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Must See Teaser for 'The Testament of Ann Lee' with Amanda Seyfried
Hollywood

Must See Teaser for ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’ with Amanda Seyfried

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Must See Teaser for ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’ with Amanda Seyfried

by Alex Billington
November 6, 2025
Source: YouTube

“A place for everything and everything in its place.” Welcome to the New World! Searchlight Pictures has unveiled the first teaser trailer for the sensational new film titled The Testament of Ann Lee, the next wondrous creation from The Brutalist filmmakers. This premiered at the 2025 Venice Film Festival (my review calling it a “Cinematic Revelation”) and it’s one of the best films of 2025. Searchlight picked it up and will be releasing it just in time for the awards season – in theaters on Christmas Day, with a wider expansion throughout January & February. Based on an entirely true story. British born Ann Lee, founding leader of the Shaker Movement, is proclaimed as female Christ by her followers. The film shows her establishment of a utopian society in America and the Shakers’ worship through song and dance. Featuring jaw-dropping choreography by Celia Rowlson-Hall (Vox Lux) and original songs & score by Academy Award winner Daniel Blumberg. This mesmerizing film stars Amanda Seyfried as Ann Lee, Thomasin Mckenzie, Lewis Pullman, Tim Blake Nelson, Christopher Abbott, Stacy Martin, Matthew Beard, Scott Handy, Viola Prettejohn, Jamie Bogyo, David Cale. I am a huge fan of this film – I think it’s one of the most magnificent and exciting and unique films of this year and a must watch on the big screen. Take a look.

Here’s the first teaser trailer for Mona Fastvold’s film The Testament of Ann Lee, direct from YouTube:

The Testament of Ann Lee Teaser

The Testament of Ann Lee Teaser

The Testament of Ann Lee Teaser

From award-winning director Mona Fastvold comes the extraordinary true legend of Ann Lee, founder of the devotional sect known as the Shakers. Amanda Seyfried stars as the Shaker’s irrepressible leader, who preached gender and social equality and was revered by her followers. The Testament of Ann Lee captures the ecstasy & agony of her quest to build a utopia, featuring more than a dozen traditional Shaker hymns reimagined as rapturous movements. The Testament of Ann Lee is directed by acclaimed Norwegian writer / filmmaker Mona Fastvold, director of the films The Sleepwalker and The World to Come previously, plus the series “The Crowded Room” and “Long Bright River” recently. The screenplay is by husband-wife duo Mona Fastvold & Brady Corbet (also The Brutalist). Produced by Andrew Morrison, Joshua Horsfield, Viktória Petrányi, Mona Fastvold, Brady Corbet, Gregory Jankilevitsch, Klaudia Śmieja-Rostworowska, Lillian LaSalle, Mark Lampert. This initially premiered at the 2025 Venice Film Festival (read our review). Searchlight Pictures will debut Fastvold’s The Testament of Ann Lee in theaters, including with 70mm screenings, starting December 25th, 2025 on Christmas Day later this year. For info visit the official site.

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November 9, 2025 0 comments
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Dancing With the Stars' Carrie Ann Inaba Apology to Danielle Fishel
Celebrity News

Dancing With the Stars’ Carrie Ann Inaba Apology to Danielle Fishel

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

‘DWTS’ Fans Spot Awkward Moment Between Danielle Fishel & Whitney Leavitt After Shocking Elimination

Warning: This story contains spoilers for the Nov. 4 episode of Dancing With the Stars.

Carrie Ann Inaba didn’t mean to upset a contestant. 

The Dancing With the Stars judge apologized to Danielle Fishel for making a comment about her “tiny” body on Halloween Night while praising her and pro partner Pasha Pashkov‘s performance on this week’s Rock and Roll Hall of Fame episode. 

Before stepping into the ballroom on Nov. 4, Danielle shared that Carrie’s criticism had stuck with her following her Oct. 28 routine on the ABC competition series, when The Talk host told her, “You have to use the space because you are a tiny little woman.”

“I am a tiny little woman,” the Boy Meets World alum reflected in a confessional, “but she’s big on the inside—more powerful—so I need to unleash her more often.”

And Danielle acknowledged that showing how much bigger she can take her movements would be no easy feat, quipping, “It doesn’t come naturally to be flailing my 5-foot-1 body around the floor.”

