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Taylor Frankie Paul Is the New Star of The Bachelorette
Fashion

Taylor Frankie Paul Is the New Star of The Bachelorette

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Now this is the most dramatic announcement ever: Taylor Frankie Paul, star of Hulu’s The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives, is the new leading lady for ABC’s The Bachelorette.

In the early morning hours of September 10 (on Alex Cooper’s Call Her Daddy podcast, no less), it was announced that The Bachelorette will return for season 22 in 2026 with the reality star—and mom of three—at the helm.

Per ABC’s press release, “After igniting ‘MomTok’ and going viral for pulling back the curtain on Salt Lake’s soft-swinging scene in Hulu’s Emmy-nominated series, The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives, the 31-year-old Utah native is ready to trade headline-making heartbreak for hometown dates as she begins making her mark on Bachelor Nation.”

There’s plenty of shocking firsts in this announcement, namely being that this is the first time a Bachelorette lead hasn’t come from a previous season of The Bachelor. (The Bachelor, on the other hand, has more experience with this—the last contestant who didn’t come from a previous season was Matt James in 2021.)

While no specific date has been announced (ABC is only saying the “all-new season will debut in 2026”), it would seem that Taylor Frankie Paul’s season of The Bachelorette will premiere in January, which is typically when The Bachelor airs. The Bachelorette took the summer off after Jenn Tran’s rather disastrous finale in 2024 (though Bachelor in Paradise did return this summer, somewhat in its place). There has also been a lot of shuffling behind-the-scenes with Scott Teti becoming executive producer and showrunner of the franchise, starting with Paradise this summer. Meanwhile, The Golden Bachelor also returns this month (Wednesday, September 24), so it kind of makes sense that The Bachelorette gets its turn back in the spotlight next.

The biggest surprise of all is Paul’s casting, of course. While single parents have been Bachelor leads and contestants before (Jason Mesnick had a son at the time, while Emily Maynard had a daughter), Paul has three children.

More so, as Glamour senior editor Stephanie McNeal wrote last year, “Paul and some of her gang of internet-famous Mormon wives and mothers were swingers. During the pandemic, [she and her fellow] Mormon, Utah-based moms who posted videos together dancing grew huge social followings as rumors ran wild that they all were all sleeping with each other. Then, in May 2022, Paul seemed to confirm this when she made a video announcing that she and her husband were splitting up because she violated the rules of the “soft swinging” arrangement the couple had with several others in their #MomTok friend group. Many of the women denied it, some blasted Paul, and the whole thing was rather juicy.”

In speaking with McNeal, Paul said, “I’ve had a lot of lessons learned. I had to go the hard way, and that was all by my choices that I made in life.”

September 10, 2025 0 comments
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On 'Hamnet,' Paul Mescal, and Jessie Buckley
TV & Streaming

On ‘Hamnet,’ Paul Mescal, and Jessie Buckley

by jummy84 September 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Over the Labor Day weekend, “Hamnet” (November 27, Focus) turned the Werner Herzog Theatre at Telluride into a river of tears. And it did the same thing, by all accounts, at Toronto’s 2,600-seat Roy Thomson Hall on Sunday night. (Toronto often waits until after the opening weekend to show Telluride titles. Not this time.)

Anyone who has seen “Nomadland,” which earned Best Picture and Director Oscars for Chloé Zhao in 2021, knows that this director is skilled at eliciting emotion, from her actors and her audiences. “I don’t think I’ve screened any of my films in a theater that big before,” she told IndieWire the next morning on Zoom. “It’s huge, and because it’s three floors and it’s round, it’s actually like the Globe Theatre.”

Normal

That’s Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre, which Zhao had rebuilt at about 70-percent scale for “Hamnet,” a heart-wrenching period family drama based on Maggie O’Farrell’s 2020 bestseller about William and Agnes Shakespeare (Paul Mescal and Jessie Buckley). The well-reviewed film tracks their early romance and marriage and the birth of three children, two girls and a boy, Hamnet. Their lives are rocked by grief when they lose Hamnet to the plague, and Shakespeare buries himself in writing the tragedy “Hamlet.”

When Sam Mendes pulled back from developing “Hamnet” in 2022, Amblin Entertainment called Zhao to check out her interest in directing. She was driving through New Mexico’s Four Corners on her way to Telluride. She had never read the book, and at first said “no.” A few hours later, she got a call that Paul Mescal wanted to meet her at the festival. She did not know his work (he had done “Normal People,” and “Aftersun” was a secret screening at the festival). “I had no idea who he was,” she said. “I googled him. I see pictures of him, and I saw a clip. ‘I like his vibe. Why don’t I just meet with him?’”

During their walk in the woods, they stopped by a creek. Zhao looked at his profile. “Have you thought about playing young Shakespeare?” she said. “‘Hamnet’?” he said. “I read the book. You have to read the book.”

“It was exciting to meet him,” she said, “because it was not that different than meeting my rodeo cowboy for ‘The Rider,’ because I didn’t know him as an actor or what he does, I just felt like this person could potentially do this.”

4238_D045_00238_R Jessie Buckley stars as Agnes and Joe Alwyn as Bartholomew in director Chloé Zhao’s HAMNET, a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC
Jessie Buckley in ‘Hamnet’Agata Grzybowska

Then she read the book. “If I had read the book, I wouldn’t have said, ‘no,’” she said. “I had never heard of the book.” And she wanted Jessie Buckley to play Agnes. “I knew her work. I had a feeling that she wouldn’t be afraid. There was no vanity in her, which is what Fran McDormand had. I’m neurodivergent, and when there’s dissonance, I can’t function. I can’t look at the person. So I need that authenticity, and vanity is the number-one enemy of authenticity. Actors, their greatest blessing they can give to the world is their authenticity and their humanness.”

Making people cry is not Zhao’s goal, per se. “I never quite know what I’m doing when I set out to do something, and why,” she said, “because I never quite know what is real or what is true. Literal truth doesn’t make sense to me. When something is completely present in the moment with no dissonance at all, that’s when I say, ‘capture that right away,’ because that is truth that can transcend time and space, and that can link everyone together. Every day on set, that’s what we go for. Of course, we have a blueprint of a script based on a beautiful book. That’s the bones, the spine.”

Early in Zhao’s career, her films were reality-based. They tried to capture something in the real world. And then she directed Marvel’s “Eternals,” which is the opposite. While she got her worst reviews for that film, it did teach her many skills, including how to build a world. 16th-century “Hamnet” needed to be created, built from the ground up. It doesn’t exist except in the pages of O’Farrell’s book. That’s one reason why Zhao turned to O’Farrell to write the screenplay with her.

