David Warner: The first 25 years, a biography
@piterelizabethdevries @thealmightyemprex @professorlehnsherr-almashy @princesssarisa @amalthea9

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David Warner: The first 25 years, a biography
@piterelizabethdevries @thealmightyemprex @professorlehnsherr-almashy @princesssarisa @amalthea9
Happy 81st birthday dear David Warner
I wish you still a happy birthday, to give you a smile wherever your soul rests.
💞💖🎂🎉💖💞🎂🎉
@ariel-seagull-wings @parxsisburning
Cindy Morgan, David Warner.
1981
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@piterelizabethdevries
David Warner in Wing Commander (1999)
@piterelizabethdevries
@superkingofpriderock @metropolitan-mutant-of-ark @the-blue-fairie @amalthea9 @princesssarisa @parxsisburning
So my first memory of seeing David's face and learning his name was watching the BBC three part documentary A History of Horror with Mark Gatiss, where he was interviewed to talk about two horror movies he was in: the 1974 anthology From Beyond the Grave, where he sayed that the appeal of the anthology movies was: 1° They were a job; 2° They were quick, and the more well known 1976 evil child thriller The Omen, where he sayed that he lost his severed head at divorce.
Seeing the interview to the doc, i tought "Huh, i like him, he is humble, straight to the point, and has a good sense of humour".
Them i watched the first season of Penny Dreadful, only knowing that it was a crossover of classic gothic monsters, and them who appears as Van Helsing?
My reaction?
"Oh hey, it's that guy from A History of Horror! Indeed he is a good actor"!
And them later i heard of the 1968 film adaptation of a Midsummer Night's Dream that had an aclaimed Ian Holm as Puck, and went to the movie expecting only to see this.
Here is whom i found again:
So basically my introduction was finding him when i wasn't expecting to find him.
"Shoot what i've seen, killed what i didn't seen", as it goes a brazilian saying.
And my reaction was: "Okay sir, you win. Now you have become one of my favorite actors, i will have to purposely search your other works, and i will forever crush and fangirl over you".
And the best part was finding a comunity online that also admired his work and in some cases also finded him atractive right away, so now i knew i wouldn't feel as a lonely weirdow.
So thank you David Warner, for your funny interviews, your great work as an actor, for your handsome eyes, and for providing me a great comunity of artists and friends.
I wanted to draw David Warner’s Hamlet in his honor. So here’s the artwork! Thank you!
“Good night, sweet Prince. Flights of angels sing thee to thy rest.”
@ariel-seagull-wings @parxsisburning