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Elliott
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Freddie Highmore
28. May 2004 at 15:46
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Thanks for putting up a profile page for Freddie Highmore. What a cutie!  Grin I can't wait to see him as Charlie Bucket.
  
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Re: Freddie Highmore
Reply #1 - 28. May 2004 at 23:12
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I caught Freddie in the mini series 'I Saw You' (2002) on TV a couple of weeks ago. He reminds me a lot of Thomas Sangster. He's a great choice for Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.

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Re: Freddie Highmore
Reply #2 - 29. May 2004 at 07:45
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Freddie Highmore Visits the Chocolate Factory
Source: Variety       
Friday, May 21, 2004

We received rumors earlier this week that Johnny Depp's young J.M. Barrie's Neverland co-star Freddie Highmore was also cast in Depp's upcoming Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, which Tim Burton is directing. Variety has now confirmed this. Highmore also stars in the upcoming British film Five Children and It.

In "Chocolate Factory," he plays the poverty-stricken boy who stumbles across one of the five golden tickets that wins an exclusive tour of Willy Wonka's mysterious chocolate factory. The other four winners are grotesque brats who get their comeuppance in the course of the tour, leaving Charlie to become Mr. Wonka's heir.

Johnny Depp plays Willy Wonka with shooting starting this summer at London's Pinewood Studios. Here's a pic of the two in J.M. Barrie's Neverland:

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« Last Edit: 30. May 2004 at 04:03 by cal-Q-L8 »  
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Re: Freddie Highmore
Reply #3 - 30. May 2004 at 11:55
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That's a nice pic from 'Neverland', boy55.  Thanks!  :bigok:


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Love,
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Re: Freddie Highmore
Reply #4 - 18. Oct 2004 at 06:04
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freddie at london premiere of finding neverland.

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Fairytale Opening for Barrie Film

By Sherna Noah, PA News

Hollywood stars Kate Winslet and Johnny Depp turned on the charm tonight to give the new film on the life of Peter Pan creator JM Barrie a fairytale beginning.

The box office A-listers descended on London’s West End for the premiere of Finding Neverland, which tells the story of the inspiration behind the boy who never grew up.

American heart-throb Depp, 41, plays the Scottish author in the Hollywood blockbuster while British co-star Winslet, 29, plays Sylvia Llewelyn Davies.

It was Davies’ young sons who gave Barrie the idea for the children’s classic after he befriended them.

Arriving at the Odeon Leicester Square tonight, Winslet told how she took the young stars of the film under her wing.

Wearing a floor-length turquoise Ben de Lisi dress, she said: “I had to whip them into shape every now and again but there was lots of hugging and it was all very family-like.”

Finding Neverland, which also stars Julie Christie and Dustin Hoffman, tells the story of how Barrie, who never had children of his own, met Davies’ boys in London’s Kensington Gardens and became their playmate.

American critics have touted Depp, who arrived with French singer girlfriend Vanessa Paradis, for his first Oscar.

But the Pirates of the Caribbean star, who struggled to perfect the necessary Scottish accent, shrugged off the potential glory.

Depp, who has two children with Paradis, said: “I can’t say that occupies my every thought or every moment.

“That’s not my job to think about that, but if people want to say that, that is really sweet.”

The other star in the film is 12-year-old British actor, Freddie Highmore, who plays Peter Llewelyn Davies, the inspiration for Peter Pan himself.

And his more famous co-stars were quick to praise the youngster, who is also set to appear as Charlie in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.

Depp said: “He doesn’t need advice from me. I need help from him.”

Highmore said he still did not know whether he wanted to be an actor but said of his heroes: “Johnny Depp is fantastic. He will turn an ordinary scene into one which you will always remember.

“Kate is amazing. Off camera she was really loving and always looking after me.”

Earlier, Winslet, who is married to film director Sam Mendes, said having two children of her own had helped her play the movie’s mother.

“There is something about the physicality of being a parent that you don’t know about until you become one,” she said.

The movie has been accused of playing down the ambiguous nature of Barrie’s obsession with children.

Some descendants of the Llewelyn Davies family are also said to have expressed some disappointment for not “sticking to the facts”.

But Depp said: “All this happened around 100 years ago so there are always going to be questions about the exact truth.”

And director Marc Forster added: “For me the film was about how JM Barrie was inspired to write Peter Pan. You have to take out certain characters because you are just dealing with those who inspired the story.”

The premiere comes in the centennial year of the creation of Peter Pan, which was first performed as a play in 1904 at the Duke of York’s Theatre, London.

Tonight’s event hoped to raise thousands of pounds for Great Ormond Street Hospital Children’s Charity.

Barrie donated the lucrative rights to Peter Pan to the hospital before his death in 1937.

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Re: Freddie Highmore
Reply #5 - 20. Oct 2004 at 05:50
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Thanks apple...  it sounds like Freddie gets plenty of screen time. I'm looking forward to this movie very much.
  
