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Tag: daniel radcliffe

  • ‘Harry Potter’ Characters Easily Have the Most WTF Haircuts

    Whether you’re a fan of the ‘Harry Potter’ franchise or not, you have to look at these characters and be able to appreciate the “fuck me up, bro” haircuts they all rock at one point or another.

    We’ve got just about everything under the sun. Bangs, mullets, mop-tops, you name it. But perhaps the funniest part about this entire gallery is that there were professional costume designers and makeup artists who literally made these decisions.

    I don’t care if you’re a wizard, a witch, professor, or pureblood. Fix your shit!

    Zach

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  • A new Harry Potter, Hermione Granger and Ron Weasley want to tell you a story

    LONDON (AP) — If you listen carefully, you can hear the noise of chocolate frogs flying through the air on the Hogwarts Express.

    Hermione Granger gasps with delight as Ron Weasley catches the sweet treat thrown his way by Harry Potter, as all three travel home after an eventful first year at the wizarding school.

    This isn’t the now-vintage, Daniel Radcliffe-era movies, it’s not the “Cursed Child” play and neither is it the forthcoming HBO TV series. What you’re hearing is a brand-new cast in a new Audible recording of J.K. Rowling’s seven books.

    The legacy of Harry Potter might have been clouded by headlines surrounding Rowling’s comments on gender and opposition to trans rights, but it hasn’t stopped production on new projects set in the wizarding universe. The Associated Press visited the London recording studio for a “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone” session in the summer, as young actors Frankie Treadaway, Max Lester and Arabella Stanton lay down walla — background noise that’s used to bring the stories to life. The young trio voice Harry, Ron and Hermione in the first three audiobook adaptations, before an older cast takes over.

    Instead of listening to someone like Jim Dale or Stephen Fry telling the whole story alone, this new audio production — the first book releases Nov. 4 — has a full, high-wattage cast. While Cush Jumbo narrates, Hugh Laurie is Albus Dumbledore, Riz Ahmed portrays Professor Snape and Michelle Gomez brings Professor McGonagall’s Scottish lilt to life. Matthew Macfadyen voices Voldemort, and Keira Knightley appears later in the series as Dolores Umbridge.

    But it’s Stanton who is pulling double duty in the Potterverse: The 11-year-old is also starring as the studious and brave Hermione Granger in the HBO show.

    “I can’t say much, because they’ve cast a Mimblewimble tongue-tying spell on me,” Stanton apologizes. “But I’ve just started filming, and it’s great at the moment.”

    AP sat down with Treadaway, 14, Lester, 13, and Stanton to find out the snacks required to keep them going, their introductions to the wizarding world and how they feel about acting. The conversation has been edited for clarity and brevity.

    AP: What were the auditions like?

    TREADAWAY (Harry): You really got like, a taste of what it was going to be like, also in the studio and even the scenes.

    AP: Had you done anything like this before?

    LESTER (Ron): I did some audio before, yeah, but I mean nothing as professional as this is.

    AP: How does this compare to your stage work?

    STANTON (Hermione): It’s just very, very different, but I suppose the similar thing is that, because you want to make your voice come alive, I think you … sort of act as you’re saying the lines to give the words some color.

    AP: How’s the recording going so far?

    LESTER: Lovely people, great food and great experience.

    AP: What’s your favorite food when you’re working?

    TREADAWAY: The snack cupboard and the chocolate fridge.

    LESTER: The chocolate fridge is dedicated to chocolate.

    STANTON: It’s filled with snacks.

    TREADAWAY: They have to restock every time I go.

    AP: Can you remember the first time you ever heard about Harry Potter?

    TREADAWAY: I think it might have been when my sister was watching the movies chronologically and then for some reason I only decided to tag along for the last one.

    AP: Did you go back to the beginning?

    TREADAWAY: I don’t think I did, because I was like, “Oh, I can’t watch this, this is a 12 (rating),” so I had to wait till I was 12 to watch them.

    STANTON:  My friends had started all reading all the books and everything and they were like, “Oh have you heard Harry Potter this, Harry Potter that?” And so I was like, right I’m going to start reading the books. So I think when I was 8 I started reading the first one. Sort of just worked my way through them and yeah it was great, I’ve loved Harry Potter. I love it.

    LESTER: I saw this book in Waterstones and everyone said that it was quite popular. It was like one of the bestsellers. So my mum bought it for me and I read the book and it was just great.

    AP: So what do your friends and family think about you voicing these characters? Have you been able to tell them?

    LESTER: I haven’t really told many of them, not really.

    TREADAWAY: I think those who know will never truly know actually what it’s about until they listen to it.

    STANTON: I think I’ve told quite close family, sort of keeping it in a bubble. But they’ll never really understand because so much effort — I mean, the teams, all the amazing people behind it, they put in so much effort to make the audio series incredible.

    AP: Have you got a favorite part of the stories?

    TREADAWAY: I can’t wait to hear how the battle scenes work because of all the SFX and all the sounds and all of the grunts and oohs and ahs and all that because I think that will sound really cinematic. … It was very weird because I would stand there for a minute just grunting and I would feel so stupid.

    STANTON: I can’t wait to hear all the spells because I think Hermione generally just says so many spells and I can’t wait to hear the sounds of people casting them, I just love spells.

    LESTER: My favorite part that I’m looking forward to is just literally just to hear it all come together and for everyone to talk to each other because I feel like that’s going to be amazing.

    AP: Are you like your characters in any way?

    TREADAWAY: That’s how I found it quite easy to just step into the character because I think I relate to them and I’m sure you guys do as well. … I’m not like the biggest ego ever. … Sometimes you’re the smaller person in the room and you just sometimes just mingle. I feel like I relate to Harry in that way.