Chloe Zhao
‘Hamnet’ director Chloé Zhao at TellurideAnne Thompson

If O’Farrell had refused to write the “Hamnet” script with her, Zhao wouldn’t have made the movie, because she had built a world in the book. “Not only that, she had also been swimming in that pond for so long that she knows what she didn’t put in the book,” said Zhao. “To have that book, she must have written 10 of those to distill to that in her research. I needed to know what else isn’t in the book, because things will change. We add scenes. And so without her, I couldn’t have done that.”

O’Farrell did a first pass and arranged everything in chronological order. Zhao did another pass to condense it, pick the things to keep and throw away. And with that spine, they add and subtract “until we both go, ‘OK, this is it,’” Zhao said.

It helped to have Steven Spielberg on hand to give notes on the script and the edit. After he read the first drafts, he told Zhao, “I’m missing a moment between Will and Hamnet, between father and son.” So she wrote the “will you be brave?” scene. “He helped,” she said.

As far as Zhao is concerned, she and O’Farrell and the cast and crew contributed to the film every day, from Oscar-winning sound designer Johnnie Burn (“The Zone of Interest”) and ASC-winning cinematographer Łukasz Żal (“Cold War”) to co-editor Affonso Gonçalves and composer Max Richter.

“The emotionality of the film was the emotional truth of what we captured as a village,” she said. “We don’t know how to do it any other way. We were swimming the river together. So this is what we ended up with. And I have a faith that I hold on to — I’m not a traditionally religious person — but this faith I have as an artist is that if we do the work and we have conviction and we show up every day, something much bigger and older is going to try to speak through us. And whatever that is, is what the world needs. I just want to trust that. Otherwise, I’m lost.”

TORONTO, ONTARIO - SEPTEMBER 07: (L-R) Paul Mescal and Jessie Buckley attend the premiere of
Paul Mescal and Jessie Buckley attend the premiere of ‘Hamnet’ during the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival at Roy Thomson Hall on September 07, 2025 in Toronto, Ontario. (Photo by Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images)Getty Images

“Hamnet” had to be filmed on a smaller scale than her Marvel movie “Eternals.” “There isn’t another sunset that I could capture more dramatically than ‘Eternals,’” said Zhao. “Capturing sunsets in ancient places, with 500 people waiting and superhero-like, I’ve done enough sunsets now. In my 30s, I was chasing the horizons like a nomadic person, because for me it was easier to keep running. It’s difficult for me to sit with myself. ‘Hamnet’ needed depth, maturity. I challenged myself: one frame, one room, one stage. You’re not going to rely on that grandeur and that excitement of movement. How deep can you go? Because once you restrain yourself with these walls, the only place you could go is above or below, and that is extremely uncomfortable.”

The day when everyone on set went deep was the death of Hamnet. The night before, Jacobi Jupe came to Zhao and said, “I’m going to break your heart tomorrow.” She said, “Good! I have high expectations.”

When the day came, “I did not know Jessie was going to scream,” said Zhao. “I didn’t know that. I didn’t know what Jacobi was going to do. I had no idea what the two of them were going to do. We create an environment. By then, we’ve been together for a couple of months, cast crew, everyone knew what today is, it was like a ceremony. It wasn’t doing a scene. The pin could drop. Everyone in that moment was feeling something from the beginning of the day, something they loved they’d lost. So Jessie and Jacobi were channeling what all the people that are their found family in this last few months are feeling as well, and so the truth we capture in the moment is the only thing that we need to stand by. And in the edit, I have to make sure to not betray that, to not be afraid what that might do to the film in public.”

One of the reasons that Zhao initially shied away from the book was to avoid dealing with a mother figure. “When you have a deep mother wound, from your own personal life or ancestrally, telling a story about motherhood is triggering,” she said. “That’s why, if you look at my films in the past, that character doesn’t exist. She’s either not present or dead. So when I heard about the synopsis, I said I was not anywhere near doing it. I was also in the middle of going through midlife transition, [I was] turning 40-41, around that time. ‘If I don’t heal that wound, the second half of life is going to be hard.’ So I was reading the book, seeing how Agnes is losing her mother, losing her connection with nature, her connection with her child. There’s so much there. ‘How am I going to hold that? I can’t do this!’”

But then Zhao saw something that she could grasp, “a safe place,” she said, “which is actually the William Shakespeare side of the story, because I was writing from myself, too. I escaped into the fantasy world because I didn’t want to sit around the dinner table. It was not safe. So I know that character, that’s my safe place for 41 years. If I can escape to him half the time, I can maybe handle her, and then to allow these two sides of myself who had been at war and caused a lot of suffering to finally see each other. At the end, I went on an incredible healing journey making this film.”

Crying together goes back to the Greeks. “In every indigenous tradition, you come around the fire, and then the shaman would channel a story,” said Zhao, who used daily meditations and dream sessions with her actors, and arranged weekly dance rituals to let off steam.

“Animals, dreams, visions. People have strong emotions. Warriors come back from battle. They don’t just take medication. They can go back home. They sit around the fire, and they dance, and they release these emotions, and that turned into theater, these Greek tragedies. You get together, everyone gets angry together, and then they rage, and then they cry. And we have been dealing with this impossible tension to be alive. We so far have not been able to escape the law of nature. We’re going to be born, we’re going to die. And we have been using art and storytelling and a collective communal experience, to grieve, to feel, to deal with that since way before any of these things that are telling us we should be separated even existed. We’re remembering, ready to survive.”

At the end of the movie, the grieving Agnes, feeling bereft of her child and her husband, and away writing and mounting “Hamlet,” comes to the Globe Theatre to see the premiere performance. She stands at the edge of the stage with hundreds of extras behind her. [Spoiler Alert.] She is riveted as the actor playing Prince Hamlet (Noah Jupe) is onstage with her husband, Will, playing the ghost of his father, King Hamlet.

“It was four of the most difficult, but also life-changing days of my life,” said Zhao. “There’s barely any dialogue. This language is quite universal for everyone, right? Sometimes our truth can only be felt in silence and maybe with Max Richter’s music playing in the background. All we’re asking is to see each other and be seen without judgment, unconditionally, and that was healing and also difficult to experience. Shakespeare worked hard his entire life to bring people together every day for a few hours: The illusion of separation dissolves.”

She added after the TIFF premiere, “And that’s how I felt yesterday at the theater. Just for that short amount of time, you go to these events, you hold each other’s grief and anger and fear and shame in that short amount of time.”