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Re: Freddie Highmore
Reply #6 - 21. Oct 2004 at 06:31
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another pic - from sky news (tv) : Family Affair

<i>Kate, 29, said she took the young stars of the movie, Nick Roud, Luke Spill and Freddie Highmore, under her wing during filming.</i>

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<i>child in time

JM Barrie was inspired to write Peter Pan by a family of boisterous boys. But it was the author himself who never grew up

AS Byatt

Saturday October 23, 2004

The Guardian

The summers of late-Victorian and Edwardian England were unusually long and hot. Families were large, and children were no longer required to be seen and not heard. They talked and were talked to; they ran wild in woods and fields; they had an autonomous, carefree existence of which their staid parents were somewhat envious. Or so it seems, reading the fantasised adventures of the powerful children's literature of the time.

Jackie Wullschlager has observed in Inventing Wonderland that the threatened and resourceful girl heroines of the Victorian period, Alice's Adventures Underground, were replaced by the adventurous boys created by male writers who wanted in some sense to remain boys - Kenneth Grahame, Sir James Barrie, AA Milne. RM Ballantyne's The Coral Island (1860) gave three shipwrecked boys a chance to conduct their own adventures, and influenced many other writers, including Barrie.

Beyond adventure, there was a fashion for what was called the "pagan", which included a kind of earth-mysticism about the great god Pan. Grahame published Pagan Papers in 1893, The Golden Age in 1895 and The Wind in the Willows, in which Pan makes a mysterious appearance, in 1908. Related to this Pan is Kipling's earth-spirit, Puck of Pook's Hill, who takes Dan and Una on various adventures. Virginia Woolf named the group surrounding Rupert Brooke the "neo-pagans". Brooke and the tomboy, tree-climbing Olivier girls went camping in woods, swam naked, and agreed that to become middle-aged was an appalling tragedy. "Is there a greater tragedy than for a boy to die, except for him to grow old, to live!" Brooke wrote to a friend.

Brooke was addicted to the play Peter Pan (which opened in 1904). He saw it at least 10 times, and fantasised about it when he was a Cambridge undergraduate: "As I stroll through Cambridge, Trinity Street fades and I find myself walking by the shore of the Mermaid's Lagoon, King's Chapel often shrinks before my eyes, and rises, and is suddenly the House in the Tree-tops." He was also, it is fair to add, addicted to Wagner's Ring, and to Wedekind's Spring Awakening - a play, not at all innocent, about the dangers of prolonged childish ignorance.

Peter Pan was written out of the imaginative games Barrie played with the Llewellyn-Davies boys, whom he met in Kensington Gardens. There were five boys, and their parents - Arthur and Sylvia Llewellyn-Davies - both alive when Peter Pan appeared, both soon to die, leaving the boys to Barrie's care. "There never was a simpler and happier family until the coming of Peter Pan," Barrie wrote in Peter and Wendy, and Andrew Birkin in his splendid book JM Barrie and the Lost Boys says he believes that Barrie had his own intrusion into the Llewellyn-Davies family in mind. Barrie - small, ugly, wildly energetic, rich, kind and tactless - took over the family despite the anxiety and irritation of their father, giving them presents, holidays, a fantasy world to play in.

Barrie's "Dedication to the Five" tells the story of how the play came to be: "I suppose I always knew that I made Peter by rubbing the five of you violently together, as savages with two sticks produce a flame... What a game we had of Peter before we clipped him small to make him fit the boards. He was the longest story on earth." He goes on to claim that as the boys "swung monkey-wise from branch to branch in the wood of make-believe" they "reached the tree of knowledge" - and, he implies, left their companion behind in Neverland.

Marc Forster's new film, Finding Neverland, is a version of the tale of Barrie, the boys and Peter Pan, which imposes (perhaps inevitably) a kind of Hollywood sweetness on the tangled story. It reduces the five boys to four, which doesn't matter much. More seriously, it kills off Arthur Llewellyn-Davies before Barrie (Johnny Depp) meets Sylvia (Kate Winslet) and her sons, thus making Barrie and Sylvia into an innocent romantic couple, until Sylvia's own tragic early death.

Depp, whose charm is very different from what must have been that of the Greedy Dwarf (another Barrie game-hero), makes the playwright into a handsome, boyish dreamer. But he does suggest a certain incomprehension of adult emotions, a certain incompleteness. The failure of Barrie's marriage, to the actress Mary Ansell, is not explained - it was widely believed that the marriage, like Ruskin's, was never consummated. The real Barrie fell romantically in love with actresses - the stage being an archetype of Neverland, as Hollywood is, in which people are surreal, not real.

The most exciting parts of the film are the stagey bits - a sequence where Depp dances with a bear among terrible clowns, the flying machinery, the final sequence where Neverland is privately re-created for the mortally sick Sylvia in her own back garden. The atmosphere of that Neverland is a dense and sickly green - with a crocodile and a cannon lurking in the depths into which Sylvia wanders. And the relationship between eternal boy and growing boys has its good spiky moments. Peter Llewellyn-Davies tells Barrie: "You're not my father," and at the first night of Peter Pan, when identified as Pan he says fiercely: "I'm not Peter Pan. He is."