    AP: How about you and Hermione?

    STANTON: I love books. I love writing, I love reading, I love doing all that kind of stuff. I mean, I like school, but I don’t love school. And I think … books is the main connection between Hermione and I.

    AP: How are you like Ron?

    LESTER: I think we both relate to each other because we’re quite cheeky and we love food. We love food! … In moments, we’re both serious and we’re also not afraid to stand up for the people that we love or stand up for our friends because we always do the thing that’s right, and that’s kind of what I relate to, because I go into the deeper side of Ron, and not just the eating food and being cheeky.

    AP: What’s your favorite kind of magical element?

    LESTER: My favorite kind of magical element is the spells. I think they’re just really cool. Like “stupefy” (the stunning spell) — I think that’s very, very cool.

    STANTON: One of the main props that Hermione uses is the Time Turner. I love all the magical objects like the Invisibility Cloak, the Time Turner, all those things because … (they’re) things you wouldn’t be able to use in real life, but in the magic world, it transports you into a completely different world.

    TREADAWAY: The Polyjuice Potion, because when you record that, it’s like, you have to really hone in on the actual sound of turning into someone else, and that was one of my favorite magic parts of it.

    AP: Are you aware of how much love there is for Harry Potter?

    TREADAWAY: I guess that’s sort of why you have a bit of pride in yourself knowing that such a big name and characters, you get to associate yourself with them. If you know what I mean, it gives you a little feeling inside your heart.

    AP: What does it mean for you to be representing Ron?

    LESTER: It makes me proud, honestly, to be representing such a great and funny character, but then also, I don’t know, it just makes me … feel a part of this community.

    AP: And how about you, representing Hermione?

    STANTON: I’ve dreamt of that since a really young age, and I’ve always looked up to all of the people who played Hermione, like Emma Watson and all those people.

    AP: Are you aware how huge it is around the world?

    TREADAWAY: I don’t think we’ll really feel that until it comes out, I guess, because that just makes it more unreal.

    LESTER: It’s so popular around the world, which makes it more unreal that so many people are going to be interested in this and we don’t even realize it, yeah, we can’t even process this.

    AP: So is acting the way forward for you now? Would you like to continue doing this?

    TREADAWAY: Yeah, definitely — I mean on this, it never really felt like pushing yourself to do something, it wasn’t work, it felt like an enjoyable experience and you’ve got something to see at the end of it.

    STANTON: I’d love to act, yeah, definitely. And I think, like Frankie said, I mean, just being part of the audio series is incredible. And yeah, can’t wait to do more.

    LESTER: I think it is for me because I always say it’s not work if you do something that you love and, honestly, I love acting so much. It makes me feel happy and it makes me feel like my true self and … I think it is the way forward just to keep going and do a lot of jobs, hopefully.

    AP: And you’re all bonded now aren’t you?

    ALL: Yeah.

    LESTER: The proper trio.

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  • Mom-to-Be Lea Michele Poses WIth Daniel Radcliffe and Jonathan Groff Backstage Post Their Tony Wins: SEE PIC

    Mom-to-Be Lea Michele Poses WIth Daniel Radcliffe and Jonathan Groff Backstage Post Their Tony Wins: SEE PIC

      Hi there! I’m Sweta Choudhury, a 25-year-old from Assam who has always had a passion for expressing

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  • Inside the Star-Studded Tony Awards Afterparties

    Inside the Star-Studded Tony Awards Afterparties

    Daniel Radcliffe with some of his Merrily costars. Andy Henderson

    Lincoln Center was abuzz with celebrity star-studded parties after the 77th Annual Tony Awards Sunday night and Observer was there to witness all the excitement. Across the street from the David H. Koch Theater where the award show was held for the first time, Best Play winner Stereophonic held its party at PJ Clarke’s. When the telecast ended after 11 p.m., guests from inside the 2,500-seat theater quickly filled the restaurant. The crowd cheered as newly minted Tony Award-winning director Daniel Aukin walked in. Sliced steak, salmon and Caesar salad were served along with cocktails with clever names like the mezcal-infused “Mud F*ck”—a nod to the play. Aukin made his way downstairs where he sat down at a round table in a corner with friends and family to eat dinner. Next door at Rosa Mexicano, The Outsiders celebrated its Tony Award win for Best Musical, where producer Angelina Jolie also made an appearance.

    SEE ALSO: The Best Red Carpet Fashion from the 2024 Tony Awards

    A few blocks south at Shops at Columbus Circle, Water for Elephants held its party on the fifth floor at Jazz on Lincoln Center, and Merrily We Roll Along, which won Best Revival of a Musical, celebrated in the Ascent Lounge. Guests were treated to the “Our Thyme” cocktail made with Grey Goose Vodka infused with thyme, elderflower liqueur and watermelon juice as a DJ kicked off the evening with “September” by Earth, Wind & Fire. The young children in the cast were allowed to stay up well past their bedtimes and were dancing up a storm. In a separate roped-off area, Lindsay Mendez and Daniel Radcliffe snapped photos with his new trophy.

    A group of people dancing at a partyA group of people dancing at a party
    The cast of Water For Elephants celebrating. The cast of Water For Elephants

    For the third year in a row, some of the biggest stars of the night attended Late Night at Pebble Bar, the annual Tony afterparty at the 132-year-old institution in Rockefeller Center. Best Actress nominee Kelli O’Hara and Arian Moayed, nominated last year, hosted the festivities with cocktails by Pernod Ricard—the “Moon Unit Zappa” was a spicy pineapple margarita with Código 1530 Blanco Tequila.