 

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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Dancing With the Stars' Carrie Ann Inaba Claps Back at Critics
Celebrity News

Dancing With the Stars’ Carrie Ann Inaba Claps Back at Critics

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

In fact, Danielle said she appreciates Carrie Ann’s “direct” approach to judging. As the Boy Meets World alum shared in her E! interview, “Carrie Ann saying that our dances look the same, we walked out of here and we said, ‘All right, next week, we will give her what she asked for.'”

That’s why she said DWTS contestants can’t “let critiques go to your head.”

“Whenever it’s over, it’s over,” she noted. “But in the meantime, you are doing it.”

Read on to get to know the DWTS season 34 cast.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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Dancing With the Stars: Pasha Pashkov on Carrie Ann Inaba’s Criticism
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Dancing With the Stars: Pasha Pashkov on Carrie Ann Inaba’s Criticism

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Pasha Pashkov is meeting his critics head-on.

The Dancing With the Stars pro—who’s partnered with Boy Meets World alum Danielle Fishel on the ABC competition’s 34th season—said he was “not happy” to hear judge Carrie Ann Inaba‘s criticism of their routine during Oct. 14’s Dedication Night episode.

“Some of your dances are starting to feel like I’m watching the same dance over and over again,” Carrie Ann told the duo, whose jive number paid tribute to Danielle’s former costar William Daniels. “Try to give a little bit more variety as far as dynamics. This is also on you, Pasha.”

Well, Pasha thinks that comment was “unfair.”

“Especially being that she said that the dances looked similar,” he told Variety in an interview published Oct. 15. “The thing is, we did have a quickstep and we had a jive this week. These are two dances that [are] very, very similar.”

The 39-year-old continued, “If we had dances that were drastically different and they felt the same, I’d understand. But, based on the dances that we had, that did not feel like it made sense to me. In my heart.”

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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Lesley Ann Warren on His 'The Limey' Role
TV & Streaming

Lesley Ann Warren on His ‘The Limey’ Role

by jummy84 September 20, 2025
written by jummy84

When Terence Stamp passed away on August 17, he left behind a legacy of incredible performances, ranging from his breakthrough role as the title character in “Billy Budd” and assignments for European auteurs like Pier Paolo Pasolini (“Teorema”) and Federico Fellini (“Toby Dammit”) to his comeback role as General Zod in the “Superman” movies. Yet as good as all these films and many of his others are, there’s one Terence Stamp movie that gave him the part he was born to play: director Steven Soderbergh‘s “The Limey.”

Working with a razor-sharp script by his “Kafka” and “Haywire” collaborator Lem Dobbs, Soderbergh made “The Limey” a tailor-made showcase for Stamp’s distinctive blend of wry humor, brooding intensity, and icy charisma. Stamp plays Wilson, a British ex-con who travels to Los Angeles to avenge the murder of his daughter, whom he suspects was killed by aging music mogul Peter Fonda or someone in his orbit.

'A House of Dynamite'

It’s a character that riffs on both earlier Stamp performances (most notably his work in Ken Loach’s “Poor Cow,” which is integrated into “The Limey” as flashback footage) and his personal biography as a 1960s icon, since Soderbergh and Dobbs use their revenge story as a vessel into which they can pour every idea they’ve ever had about the era and its unfulfilled promises. Wilson is one of the richest characters in Stamp’s oeuvre: regretful and resigned, hilarious and mournful, and deeply angry yet with flashes of tenderness.

The fervor with which Stamp attacks the role was evident right from the first table read, according to his co-star Lesley Ann Warren. “I did a read-through with Terence and Steven Soderbergh, and I was totally terrified,” Warren told an audience at the American Cinematheque. “He’s very imposing in real life. He was a very formidable man.”

The Cinematheque screened “The Limey” last week as part of its “Starring Terence Stamp” series, which runs through September 25 and features key Stamp works like “The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert” and William Wyler’s “The Collector.” Warren, who plays Elaine, a struggling actress who helps Wilson in his quest (she was his daughter’s acting teacher), participated in a post-screening Q&A to pay tribute to Stamp and talk about her experience on the movie.

“I had never met him, but I was such a fan of his from the time of ‘Billy Budd’ on,” Warren said, adding that the fact that she was intimidated by the actor fed her performance. “I was nervous, but it actually helped with the character because she’s so uncertain and suspicious and unsure.” Indeed, one of the movie’s many pleasures is the power of Warren’s quiet, understated portrayal of a lonely woman whose dreams have not worked out — a far cry from Warren’s more energetic and comic performances in movies like “Clue” and “Victor/Victoria.”