September 9, 2025 0 comments
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Paul McCartney and Billie Eilish enjoy Oasis reunion tour in LA
Music

Paul McCartney and Billie Eilish enjoy Oasis reunion tour in LA

by jummy84 September 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Paul McCartney and Billie Eilish were among those attending the Oasis reunion tour stop in Los Angeles this weekend.

  • Read More: Oasis live in Cardiff review: a supersonic reunion for a new generation

The North American leg of the Oasis Live ‘25 tour rolled into the Rose Bowl Stadium for the first of two sold-out shows last night (September 6), with a host of famous faces, including Vince Vaughn, Leonardo DiCaprio, Salma Hayek, Kristen Stewart, Metallica‘s James Hetfield, Finneas, Eilish and McCartney in attendance.

The latter can be seen in clips on social media filming while Noel Gallagher sang ‘Little By Little’, with many noting he was the only one in his section who stood up throughout. In a separate clip, fans approached him as he left the venue and asked what he thought of the show, to which he replied: “Fabulous”.

As far back as 2015, Noel had joked that if McCartney wrote their comeback single, he’d be willing to discuss a reunion. The same year, he walked back comments he made to MTV, where he said Oasis were bigger than The Beatles, which McCartney said was the biggest mistake of their career.

Paul McCartney’s review of Oasis show at the Rose Bowl Stadium in Los Angeles 🇺🇸

📹 Joy Of Everything pic.twitter.com/eUyMMttjb4

— Oasis Planet (@OasisPlanet_) September 7, 2025

Paul McCartney, the only one standing in his section, taking a video of Noel Gallagher singing “Little By Little#OasisLive25 pic.twitter.com/YywZZXLJIt

— Oasis Mania (@OasisMania) September 7, 2025

Billie Eilish and her family at Oasis’ show in Los Angeles 🇺🇸

📸 @mrtphotog pic.twitter.com/7XXk2ymv3d

— Oasis Mania (@OasisMania) September 7, 2025

James Hetfield and Vince Vaughn at the Oasis concert in Los Angeles last night 🇺🇸

📸 Eric Rabbers pic.twitter.com/omB444B4d5

— Oasis Planet (@OasisPlanet_) September 7, 2025

“I thought, ‘So many people have said that, and it’s the kiss of death,‘” he said at the time. “Be bigger than The Beatles, but don’t say it. The minute you say it, everything you do from then on is going to be looked at in the light of that statement.”

Both brothers revere McCartney, with Liam fondly recalling a now infamous interaction they’d had while speaking to NME in 2017.

“I’ve met him a few times he’s been absolutely a dream,” he said. “The last time was at the Royal Albert Hall. He goes, ‘Why are you always in a rush? Sit down, sit down’. I sit down and he goes, ‘Do you like margaritas?’ I said, ‘Yeah, but I had something before I come out, I don’t eat at this time of night’.

“He said, ‘They’re fuckin’ drinks, you stupid prick’. I thought he was offering me a pizza.”

A previous stop on the North American leg took them to New Jersey’s MetLife Stadium, where they dedicated ‘Live Forever’ to the victims of the Minneapolis church shooting on the first night earlier this week.

Last Wednesday (August 27), a shooter targeted a group of people outside the Church of the Annunciation in Minneapolis before morning mass, killing two children and injuring eighteen others. The perpetrator then killed himself.

Oasis will next play dates in Pasadena and Mexico City before heading back for two extra shows at Wembley Stadium at the end of the month. They go on to play South Korea, Japan, Australia, Argentina, Chile and Brazil before the end of the year.

NME gave Oasis’ historic first comeback concert at Cardiff’s Principality Stadium a glowing five-star review, writing: “After a ‘90s heyday and an often maligned post-millennium era, this is Oasis redesigned for the 21st Century.”

“Playing before a pop-art-meets-psychedelia visual spectacular that never distracts but will look sick on a phone, they seem the quintessential stadium band playing the greatest hits of greatest hits.”

Noel also spoke recently about the “great” experience of being back on tour with his brother Liam, saying he had forgotten “how funny” he is, adding that he is “smashing it” and he is “proud of him”.

September 7, 2025 0 comments
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Paul Shaffer
TV & Streaming

Paul Shaffer Reacts to Late Show Cancellation at CBS

by jummy84 September 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Late Show With David Letterman bandleader Paul Shaffer is just as stunned as viewers are that CBS is canceling The Late Show With Stephen Colbert and the entire Late Show franchise.

“Shocking. Absolutely shocking,” Shaffer said of the decision in a recent Entertainment Weekly interview. “That’s all I can say. I mean, I don’t know what more to say about it. Stephen Colbert was absolutely number one.”

Shaffer was a CBS employee for decades, leading the CBS Orchestra and serving as David Letterman’s sidekick for the host’s entire Late Show run, from 1993 to 2015. Previously, Shaffer filled the same role on Letterman’s NBC show, Late Night With David Letterman, from 1982 to 1993.

And the musician thinks the end of The Late Show might indeed portend the end of late-night talk shows. “I wouldn’t be surprised if those doom-sayers that are saying it signifies the end of the Late Show-type of thing, you know, late night television, it’s over,” he told EW. “People will watch clips on their computers, and it all makes sense to me. I’m glad that I was in and out of there while the getting was good.”

Letterman, for his part, criticized his former network, saying on his YouTube channel that he doesn’t believe CBS’ claims that the decision to cancel the Late Show franchise was purely economic. He said CBS was showing “pure cowardice” following parent company Paramount’s $16 million payment to Donald Trump to settle the president’s lawsuit over CBS’ 60 Minutes.

“I think one day, if not today, the people at CBS who have manipulated and handled this are going to be embarrassed,” Letterman added. “This is gutless.”

Former Late Night host Conan O’Brien said at a Television Academy event last month (per The Hollywood Reporter) that “late night television as we have known it since around 1950 is going to disappear,” but he wasn’t concerned about Colbert. “Those voices are not going anywhere,” he explained. “People like Stephen Colbert are too talented and too essential to go away.”

But Jimmy Kimmel, ABC’s resident late-night host, thinks the post-11-p.m. segment of the television industry will survive. “Network television is declining. There’s no question about that,” he told Variety last month. “The idea that late-night is dead is simply untrue. People just aren’t watching it on network television in the numbers they used to — or live, for that matter. So the advertising model may be dying, but late-night television is the opposite.”