    A man in black sits with a woman in a green gownA man in black sits with a woman in a green gown
    Billy Porter and Mary Martha Ford. Rupert Ramsay/BFA.com

    Billy Porter was one of the first people on the fourth floor to start dancing, then we spotted him later talking to O’Hara, dressed in a stunning hot pink peplum gown. Porter’s found phone was a notable addition to the scene—he’d mentioned on TV earlier in the evening during his acceptance speech for the prestigious Isabelle Stevenson Award that he couldn’t find it.

    Sarah Paulson at the Carlyle. Little Fang

    All eyes in the room turned round as winner Sarah Paulson holding her Tony and her Appropriate co-stars Corey Stoll, Ella Fanning and Ella Beatty walked in and went straight to the bar. Paulson, who changed for the parties into a black slinky ensemble with silver swirl embellishments, took numerous photos with the group before they all noshed on Brooklyn-based Fini pizza topped with Petrossian Caviar. On the other side of the room was Stoll’s West Side Story co-star Brian D’Arcy James chatting it up with Leslie Odom Jr., while his wife Nicolette Robinson sparkled in her strapless glimmery gold A-Line gown among the sundry guests. At around 2 a.m., Elle Fanning headed for the elevator—this was her first Tony Awards ceremony. “I just wanted Sarah Paulson to win,” she was overheard saying on her way out. She said she had to catch an early flight to Norway for work the next morning.

    After the individual parties wrap, everyone who’s anyone winds up at the legendary Rick Miramontez DKC/O&M and John Gore after-afterparty at the Carlyle Hotel.

    Shaina Taub with her Tonys at the Carlyle. Little Fang

    Host Ariana DeBose, wearing the same dress she ended the telecast in, was spotted sitting along a long velour couch gabbing with Julianne Hough, who co-hosted the 6:30 p.m. show on Pluto. Two-time winner for Suffs, Shaina Taub, held a Tony in each hand, leaving her no way to carry a purse or phone. Stereophonic star Sarah Pigeon held her heels in her hand as she strolled through the hotel lobby and into Bemelmans Bar. That’s where Daniel Radcliffe, still holding his Tony, and his Merrily co-star Jonathan Groff were, too, and they were spotted taking in their victories together. Groff, who won Best Actor in a Musical, surprised the crowd and sang “Old Friends” from the show with Billy Stritch on piano. Shrimp cocktail, sliders and mini quiche were among the passed hors d’oeuvres.

    On the second floor, a chef was making fresh omelets. In the next room, Ashley Park danced with her former Mean Girls co-star Jonalyn Saxer to Destiny’s Child “Bills, Bills, Bills,” then walked over to the bar for a soda before grabbing a group and heading downstairs.

    A woman in a black dress poses with a man in a blazer in front of a creepy red lightA woman in a black dress poses with a man in a blazer in front of a creepy red light
    Alicia Keys and Roy Nachum, co-founder and creative director of Mercer Labs, at the Hells Kitchen afterparty. Mercer

    While the Hell’s Kitchen’s party was held all the way in the financial district at Mercer Labs, many in the cast made a point to still show face on the Upper East Side, including winner Kecia Lewis and her nominated co-star Shoshana Bean. Kara Young, who won a Tony Award after being nominated three years in a row, arrived around 2:30 a.m. and changed into a sequin copper mini dress so as not to ruin her long, flowy, green award show gown (someone might have stepped on it). Billy Eichner mosied around the party, too.

    At 3:45 a.m., Groff made his way outside with a group of friends posing for photos outside the hotel as other guests waited for their Ubers, and most of us called it a night.

    Eddie Redmayne

    Eddie Redmayne. Little Fang

    Grant Gustin and LA Thoma Gustin

    Grant Gustin and LA Thoma Gustin. Marcus Middleton

    Sue Wagner

    Sue Wagner. Valerie Terranova Photography

    Sarah Pidgeon

    Sarah Pidgeon. Valerie Terranova Photography

    Elle Fanning and Natalie Gold

    Two women sit closely on a chairTwo women sit closely on a chair
    Elle Fanning and Natalie Gold. Rupert Ramsay/BFA.com

    Kelli O’Hara and Leslie Odom Jr.

    A woman in a pink dress stands with a man in a white suitA woman in a pink dress stands with a man in a white suit
    Kelli O’Hara and Leslie Odom Jr. Rupert Ramsay/BFA.com

    Lindsay Mendez

    Lindsay Mendez. Andy Henderson

    Will Brill

    Will Brill. Little Fang

    Eli Gelb and Sarah Pidgeon

    Eli Gelb and Sarah Pidgeon. Valerie Terranova Photography

    Observer correspondent Leigh Scheps with her husband

    A woman in a silver dress poses with a man in a tuxA woman in a silver dress poses with a man in a tux
    Observer correspondent Leigh Scheps with her husband. Rupert Ramsay/BFA.com

    Inside the Star-Studded Tony Awards Afterparties

    Leigh Scheps

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  • Argylle, Matthew Vaughn’s “Layer Cake” of a Movie Still Not Ultimately as Layered as The Lost City

    Argylle, Matthew Vaughn’s “Layer Cake” of a Movie Still Not Ultimately as Layered as The Lost City


    Upon watching the first thirty-five seconds of the trailer for Argylle, it doesn’t take fans of 2022’s The Lost City very long to immediately spot a certain glaring correlation between the latter and the former. Right down to Argylle’s, spy novel author, Elly Conway (Bryce Dallas Howard, not to be confused with Jessica Chastain, who once starred in a Matthew Vaughn-written movie called The Debt), being extremely introverted and “married to her work.” While The Lost City’s Loretta Sage (Sandra Bullock) might not have a cat she’s devoted to the way Elly is (another extremely gimmicky element of the movie), she embodies, for all intents and purposes, the same “lonely cat lady” trope. Where Loretta has a pushy manager, Beth Hatten (Da’Vine Joy Randolph), hounding her to finish the book so she can start her tour of it, Elly has her pushy mother, Ruth Conway (Catherine O’Hara), to make her write a different ending to the final installment in the Argylle series. 

