25/08/2014

Will Downton's Anna be toast of Tinseltown?

Will Downton's Anna be toast of Tinseltown? Actress Joanne Froggatt up against Dame Maggie Smith at the Emmys

 

It was a shocking and controversial scene that prompted more than 200 complaints – and one nomination that has given Joanne Froggatt plenty to smile about.

 

The Downton Abbey actress who plays housemaid Anna Bates has been nominated for an Emmy as outstanding supporting actress in the wake of her character's rape scene.

 

The episode was originally shown in the UK last year and aired in the US earlier this year. In the scene Miss Bates is pushed against a wall by Lord Gillingham's valet Green (played by Nigel Harman) and he tries to kiss her. His advances spurned, he beats and then rapes her.

 

Although the attack was implied through sounds behind a door, ITV faced a backlash from fans and domestic violence charities who accused programme-makers of using rape to liven up the drama's script when it was shown in October last year. It prompted more than 200 complaints to ITV and regulator Ofcom.

 

Joanne Froggatt looks radiant in red as she arrives with the rest of the Downton Abbey cast at the BAFTA Pre-Emmy Tea Party at the SLS Hotel in Beverly Hills

 

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However US judges for the prestigious annual Emmy awards felt her performance deserved to be praised.

 

Speaking at the Audi Pre-Emmy party last week, where the period drama has been given 12 nominations including best actress for Michelle Dockery who plays Lady Mary Crawley, Miss Froggatt, 34, said: 'We are so so thrilled to be here and have 12 nominations, because the competition is so stiff this year - as it is every year.

 

'There is such great shows this year. We never expected anything. We were saying it was going to be hard, we would be lucky to get a couple of nominations.

 

'To get 12 is just incredible and we are over the moon and can't believe it and we are so excited just being in the mix.'

 

The new series of Downton Abbey will air in the UK next month and Miss Froggatt said British fans will see the aftermath of her character's rape and the impact it has on her on-screen marriage to valet John Bates.

 

She said: 'We will see them trying to move forward and heal themselves from what has happened to Anna.. But as you would expect there is a huge cloud hanging over them and it is not something they are going to process easily or if ever. Rightly so that storyline carries through. Also there is the issue of Mr Green's death.That is hanging over them and there are questions about that.

 

'There are moments of hope, love and joy for Anna and Bates. It is not all doom and gloom, It would be remise to leave these characters in that situation we have to follow that through and see where that goes.'

 

Downton Abbey faces strong competition this year from Breaking Bad, True Detective and House of Cards.

 

The 66th Primetime Emmy Awards, take place this evening (Monday 1am GMT).

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20/08/2014

It takes work to look this good!

It takes work to look this good! Jaime King wows in figure-hugging black after a day spent prepping for Sin City 2 premiere

 

After a busy day of preparations it's no wonder Jaime King looked immaculate

 

The actress showed off her stunning physique in a figure-hugging black gown featuring a seductive thigh-high slit at the Sin City: A Dame To Kill For premiere on Tuesday night.

 

She also displayed the white manicure she received earlier the same day as she enjoyed some pampering at a Beverly Hills salon.

 

Jaime, 35, showed-off her statuesque 5ft 9in figure in the floor-length dress which boasted a sweeping asymmetric neckline displaying her defined collarbone and slender shoulders.

 

The garment included a glittering trim around a zipped leg slit and an identical zip down down the back of the frock. She teamed it with a gold cuff around her wrist and simple spiked earrings.

 

Her blonde tresses were fixed in a super tight bun atop her head and she wore smokey eye make-up to perfect the evening look.

 

Glam: Jaime's stunning dress featured a zipped leg slit with jeweled trim

 

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On her feet she sported black patent heels which matched the curves of her dress perfectly and carried a coordinating black and gold box clutch.

 

During the day Jaime was seen getting ready for her glamourous appearance and donned a daring backless denim jumpsuit which cut low under her arms and hung delicately on her slender frame.

 

The mother-of-one was spotted at a salon enjoying both a manicure, pedicure and a simultaneous shoulder massage.

 

Her hair was scraped into a low bun which displayed her back tattoos and she donned retro style white-rimmed sunglasses.

 

Once home the star shared a snap with her Instagram followers showing her clad in a white dressing gown with her make-up and hair complete.