September 7, 2025 0 comments
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Paul Greengrass’s Intense Wildfire Drama
TV & Streaming

Paul Greengrass’s Intense Wildfire Drama

by jummy84 September 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Paul Greengrass and Blumhouse might seem like an odd mix, the former perhaps best known for his meticulous, sensitive docudramas, the latter most famous for low-budget, high-yield genre movies. But though it has its roots in the real world, The Lost Bus — the director’s first film since his 2020 Western News of the World — is arguably his first horror movie, made all the more frightening after the wildfires that swept California earlier this year. Based on real events, it’s a true story of heroism that took place in Northern California just six years earlier during what’s now known as the Camp David fire.

The beginnings of it are depicted in true disaster movie style, with ominous music and a collapsing electric pylon that causes a faulty cable to fall to the ground. The blaze starts small but soon catches hold, and these scenes are right up there in Greengrass’s wheelhouse. We see what looks very much like professional fire-fighters playing themselves, mapping out the path of the fire — or is several fires? — and arguing about the threat it poses. “I don’t think it’s an issue,” says one. “It should be fine.” Famous last words indeed.

It’s all theory at this point, and Greengrass incrementally introduces the reality of such a dangerous fire, and the first men to try to douse the flames soon realize they’re about to be fighting a losing battle. Going into the wildfire is a like a portal into another world; aside from the vicious heat, a constant rain of sparks flies through the smoke-choked air, and not only is hard to see, it’s hard to breathe. All of this is rendered with stunning ease by his VFX team, in scenes that look like a news bulletin from the apocalypse. In this sense, the film has two locations: the sleepy, sunshine town of Paradise and the fiery hellscape of Dante’s Inferno. The effect is jarring, giving the effect of night and day (indeed, it takes a while to realise that all of this happening simultaneously).

Paradise is where we meet Kevin McCay (Matthew McConaughey), a single father who has returned to his hometown from Reno after his father’s death. Kevin has started work as a bus driver but finds himself at the end of the list when shifts are handed out. This is why, as the fire is just about to spin out of control, he agrees to pick up 23 children stranded at Ponderosa Elementary School, plus their teacher Mary Ludwig (America Ferrera). The fire has knocked out the bus’s comms and tracking system — hence the film’s title — leaving Kevin to battle the elements using only his and Mary’s intuition and common sense.

McConaughey starts out in usual mode; this could be his character from Mud with a few extra dollars in his pocket. He lives in a tumbledown comfort with a sick dog, his ailing mother and his son Shaun (Levi McConaughey). His relationship with Shaun is fraught, to say the least. As we see in an early scene, Kevin’s attempts to be a dad are lacklustre at best, and it ends with Shaun shouting, “I f*cking hate you. I wish you were dead.” These words are still ringing in Kevin’s ears when the disaster strikes, and the blaze takes on a more personal significance, a metaphor for Kevin’s mental state as he enters purgatory.

As with all Greengrass’s films, though, this is a film about ordinary people in extraordinary circumstances, which is no doubt what drew him to Brad Ingelby’s very human script. Once the chips are down, though, McConaughey effortlessly switches up to action mode, and the film starts to resemble a fever dream of Speed. Alongside him, the scared but somehow quietly reassuring presence of America Ferrera leavens the potential for cliched action-hero theatrics by giving the film a rare but for once very real sense of peril. The same goes for Ashlie Atkinson as bus controller Ruby, whose very human guilt is palpable throughout.

That we know, or can safely assume, that the story worked out well for the kids does take away some of the intensity, as does the film’s determination to make this film a moral journey and not just an experiential thrill ride. Nevertheless, it’s a trip in more than one sense of the word, and yet another streaming release this year that demands to be seen on the big screen.

Title: The Lost Bus
Festival: Toronto (Special Presentations)
Director: Paul Greengrass
Screenwriters: Paul Greengrass and Brad Ingelsby
Cast: Matthew McConaughey, America Ferrera, Yul Vazquez, Ashlie Atkinson, Spencer Watson
Distributor: Apple TV+
Running time: 2 hr 9 mins

September 6, 2025 0 comments
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Sales So Far Out of Venice, TIFF, and Telluride
TV & Streaming

Paul McCartney Doc Man on the Run: Morgan Neville Interview

by jummy84 September 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Listening to documentarian Morgan Neville and actor Paul Mescal dive down the Paul McCartney rabbit hole at the Telluride brunch was one of my festival highlights. Both are McCartney experts at this point, as Mescal is returning to rehearsals in London to play Paul in the first of Sam Mendes’ four Beatles movies, and Neville has spent the last three years prepping “Man on the Run,” his post-Beatles portrait of McCartney as he created his solo albums and assembled the band Wings. When I was growing up in ’70s New York, I loved McCartney albums Cherry and Ram, but was never a Wings fan. Now I see how many of his catchy songs have seeped into the culture: I’m adding a bunch to my playlists.

'Wuthering Heights'

“Man on the Run” reveals an artist who must reinvent himself without the Beatles and with his great ally and love, Linda McCartney. But he never fell out of love with John Lennon.

This is a Q&A with Neville by documentary filmmaker David Wilson that took place after the film‘s second screening on September 1. (Full disclosure: My daughter works for Neville’s Tremolo Productions.)

This interview has been edited for clarity and brevity.

David Wilson: You’ve worked primarily in music films, although every time you make a film about music you’re coming at it from a different place. What role did music play in your life growing up?

Morgan Neville: A lot. We had a jukebox in my house. Lot of Beatles 45s. My dad was a music obsessive. He saw the Beatles in ’64 in Indianapolis. I started playing music. I formed my first band when I was 12. My wife and I played in a band together. I just love music. And I love the stories of music, too. And I have made a lot of music films, but to me, they’re all exploring some different thing I’m trying to find out about.

That is a through-line in your films. With all these different subjects, there’s a big idea you’re grappling with. Is that something you think about going in? Or it comes out as you make it?

It’s both for this one. When I first started thinking about it, I started reading that first interview Paul gave, which was the Q&A where he revealed that the Beatles were no more. And you see the woman handing that Q&A out to the press. And that last question: “What are you going to do next?” And he said, “My plan, my only plan, is to grow up.” And I thought, “That’s the question I want to start with. What does that mean when you’ve been a Beatle since you were 17, you’ve been a quarter of this entity that’s gone to outer space and back. And how do you be a person in the wake of that?”