    After reading the finale to the book, Ruth insists that Elly owes her readers more than that. Just like Dash McMahon a.k.a. Alan (Channing Tatum), the cover model for Loretta’s books, insists that she owes it to her readers to keep the Lovemore series—steeped in the erotic romance-adventure genre—going, even though she announces her plans to end it. Like Elly, she’s run out of things to say…and she also just thinks the books are generally schlocky, and not representative in the least of her true intelligence. The same ultimately goes for Elly, after Argylle’s screenwriter, Jason Fuchs, throws in an amnesia plotline that will eventually reveal Elly is an untapped reserve of far more intelligence than she lets on. An “alter ego” that will inevitably lead to her wearing an atrocious sequined gold dress that she doesn’t quite rock with the same panache as Loretta with her fuchsia sequined jumpsuit (on loan, of course). 

    Loretta’s own intelligence, too, has been suppressed in favor of using her archaeology degree to make the main character in her series seem more “believable.” Even though there is nothing believable about an archaeologist named Dr. Lovemore. An archaeologist named Dr. Sage, on the other hand, slightly more so. Alas, Loretta no longer pursues her archaeological ambitions “legitimately.” And that’s been making her feel like enough of a sham lately to call it quits on the erotic novel front. Stuck on the last chapter, just as Elly is with her own final installment in the Argylle series, Loretta decides to slap together an ending, much to Alan’s dismay. Not just because it puts him out of a job, but because he has a long-time crush on Loretta and losing proximity/access to her, however rare, is a bitter pill to swallow. Loretta, of course, couldn’t be more oblivious to his affections…in the same mousy, bookish manner that Elly is oblivious to the fondness Aidan Wilde (Sam Rockwell) has for her when he initially approaches her on a train under the guise of being a “regular Joe.” 

    Turns out, he’s there to save her from the bevy of fellow spies on the train (a concept that itself reeks of the banal Brad Pitt movie, Bullet Train) out to kidnap her for, what else, her savvy spy mind. As displayed with unexpected perspicacity and foresight in the books she’s written. Foresight that is so accurate, as a matter of fact, that the top/most dangerous spy organization in the world, the Division, truly believes she’s the only one who can find what (or rather, who) they’re looking for. In the same fashion, Abigail Fairfax (Daniel Radcliffe), the man who kidnaps Loretta in The Lost City, does so because, as he reminds her, “Your fictional archaeologist was making real translations of a dead language. Something no one else has been able to do.” He then reminds her that she was once a young college student doing her dissertation on the lost language that will lead Abigail to the Crown of Fire, a valuable yet priceless treasure that has thus far only been the stuff of lore. Until Loretta gave Abigail hope that she could crack the code to finding it. 

    Aidan, too, hopes that Elly can use her unique writer’s brain to tap into some arcane spy knowledge that will lead them to the British hacker who holds the Masterkey (better known as a USB drive) with all the damning evidence against the Division and its corrupt members. And, naturally, because Vaughn expects us to believe that Elly is just that shrewd (along with a lot of other things we’re supposed to “just believe”), she effortlessly figures out how to find him as she and Aidan embark on an increasingly dangerous, unexpected and all-over-the-map (literally and figuratively) journey. Which, yes, is precisely what happens in The Lost City. Except the hijinks that ensue once Loretta is kidnapped (also forced to take a plane she doesn’t want to get on, as is the case with Elly) are at least far more humorous and endearing to watch unfold (not to mention much less filled with so much expository dialogue).

    Maybe this is because one knows that The Lost City isn’t trying to be everything to everyone. Doesn’t seek to extend beyond the confines of its rom-com adventure genre. One that mimics the spirit of 80s classics like Romancing the Stone and the various Indiana Jones movies of that decade. This being what The Lost City does as well, and yet with just a dash more credibility and a tone that is far less “look how clever we, the writer and director, are.” Goddamn, they’re acting like they’re capable of the kind of artful meta plotline that was present in Scream. Unfortunately, that’s not the scenario.

    In any event, even The Lost City couldn’t fully melt the hearts of critics like Manohla Dargis, who wrote at the time of the film’s release: “The Lost City remains a copy of a copy.” One supposes that makes Argylle a copy of a copy of a copy. And not a very well-executed one at that. Not half as well-made as The Lost City anyway, a film that has apparently stoked a rash of imitators in the genre, including the J. Lo atrocity that was Shotgun Wedding

    Perhaps the sudden increased interest in spy and/or action-adventure rom-coms is a sign of the times, what with a reboot of Mr. and Mrs. Smith in TV series format also occurring this year. Whatever that sign is, it doesn’t exactly bode well for the “new Cold War”…or the hooey content of movies like Argylle.



    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Daniel Radcliffe Partners Up With ‘Harry Potter’ Stunt Double Who Was Paralyzed After ‘Deathly Hallows’ Accident for Doc

    Daniel Radcliffe Partners Up With ‘Harry Potter’ Stunt Double Who Was Paralyzed After ‘Deathly Hallows’ Accident for Doc

    Daniel Radcliffe is partnering up with David Holmes, his longtime stunt double in the Harry Potter films, to create a documentary based on his life.

    Holmes was brought onto the film franchise ahead of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone and, over the course of 10 years, he and Radcliffe formed an “inextricable bond.” However, in the penultimate film, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1, Holmes had a tragic accident on set that left him paralyzed after a spinal injury.