It’s a type Warren recognized from her years in Hollywood. “ I know some of those people and see what they go through,” she said. “Men and women who just keep trying and trying, and they get a little something, and it keeps them hooked. They work a lot of other jobs, and it’s all great, but there’s a kind of chronic heartbreak because you never really accomplished what you had come out here for or dreamt about doing.”

Understanding the character implicitly, Warren dressed the way she thought Elaine would dress for her first meeting with Soderbergh, and tried to be as low-key as possible. When she got the part, Soderbergh not only had the costume designer model Elaine’s wardrobe on what Warren wore to her audition, but was surprised to find that Warren was completely unlike her melancholy character. “I was laughing about something with the hairdresser one day, and Steven came over and said, ‘You’re not really a depressed person, are you?’ I said, ‘No, I was just trying to get hired.’”

According to Warren, Soderbergh almost never talked to her about her character or her performance — but that doesn’t mean he wasn’t directing. On the day of her most emotional scene, Soderbergh bugged Warren incessantly by telling her a long, bad joke right before she went on camera. “When we were done, I said, ‘Why did you do that?’  He said, “Because I know you, and if you start crying, you won’t stop.’ And I thought, that’s really true about me, how incredibly perceptive. So he directs in this very oblique way, never actually talking about the scene or what should happen. He gets you there without you even knowing what he’s doing. Brilliant.”

Warren found Soderbergh’s oblique way of directing perfect for an oblique script — and a movie that became even more oblique in the editing, as Soderbergh reshuffled the linear narrative to be out of order and more evocative of past memories than a present-day story being told with immediacy. “He changed the entire movie and made it into a kind of dream memory film,” Warren said, noting that that meant shooting the same dialogue scene in different locations and then cutting them together, so that they would feel more like memories where one isn’t quite sure of where certain things were said or heard.

“I had never done that,” Warren said, noting that the different locales helped bring added dimension to the scene every time she and Stamp played it. “The environment affected both of us. We walked and talked by the ocean in a different way, versus when we were in the apartment. There was an intimacy in the apartment that wasn’t there outside. It was as if it was a whole new scene.”

Although Soderbergh’s drastic restructuring left some key scenes on the cutting room floor — including a love scene between Warren and Stamp that she says was the first time she was finally able to relax a little — Warren was thrilled by the final result when she first saw the movie put together. “It was a whole other movie than I had anticipated, but I really loved it.”

Warren sat through the movie again at the Cinematheque, and said that even after seeing it multiple times, she never gets tired of Stamp’s performance — or of another actor who recently left us, Nicky Katt. “I miss Nicky Katt so much,” she said, adding that all of his comic dialogue as an inappropriate hit man was improvised. “He was so great, and Steven loved him.”

As for Stamp, “He’s so powerful and interesting and complex that I’m just as enthralled as I was in the beginning. I never tire of the performance. And I’m just struck by how new the movie still feels.”

“Starring Terence Stamp” runs through September 25 at the American Cinematheque.

September 20, 2025 0 comments
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Is the Annabelle Doll Real? All About the Haunted Raggedy Ann Figure – Hollywood Life
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Is the Annabelle Doll Real? All About the Haunted Raggedy Ann Figure – Hollywood Life

by jummy84 September 5, 2025
written by jummy84

Image Credit: Getty Images

Our worst nightmares may have come true in 2025 when Annabelle, the haunted doll, was rumored to have gone missing. Most horror fans already know that the doll inspired the figurine from The Conjuring films and their spinoffs Annabelle. To make matters even worse this year, paranormal investigator Dan Rivera, who helped lead the “Devils on the Run Tour” featuring Annabelle with the New England Society for Psychic Research, mysteriously died on July 13 at the age of 54.

So, is Annabelle real, and is she actually haunted?

Learn all about Annabelle’s story and what allegedly happened to her in 2025.

Is the Annabelle Doll Real?

Yes, Annabelle is real. She does not look anything like the doll from The Conjuring or the Annabelle movies, though. Instead of a porcelain, wide-eyed, pig-tailed figurine with angular, rosy cheeks, the real Annabelle is a Raggedy Ann doll with the brand’s iconic red hair, a white and multi-patterned dress and a face with wide-set eyes and a triangle nose.

Is Annabelle Really Haunted?