Directors Scott Cooper and Morgan Neville at Telluride.
“Bruce Springsteen: Deliver Me” director Scott Cooper and Morgan Neville at the Telluride brunch. Anne Thompson

I’ve made a lot of biographical films. The films are always a form of therapy for me, and certainly for the subject. And with Paul, we could talk about that, trying to get him into a certain headspace. But the questions Paul was asking at that time were questions I was always wondering about: “How do you wrestle with your own legacy? How do you stay grounded in show business? How do you deal with being a parent and a father?” All these different questions that I grapple with all the time. So all that was resonating. So even though it’s Paul McCartney, who’s a genius to me, it was this guy who’s just an artist trying to find his way and trying to listen to his gut as much as he can. So “Mary Had a Little Lamb,” which is the flip side of “Mull of Kintyre,” they’re both crazy ideas. One turns out and one doesn’t, but it’s the same impulse, and I totally respect that fearlessness.

McCartney also talks about a quest for “personal peace.”

Yeah, and that quote at the end where Stella [McCartney] says, looking back on it, these were the happiest years of our lives? And I just sent my last child off to college 10 days ago. I get emotional even thinking about it. I don’t think anybody’s ever understood what Linda meant to Paul in all ways. And that’s what my wife means to me: having somebody who can be your wingman in every imaginable way, who has your back, is the greatest thing. That’s what you need to survive.

Had you met Paul before this project?

Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, George Harrison, John Lennon
Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, George Harrison, John LennonCourtesy Everett Collection

I met him once for a shoot on another documentary years ago. And then I met him again when we talked about the film, and he was, “Okay, this sounds great.” The first interview, we did in London at his office. He had a sound man in the Bates Studio in the basement. He said, “My guy will set up some mics.” So I show up, and there are two mics in this tiny love seat in his office. I’m sitting close. Okay, you have to forget it’s Paul McCartney and just go for it. And Paul’s great at helping you forget he’s Paul McCartney, because he’s been Paul McCartney for a very long time. For somebody like him, who’s been public for so long, who’s talked so much, to not do the jukebox of greatest hits, of things he says about albums or songs, and trying to really break that, was great.

I did many audio interviews, but I wanted to have conversations with him. So we started talking about ideas. We talked about painting, we talked about all different kinds of things, because I wanted to get him to be thinking and speaking in the present. That helped. He recognized in the conversations he would get carried away. We ended up having seven sessions of interviews over more than a year.

The Beatles are famously difficult interviews, right? Was there a moment with him, as you were in those sessions, where you thought, “Oh, this is something new. I’m getting a side of Paul that wasn’t there.”

I like to think so. When he would get excited about things, we were doing one interview at his house, and he’d run over to the piano and start playing, show me stuff. And then he’d go on about getting high with Fela Kuti. It was helpful to get him in a certain headspace. He hadn’t talked about Linda in any deep way in decades. I just showed the film two weeks ago. He had a little family screening with his family and all the grandchildren, and invited my wife and my son. All the grandkids are sitting in front of me. Stella’s son said, “I’ve never heard my grandmother’s voice before,” and that punched me. And then I heard another grandson say, “Grandpa went to jail?”

Was there a moment where you thought you would go all the way up to Linda’s death?

I always felt like that decade and the bookends of McCartney, one and two: leaving the Beatles and John’s passing, and running away from the Beatles and what he had done for that decade. And I definitely thought about Linda’s death and we played with it, but it just felt extraneous in a way that Linda did live on for another 17 years past this time. And when I showed Paul the film, he said, “I’m so glad that you left Linda at the end of the film like that.”

It’s something I’m piecing together from talking to Paul again just a couple weeks ago, in the beginning of the film where he said, “I thought myself as the bastard, when people blame me for all this.” He internalized it, and that period of ‘Let It Be,’ and then suing the band was so painful. And the “Get Back” project actually opened up something in him, saying it wasn’t all bad. Everybody said everything was horrible, but actually it was much more nuanced. There was love, there was tension. And that process of self-forgiveness was the reason this film happened: if that wasn’t that bad, maybe I should think about this other period that I’ve also pushed out of my head in a lot of ways. And that’s amazing that still 50 years later, that’s still going on.

The parallel love story here, obviously, is him and John. Do you think that “Get Back” experience opened up his ability to talk about him and John?

In watching ‘Get Back,’ which I devoured as soon as it came out, you see how much real love that he still has, to the point where John is in his life every day. And I’m not exaggerating. I have no doubt he thinks about John every day, if not many times a day. So it’s not something that’s distant to him. It’s something that he holds onto.

When you’re digging through an archive and trying to find something usable, and then this clip rises up to the surface, what were those clips for you?

God, there’s so many. Paul has an amazing archive. He married a photographer, so that was convenient, all of Linda’s negatives of that entire decade, which is just incredible. There are so many things in this film that have never been seen. And there’s so many tiny things from the way people talked about Paul in the press at the time. I love that little clip of the reporter going back to the Cavern Club to interview the young punk girl about the Beatles. The best thing is the home movies. Who documents themselves that much? Now, we maybe do with phones, but you see Paul filming with a 16 camera. And Linda’s taking pictures of Paul taking film of her.

There are so many great shots in this film of the actual construction of songs, where you’re in the studio, and you’re seeing them work through something. Was that something you specifically went looking for? How much did you want to have that behind the scenes?

I geek out on that stuff. And hearing the studio chatter. You can hear him orchestrating this stuff in his head in real time, which is what makes him Paul McCartney. And we have fragments of so many different songs in here. I loved the Beatles, but Wings were the band that were putting out albums when I was a kid, and that’s what I was buying. And I loved Wings. There’s so much interesting, good work through that decade that people don’t think about that much. He put out 10 records in 10 years. One of the happiest things was after I showed my son the film two weeks ago, I saw that he quietly added a whole bunch of Wings songs to his playlist on Spotify.

One of the joys was every three minutes there was hit after hit song that has been a part of the fabric of our world. Even if we didn’t identify with them the same way that we did with The Beatles.

We put that tiny snippet of “Wonderful Christmastime” in there, because in the midst of all that other stuff, that was a tiny single he threw out at the end of the year in 1979 which was a footnote, but a song that for better or worse we hear every year. It’s both the contextualizing and rediscovering of a lot of the songs we know, a deep dive, going through some of these records. And Ram is one of my favorite albums. It’s amazing how reviled that album was, again, you see the savage Rolling Stone review by Jon Landau, who went on to manage Bruce Springsteen. And now Ram is one of the top 500 Albums of All Time, according to Rolling Stone. So it’s that long game: Let’s not pay attention to what people want this week, this year. Let’s just make music that works for us.

How can people tell their friends to go see this?

