never. Stopped. In twenty years, all my experience of Alan was like this. He’d be on a mad press trip round the world, having just finished a broadway show and be about to start shooting a film - with several other projects as an actor, director, writer, board member, mentor bubbling away in the background - and if I needed anything he would immediately spend hours of his time helping me. AND, amazingly, I know of at least a dozen other people who had this same relationship with him. He was our fairy Godfather. He was the whisper in the right ear at the right time. He was the reassuring message when he sensed, always correctly, that we needed it most. He was new head shots or carpets or travel money when times were tough. How he found the time, let alone the will for all this is a mystery to me. He was the most generous, wise, supportive, talented, charismatic, empathetic person I think I’ve ever known. The last time I saw Alan he had, unbeknownst to me, been in hospital for the previous ten days. He got out that morning…and kept our theatre date. In a strange way I’m glad of that frightening episode, as it made me realise that even he was a mortal of flesh and blood and a certain age and he might not always be there. That evening when we parted, I hugged him and told him I loved him and I’m very glad of that now. On monday morning I will start rehearsals for a new play. It will be the first time since I was thirteen years old that I have engaged in such a project without being able to call on Alan for advice and support and I am utterly terrified. I can only hope that enough has rubbed off that I’ll be able to take it from here. I’m honestly not so sure… Goodnight, Alan. I will miss you every day.
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Shelbylee Bookworm
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Ven 15 Jan - 19:27
C'est très émouvant.
Le témoignage de Ian McKellen qui montre lui aussi quelle belle personne était Alan Rickman.
Citation :
There is so much that is matchless to remember about Alan Rickman. His career was at the highest level, as actor on stage and screen and as director ditto. His last bequest of his film “A Little Chaos” and his indelible performance as Louis 14th, should now reach the wider audience they deserve. Beyond a career which the world is indebted to, he was a constant agent for helping others. Whether to institutions like RADA or to individuals and certainly to me, his advice was always spot-on. He put liberal philanthropy at the heart of his life. He and Rima Horton (50 years together) were always top of my dream-list dinner guests. Alan would by turns be hilarious and indignant and gossipy and generous. All this delivered sotto, in that convoluted voice, as distinctive as Edith Evans, John Gielgud, Paul Scofield, Alec Guinness, Alastair Sim or Bowie, company beyond compare. When he played Rasputin, I was the Tzar Nicholas. Filming had started before I arrived in St Petersburg. Precisely as I walked into the hotel-room, the phone rang. Alan, to say welcome, hope the flight was tolerable and would I like to join him and Greta Scacchi and others in the restaurant in 30 minutes? Alan, the concerned leading man. On that film, he discovered that the local Russian crew was getting an even worse lunch than the rest of us. So he successfully protested. On my first day before the camera, he didn’t like the patronising, bullying tone of a note which the director gave me. Alan, seeing I was a little crestfallen, delivered a quiet, concise resumé of my career and loudly demanded that the director up his game. Behind his starry insouciance and careless elegance, behind that mournful face, which was just as beautiful when wracked with mirth, there was a super-active spirit, questing and achieving, a super-hero, unassuming but deadly effective. I so wish he’d played King Lear and a few other classical challenges but that’s to be greedy. He leaves a multitude of fans and friends, grateful and bereft. -- Ian McKellen, London, 14 January 2016There is so much that is matchless to remember about Alan Rickman. His career was at the highest level, as actor on stage and screen and as director ditto. His last bequest of his film “A Little Chaos” and his indelible performance as Louis 14th, should now reach the wider audience they deserve. Beyond a career which the world is indebted to, he was a constant agent for helping others. Whether to institutions like RADA or to individuals and certainly to me, his advice was always spot-on. He put liberal philanthropy at the heart of his life. He and Rima Horton (50 years together) were always top of my dream-list dinner guests. Alan would by turns be hilarious and indignant and gossipy and generous. All this delivered sotto, in that convoluted voice, as distinctive as Edith Evans, John Gielgud, Paul Scofield, Alec Guinness, Alastair Sim or Bowie, company beyond compare. When he played Rasputin, I was the Tzar Nicholas. Filming had started before I arrived in St Petersburg. Precisely as I walked into the hotel-room, the phone rang. Alan, to say welcome, hope the flight was tolerable and would I like to join him and Greta Scacchi and others in the restaurant in 30 minutes? Alan, the concerned leading man. On that film, he discovered that the local Russian crew was getting an even worse lunch than the rest of us. So he successfully protested. On my first day before the camera, he didn’t like the patronising, bullying tone of a note which the director gave me. Alan, seeing I was a little crestfallen, delivered a quiet, concise resumé of my career and loudly demanded that the director up his game. Behind his starry insouciance and careless elegance, behind that mournful face, which was just as beautiful when wracked with mirth, there was a super-active spirit, questing and achieving, a super-hero, unassuming but deadly effective. I so wish he’d played King Lear and a few other classical challenges but that’s to be greedy. He leaves a multitude of fans and friends, grateful and bereft. -- Ian McKellen, London, 14 January 2016
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Emjy Bookworm
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Ven 15 Jan - 19:30
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Seirên Overbearing Master
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Ven 15 Jan - 20:40
Cet homme avait décidément bien des qualités et n'était pas seulement un grand acteur...c'est ce qui faisait, une grande partie de son charme, Alan Rickman reste pour moi, une des incarnations de la classe à l'anglaise, avec un petit grain d'originalité qui le rendait incomparable.
@Miss Woodhouse: comme je te comprends...c'est dommage de réduire cet acteur a un simple rôle. Certes, son rôle de Rogue a marqué toute une génération mais il savait jouer bien des personnages: à ce jour, son shérif de Nottingham reste mon favori Je regrette de ne l'avoir jamais vu sur scène car il semblait être un grand comédien sur les planches...
Maribel Byronic Hero
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Sam 16 Jan - 15:55
Dernièrement, Alan Rickman a fait la narration d'une vidéo pour Save the Children et le refugee Council. Tous les revenues publicitaires liés au visionnement de cette vidéo iront à ces œuvres de charité.
Emjy Bookworm
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Jeu 21 Jan - 20:07
Merci Maribel !
Un hommage très attendrissant de Kate Winslet aux derniers London Critics Circle Awards :
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Maribel Byronic Hero
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Jeu 21 Jan - 22:19
C'est très émouvant, merci Emjy!
didyousaybooks Bookworm
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Mer 3 Fév - 15:38
Quelle perte immense, je pense que personne ne diras le contraire.
Il avait l'air d'être si gentil, en plus d'être plus que talentueux...
Merci pour la vidéo de Kate Winslet. J'avais bien lu quelques condoléances, dont celle de Daniel Radcliffe également, mais je n'avais pas regardé de vidéo, car je trouve ça bien trop triste. Et c'est bien le cas avec celle de Kate et je resterai pendant un petit moment sans en voir et rester sur sa petite anecdote qui fais un peu de bien même en étant si triste.
Diana Bookworm
Sujet: Re: Alan Rickman Sam 24 Sep - 9:13
Le 4 octobre 2022 sortira le journal d'Alan Rickman : Madly, Deeply: The Alan Rickman Diaries Selon le Guardian, il a tenu un journal assez concis dès 1972, qui est devenu plus important en 1992 avec des remarques sur ses différents tournages, notamment les films Harry Potter Il y a plusieurs extrait de son journal sur le guardian aujourd'hui Il a illustré certaines pages de son journal, comme les pages ci-dessous.
Et ci-dessous, comment Alan Rickman a réussi à acheter le tout dernier livre Harry Potter sans faire 10 heures de queue