She is cast in the role of Monika in the 1973 movie Haham Gamliel.
In 1916, Tuva Novotny's character is Anna Wohlin in the show Her Double Life.
"Thanatos" wrote in message
news:atropos-5602CE.21455318032008@news.giganews.com...
> In article
> ,
> TranslucentAmoebae wrote:
possession"http://www.tmz.com/2008/03/11/mary-ann-busted-with-mary-jane/
responsibility"http://www.tmz.com/2008/03/12/it-wasnt-mary-anns-mary-jane/
> difference?
He can't tell you...too drunk.
"Rick in Oz" wrote in message
news:zJ4he.504$oi7.6645@nnrp1.ozemail.com.au...
>
http://breakingnews.iol.ie/entertainment/story.asp?j=117407660&p=yy74x8z4x&n
> =117408269
> finally to solve the mystery behind the death of guitarist Brian Jones.
> initially thought to have died from a drink and drugs overdose.
was
> at the star's Sussex mansion on the night he died.
> builder Frank Thorogood - either in an act of murder or manslaughter.
> about the project.
said
> good luck with it.
> about.
> very suspicious about the events of that night."
and
> Ben Whishaw, while Charlie Watts is played by James D White.
> involve them because I didn't want it to be a film about the Rolling
Stones.
group
> themselves. I didn't want to embroil myself with the corporate machine
that
> the Stones have become."
> behaviour and drug addiction.
> including one by his girlfriend Anna Wohlin.
researching
> the project and bought the rights to the books.
home
> on the night he died.
had
> never told her story before.
> her identity.
> Thorogood's girlfriend who changed her name to avoid publicity.
> were too many questions left unanswered. But Janet Lawson turned out to be
> my ace in the hole. From what she told me about what happened that night,
I
> have my ending."
> murder or manslaughter.
> builder Thorogood, who was hired to renovate his home and became drawn
into
> his debauched world.
> under the water in a fit of anger.
> deathbed, saying: "It was me that did Brian. I just finally snapped."
> Considine plays Thorogood.
> fell in love with it. When I got the part I read all the books about him
and
> immersed myself in everything Brian. I had a short time to cram in
> everything about his life, his personality and his music.
Mick
> Jagger impersonators.
a
> couple of lookalike Mick Jaggers, but it was preposterous.
> looked like in the Sixties so it was more important to get good actors and
> good performances."
> former wife of Colin Farrell.
> Keylock, Tuva Novotny as Anna Wohlin and Monet Mazur as Jones's former
> girlfriend Anita Pallenberg.
Don't trust it. One of the original Stones managers, Andrew Loog Oldman let
it slip in an interview with a local pop music reporter in Peru when he was
doing there checking out pre-Inca ruins. Brian was killed because he was
going to tell the story of how the Stones supergroup status was created by
London Records and the BBC to counteract the pirate success of the Beatles
and their capturing of America.
It's been inside knowledge for years that Columbia passes on the Beatles
and when black owned VJ records couldn't afford record promotion costs for
Introducing the Beatles that Capitol Records snatched them and took the
recording industry balance to LA. John Hammon alluded to it, and Clive Davis
played catch up for thirty years, even with pre-fab stars like Janis Joplin
and Bruce Springsteen. Stardom isn't about talent or even luck, it's been
about mechandizing from at least 1959. Dick Clarke said it about the Rolling
Stones, "Do you really think Ameican kids would have wanted bad versions of
superior Black American Rhythm and Blues from a bunch of middle class
college drop outs from London unless they hadn't been given the biggest
sales pitch in history of music?" (Until that time.)
Sorry Stones fans. This doesn't mean they are terrible, lots of people
including the two I mentioned above got similar help, but don't kid yourself
that if London ecords, the BBC, and The whole of the New York controlled
American music industy hadn't missed out on the only true music phenomenon
other than Elvis in the second half of the twentieth century The Beatles,
that the Stones would have ever gotten out of the middle class collegiate
coffee houses and clubs of London.