Amazon/MGM bought the film and it’s not going to come out till February. Six months from now, hopefully you will hear all about it. We’re going to do a theatrical release, and then it will eventually stream. It’s coming.

September 4, 2025 0 comments
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Kneecap share hedonistic video for massive new Paul Hartnoll collab single 'Sayōnara' featuring Jamie-Lee O’Donnell from 'Derry Girls'
Music

Kneecap share hedonistic video for massive new Paul Hartnoll collab single ‘Sayōnara’ featuring Jamie-Lee O’Donnell from ‘Derry Girls’

by jummy84 September 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Kneecap have shared a new music for their massive new Paul Hartnoll collab single ‘Sayōnara’ featuring Derry Girls star Jamie-Lee O’Donnell – check it out below.

  • READ MORE: Kneecap: giving peace, protest and partying a chance

The Irish-language rap trio have today (September 2) shared the stand-alone track, which is written and recorded in collaboration with Orbital‘s Paul Hartnoll.

The track will also be available as a double A-sided 12” alongside the Kemi Badenoch-baiting summer anthem, ‘The Recap‘ – which got its live debut at their incendiary  Glastonbury 2025 set, along with ‘Sayōnara’ – and the band said fans had been “going mad for” it in mosh pits all summer.

The green vinyl variant, which was made exclusively available to fans with the band’s WhatsApp group, has now sold out, but the black variant is available to pre-order here now, and will be released on October 10.

The video, directed by Finn Keenan, features an appearance from O’Donnell, who is best known for her role as Michelle in Derry Girls. She plays an exasperated desk worker on a comedown who escapes the drudgery of the office in a van emblazoned with “Free Mo Chara”.

Speaking about her appearance in the video, Lee O’Donnell said filming it was “the best time”.

“Not only is it a massive banger of a track but the intense yet euphoric video is sure to be remembered,” she said. “The creativity and vision of director, Finn, created a fantastic environment for us all to create something really special. I was delighted to have been asked to be involved in this project especially as I am already a huge fan of Kneecap’s music and an admirer of their work overall.”

Director Keenan added that the “intensity” of the video was intended to reflect the aftermath of a mad night out.

“Through conversations with the band, we also wanted to nod to Belfast’s rave history” he added. “In the ’90s, raves weren’t just parties — they were acts of resistance, dangerous but vital spaces where Catholics and Protestants could go to be together and dance.

“That spirit is what fuels the scene of Jamie Lee driving the pimped-up Kneecap Land Rover across the city — a kind of rave Pied Piper, spreading the idea that art, music, and creativity can break down the metaphorical walls which are often stronger than the physical ones. Pent up anger and frustration are released through dance instead of turning into hate.”

Jamie-Lee O’Donnell, in Kneecap’s ‘Sayōnara’ video. CREDIT: PRESS

The new video arrives just after Kneecap played the main stage of Co Laois festival Electric Festival on Saturday (August 30). Their set was held just days after festival boss Melvin Benn confirmed there would be no censorship of their performance amid the intense scrutiny they’ve faced over their critique of Israel and vocal support of Palestine.

At the show, the band used their set to accuse the Irish government of being “complicit in genocide” over Israeli war bonds, and projected the message “They [Israel] are now starving the people of Gaza to death.”

Just before that gig, which saw “50,000 Fenians” sing back to the band in Irish, the group were forced to cancel their sold-out 2025 US headline tour. That update came shortly after Mo Chara’s terrorism case was adjourned until next month at his second court hearing at Westminster Magistrates’ Court in London last Wednesday (August 20).

The terrorism charges were levelled against him in May for allegedly displaying a Hezbollah flag on stage at a London show last November. The rapper is yet to enter a plea, but has denied any wrongdoing. Chara (real name Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh) first appeared in court in June, when he was released on unconditional bail.

Chara’s lawyers are seeking to throw out the case, arguing that the terror charge against him was brought outside the time limit. They claim that it was brought a day after the six-month limit for such charges. Prosecutors, however, say the charge was brought exactly within the required time limit.

Last year, Kneecap spoke to NME for their time on The Cover and shed light on the decision to rap in their native tongue. “There’s still a post-colonial hangover of colonisers telling us that our language is useless and that we’re not progressive,” Móglaí Bap said, while DJ Provaí added: “People have been told that for the last 100 years.”

They also discussed their “Brits Out” chant from their 2019 gig at Belfast’s Empire – the day after the Prince and Princess of Wales had stood on the very same stage. “If you’re from Ireland, you understand that it means nothing to do with citizens or people who identify as British,” Mo Chara said. “It’s a term used during The Troubles about getting the British government and British soldiers out of Ireland. That was it; it was a political thing.”

Check out the full Cover story with Kneecap here.

September 2, 2025 0 comments
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Paul Mescal & Jessie Buckley Rip Your Heart Out
TV & Streaming

Paul Mescal & Jessie Buckley Rip Your Heart Out

by jummy84 August 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Adapted from Maggie O’Farrell’s 2020 novel of the same name, “Hamnet” is an emotionally pulverizing drama that imagines how the death of William Shakespeare and Anne (or Agnes) Hathaway’s only son might have inspired the creation of his greatest tragedy; think of it as “Shakespeare in Agony.” And yet the violent beauty of this film, which rips your soul out of your chest so completely that its seismic grief almost feels like falling in love or becoming a parent, is that it’s as much about the experience of having a child as it is about the experience of losing one. 

More to the point, “Hamnet” is a wrenching story about how those two experiences — so unalike in dignity — might ultimately be catalyzed by the same process of emotional transfiguration. In the first, your heart is placed into someone else’s body. In the second, that body is subsumed into the world. To create anything, be it a person or a play, is to give a piece of yourself a life of its own; a life that you will never again be able to control or keep safe. It’s to risk the infinite potential of an offering over the unborn reality of an idea, and to accept how even something that looks just like you can grow to assume unimaginable shapes. The author dies so that their work can be reborn anew forever.

Ask E. Jean
Oscar Isaac, Guillermo del Toro and Jacob Elordi attend the 'Frankenstein' photocall during the 82nd Venice International Film Festival on August 30, 2025 in Venice, Italy.