Neverland is one of the great "secondary worlds", as Auden named them, writing about Tolkien's myth-creation. It is a world with its own laws - its own kinds of fairies, mermaids and pirates, as well as flying children responsible for their own fates - which is not only sentimental. There are secondary worlds, like Tolkien's and Pratchett's, into which no children have wandered from a primary world in pyjamas or shorts and gym-shoes, and I find these easier to inhabit imaginatively than those in which "real" children are there to experience them.

I find CS Lewis's children nuisancey and repugnant. I mildly enjoy E Nesbit's family who make disastrous wishes in Five Children and It. Kipling got it right, imaginatively, in the Puck books, because his Dan and Una meet imaginable historical adults as a young reader meets characters in a grown-up book. Puck is giving them what books and tales do give children, only in their own lives. I can still read The Railway Children, which has no magic, and The Secret Garden, which has Dickon, a "real" Pan figure, and find a lump in my throat. As a little girl in the second world war, and now as a woman, I found and find tears in my eyes at the end of Peter Pan, as I do when Bobbie recovers her father at the end of The Railway Children, or Arthur Ransome's family survives a storm in the North Sea, to find their father on a boat in a Dutch port.

But Peter Pan, like a lot of dangerous Victorian fantasy, conflates fairyland with death. The Lost Boys are those who vanished from their prams. Pan is Barrie, whose formative experience was the death of his brother (aged 15) when he was little and felt compelled to try to replace him for his mother, even wearing his clothes and whistling his whistle. Peter Pan is the ghost of a dead child, flying in the dark. Even as a five-year-old, I was crying for Mrs Darling because I knew the vanished children wouldn't really come back, as I was crying for my father, who was lost in the air force, and might not return. In the film, Barrie tries to persuade Peter that his mother will always be there in Neverland. I think Peter, and we, know better.

It is brave to make a film on this subject in a time obsessed with paedophilia. Parents have been prosecuted for naked photographs of their children, which are as innocent as those of the five boys that illustrate Andrew Birkin's book. In Barrie's tale The Little White Bird, about a man who invents an imaginary son, in order to be able to play with a real boy called David, the scene in which David is allowed to sleep the night with the narrator would be unpublishable now.

"'Why, David,' said I, sitting up, 'do you want to come into my bed?'

"'Mother said I wasn't to want it unless you wanted it first,' he squeaked."

In this tale, too, the boys and their adult friend invent Peter Pan, the boy who could fly because babies are birds before they are born, and Peter's mother had forgotten to weigh him at birth, which would have held him down. The narrator's imagined son Timothy resembles the daughter of Dear Brutus, a stage-play in which a man meets the daughter he never had, who didn't "want to be a might- have-been". Barrie's fantasies and needs were close to the surface, and freely expressed. The Llewellyn-Davies boys are on record as saying he was simply an innocent. The youngest, Nico, said: "Of all the men I have ever known, Barrie was the wittiest and the best company. He was also the least interested in sex. He was a darling man. He was innocent; which is why he could write Peter Pan."

He is said to have bought an engagement ring to give Sylvia before her death, and his love for her, as well as for her boys, bears little resemblance to the behaviour of Humbert Humbert, marrying the mother to ensure access to the child. Nor does his Neverland bear much resemblance to Michael Jackson's Neverland ranch, though Jackson is certainly a weird, panicky version of both Barrie and his hero.

What happens to those who have inhabited Neverlands? One thing is that they get called "the boy who was Peter Pan", or the "boy who was Little Lord Fauntleroy" or "the boy who was Christopher Robin" all their adult lives, and the haunting is not pleasant. What happened to the golden boys of the Edwardian Age was, of course, the first world war. "To die will be an awfully big adventure," Peter Pan said blithely on his rock - a line that was cut in performance as the war wore on. Rupert Brooke died of an infection in the army in 1916. Kipling's only son, on whom Dan was based, was killed in his first battle. George, the eldest Llewellyn-Davies boy, was killed in 1915, in Flanders. The toy cannon in the film Finding Neverland and the ticking crocodile prefigure this.

More darkly, Michael, the boy Barrie most loved, drowned in 1921, with a friend, at Oxford - he couldn't swim, and the deaths were felt to be possibly a suicide pact. Barrie was heartbroken. Kenneth Grahame's son, Alastair, went to Oxford after the war and went out one evening and lay down on a railway line in front of a train. Saddest, and in a way final, was the fate of Peter Llewellyn-Davies. He became a successful publisher. He began to construct a family history out of the documents he called "the Morgue". In 1952, he burned the more than 2,000 letters between Barrie and Michael. He loathed the association with "that terrible masterpiece". In 1960, at the age of 63, he committed suicide by throwing himself under a train at Sloane Square station. Fleet Street reported his death with the headlines: "The Boy Who Never Grew Up Is Dead"; "Peter Pan's Death Leap."

And the innocence of the boys' stories died too. The Coral Island inspired not only Peter Pan, but also that great myth of the Fall, Lord of the Flies.</i>

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« Last Edit: 23. Oct 2004 at 07:38 by apple »  
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