And Mick was there early in the evening before Brian was drowned, and
was in on the board meetings when the decision was made. Their not rock
rebels. Keith hs lived in guilt and Charlie was a jazz drummer pulled from
nowhere and Bill was the token were pulled into the mix as part of a
business arrangement. Don't believe me. Do the research yourself. Skip the
celebrity typ books and start by reading the book, "Rock And Roll Is Here To
Pay." You wont find Micks fingerprints on Brian's head holding him under
the water, but they may as well have been there.
Ambrose
>
http://breakingnews.iol.ie/entertainment/story.asp?j=117407660&p=yy74x8z4x&n
=117408269
Stones support 'Brian Jones was killed' film
13/05/2005 - 16:26:36
The Rolling Stones have given their blessing to a new film which claims
finally to solve the mystery behind the death of guitarist Brian Jones.
Jones was found dead in his swimming pool in 1969, aged 27, and was
initially thought to have died from a drink and drugs overdose.
But director Stephen Woolley has uncovered new evidence from a woman who was
at the star's Sussex mansion on the night he died.
Her story has been used in Stoned, which claims Jones was killed by his
builder Frank Thorogood - either in an act of murder or manslaughter.
Surviving Stones Mick Jagger and Keith Richards were thought to be unhappy
about the project.
But Woolley said: "They have given me a message of support and Mick has said
good luck with it.
"From what I have heard they have no problem with the film or what we are
about.
"Looking back at some of the interviews Keith did in the Seventies, he was
very suspicious about the events of that night."
Jagger and Richards are portrayed in the film by actors Luke de Woolfson and
Ben Whishaw, while Charlie Watts is played by James D White.
But they were not consulted about the film and Woolley said: "I didn't
involve them because I didn't want it to be a film about the Rolling Stones.
"The Rolling Stones are much bigger than the individual members of the group
themselves. I didn't want to embroil myself with the corporate machine that
the Stones have become."
Jones had been sacked from the band days before his death due to his wild
behaviour and drug addiction.
The film is based on three books which were written about Jones's death,
including one by his girlfriend Anna Wohlin.
Woolley, producer of Scandal and The Crying Game, spent 10 years researching
the project and bought the rights to the books.
It was always accepted that Jones, Wohlin and Thorogood were at Jones's home
on the night he died.
But Woolley hired a private detective to track down a fourth person who had
never told her story before.
Speaking at the film's launch in Cannes today, Woolley refused to discuss
her identity.
But he has named her in the past as Janet Lawson, a London nurse and
Thorogood's girlfriend who changed her name to avoid publicity.
"For years I was worried about the ending," Woolley said last year. "There
were too many questions left unanswered. But Janet Lawson turned out to be
my ace in the hole. From what she told me about what happened that night, I
have my ending."
The director would not reveal whether that ending reveals the death to be
murder or manslaughter.
His film chronicles the relationship between the rock star and East End
builder Thorogood, who was hired to renovate his home and became drawn into
his debauched world.
One theory is that the pair rowed over money and Thorogood pushed Jones
under the water in a fit of anger.
Thorogood died in 1993 and reportedly confessed to the killing on his
deathbed, saying: "It was me that did Brian. I just finally snapped."
Jones is played in the film by 26-year-old actor Leo Gregory, while Paddy
Considine plays Thorogood.
Gregory said: "I didn't know much about Brian but when I read the I
fell in love with it. When I got the part I read all the books about him and
immersed myself in everything Brian. I had a short time to cram in
everything about his life, his personality and his music.
"Playing such a multi-faceted guy as Brian is an actor's dream."
Woolley auditioned dozens of actors to play the Stones, even looking at Mick
Jagger impersonators.
He said: "We wanted people that vaguely looked the same and I did look at a
couple of lookalike Mick Jaggers, but it was preposterous.
"A younger audience seeing this film don't know what the Rolling Stones
looked like in the Sixties so it was more important to get good actors and
good performances."
Janet Lawson will be played in the film by Amelia Warner, the 22-year-old
former wife of Colin Farrell.
The film also features David Morrissey as the Stones' road manager Tom
Keylock, Tuva Novotny as Anna Wohlin and Monet Mazur as Jones's former
girlfriend Anita Pallenberg.
Little Britain star David Walliams plays the band's accountant.
The film is set for release in the New Year.
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