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Page "Joseph Fiennes" ¶ 8
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Fiennes and starred
In 1999, Fiennes starred in the legendary role of Eugene Onegin in Onegin, a movie which he also helped produce.
A film version released in 1997 was directed by Gillian Armstrong and starred Ralph Fiennes, Cate Blanchett, and Tom Wilkinson.
At the Comedy Theatre in September 2005, Annis starred in Epitaph for George Dillon with Joseph Fiennes.
The production starred Ralph Fiennes and Simon Russell Beale ; first staged at the Barbican Centre, it later toured Europe.
She appeared in the 1992 film version of Wuthering Heights ( co-starring Juliette Binoche and Ralph Fiennes ) and the 1995 film Carrington ( which starred Emma Thompson and Jonathan Pryce ).
In 2008, she starred in God of Carnage in the West End alongside Tamsin Greig, Ken Stott and Ralph Fiennes, at the Gielgud Theatre.
In 1995 Fitzgerald starred as Ophelia opposite Ralph Fiennes in Hamlet at London ’ s Almeida Theatre, which led to her American stage debut.
In 2011, Ralph Fiennes directed and starred as Coriolanus with Gerard Butler as Aufidius in a modern-day film adaptation Coriolanus.
In 2008 Stott starred in another West End production of a Reza play, this time God of Carnage, alongside Tamsin Greig, Janet McTeer and Ralph Fiennes at the Gielgud Theatre.

Fiennes and fiction
Fiennes ' career as an author has developed alongside his career as an explorer: he is the author of 19 fiction and non-fiction books, including The Feather Men.

Fiennes and series
In the 2011 TV series Camelot, Merlin was played by Joseph Fiennes.
Fiennes stars in Starz's 10-part series, Camelot, as the wizard Merlin.
After portraying a priest opposite Julianne Moore and Ralph Fiennes in Neil Jordan's acclaimed adaptation of Graham Greene's The End of the Affair ( 1999 ), Isaacs played the charismatic honourable priest opposite Kirsty Alley in the mini series The Last Don.
Under the direction of Gareth Neame and Sally Woodward Gentle, Carnival has produced series such as Material Girl, Midnight Man, and The Philanthropist ; hit returning series Hotel Babylon and Whitechapel ; the critically acclaimed television films Enid starring Helena Bonham Carter and Matthew Macfadyen ; ‘’ Page Eight ’’ starring Bill Nighy, Rachel Weisz, Michael Gambon and Ralph Fiennes ; and landmark four part drama Any Human Heart starring Jim Broadbent, Matthew MacFadyen, Hayley Atwell and Kim Cattrall.

Fiennes and FlashForward
He is the eldest of six children, his siblings being actor Joseph Fiennes ( Shakespeare in Love, Luther, FlashForward ); Martha Fiennes, a director ( in her film Onegin, he played the title role ); Magnus Fiennes, a composer ; Sophie Fiennes, a filmmaker ; and Jacob Fiennes, a conservationist.

Fiennes and which
As a result of this journey, which formed a section of the three-year Transglobe Expedition 1979 – 1982, Fiennes and Burton became the first people to complete a circumnavigation of the world via both North and South Poles, by surface travel alone.
In 2004 polar explorer Sir Ranulph Fiennes published a biography which was a strong defence of Scott and an equally forthright rebuttal of Huntford ; the book is dedicated " To the Families of the Defamed Dead ".
This includes, Ralph Fiennes ' directorial debut of Shakespeare's Coriolanus in which Redgrave plays Volumnia ; and Roland Emmerich's Anonymous in which Redgrave plays
In 1998, Fiennes appeared in two films that were nominated at the Academy Awards: he played Robert Dudley opposite Cate Blanchett in Elizabeth and he portrayed William Shakespeare opposite Gwyneth Paltrow in Shakespeare in Love, which won the Academy Award for Best Picture.
In 2011, Fiennes made his directorial debut with his film adaptation of Shakespeare's tragedy Coriolanus, in which he also played the titular character.
Fiennes first worked on screen in 1990 and then made his film debut in 1992 as Heathcliff in Wuthering Heights opposite Juliette Binoche, for which he received substantial acclaim and praise throughout Europe.
In 1643 Prynne became involved in the controversy which followed the surrender of Bristol by Nathaniel Fiennes.
Together with his ally Clement Walker, he presented articles of accusation against Fiennes to the House of Commons ( 15 November 1643 ), managed the case for the prosecution at the court-martial, which took place in the following December, and secured a condemnation of the offending officer.
Celia Fiennes, who in 1697 proceeded out of London along the Dover Road, wrote in her diary of stopping at " Shuttershill, on top of which hill you see a vast prospect ... some lands clothed with trees, others with grass and flowers, gardens, orchards, with all sorts of herbage and tillage, with severall little towns all by the river, Erith, Leigh, Woolwich etc., quite up to London, Greenwich, Deptford, Black Wall, the Thames twisting and turning it self up and down bearing severall vessells and men of warre on it ".
He filmed the short film La Torcedura in which he played the lead, and appeared in The Darwin Awards, an independent film directed by Finn Taylor, starring Winona Ryder and Joseph Fiennes.
Fiennes then returned to be educated at Sandroyd School, Wiltshire and then at Eton, after which he joined the British Army.
On 6 March 2010, Fiennes was involved in a three-car collision in Stockport which resulted in minor injuries to himself and serious injuries to the driver of another car.
In late 2008 / early 2009 Fiennes took part in a new BBC programme called Top Dogs: Adventures in War, Sea and Ice, in which he teamed with fellow Britons John Simpson, the BBC World Affairs editor, and Sir Robin Knox-Johnston, the round-the-world yachtsman.
They met while performing Hamlet, in which Annis portrayed Gertrude with Fiennes playing Hamlet.
He addressed to Essex a letter in his defence ( Thomason Tracts E. 65, 26 ), drew up for the parliament a Relation concerning the Surrender ... ( 1643 ), answered by William Prynne and Clement Walker accusing him of treachery and cowardice, to which he opposed Col. Fiennes his Reply ....
His public career closes with addresses delivered in his capacity as chief commissioner of the great seal at the beginning of the sessions of 20 January 1658, and 2 January 1659, in which the religious basis of Cromwell's government is especially insisted upon, the feature to which Fiennes throughout his career had attached most value.
Dolarhyde has been twice portrayed in film adaptations of Harris ' novel: By Tom Noonan ( in which he was called ' Dollarhyde ') in 1986's Manhunter, and by Ralph Fiennes in 2002's Red Dragon.
The Cormorant received the 1987 Somerset Maugham Award, and, in 1993, the BBC made it into a film, starring Ralph Fiennes, which won two BAFTA Cymru awards.
During the politics of the 1640s, Pembroke was initially associated with the group of lords headed by William Fiennes, 1st Viscount Saye and Sele and Algernon Percy, 10th Earl of Northumberland, which supported the Self-denying Ordinance and the creation of the New Model Army in 1645.