In that light, one of the great strengths of O’Farrell’s novel is how the lightly historical context it invents around “Hamlet” refuses to align with the play’s general plot and most obvious themes, and Chloé Zhao’s film — which she co-wrote with the author — respects how that 2+2=5 approach begs for a different kind of equation. Unlike “Shakespeare in Love” (a masterpiece), “Solo: A Star Wars Story” (not so much), or any other examples of modern day origin stories, “Hamnet” doesn’t reverse engineer its drama from the stuff of its ultra-familiar source material. Sure, there’s a brief aside in which Will (Paul Mescal) jots down the balcony scene from “Romeo and Juliet” after his first kiss with Agnes (Jessie Buckley), and a later moment where their three children roleplay as the witches from “Macbeth” on some gray English morning, but never does this movie rely on the lizard-brain thrill of recognition in order to stand on the shoulders of giants. 

On the contrary, “Hamnet” derives its simple but overwhelming power from the disconnect between intention and response; it’s a film that plants its roots in the liminal space between them, and keenly observes how the same kind of no man’s land can form between a husband and a wife just as easily as it does between an artist and their work. By that measure, it would be hard to imagine a more fitting tribute to Shakespeare’s most widely interpreted play.  

When the story begins in 1580, Will and Agnes are both arrestingly self-assured. He’s a poor and scruffy Latin tutor whose interest in words, words, words makes him a “useless” disappointment to his domineering father (like Agnes’ severe mother-in-law played by Emily Watson, Will’s father isn’t hateful toward his eldest child so much as he is afraid to love him, lest the world decide to take him back). She’s a mystical “forest witch” whose fascination with falconry — and broader attraction to communing with the non-human world — makes her stand out from her family even more than the blood red dress she wears in a world of medieval gray. Will abandons his students at the first sight of Agnes walking by the classroom window, and the two of them are sucking faces a minute later. She makes him feel giddy, and he makes her feel destined. (Will proposes to Agnes by circling her like a child playing duck, duck, goose, a funny bit of blocking in a film that’s always careful to let enough light shine through its potentially oppressive darkness). They each see a vision of the world in the other.

Needless to say, Zhao’s signature naturalism serves Agnes well. We first see her curled up in the tree hollow where she’ll eventually give birth to her eldest daughter, and the elemental nature of Łukasz Żal’s cinematography allows her to retain that sense of earthiness wherever she goes. By a similar token, that stark visual language — complicated by Zhao’s stately framing and related inclination toward surveillance-like interior shots that suggest the presence of a ghost looking down — helps to disabuse the drama of any potential staginess. Ditto the plainspoken dialogue, the wind that groans outside the Shakespeare family’s house like an empty stomach, and the delicate Max Richter score that doesn’t intrude on the drama until the film’s nuclear-grade sobfest of a finale, which skirts dangerously close to emotional pornography as Zhao cues up the composer’s most famous track. (Tear-jerkers come and go, but it’s rare to see a movie that feels like it’s farming you for moisture.)  

Anyway, for a fictionalized story about famous historical figures, “Hamnet” is uncommonly attuned to the base immediacy of their feelings. With actors like these at Zhao’s disposal, it would have been a tremendous waste for the movie to focus on anything else. Anchored by the primordial rawness of Buckley’s astonishing performance, “Hamnet” is never the least bit at risk of reducing Agnes to a trope. If anything, the film regards her as an even more powerful creative force than her husband; Will scribbles plays offscreen while Agnes sweats, screams on all fours, and shouts at the fates as she gives birth to their three children.

The kids grow up to embody the best of their parents, with Zhao paying special attention to the bond between twins Hamnet and Judith (Jacobi Jupe and Olivia Lynes, both terrific), who play together by swapping identities and trying to fool their parents. It’s a fun Shakespearean flourish, of course, but one that lingers here for the casual sense of transference that it seeds for the semi-fantastical heartache that follows when Hamnet volunteers to absorb his sister’s plague. Without exaggeration, the image of the cherubic eight-year-old boy standing lost in the bardo against a backdrop of painted trees is among the most devastating things that I’ve ever seen in a movie (where did he go?), and I spent the remaining hour of “Hamnet” feeling as if the weight of death itself were crushing down on my chest. 

Zhao is careful not to gild the lily (that “On the Nature of Daylight” needledrop notwithstanding), but her Shakespeare doesn’t exactly need a lot of runway to make his loss feel like your own. Between “Aftersun,” “All of Us Strangers,” and the upcoming “The History of Sound,” no actor in the last five years has made me cry more than Paul Mescal — not because he’s so fucking good at playing wounded, but rather because he’s even better at playing the hurt of someone who doesn’t know how to heal themselves. 

His performance in “Hamnet” is so cathartically transcendent because it at last rewards that search, a search that here extends beyond this world — if not the Globe — as Will starts looking for his son in the space between life and death. The pliability of English drama’s most famous speech allows the suicidal dilemma of “To be, or not to be” to double as an invitation to reject its binary proposition, as the movie doesn’t invoke it until it’s clear that — so far as his increasingly estranged parents are concerned — poor Hamnet is being and not being all at once. He isn’t there, but he isn’t not there either. “He can’t have just vanished,” she and her too-absent husband both agree, though they have very different ideas as to where he might have gone. 

If “Hamlet” is typically considered to be a revenge story first and foremost, the extraordinary final sequence of Zhao’s film (which is much less open to interpretation), maps a different meaning onto “the undiscovered country” that lies beyond this mortal coil — one that may not align with Shakespeare’s intention, but nevertheless hears a resonant stir of echoes in the silence at the end of the show. Hamlet and Hamnet may sound very different to our ears, but as the film’s opening title card reminds us, they were interchangeable names at the time.

As we see “Hamlet” performed for the first time with Agnes and her brother (Joe Alwyn) in the audience after months of not speaking to Will, the play metamorphosizes before our eyes into a vehicle for mutual communion between the griefstricken parents. Will’s agony takes brilliant and uncontrollable new shape on the stage of the theater, while Agnes’ heartache is given the conduit it so urgently needs by virtue of how she projects her own pain onto the performance. 

Just as Hamlet begs Horatio to live on and tell his story, “Hamlet” finds Will pleading with Hamnet to do the same. This tragedy may not be the fate that either the playwright nor his wife ever wanted to imagine for their only son, but his story was never theirs to tell, nor could it ever hope to mean as much to anyone else. Because of “Hamlet,” that angel-faced little boy will die again a million times over for centuries to come. But in that sleep of death and what dreams may come, he will be reborn just as often, his memory rendered eternal across a more brilliant future than even William Shakespeare could have written for him.

Grade: A-

“Hamnet” premiered at the 2025 Telluride Film Festival. Focus Features will release it in theaters on Thursday, November 27.

Want to stay up to date on IndieWire’s film reviews and critical thoughts? Subscribe here to our newly launched newsletter, In Review by David Ehrlich, in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the best new reviews and streaming picks along with some exclusive musings — all only available to subscribers.