If you believe in the supernatural, yes — Annabelle was declared demonically possessed in the 1970s by Ed and Lorraine Warren. According to the late paranormal investigators, a student nurse was given the doll, and it exhibited odd and inexplicable behavior. After taking it to a psychic, the student was told that it was possessed by a spirit named Annabelle. Despite all attempts to nurture the doll, the student couldn’t handle the alleged eerie behavior, and the Warrens kept the doll locked inside a glass case.

We can relax folks…the Annabelle doll is safely secured back at the Warren Occult Museum. 🫣#AnnabelleDollMissing pic.twitter.com/sq1KTdgrTQ

— Countdown City Geeks (@CCG_Podcast) May 24, 2025

Where Is Annabelle?

Annabelle had lived inside the Warrens’ Occult Museum in Connecticut, which comedian Matt Rife claimed he purchased in August 2025. To this day, she is kept inside a glass case. In July 2025, she was at the Soldiers National Orphanage by Ghostly Images of Gettysburg Tours in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, for the “Devils on the Run Tour.”

Annabelle is scheduled to appear in Rock Island, Illinois, on October 4 and October 5, 2025, as part of the “Devils on the Run Tour.”

Did Annabelle Go Missing in 2025?

No, Annabelle never went missing, despite social media rumors that exploded in May 2025. Paranormal investigator Rivera debunked the rumors by appearing in a social media clip, showing that Annabelle was intact and still in her glass case.

“I just wanna show you guys that Annabelle in the Warrens’ Occult Museum, and let’s check,” Rivera said while recording the inside of the Warrens’ Occult Museum. “Annabelle’s not missing,” Rivera added while filming the doll in its display case.

A social media user who shared Rivera’s clip to Facebook captioned their post, “Some wild and crazy internet rumors this morning claiming that we lost Annabelle. She/it is NOT lost and here’s Dan Rivera with NESPR proving she is back home inside the museum in Connecticut.. for now. And no, Annabelle is not supposed to be in Chicago.”

Dan Rivera’s Cause of Death

The cause of death for Rivera was officially confirmed in early September 2025. The Adams County coroner ruled his passing cardiac-related and natural, consistent with his known history of heart issues. No foul play was suspected.

“Mr. Rivera had a known history of cardiac issues, which were consistent with the findings,” Francis Dutrow, the Adams County coroner, said.

TMZ previously reported that Rivera informed his coworkers he was feeling ill the day he died.

Was Annabelle Near Dan Rivera When He Died?

No, Annabelle was not in the Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, hotel room where Rivera was found dead. The Adams County Coroner also added, “It is also confirmed that Annabelle was not present in the room at the time of his passing.”

September 5, 2025 0 comments
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Venice 2025: 'The Testament of Ann Lee' is a Cinematic Revelation
Hollywood

Venice 2025: ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’ is a Cinematic Revelation

by jummy84 September 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Venice 2025: ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’ is a Cinematic Revelation

by Alex Billington
September 1, 2025

The exhilaration of majestic cinema once again at the Venice Film Festival. Following last year’s masterful The Brutalist (here is my 10/10 review), filmmakers Brady Corbet and Mona Fastvold are back again at Venice this year with their latest work. The Testament of Ann Lee is the third feature film directed by Norwegian filmmaker and actress Mona Fastvold, who is married to Brady Corbet. They co-wrote both of these films together and this one is also shot on film just like The Brutalist, and they both worked with the truly one-of-a-kind composer Daniel Blumberg to create the scores for both of these films. Other than that, these films couldn’t be more different. The Testament of Ann Lee is actually a musical, featuring a few truly transcendent, mystical musical sequences of dancing through the forest and around their land. It’s the story of a religious leader and the creation of the religion she believed in, known as the Shakers, but it’s also the story of emancipation and escape and freedom from oppression. Unquestionably of the best films of the year – it’s extraordinary in every single way that cinema can be extraordinary. I need this soundtrack to listen to.

The Testament of Ann Lee, also known as simply Ann Lee, is the story of a real woman named Ann Lee – starring Amanda Seyfried in the lead role as this woman. Born in Manchester, England in 1736 during a time of the Evangelical revival in England, she married young and became pregnant. After 4 pregnancies, all of her children died before they turned 1 year old and this destroyed her. After this experience she turned to religion, helping create what is now known as the the Shaker Movement, preaching about the second coming of Christ as a woman – she came to be called Mother Ann. They were initially known as “Shaking Quakers” because of their ecstatic behavior during worship services. After being attacked by the English church at the time, her followers packed up and got on a ship and headed to the new colonies – America. There they settle in and establish a new home on a plot of land they find by taking a boat up the Hudson River. Of course it is a story about someone creating a religion out of completely made up beliefs (let’s be honest), however it’s also about a woman breaking free from the the shackles of the dominant religion and creating a new series of rules & ideas to live by – some of which were quite utopian & beautiful, including a love for the land and equality among all people of all kinds. It shares her life’s story in such a uniquely magical, transcendent way.

