Mirren’s new role as Mossad agent

She won an Oscar as the Queen, but Dame Helen Mirren’s next film will see her play a Mossad agent who covers up the re-emergence of a Nazi war criminal.

The 63-year-old has signed up for the lead role in The Debt – a remake of Israeli thriller Ha-hov – according to film trade paper Variety.

John Madden, who previously worked with Dame Helen on TV series Prime Suspect, has been named as the director.

“Helen Mirren is the perfect choice for the central role,” he said.

The actress’s character, Rachel Singer, is a secret agent who lies about killing a Nazi war criminal in the 1960s.

She is forced to return to work when her alleged victim reappears three decades later.

Madden, whose previous films include Shakespeare In Love and Mrs Brown, described the character as “a formidable and dignified woman grappling with years of emotional disappointment, suddenly confronted by a powerful and unexpected choice”.

The script is being written by Matthew Vaughn and Jonathan Ross’s wife, Jane Goldman, who were responsible for the acclaimed fantasy movie Stardust.

Filming is due to take place in the UK, Germany and Israel next year

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September 27, 2008 by KirstyArticles


Helen Mirren to Return To The National Theatre Stage

Oscar-winning actor Helen Mirren is to return to the stage of the National Theatre to play the title role in Racine’s Phèdre next year.

Mirren, who won an Oscar for her performance in Stephen Frears’s 2006 film The Queen, will be directed by Nicholas Hytner, the National Theatre’s artistic director, next June.

The production will co-star Margaret Tyzack as the nurse Oenone – the veteran actor who has recently charmed audiences with her performance in Enid Bagnold’s The Chalk Garden at the Donmar Warehouse, London.

Mirren last performed at the National Theatre in 2004 to great acclaim, in Eugene O’Neill’s Mourning Becomes Electra.

Racine’s Phèdre, premiered in 1677, is based on Euripides’s play Hippolytus. It relates the story of the fatal, illicit love that Queen Phèdre nurses for her stepston, Hippolyte.

More news from the National Theatre in tomorrow’s newspaper.

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September 17, 2008 by KirstyArticles