    “As Daniel and his closest stunt colleagues rally to support David and his family in their moment of need, it is David’s extraordinary spirit of resilience that becomes their greatest source of strength and inspiration,” Warner Bros. Discovery said in a statement about the documentary, which is directed by Dan Hartley (Lad: A Yorkshire Story).

    The statement continued, “Featuring candid personal footage shot over the last decade, behind-the-scenes material from Holmes’ stunt work, scenes of his current life and intimate interviews with David, Daniel Radcliffe, friends, family and former crew, the film also reflects universal themes of living with adversity, growing up, forging identities in an uncertain world and the bonds that bind us together and lift us up.”

    David Holmes: The Boy Who Lived marks the most recent collaboration between the stunt double and the actor. The pair launched a podcast in 2020 called Cunning Stunts, in which they speak to notable stunt performers in the industry and break down some of the biggest action scenes in films.

    The project is produced by HBO Documentary Films in association with Sky Studios and Lightbox/Ripple Productions. Simon Chinn, Jonathan Chinn, Vanessa Davies and Amy Stares serve as producers, with Radcliffe, Holmes, Hartley, Sue Latimer and Sarah Spahovic executive producing. HBO’s EP includes Nancy Abraham, Lisa Heller and Tina Nguyen, and Poppy Dixon EPs for Sky Studios.

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  • Vanity Fair’s “It’s Raining Teens” Cover at 20: Where Are They Now?

    Vanity Fair’s “It’s Raining Teens” Cover at 20: Where Are They Now?

    See what cover stars Lindsay Lohan, Hilary Duff, the Olsen twins, and more have been up to since their iconic VF photo spread.

    Savannah Walsh

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  • Daniel Radcliffe Reveals Sex Of First Baby With Erin Darke

    Daniel Radcliffe Reveals Sex Of First Baby With Erin Darke

    By Mona Khalifeh‍, ETOnline.com.

    Daniel Radcliffe is a proud dad to… a baby boy!

    Radcliffe and his girlfriend, Erin Darke, welcomed the little one — their first child together — back in April but had yet to reveal the sex of their baby until now. While speaking to ET’s Denny Directo ahead of the season 4 premiere of Radcliffe’s TBS series, “Miracle Workers”, the “Harry Potter” alum gushed over life as a new dad.

    “It’s great. It’s crazy and intense, but he’s wonderful and Erin is amazing — it’s a real privilege also to have this time with him,” Radcliffe gushed. “I was always going to take some time off, which not everyone is able to do, and so I’m able to kind of just be here with him a lot, which is lovely.”

    He added, “So, we’re having a great time.”

    While their baby boy is only a few months old, Radcliffe said the newborn will be a factor in the projects he takes going forward.

    “I think it certainly will. It hasn’t really yet affected things, but I really like spending time with him, and I think I’m gonna miss him when I go back to work later in the year,” Radcliffe shared. “So, I will definitely be I think a bit more selective — not more selective, I’ve always been selective, but I think I’ll probably work a little bit less for the next few years.”

    “I’ll never be stopping. I don’t think that’s good for me either,” he continued.

    As for his current project, “Miracle Workers”, Radcliffe said the best part about participating in the anthology series is “awesome.”

    “It’s one of the reasons I wanted to do the show to begin with,” Radcliffe said. “It was always intended to be this anthology series where we once we had blazed by the source material in the first season, we just like jumped around and did different comedy stuff in different settings every year.”

    He continued of the comedy, which this season takes place in a post-apocalyptic world, “It’s the joy of it, is [that] you get to come back and do something different each time, and see what everyone else is doing that’s new and wonderful and crazy. And so this season was very, very good for that, as everyone’s doing I think very, very different stuff.”

    “Miracle Workers: End Times” premieres July 10 on TBS.

    MORE FROM ET:

    Daniel Radcliffe Welcomes First Child With Girlfriend Erin Darke

    Chrissy Teigen, Tina Fey, Daniel Radcliffe Star in New Animated Series

    Daniel Radcliffe and Girlfriend Erin Darke Expecting First Child

    Click to View Gallery

    Celebs Who Welcomed Babies In 2023




    Becca Longmire

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  • Daniel Radcliffe confirms birth of 1st child with girlfriend Erin Darke – National | Globalnews.ca

    Daniel Radcliffe confirms birth of 1st child with girlfriend Erin Darke – National | Globalnews.ca

    Beloved actor Daniel Radcliffe, who many of us still think of as a little kid, is officially a dad.

    A spokesperson for Radcliffe, 33, confirmed he and his longtime girlfriend Erin Darke, 38, have welcomed their first child together.

    News of the Harry Potter actor’s new role as a parent came after he and Darke were seen pushing a baby stroller in New York City on Monday. The baby’s name, birthday and sex are not publicly known.

    Radcliffe, who is notoriously private about his personal life, last year alluded to the fact that Darke may be pregnant.

    In an October interview with Newsweek, Radcliffe said he did not want his children to be famous and would prefer if they aspired to work behind the scenes in the film industry.

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    “I would love them to be around film sets,” Radcliffe told the outlet. “A dream would be for them to come onto a film set and be like, ‘God, you know, I’d love to be in the art department. I’d love to be something in the crew.’

    “Film sets are wonderful places,” he continued. “I think a lot of the time it can be wonderful for kids. But it’s really the fame side of it that should be avoided at all costs.”

    Radcliffe said last year that he and Darke, who is also an actor, have been together for nearly a decade. They met on the set of Kill Your Darlings in 2013, which saw Radcliffe play the American poet Allen Ginsberg.

    Radcliffe is best known for his 10-year portrayal of the Boy Who Lived in the immensely popular Harry Potter franchise.