Ultimately this film isn’t really about religion or cults or how to get people to believe in nonsense. The story presented includes these things happening, but that’s not really the deeper meaning of this film. As someone who usually despises films about religion, I was delightfully lost in how much this is anything but. There are even moments where it seems Mother Ann herself (or at least Amanda Seyfried as Mother Ann) knows she’s spouting complete bullshit, but it doesn’t matter, because her whole point is staying true to the dogma of her Shaker religion – namely rejecting marriage and sex and so on. For obvious reasons – considering her early life at the time. At first, Ann Lee’s divine decision to create this religion is more of an of-the-times-she’s-in example of fabricating something to allow her to escape the patriarchal, misogynistic hell (of being forced to pop out babies) she was living in England at time. This was right around when a group of people fled to a new land to create what is now America to escape English religious persecution, so it makes sense she would try this, too. Eventually it also becomes a tale of how America is a rotten place as well. Aside from all of the slavery and racism and violence, she soon learns how much Americans (even in the late 1700s) actually hate others and don’t really want anyone else to be able to practice their own religion(s). Especially one that goes against their own views and is as blasphemous as the Shakers with their belief that marriage and sex is bad.

All of these layers of commentary, even more beyond just these two aspects, are beautifully worked into this magnificent piece of art. And it’s so mesmerizing and enchanting to get totally lost in and swept away by all the magic (and music and singing) of this film. Right from the start with a haunting musical opening with women dancing through the forest, all the way across the Atlantic Ocean, right up to the final days of Ann Lee as her colony in Niskayuna grows and her religion spreads, this is an bewitching film that showcases all of what makes cinema so special. It’s fun and clever and cinematically exciting. It’s about more than what it seems to be about. It’s carefully crafted, enhanced by the storytelling choices. As with The Brutalist, you can tell every single person involved in making this is fully in sync with the vision & the artistry of the filmmaker and everyone gave it their all to make this so magical. Best of all, Amanda Seyfried is absolutely outstanding leading the film preaching a best-of-her-career performance. Her complete devotion to this character, to the performance, to delivering emotion from the depths of her soul to make it believable, is astonishing and she absolutely deserves all the awards & accolades coming her way. She’s matched by supporting turns from Lewis Pullman, Thomasin McKenzie, David Cale (my favorite character), and Christopher Abbott.

Aside from the enchanting cinematography (shot by DP William Rexer on film) and wonderfully accurate period costumes & sets and all of the riveting performances, the music in this also swept me off my feet. All of the songs are incredible. Which I was not expecting, especially based on this story. And that score, THAT SCORE my goodness, Daniel Blumberg is quickly becoming one of my favorite composers up there with Göransson and Zimmer and Desplat. I cant wait to get a copy of this soundtrack. Of course all of the musical numbers are inspired by real Shaker hymns and chants, infused with modern composition. It’s a musical that doesn’t really feel like a musical, which is not an easy thing to accomplish. The musical numbers are integrated right into each scene as if this what the Shakers would be doing at this moment anyway right in the middle of their work day, dancing as part of their daily chores & religious activities. This film absolutely deserves its place in cinema history alongside The Brutalist. These films are two defining modern cinematic experiences and I believe we’ll still be talking about both of them, and both filmmakers, for decades to come.

Alex’s Venice 2025 Rating: 9.5 out of 10
Follow Alex on Twitter – @firstshowing / Or Letterboxd – @firstshowing

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September 2, 2025 0 comments
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Sheridan Smith Interview on Ann Ming, ITV Drama
TV & Streaming

Sheridan Smith Interview on Ann Ming, ITV Drama

by jummy84 August 29, 2025
written by jummy84

English actress and singer Sheridan Smith has not only made a name for herself with the role of Ruth “Rudi” Smith in Gavin & Stacey, but also by portraying real-life people. In the TV drama Cilla, she played English singer, actress and TV host Cilla Black. The role won her the best drama performance honor at the National Television Awards and the best actress honor at the TV Choice Awards. And in the TV series Mrs Biggs, she portrayed Charmian Biggs, the wife of the famous train robber Ronnie Biggs, winning the BAFTA TV Award for best actress for her performance.