Fiennes and on
Fiennes was later criticised by the reviewer of another book for the personal nature of his attacks on Huntford, and for his apparent assumption that his own experiences as a polar explorer gave him unique authority.
Fiennes won a Tony Award for playing Hamlet on Broadway and has been nominated twice for the Academy Award.
Ralph Twisleton Wykeham Fiennes was born in Ipswich on 22 December 1962, the eldest child of Mark Fiennes ( 1933 – 2004 ), a farmer and photographer whose father was industrialist Sir Maurice Fiennes ( 1907 – 1994 ), and Jennifer Lash ( 1938 – 1993 ), a writer of English and Irish descent.
Fiennes later claimed that playing the role had a profoundly disturbing effect on him.
* The 1999 film, " Onegin ", is an English adaptation of Pushkin's work, directed by Martha Fiennes, starring Ralph Fiennes as Onegin, Liv Tyler as Tatiana, and Toby Stephens as Lensky. The film compresses the events of the novel somewhat: for example, the Naming Day celebrations take place on the same day as Onegin's speech to Tatiana.
* An inaccurate example of this dance in the movie Elizabeth ( 1998 ), where Cate Blanchett ( Queen Elizabeth I ) and Joseph Fiennes ( Lord Robert Dudley ) dance it on two occasions.
The house was built by Thomas Bourchier, Archbishop of Canterbury, between 1456 and 1486, on the site of an earlier house belonging to James Fiennes, the Lord Say and Sele who was executed after the victory of Jack Cade's rebels at the Battle of Solefields.
James Fiennes, 1st Baron Saye and Sele, the Lord High Treasurer, was captured and beheaded, along with a few other favourites of the King including his son-in-law William Crowmer, a previous High Sheriff of Kent and their heads put on pikes and made to kiss each other.
The patent confirmed that the barony created in 1447 belonged to Richard Fiennes, but on the condition that, for the purposes of precedence or seniority, it would be considered as having been created in 1603, and also provided that no future Baron Saye and Sele would assert the precedence of 1447.
In Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix she had a central role where her character sets firmly in the limelight, with hints of Ginny's greater importance to the overall plot by joining a secret student organisation called Dumbledore's Army that was founded by Harry, Ron and Hermione ( played by Emma Watson ) and eventually goes along with Harry, Ron, Hermione, Neville ( played by Matthew Lewis ) and Luna ( played by Evanna Lynch ) on a mission to rescue Sirius Black ( played by Gary Oldman ) that leads to the climactic battle between Dumbledore's Army and the Order of the Phoenix, Lord Voldemort ( played by Ralph Fiennes ) and the Death Eaters.
The first episode, aired on 27 March 2009, saw Simpson, Fiennes and Knox-Johnston go on a news-gathering trip to Afghanistan.
Fiennes served in the British Army for eight years including a period on counter-insurgency service while attached to the army of the Sultanate of Oman.
Fiennes was born on 7 March 1944 in Windsor, Berkshire shortly after the death of his father, Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Ranulph Twisleton-Wykeham-Fiennes, commanding the Royal Scots Greys, who died of wounds on 24 November 1943.
Despite suffering from a heart attack and undergoing a double heart bypass operation just four months before, Fiennes joined Stroud again in 2003 to complete seven marathons in seven days on seven continents in the Land Rover 7x7x7 Challenge for the British Heart Foundation.
Originally Fiennes had planned to run the first marathon on King George Island, Antarctica.
In September 2012 it was announced that Fiennes was to lead the first team on foot across Antarctica during the southern winter, in aid of the charity " Seeing is Believing ", an initiative to prevent avoidable blindness.

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