More from Behind Bridgerton: Sophie's Fairy Tale. A clip of Yerin and Luke filming the masquerade ball scene and talking about their acting process. ✨

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More from Behind Bridgerton: Sophie's Fairy Tale. A clip of Yerin and Luke filming the masquerade ball scene and talking about their acting process. ✨
Julianne Moore for CULTURED
“I think there’s a misnomer that what we do is unconscious. It’s always conscious. When you’re an actor, you’re reading the script to get a sense of the character, but you’re also thinking, How does she move? How does she speak? How does she see herself? How does she want the world to see her? There can be a sense of allowing things to happen to you [on a set], but you’ve done a lot of preparation to get there. Actors are very, very aware of what they’re creating.”
Interview by: Raven Smith Photography: Cass BirdStylist: Studio&
Kingsley Ben-Adir has become very familiar to television audiences from his appearances on the Netflix drama The OA and the BBC series Peaky Blinders, along with a breakout role as Malcolm X in the acclaimed film One Night In Miami... Now, he's back on the big screen playing another larger than life role, starring as legendary reggae artist Bob Marley in the new biopic Bob Marley: One Love. As he did with Malcolm X and with his role as President Barack Obama in the miniseries The Comey Rule, Ben-Adir spoke about how he took a very distinct approach to playing a real-life character like Marley and explained his process.
Bob Marley: One Love opens in theaters on February 14.
The Virtue of Scandal
Richard Redgrave The Governess oil painting, 1844. Detail. Victoria and Albert Museum, London “You’re a governess?” To save her younger brother from poverty and her country from invasion, Simone must sound like anything but an English governess. The audiobook version of Barbara Metzger’s Regency Romance THE SCANDALOUS LIFE OF A TRUE LADY is now available on Audible UK, Audible US, Amazon and…
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Love: Anton.
“Anyone that has a creative bone in their body can relate to him and will be inspired to do more.” As the documentary Love, Antosha comes to streaming services, filmmaker Garret Price talks to us about his directorial debut, and what made Anton Yelchin a once-in-a-generation talent.
When Star Trek star and indie film hero Anton Yelchin died in a tragic accident in June 2016 he was just 27 years of age. At the time, he had been preparing his directorial debut, Travis. The feature-length documentary Love, Antosha isn’t interested in exploring Yelchin’s death, however. It is a film about his life, about his boundless talent, which would have led to a long and varied creative career, and about the effect he had on his fellow cast and crew, including Kristen Stewart, Chris Pine and the late Martin Landau.
The deep well of footage in the film was collected throughout Anton’s life by his parents, the Russian-Jewish couple Irina Korina and Viktor Yelchin. They were star figure-skaters for the Leningrad Ice Ballet for fifteen years, before migrating to America to escape religious persecution. Anton was terribly close to his parents and the film takes its title from the sign-off he used in his affectionate letters to his mother.
Love, Antosha premiered to glowing praise from fans and film lovers at the 2019 Sundance Film Festival and again upon its August cinematic release. “This is the only time I’ve fully sobbed in theaters,” Letterboxd member Steven Thomas wrote. While “it [may] not be reinventing the wheel or doing anything new” said Mitchell Beaupre, “it is a really touching and impactful tribute to a tremendous actor, and by all accounts a tremendous person.”
Yelchin’s parents first approached director Drake Doremus to make the documentary, because he had grown close to Anton after the Sundance 2011 smash Like Crazy. Doremus, whose new film Endings, Beginnings had its world premiere at TIFF 2019, felt the project needed a more objective eye. He pulled in Garret Price—primarily known as a film editor for documentaries such as The Director and the Jedi and Janis: Little Girl Blue—with the idea that it would be the perfect project for Price’s first time as a director.
We talked to Garret Price on the eve of the film’s streaming launch.
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Acting is not Pretending
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