    Click to play video: 'Coronavirus outbreak: Daniel Radcliffe joins other celebs for online reading of ‘Harry Potter’'


    Coronavirus outbreak: Daniel Radcliffe joins other celebs for online reading of ‘Harry Potter’


    More recently, he was nominated for a BAFTA for his titular role in the biopic Weird: The Al Yankovic Story. 

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    Darke, who was born in Michigan, is best known for playing Cindy Reston in the 2015 TV series Good Girl Revolt. She has also appeared in The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, Dietland and Love & Mercy. 

    &copy 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

    Sarah Do Couto

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  • Daniel Radcliffe and Longtime Partner Erin Darke Are Expecting First Child

    Daniel Radcliffe and Longtime Partner Erin Darke Are Expecting First Child

    Congratulations are in order for Daniel Radcliffe and Erin Darke. The couple is expecting the birth of their first child, as per The Hollywood Reporter, although the due date remains unclear. British tabloid The Sun quoted “a source” who said that Darke “can’t hide her bump anymore.” V.F. has reached out for further comment.

    Radcliffe, 33, and Darke, 38, first met during the 2012 production of the Beat Generation origin tale Kill Your Darlings, and have been together since. The two keep a pretty low profile considering his household name status. The London-born Harry Potter star has no social media presence, once explaining “if I did, you all would be waking up to stories like ‘Dan Radcliffe gets into fight with random person on Twitter.’” The Michigan-born Darke has a private Instagram and a Twitter account that is mostly (forgive me) dark. 

    In 2019, he described first meeting his future partner while portraying Allen Ginsburg in Kill Your Darlings. “It’ll be a hell of a story to tell our kids one day because of what our characters do with each other,” he said, describing the lewd act the two actors shared on screen. “That’s how we met. That was the beginning of our beautiful relationship.”

    He went on to say (rather poignantly!) that he tends to swat away questions about “how was it like to grow up on film?” because all the “private moments where you grow up were off-camera—apart from meeting the girl who is the love of my life. It is genuinely preserved on film [when] our characters are meeting and flirting with each other.” He called it a “sweet record.” Who doesn’t love this guy?!?!?

    In addition to Kill Your Darlings, Darke can be seen in the films Love & Mercy, Still Alice, and Don’t Think Twice, and several episodes of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, where she played one of Midge’s coworkers at B. Altman & Company. 

    In December 2022, Radcliffe starred in a revival of Stephen Sondheim’s Merrily We Roll Along at the New York Theater Workshop, one of the city’s most prominent off-Broadway venues. The New York Times praised the production, and noted that the actor “seem[ed] to have written a Bible of back story, giving wild spins to every line that help send the song into orbit.” In November, he starred in Weird, a musical biopic parody portraying the life of American musical legend “Weird Al” Yankovic. V.F.’s review said, “Radcliffe’s zeal for the role is contagious.”

    Jordan Hoffman

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  • Video: ‘Weird: The Al Yankovic Story’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    Video: ‘Weird: The Al Yankovic Story’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    The director and co-writer Eric Appel narrates a sequence from his film, featuring Daniel Radcliffe as Weird Al Yankovic.

    Mekado Murphy

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  • ‘Weird’ Does What It Says On the Box: It’s Pretty Weird

    ‘Weird’ Does What It Says On the Box: It’s Pretty Weird

    One really has to work at it to dislike “Weird Al” Yankovic. The accordion-wielding musician who somehow became an icon of the 1980s and 90s with his moronic parody versions of popular songs is largely impervious to criticism. He’s annoying, you say? No duh, would be the appropriate response. And after decades of delighting fans (and wrenching begrudging chuckles out of others) there are few performers more deserving of a career-topping victory lap.

    Weird: The Al Yankovic Story is a light and amusing romp very in much in tune with the dorky-and-proud aesthetic that has made its subject an unlikely household name. It’s also about as real of a movie as a “Weird Al” album is real music. I mean, sure, there are images on screen, just like instruments were put to tape, but for heaven’s sake let’s not scrutinize the craft in this too heavily. It’s a collection of jokes, some a little more clever than others, but when that’s done well, it’s well enough. Plus some polka.

    Co-written and co-produced by Yankovic himself (his first significant exercise in motion pictures since his daffy 1989 sketch collection UHF) the low-budget faux-biopic has two tremendous aces up its sleeve. Firstly, it has zero interest in telling you the actual Al Yankovic story; any honest-to-polka facts about the parodist’s life that made it into the movie seem to be purely coincidental. (It only takes a few minutes before that’s abundantly clear, with Toby Huss as Papa Yankovic beating the snot out of a traveling accordion salesman for trying to bring “the devil’s squeeze box” into his home.) Second, there’s Yankovic passing the signature Bermuda shirt, enormous glasses, and shag of curly hair to Daniel Radcliffe.

    Radcliffe’s zeal for the role is contagious. He’s basically doing an extended Saturday Night Live appearance, but he commands your attention as the driven song parodist who becomes a multi-platinum-selling artist with the ego and platinum jewelry to match. Many of the story beats follow typical musical biopics (indeed, this whole project began as a fake trailer that Yankovic used to psych up the audience on tour) so there’s an added level of parody here. Alas, one can not help but compare Weird at times to Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story, but the fact is that occasionally Weird tells the truth. “My Bologna,” Yankovic’s parody of The Knack’s “My Sharona” was, indeed, recorded in a bathroom for its good acoustics.

