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Post by dianahawthorne on Sept 1, 2009 9:34:40 GMT -5
One of my newest favourite pictures, despite the fact that it's watermarked. Today's picture is from one of Maggie's appearances on The Carol Burnett Show.
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Post by gracehawkins on Sept 1, 2009 12:23:57 GMT -5
I love it!! I wish I could have seen it...
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Post by harmonydumbledore on Sept 1, 2009 14:10:38 GMT -5
Oh cute! Were they singing together?
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Post by mistressquill on Sept 1, 2009 17:11:01 GMT -5
Hehee, with Maggie's head turned . . they nearly look like twins especially since they nearly have on the same outfit. It's a really great picture.
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Post by dianahawthorne on Sept 2, 2009 9:23:13 GMT -5
Today's picture is of Maggie and Daniel Massey on the set of Go to Blazes. (For those Julie Andrews fans out there, NOEL COWARD!!! You'll understand what I mean if you've seen Star!).
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Post by harmonydumbledore on Sept 2, 2009 13:51:17 GMT -5
Cute!
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Post by Rosemary Dumbledore McGonagall on Sept 3, 2009 10:53:49 GMT -5
I need to see this movie... does anyone know if it is on YouTube? It certainly is I've seen it and it's really funny!
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Post by Rosemary Dumbledore McGonagall on Sept 3, 2009 11:01:33 GMT -5
Today's picture is from the 1981 movie "Clash of the Titans", starring Maggie as Thetis and Sir Laurence Olivier as Zeus. The screenplay of the movie was written by Maggie's second husband Beverley Cross. I loved her in this one cause she seems quite nice and caring and yet she can be so vile and evil! I loved it thoroughly recommend it!
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Post by dianahawthorne on Sept 3, 2009 14:16:38 GMT -5
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Post by harmonydumbledore on Sept 3, 2009 19:41:00 GMT -5
Clash of the Titans pic is awesome. I love that about her in the movie as well!
HAPPY BIRTHDAY MICHA! dressing room pics were cool
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Post by dianahawthorne on Sept 4, 2009 1:20:13 GMT -5
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Post by harmonydumbledore on Sept 4, 2009 9:07:38 GMT -5
Yay for Fridays!
I had to click each individual picture and go to your photobucket to see them for some reason but it was worth. I'd never seen some of those picks before and they were great!
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Post by dianahawthorne on Sept 4, 2009 9:50:56 GMT -5
Sorry abou that. It's fixed now, and my photobucket account will reboot on the 6th. Glad you enjoyed the pictures!
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Post by mistressquill on Sept 4, 2009 9:53:23 GMT -5
Awesome pictures Thanks for sharing.
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Post by Mrs Mendes on Sept 4, 2009 14:36:46 GMT -5
You know, I love you for posting all this great pictures of wonderful Maggie xD!!!! Thank you so very very much!!!!! Love Mrs Mendes
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Post by micha on Sept 5, 2009 12:04:34 GMT -5
My week for posting again ;D, and I start with Maggie at the celebration of the Premiere of "Night and Day" 1979
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Post by harmonydumbledore on Sept 5, 2009 19:04:22 GMT -5
What's night and day?
I like the pic though simple and sweet
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Post by micha on Sept 6, 2009 2:56:29 GMT -5
"Sister Act" followed "Hook" 1992....my two first conscious "Maggie-films", in both ones her role is not one to look beautiful in, but nevertheless she did... harmonydumbledore: "Night and Day" is a play by Tom Stoppard
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Post by harmonydumbledore on Sept 6, 2009 15:36:08 GMT -5
I Love Maggie in the Sister Acts! I fell in love with her in those movies!
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Post by micha on Sept 7, 2009 1:31:13 GMT -5
But theatre remains the first love of one of Britain's finest actresses, who is in Australia to star in one of Alan Bennett's Talking Heads monologues, Bed Among the Lentils. She appears as Susan, a vicar's wife whose mundane provincial life is relieved only by her fondness for altar wine - and a young Indian grocer. The work is part of a double- bill that will include Soldering On, starring fellow British actress Margaret Tyzack, as a middle-class widow who faces the disintegration of her family after her husband's death. Both pieces are tales of life on the suburban margins. Smith originally performed Bed Among the Lentils for television and reluctantly transferred it to the stage in 1996. Despite her hesitation at reprising the role, it had the critics reaching for superlatives. "It's more interesting in the theatre," she says. "Now I just wonder how it worked on television." Smith's show is the latest in a series of leading British theatre productions that have come to the Australian stage this year. Although still shaking off jet lag in Sydney yesterday, Smith was off last night to catch her fellow Harry Potter professor, Miriam Margolyes - Professor Sprout - on stage in Noel Coward's Blithe Spirit at the Sydney Theatre Company. It seems Australia has more Hogwarts professors than you can wave a magic wand at" (Sydney newspaper, 06.03.2004)
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Post by harmonydumbledore on Sept 7, 2009 8:18:26 GMT -5
I like the pic she's cute.
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Post by micha on Sept 8, 2009 1:39:56 GMT -5
one of my best loved pictures ever - taken at the premiere of "My House in Umbria" in May 2003
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Post by harmonydumbledore on Sept 8, 2009 12:33:37 GMT -5
Wow her eyes are so bright!
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Post by mistressquill on Sept 8, 2009 16:48:07 GMT -5
That's a really good picture.
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Post by micha on Sept 9, 2009 2:39:07 GMT -5
Another still from the 1999 BBC-film "All the King's Men" with Maggie as the King's mother Queen Alexandra:
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Post by Rosemary Dumbledore McGonagall on Sept 9, 2009 11:23:53 GMT -5
God I am SSOOOOOO loving this! I hope this keeps up! What about the Lily in Love pic spams?
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Post by mistressquill on Sept 9, 2009 11:28:14 GMT -5
Awesome pic Though in that picture she sort of reminds me of Susan Surandon . . another pretty actress.
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Post by harmonydumbledore on Sept 9, 2009 14:52:16 GMT -5
I recentaly got this movie over the summer. I quite liked it....although it was terribly sad.
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Post by dianahawthorne on Sept 9, 2009 15:45:14 GMT -5
God I am SSOOOOOO loving this! I hope this keeps up! What about the Lily in Love pic spams? I know I've been sorely remiss in updating my Lily in Love picspams, and I hope to make the next part by the weekend. Stay tuned!
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Post by micha on Sept 10, 2009 1:23:38 GMT -5
Stephen Poliakoff's "Coming in to Land," seen at the National in 1987, cast her as a Polish émigré in London who draped herself like a desperate sylph across the immigration officer's desk. ("There is nothing like a dame", The New York Times Magazine, 18.03.1990, Matt Wolf)
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