August 31, 2025 0 comments
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Jessie Buckley & Paul Mescal in Chloe Zhao's 'Hamnet' Teaser Trailer
Hollywood

Jessie Buckley & Paul Mescal in Chloe Zhao’s ‘Hamnet’ Teaser Trailer

by jummy84 August 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Jessie Buckley & Paul Mescal in Chloe Zhao’s ‘Hamnet’ Teaser Trailer

by Alex Billington
August 26, 2025
Source: YouTube

“What do you see?” “He will live…” Focus Features has unveiled the teaser trailer for the film Hamnet, a highly anticipated new film coming up this awards season. Hamnet is the latest feature directed by Oscar-winner Chloé Zhao, following her work on Marvel’s Eternals, this is her getting back to making something more meaningful and intimate. Hamnet tells the powerful story of love and loss that inspired the creation of Shakespeare’s timeless masterpiece, Hamlet. Jessie Buckley stars as Agnes Shakespeare, Paul Mescal as William Shakespeare set in the 16th century. It’s telling the story of Agnes – the wife of William Shakespeare – as she struggles to come to terms with the loss of her only son, Hamnet. A human and heart-stopping story as the backdrop to the creation of Shakespeare’s most famous play, Hamlet. TIFF describes it as a look at how The Bard was not a cold genius, he was “a real man whose literary prowess was irrevocably impacted by his domestic life.” The cast includes Joe Alwyn, Emily Watson, Jacobi Jupe, Jack Shalloo, David Wilmot. With a gorgeous new score by Max Richter which can be heard briefly in this teaser. This looks stunning! It’s going to be a very emotional story that will break us all down into tears. A must watch trailer.

Here’s the first teaser trailer for Chloé Zhao’s new film Hamnet, direct from Focus Features’ YouTube:

Hamnet Teaser Trailer

Hamnet Teaser Trailer

Intro via TIFF: “In William Shakespeare’s day, the names Hamlet & Hamnet were interchangeable. The newest film by Chloé Zhao uses that context as the basis for a tender exploration of Shakespeare’s domestic life, connecting a family tragedy to one of his most famous works. Maybe we can better understand Hamlet, Zhao suggests, if we consider that it was developed while the most famous writer in the Western canon was mourning the death of his 11-year-old son, Hamnet. Based on the novel by Maggie O’Farrell, Hamnet’s main character isn’t The Bard — played here by an impressive Paul Mescal — or even the child who gives the film its name. Hamnet belongs to Agnes – Shakespeare’s thoughtful wife, played by an enthralling Jessie Buckley, who bathes the film in her warmth. Many historical accounts preface reports of Hamnet’s death with statistics about how common child mortality was in the 16th century, as though it barely made an impact. Hamnet rejects that premise, showing Shakespeare not as a distant, untouchable genius but as a real man whose literary prowess was irrevocably impacted by his domestic [family] life.“

Hamnet is directed by the Oscar-winning Chinese filmmaker Chloé Zhao, director of the films Songs My Brothers Taught Me, The Rider, Nomadland, and Marvel’s Eternals previously. The screenplay is written by Maggie O’Farrell and Chloe Zhao; adapted from Maggie O’Farrell’s book also titled “Hamnet”. Produced by Liza Marshall, Pippa Harris, Nicolas Gonda, Sam Mendes, Steven Spielberg. This is premiering at the 2025 Telluride & Toronto Film Festivals this fall. Focus Features will then debut Chloe Zhao’s Hamnet film in select US theaters starting November 27th, 2025, on Thursday, Thanksgiving Day, later this year before a wide expansion in more theaters in December. Stay tuned for updates. Looking good? Who wants to watch?

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August 27, 2025 0 comments
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First Look at Will Sharpe, Paul Bettany in Sky Series
TV & Streaming

First Look at Will Sharpe, Paul Bettany in Sky Series

by jummy84 August 21, 2025
written by jummy84

Will Sharpe is musical prodigy Wolfgang ‘Amadeus’ Mozart in a new photos from the upcoming show Amadeus.

Sky released a first look at the limited series on Thursday with Paul Bettany starring as envious court composer Antonio Salieri and Gabrielle Creevy as Constanze Weber, Mozart’s fiercely loyal wife.

Based on Peter Shaffer’s award-winning stage play, and adapted by Joe Barton (Black Doves, Giri/Haji, The Lazarus Project), the five-part reimagination explores the meteoric rise and mythic downfall of one of history’s most iconic composers — and rockstar virtuoso of the 18th century, Wolfgang ‘Amadeus’ Mozart.

When twenty-five-year-old Amadeus arrives in bustling 18th-century Vienna, no longer a child prodigy and craving creative freedom, his world collides with two pivotal figures: his fiercely loyal future wife, Constanze Weber, and devoutly religious court composer, Antonio Salieri.

Paul Bettany as envious court composer Antonio Salieri in ‘Amadeus’.

Sky Studios

Gabrielle Creevy as Constanze Weber, Mozart’s fiercely loyal wife in Sky’s ‘Amadeus’.

“As Amadeus’ brilliance continues to flourish in spite of his personal demons, a questionable reputation and scepticism from the conservative court, Salieri becomes increasingly tormented by this apparent divine gift,” a plot synopsis reads. “Amadeus is a threat to all that he holds dear in life: his talent, his reputation, even his faith in God, Salieri vows to bring him down. What begins as professional rivalry turns into a deeply personal obsession spanning 30 years, culminating in a murder confession and a desperate attempt to entwine himself with Mozart’s legacy forever.”

Rory Kinnear, Lucy Cohu, Jonathan Aris, Ényì Okoronkwo, Da Ponte, Jessica Alexander, Hugh Sachs, Paul Bazely, Rupert Vansittart, Anastasia Martin, Nancy Farino, Olivia-Mai Barrett, Viola Prettejohn and Jyuddah Jaymes also star.

Amadeus is produced by Two Cities Television (part of STV Studios) in association with Sky Studios. Megan Spanjian is EP for Sky Studios. Michael Jackson (Patrick Melrose) and Stephen Wright (Blue Lights) are EPs for Two Cities Television. The series EP is John Griffin. Julian Farino (Giri/Haji) and Alice Seabright (Chloe, Sex Education) will serve as directors. Barton, Sharpe, Bettany and Farino also serve as EPs. Seabright also serves as co-EP.

NBCUniversal Global TV Distribution handle international sales of the series on behalf of Sky Studios. 

August 21, 2025 0 comments
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