    While Weird (and Yankovic’s career) has one foot in the extremely popular—Evan Rachel Wood is very funny as Madonna, who, in this version of reality, becomes Yankovic’s lover/puppet master/eventual…well, you’ll see—it maintains a tight connection to its MAD magazine roots. Like this year’s Funny Pages, which reminds viewers that, until only very recently, comic books were for outcasts only, Weird is a nice window into a pop culture freakshow of a mostly gone era. Yankovic’s real-life mentor, Dr. Demento (a DJ, not a doctor), played by Rainn Wilson, is hilarious as the ringleader of a band of social reprobates. A party scene is a who’s who of comics and celebs portraying legends: Conan O’Brien as Andy Warhol is just one of about a dozen.

    While Weird goes down easy (and has a few out-of-nowhere zings that really kill) it does drag at times. I mean, has anyone listened to an entire “Weird Al” album in one sitting? The polka medleys are great, but eventually, they get tiresome. A tangent in which “Weird Al” and Madonna race off to fight Pablo Escobar is a great moment to head into the kitchen to see if there’s any leftover rocky road.

    It’s also perfectly “Weird Al” that this movie should be released by The Roku Channel, current home to all the orphaned Quibi content. (Seriously.) At first blush this may sound quite limiting—as if Yankovic’s 1984 breakout In 3-D were only available on 8-track—but this is apparently not the case. A publicist has assured me that one need not have a Roku device to watch the movie, all you need to do is go to their website. You don’t even have to set up an account if you don’t want to. (And there will be ads in there either way.)

    To be honest, that’s a shame. You should need a special talisman of sorts, like a decoder ring, or knowledge of the secrets from a MAD fold-in, to gain access. Like the young Alfie Yankovic secretly tuning in to Dr. Demento on his transistor radio, the idea of misfit moths working a little extra-hard to find this weird flame is the effort that’s missing in a lot of comedy these days. And it’s what drove “Weird Al” to become the … whatever the heck it is that he eventually became. You don’t need to be a fan of the accordion-toting Yankovic to get some enjoyment and laughs out of the gleefully absurd Weird, but it sure wouldn’t hurt either.

    Jordan Hoffman

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  • Daniel Radcliffe Gets Nostalgic Over Late ‘Harry Potter’ Actor Robbie Coltrane

    Daniel Radcliffe Gets Nostalgic Over Late ‘Harry Potter’ Actor Robbie Coltrane

    By Zach Seemayer, ETOnline.com.

    Looking back with love and good memories. Daniel Radcliffe is reflecting on his time with the late Robbie Coltrane on the set of the “Harry Potter” franchise.

    Radcliffe, 33, walked the carpet at the New York City premiere of his new film, “Weird: The Al Yankovic Story”, at the Alamo Drafthouse in Brooklyn on Tuesday, and he spoke with ET about the beloved actor, who played Rubeus Hagrid in the celebrated series of films.

    “Honestly, just Robbie was incredibly funny, and when you’re a young kid on a set you can get bored, and I think Robbie just recognized that we needed to kind of be entertained a little bit, at first,” recalled Radcliffe — who was just 12 when filming the first Harry Potter film.

    “He was incredibly funny, with accents, impressions, and just, he was lovely with us,” Radcliffe added with a smile.

    The Scottish actor died on Oct. 14 at a hospital near Falkirk in Scotland. According to NBC News, Coltrane had been ill for the past few years, and wasn’t active recently when it came to acting.

    While speaking with ET on Tuesday, Radcliffe also opened up about his new film, “Weird: The Al Yankovic Story”, in which he portrays a largely fictionalized version of the famed accordion-toting parody musician.

    Radcliffe admitted that, while he’d heard some of Yankovic’s iconic comedy songs in his childhood, he didn’t really get into them until he was truly introduced by his girlfriend, Erin Darke, and her family.

    “I probably heard some of his songs when I was a teenager first, but when I really got into it was when I started dating my girlfriend about 10 years ago,” he shared. “Her and her whole family are like devoted and obsessed Weird Al fans.”

    Given that, it seems like Radcliffe playing the musician would get him some real points with his girlfriend’s family, but the actor cautioned, “They haven’t seen it yet, so we’ll see.”

    ‘But if they like it, then yeah! That’ll be great,” he added. “I got genuinely nervous when I was like, ‘Oh, I’m gonna have to tell them I’m playing Weird Al.’”

    “Weird: The Al Yankovic Story” — which also stars Evan Rachel Wood and Rainn Wilson — premieres exclusively on Roku Nov. 4.

    MORE FROM ET:

    Daniel Radcliffe on Getting Weird Al’s Approval in New Biopic

    Robbie Coltrane Dead at 72: ‘Harry Potter’ Stars Pay Tribute

    Daniel Radcliffe Opens Up About His ‘Really Supportive’ Parents

    Daniel Radcliffe on the Surprising People Who Inspire Him to Stay Fit

    Brent Furdyk

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  • Daniel Radcliffe On Getting Weird Al’s Approval In New Biopic (Exclusive)

    Daniel Radcliffe On Getting Weird Al’s Approval In New Biopic (Exclusive)

    By Meredith B. Kile‍ , ETOnline.com.

    Daniel Radcliffe and Evan Rachel Wood know there’s no shame in being weird!

    The stars of the new biopic, “Weird: The Al Yankovic Story”, sat down with ET, as well as the film’s writer and director, Eric Appel, to extol the benefits of identifying as “weird.”

    “I have for a long time, I feel like,” Radcliffe admitted, though he added jokingly, “It’s definitely been confirmed by the last few years of everyone being like, ‘You have weird taste in movies, everything you do is weird!’”

    “My child tells me I’m weird all the time, but makes sure that I know they consider that a compliment,” Wood agreed, giving credit to 9-year-old Jack. “And I do take it as a compliment.”