Now, Smith stars in ITV‘s four-part drama I Fought the Law as Ann Ming, an English woman whose 22-year-old daughter was murdered in 1989. After two unsuccessful trials, the defendant admitted to the murder. But the 800-year-old British double jeopardy law prevented him from further prosecution. After all, the double jeopardy rule prevented people from being tried twice for the same offense.

Ming reacted with 15 years of campaigning to change the law. Thanks to her efforts, the Criminal Justice Act 2003 created an exception, allowing an acquitted defendant to be tried a second time for a serious offense. That opened the way for a retrial and 2006 conviction in the case of Julie’s murder. The man was sentenced to a life term.

Jamie Crichton (All Creatures Great and Small, The Last Kingdom, Grantchester) wrote I Fought the Law, based on Ming’s book For the Love of Julie. Smith stars as Ming in the drama produced by Hera Pictures (What It Feels Like for a Girl, Mary & George, Hamnet), in association with All3Media International.

“The drama follows the tragic, moving and deeply inspiring journey of the Ming family after the murder,” highlights an ITV synopsis of the series. “In the wake of multiple police failings, Ann relentlessly pressures the authorities to uncover the truth and ensure the man responsible is brought to justice — despite initially seeming he will get away with murder.”

I Fought the Law launches on ITV and STV on Sunday, Aug. 31, with the series streaming on ITVX and STV Player, followed by a documentary about Ming’s historic campaign called I Fought the Law: The Ann Ming Story.

Star Smith and writer Crichton talked to THR about creating the drama series and the challenges it provided, working with Ming, and why it never mentions her daughter’s murderer by name.

“She’s not a very well-known name in this country, and yet she should be, and hopefully she will be,” Crichton said about Ming. “The same is true for the double jeopardy law. I think if you stopped someone on the street and said, ‘What’s double jeopardy,’ they probably wouldn’t know.”

He saw a documentary that moved him, though. “It was Ann’s story, and it was such an incredible story. I couldn’t believe I didn’t know it,” he recalled. “So, I took it to Liza Marshall at Hera, and thankfully, she loved it too.”

The question of who should portray Ming in the drama wasn’t really a question for the writer and producer. “We both said the same name,” Crichton told THR. “I feel everybody says, whenever you’re talking about actors, ‘Oh, they were at the top of our list.’ But genuinely, I had three names and said I’m going to start with the first one. And I said, Sheridan Smith. And Liza said: That’s exactly what I’m thinking. Perfect!”

Smith was quickly on board. “Liza gave me Jamie’s brilliant script, episode one, and I read it,” she told THR. “I had the same reaction that they had. ‘How do I not know this story?’ This is incredible. I was thrilled that they wanted me. And I’m very grateful that I got to portray Ann.”

Smith prepared for the role by researching online, watching the documentary, other material and Ming’s book.

“We only met once,” the star says about Ming. “I had watched her so much and studied her that I just started doing mannerisms and things. It was my friend who was on set who noticed it first. ‘You are walking differently.’ I was like: ‘What?’ And she said, ‘You’re doing this twitchy thing with your eye.’ No offense to Ann, but I just try to embody the role.”

Is it easier or harder to portray a real rather than a fictional person? “It is scarier playing a real person, especially someone like Ann, who’s changed this 800-year-old law,” Smith told THR. “I felt such responsibility to do her story justice, because she’s trusted these guys to tell her story. And at the end of the day, it’s her real life. It’s not just a TV show, it’s her life and her family, and it matters.”

That meant extra hard work to get things right. “So I put myself through the wringer and really tried to feel exactly how she would have felt,” the star explained. “I know I can’t, because I haven’t been through that trauma, but I would beat myself up if I didn’t make myself feel at least a fraction of what she went through. So it was quite a tough shoot, but it was amazing, and an amazing team.”

Sheridan Smith and Ann Ming

Courtesy of ITV

That includes a great costume and makeup department, Smith lauded the crew. “I couldn’t even see myself in the mirror,” she recalled. “It just wasn’t me, and I didn’t see where I was. So it was a magic shoot. I’m really pleased. And I hope Ann is pleased. We’ve done well, if Ann’s happy.”

