Friday, 20 November 2015

Keith Michell (1926 - 2015)

A farewell to actor Keith Michell who sadly passed away today.

 

Keith Michell (as Henry VIII) and Charlotte Rampling (as Anne Boleyn)
from the film Henry VIII and His Six Wives (1972)




Keith Michell with the cast of Henry VIII and His Six Wives.
From bottom left clockwise: Jane Asher (Jane Seymour), Jenny Bos (Anne of Cleves),
Frances Cuka (Catherine of Aragon), Charlotte Rampling (Anne Boleyn),
Barbara Leigh-Hunt (Catherine Parr), and Lynne Frederick (Catherine Howard).
 


Saturday, 19 September 2015

Keith Michell sings!

With modern day ballads on one side, and Tudor compositions on the other.



Wednesday, 9 September 2015

The lovely Charlotte Rampling

As Anne Boleyn in the film Henry VIII and His Six Wives (1972):

 


 


Sunday, 16 August 2015

Who ya gonna call?! GHOSTBUSTERS!

 
 

Is this the ghost of Anne Boleyn? Visitor to beheaded Queen's childhood home spots ghoulish hand in a castle corridor

By Jenny Awford for MailOnline
Published:  3 August 2015 
 
 
  • Liam Archer, 26, claims to have captured ghost of Anne Boleyn on camera
  • He took a picture of fireplace at queen's childhood home Hever Castle
  • When he got home he spotted ghoulish hand pointing towards chimney
  • He is convinced it is spirit of beheaded queen who is said to haunt castle
 

A tourist who visited the childhood home of beheaded queen Anne Boleyn has captured a creepy image of what he claims is her ghost stalking the corridors.
 
Liam Archer, 26, was exploring Hever Castle in Kent with his family when he took the picture which appears to show a ghoulish hand hovering in the left hand side of the frame.
 
He spent the afternoon taking pictures around the former home of Henry VIII's second wife including one of an ornate fireplace in a dimly-lit living room in the 13th Century Kent castle. But it was only when he returned home and studied the photo that he spotted what looks like a hovering hand with a long finger apparently pointing towards the chimney.

Mr Archer, from Lewes, East Sussex, who did not believe in ghosts before taking the picture, is convinced it is the spirit of the young queen, who is said to haunt the castle. He said: 'In the prayer room there was a fog or a mist hovering around but I didn't think much of it at the time. 'I felt like an unknown force was pulling me through the castle. I couldn't see it but I could definitely feel it. 'I didn't know what to make of it because I didn't believe in ghosts at this point. But I am now confident it is her. 'It wasn't until three months after that I realised what I had taken a picture of. 'I believe there is something important historically inside the fireplace she wants me to recover.'
 
This is not the first time the queen's ghost has been spotted in the grounds of the castle, which later came into the possession of King Henry's fourth wife, Anne of Cleves. Her ghostly apparition has been seen wandering the gardens of the castle, often drifting over the bridge that crosses the River Eden. Anne's ghost is also said to appear each Christmas at Hever Castle. She is believed to manifest beneath a great oak tree where Anne and Henry courted.
 
American billionaire William Waldorf Astor bought and restored the castle in 1903 and it is now owned by Broadland Properties Limited. The estate is now run as a conference centre, but the castle and grounds are open to the public.


Friday, 24 July 2015

'Vivre et Mourir'


 
Sheet music for Vivre et Mourir.

Note: The title (Wish Now Was Then) with lyrics by Don Black
appear in the song sheet, but not in the actual film.
 
Probably the best musical score composed for a Tudor-themed film was for Mary Queen of Scots (1971).
 
The composer was the great John Barry. Among his other celebrated compositions were the soundtracks for The Lion in Winter, Born Free, and several James Bond movies.
 
One of the loveliest selections from Mary Queen of Scots is Vivre et Mourir. Sung by actress Vanessa Redgrave (in the opening and closing credits, and in a scene where she serenades the sick Lord Darnley), the lyrics are taken from the last six lines of a sonnet attributed to the historical Mary Stuart ('attributed' because the sonnet was found amongst the controversial 'Casket Letters', which may or may not, or were only partly written by Mary to the notorious Lord Bothwell).
 
The lines (written in 16th century French) set to Barry's music are as follow:
 
Vous conoistres avecques obeissance
De mon loyal deuoir n'omettant la science
A quoy i'estudiray pour tousiours vous compliare
Sans aymer rien que vous, soubs la suiection
De qui ie veux sens nulle fiction
Viure et mourir...
 
 
Translated as:
 
Someday you certainly will comprehend
How steadfast is my purpose, and how real
Which is to do you pleasure until death
Only to you, being subject: in which faith
I do indeed most fervently intend
To live and die...

 

(Sonnet taken from Letters and Poems By Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots, modernized and translated by Clifford Bax, New York: Philosophical Library, 1947).
 
 
You can listen to the song below at the 1:10 time mark. Thanks to the person who posted this online.