    READ MORE:
    Daniel Radcliffe Reveals the Surprising People Who Inspired Him to Stay Fit for Shirtless Weird Al Scenes

    Appel co-wrote the movie with “Weird” Al Yankovic himself — describing it as “a satire of the biopic format itself” — so what does the ultimate satirist think of his on-screen portrayal?

    “He refuses to watch it,” Wood joked.

    In reality, Appel said, “He’s over the moon about it. He loves it, he loves how it turned out.”

    “He was there on set every day, he was incredibly involved in the shoot,” Radcliffe raved.

    The “Harry Potter” star undertook some serious training for the part — not just for his many shirtless scenes, but also to try and master Weird Al’s favourite instrument, the accordion.

    “I was very lucky to have a friend with a lot of time at that moment who was self-taught on the accordion,” he said, sharing that his friend’s lessons and diagrams were slightly easier to follow than the legend himself.


    READ MORE:
    ‘Weird: The Al Yankovic Story’ Trailer: See Daniel Radcliffe’s Transformation to Portray the Musician

    “Al has lost a bit of perspective on how bad it’s possible to be on the accordion,” he said with a laugh. “Because he’s really good at it, so he just like, was doing it, and I was like, ‘OK, I’m gonna pretend I can see what your fingers are doing.’”

    Wood plays Madonna in the film, a role she says she’s been training for for many years.

    “I have been dressing up like Madonna and singing her songs since I was a kid,” she shared. “I actually got caught skipping school once — I faked sick so I could stay home, just so I could lip sync to “Like a Prayer” all day… So yes, I’ve been preparing for this my whole life.”

    “I told Eric when we started, I was like, ‘I know that this is a comedy, but I am going to give you my best Madonna if I can help it,’” she added.

    And apart from the Queen of Pop, there are a few real-life celeb cameos in the film that will thrill viewers — thanks to Al himself!


    READ MORE:
    Evan Rachel Wood Thinks Madonna Will Get a Kick Out of Weird Al Movie (Exclusive)

    “I mean, Al has a thick Rolodex,” Appel shared. “Every comedy personality you love has probably a mutual admiration for Weird Al, so he made a lot of phone calls and got a lot of very quick yeses from friends of his. It was exciting getting those texts for me. Five minutes after he asked, ‘Yeah they’re asking when they have to show up.’”

    “I still hear from people that are disappointed that they weren’t in the movie,” Wood added.

    “Weird: The Al Yankovic Story” premieres exclusively on the Roku Channel Nov. 4.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Nx8z2Ov1w4

    More From ET: 

    ‘Special Forces’ Star Mark Billingham Recalls Being Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt’s Bodyguard (Exclusive)

    ‘Candyman’: Tony Todd, Virginia Madsen on Those Bees and Film’s Racial Impact 30 Years Later (Exclusive)

    ‘Tell Me Lies’: Grace Van Patten Breaks Down Shocking Finale Twists (Exclusive)

     

    Melissa Romualdi

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  • ‘Harry Potter’ star Daniel Radcliffe pays tribute to Robbie Coltrane: ‘One of the funniest people I’ve met’ | CNN

    ‘Harry Potter’ star Daniel Radcliffe pays tribute to Robbie Coltrane: ‘One of the funniest people I’ve met’ | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    Stars from the “Harry Potter” universe are paying tribute to Hogwart’s resident gentle half-giant, Robbie Coltrane, who died on Friday.

    In a statement provided to CNN by a representative, Daniel Radcliffe called Coltrane, 72 – who played Hagrid in the “Harry Potter” film franchise – “one of the funniest people I’ve met” and recalled how the actor “used to keep us laughing constantly as kids on the set.”

    “I’ve especially fond memories of him keeping our spirits up on ‘Prisoner of Azkaban,’ when we were all hiding from the torrential rain for hours in Hagrid’s hut and he was telling stories and cracking jokes to keep morale up,” Radcliffe said, making reference to the third film. “I feel incredibly lucky that I got to meet and work with him and very sad that he’s passed. He was an incredible actor and a lovely man.”

    Emma Watson, who played Hermione Granger in the franchise, also honored her late costar on Friday in an Instagram Story.

    “Robbie was the most fun uncle I’ve ever had,” she wrote, underneath a photo of the pair. “His talent was so immense it made sense he played a giant – he could fill ANY space with his brilliance,” she later added. “Robbie, if I ever get to be so kind as you were to me on a film set I promise I’ll do it in your name and memory,” Watson continued, going on to say how Coltrane “made us a family.”

    Tom Felton, who famously portrayed Draco Malfoy in the “Harry Potter” movies, also posted to Instagram in honor of Coltrane, writing on Friday, “One of my fondest memories of filming Harry Potter was a night shoot on the first film in the forbidden forest. I was 12. Robbie cared & looked after everyone around of him. Effortlessly. And made them laugh. Effortlessly. He was a big friendly giant on screen but even more so In real life.”

    Coltrane, too, shared fond memories of working with the film’s young stars in a recent HBO Max special, “Harry Potter 20th Anniversary: Return to Hogwarts.” (CNN and HBO are both part of Warner Bros. Discovery.)

    “Watching them grow up was kind of like watching your own kids growing up, you know? Because you were sort of protecting them,” he said. “I was always astonished at how fearless they were.”

    “Harry Potter” author J.K. Rowling wrote on Twitter: “I’ll never know anyone remotely like Robbie again. He was an incredible talent, a complete one off, and I was beyond fortunate to know him, work with him and laugh my head off with him. I send my love and deepest condolences to his family, above all his children.”

    And Warwick Davis, who played Professor Filius Flitwick and the goblin Griphook in the films, remembered Coltrane as someone who was “always jovial” and “brought warmth, light and laughter to any set he walked on to.”

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