Crichton offered that getting Smith to portray Ming was key. “It’s impossible to speak for Ann, but I don’t know whether she would have let us tell her story if we hadn’t said we got Sheridan Smith on board,” he told THR. “As soon as we said her name, she said that she absolutely adores her.”

How did he, as the writer, pick what parts of Ming’s extended campaign to focus on in the series? “It’s a big span of time, which means you must make editorial decisions, dramatic decisions,” he said. “Ultimately, it’s all about trying to get the emotional story right. Ann’s book is so powerful. It does so much of the work, if you like. When I started really feeling like this is going to work was when I made the decision to tell the whole story from Ann’s point of view.”

Explained Crichton: “So often, especially when you’re dealing with stories that have true crime elements, the story is told through the procedural point of view, from the detective’s point of view. So you’re always going to meet suspects who are being interviewed. I decided, even though it’s quite a challenge, quite tricky, to tell it all from Ann’s point of view as a mother. Obviously, what that means is you’re restricting yourself to a certain extent, you’re not able to see what you would think as an audience of as being the classic interesting scenes. For example, I knew I would have to have police come in and talk to Ann to catch her up” on the status of the case.

His worries vanished soon, though. “I first thought that’s going to be the worst story ever told. But actually it was really liberating, because it’s nothing you normally see,” Crichton said. “And the great thing is that you put Ann in every single scene, or 99 percent of the scenes. And once you make that decision, then it’s about the emotion, and about how you tell a story that conveys the appropriate emotional beats at the appropriate times.”

Being in so many scenes meant that Smith was constantly in action or getting ready for a scene. “I feel that I was going slightly nuts,” she recalled. “But it’s also a gift. I mean, Ann is constantly in a state of anxiety, and no one’s listening to her, and everyone is shutting doors in her face. And what’s brilliant about her story and Jamie’s scripts is that I could get myself panicked sometimes, because it’s just so hard to turn it off. It’s this hamster wheel, and you want to keep going.”

What was Ming’s reaction to what she saw in I Fought the Law? “I think she loved it. I think she really got a buzz,” said Crichton. Smith also had some fun in between all the dramatic scenes, including in a scene that shows Ming barging into a room. “There’s so much trauma in it, but those moments where a strength comes through are great,” the actress shared. “And it’s great fun to play that and have a real release and, after doing lots of crying and internalized emotion or angst, be able to really show how Ann flew in there.”

The murderer of Ming’s daughter never gets mentioned by name in the series, and that was a core choice Crichton made early on. “That was really important to me from day one, because this is Ann’s story,” he told THR. “It was always important to me that this is not about the killer. Not only is he not named, you never hear his name in any of the four episodes, but he’s not even in the credits. The actor who played him, Jack James Ryan, graciously agreed to this. This is not his story.”

Concluded the writer: “So often, especially when you’re watching true crime stories, they’re about the gruesomeness of the killer, and that’s where a fascination comes. That’s the intrigue of the macabre. And it feels so exploitative of some poor family’s grief and trauma to make a piece of entertainment. So, for me, it was just always important that this is not his story. This is Ann’s story. “

Smith also wrapped up with that in mind. “This is a story about a woman who sees something that’s unjust and has been around for 800 years,” she told THR. “She was so horrified, obviously, by the death of Julie, but she was also so determined that this was not right. The strength in her is amazing. She just kept fighting. It’s about this little working-class woman who takes on the establishment amd wins. And I do think that that’s such a powerful story.”

August 29, 2025 0 comments
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Sheridan Smith and Ann Ming
TV & Streaming

Ann Ming Who Changed UK Law

by jummy84 August 27, 2025
written by jummy84

800 years of British legal history. 15 years of campaigning to change it. Decades of suffering after the murder of her daughter. England’s Ann Ming, 79, is a force of nature. Now, the four-part ITV drama series I Fought the Law will tell her story and bring it to a broader audience, starting on Sunday, when the show hits U.K. screens.

Written by Jamie Crichton (All Creatures Great and Small, The Last Kingdom, Grantchester), starring English actress and singer Sheridan Smith (Cilla, Mrs Biggs, Gavin & Stacey) as Ming and produced by Hera Pictures (What It Feels Like for A Girl, Mary & George, Hamnet), in association with All3Media International, the series is based on Ming’s book For the Love of Julie, which details her long campaign to overturn the 800-year-old British double jeopardy law following the murder of her 22-year-old daughter and the ruling of a mistrial that, she kept emphasizing, kept justice from being served.

After all, the double jeopardy rule prevented people from being tried twice for the same offense. But thanks to her campaign, the Criminal Justice Act 2003 created an exception, allowing an acquitted defendant to be tried a second time for a serious offense.

That opened the way for a retrial and 2006 conviction in the case of Julie’s murder. The man was sentenced to a life term.

“I Fought the Law is the powerful true story of a mother’s relentless fight for justice following the disappearance of her beloved daughter Julie,” reads a Hera Pictures series summary. “This groundbreaking campaign led to a historic legal reform and, ultimately, to a life sentence for Julie’s killer nearly two decades after her murder.”

An ITV synopsis also highlights: “The drama follows the tragic, moving, and deeply inspiring journey of the Ming family after the murder … In the wake of multiple police failings, Ann relentlessly pressures the authorities to uncover the truth and ensure the man responsible is brought to justice – despite initially seeming he will get away with murder. In her steadfast and indomitable style, Ann takes on the entire justice system – challenging the Crown Prosecution Service, the Law Commission, prominent defence barristers in television debates, the government, the Lord Chancellor, the Attorney General, and two Home Secretaries.”

You may wonder how Ming kept up her campaign for so long. “I am quite a strong person, but I mean, I never had the challenge of changing the law, but I’m glad I did it now,” she tells THR.

Asked about the heavy weight of tradition and history that kept her from pushing through her proposal for a change for a long time, Ming explains: “I don’t know why they were so frightened to change it, because it’s common sense. If there is a proven wrongful conviction, the person should be freed. And in the case of wrongful acquittal, such as ours, the same principle should apply. This man killed my daughter and was bragging in a local pub that he got away with the perfect murder.”

So, how did the series come about? “[Hera] got in touch and said they were interested” to make a series, she recalls. “I’ve got an agent in London. He advised me to meet and go with them.”

Shares Hera founder Liza Marshall: “Yes, we wanted to option her amazing book. We were just so drawn to her.”

The long creative journey was worth it, she feels. “We first started talking about it during the pandemic, which was a time when we were all, certainly in the U.K., complaining a lot about the government,” the executive shares.

Of course, her team also felt a burden to tell the story in the best possible way. “It’s a huge responsibility,” Marshall tells THR. “Ann was right at the heart of the process all the way through, from the moment we took it to ITV to start off and develop the script with them. And then Sheridan became attached, and that was absolutely integral to the greenlighting of the show.”

Ming enjoyed working with Crichton and the rest of the creative team. “When he did the script, he sent it to me to have a look at it, and if I felt there was anything to alter, we altered it,” she tells THR. “I’m really pleased with the script and everything, the whole process and the whole drama.”

And Ming loves that Sheridan portrays her. “They couldn’t have picked anybody better than Sheridan Smith,” she tells THR. “She is really the best actress.”

So, she was a Smith fan before her casting? “Oh, yeah, definitely,” Ming says. “I’ve seen everything she’s ever done. It’s so nice for her to play me.”

Does Ming expect I Fought the Law to change people’s awareness of her work much? “I’ve lived and breathed this for so long. I think people in my local area all know that it was me who campaigned to change the law,” she says. “But a lot of people don’t know it was me, even though I did the book in 2006. Now, more people will realize who did it.”

Indeed, highlights Marshall, “in a wider U.K. context, people actually don’t know the story and the incredible bravery she showed and the resilience to get the law overturned. I think Ann is a complete shining example of what you can do if you put your mind to something, and how, even if the doors close in your face, you just keep pushing through. That just felt incredibly inspiring.”

Adds Hera executive producer Charlotte Webber: “Ann was going up against the establishment and various different organizations. How many things have we seen that we want to change and don’t? And Ann has spoken to every single level of authority on a human level. And whoever she came across, she looked them in the eye and, as a mother, told them how this happened.”

She describes Ming as a role model for women everywhere. But Ming herself remains modest. Does she feel like a role model? “No, not really,” she tells THR. She feels she just followed her heart and common sense. “If you think something’s wrong and you think that it should be changed, well, you do it,” she concludes. “Keep that thought for the day: If it’s wrong, change it to right.”

I Fought the Law launches on ITV and STV on Sunday, Aug. 31, with the series streaming on ITVX and STV Player, followed by a documentary about Ming’s historic campaign called I Fought The Law: The Ann Ming Story.

August 27, 2025 0 comments
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