 

On her lap sat adorable 10-month-old son James Knight. She captioned: 'Getting ready for #sincityadametokillfor premiere with James Knight'

 

The Pearl Harbour star also gave her fans a sneak peek of the evening's look, posting a close-up of the jewel trimmed leg slit. She wrote alongside it: 'The dress for tonight's premiere is...90's SEX'

 

Jaime was joined at the premiere by co-stars Rosario Dawson, Bruce Willis and Jessica Alba.

 

She plays both Wendy and Goldie - prostitutes and identical twins - in the action thriller which is the long-awaited sequel to the cult 2005 hit Sin City.

 

The second installment once again has the comic book creator Frank Miller at the helm, along with his co-director Robert Rodriguez, however this time Quentin Tarantino does not have a guest directing role.

 

The graphic film tells the tale of the notorious residents of Basin City as they fight to exist in a world of crime, grime and gangsters.

 

Sin City: A Dame to Kill For also stars Josh Brolin, Jessica Alba, Mickey Rourke, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Eva Green and Lady Gaga, and will hit theaters on August 22.

 

Jaime is married to director Kyle Newman and she recently revealed they dealt with fertility issues for eight years as they struggled to bring their son James into the world.

 

And In an interview with ABC News in May, Jaime gushed: 'He's the happiest, most joyful, social and loving baby. This baby was a long time in the making and I feel like the universe put a little extra magic dust in him.'

 

Jaime and Kyle met in 2005 on the set of Fanboys, which he directed. They tied the knot on November 23, 2007, at Greystone Park and Manor in Los Angeles where Kyle had proposed.

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18/08/2014

The picture that says you can invade an Englishman's castle

The picture that says you can invade an Englishman's castle...but you'll never break his spirit (or his family!): Flanked by his loyal daughters, victim of Polish thugs tells of his appalling ordeal

His misshapen and bruised face is shocking evidence of the vicious beating he endured at the hands of four masked raiders.

But academic Paul Kohler is nevertheless wreathed in a broad smile, testimony to his indomitable spirit.

Flanked by two of his four beloved daughters, one of whom was also caught up in the horrific attack, he is clearly proud of the family he fought so valiantly to protect.

And his courageous decision to allow pictures to be taken of him sitting up in his hospital bed, his blackened, swollen eyes little more than slits and his cheeks and forehead blotched with dark purple, sends out an unambiguous message to his attackers – whatever you do, his spirit will not be broken.

Sitting by his side, his 24-year-old daughter Eloise appears serene, with little to suggest that only a few days ago she had been forced to hide under her bed, terrified that she too would become a victim of the attackers.

In a second picture, she shares a joke with her father, reducing him to what must be painful stitches of laughter, while her mother Sam, who was threatened with violence by the intruders, stands by the bed like a tower of strength.

The images were taken after the Cambridge-educated law lecturer and father of four spoke in graphic detail for the first time about the brutal attack that shocked the country.

When he opened the door of his six-bedroom house on Monday night, he had been enjoying a tranquil evening playing board games with his wife.

The last thing he expected was that within moments he would be battling for everything he most loved.

Mr Kohler, the head of law at the University of London’s School of Oriental and African Studies, said he thought only of protecting his family as he fought back furiously against the intruders.

He said: ‘I regard my home as my domain and suddenly these men break through the defences.

‘Within my domain I had this hostile force and I felt incredibly protective. I had my family there and this whole notion of an Englishman’s home is his castle – that was the feeling. I realised I’d stupidly let into my house someone who was out to create havoc, and there’s a real sense of fear and panic.

‘But I felt I had to defend my home and my family. I really was fighting for my life.’

Mr Kohler’s ordeal, during which he suffered severe blood loss and injuries that could permanently damage his sight, began at 10pm on Monday when he heard the doorbell ring at his £2 million, three-storey Edwardian property in the normally peaceful suburb of Wimbledon, South-West London.

Unusually, he said, he had won several rounds of the intellectually challenging game Lost Cities, and his wife Sam had gone upstairs to ‘lick her wounds’.

His daughter Eloise and her boyfriend Geraint had earlier had supper with the couple but had gone upstairs to watch television in her room, a piece of good fortune that probably saved the family from an even worse fate.

His other three daughters, Saskia, Bethany and Tamara, were not in the house, and Mr Kohler, who was alone downstairs when the doorbell rang, said he assumed it was one of his daughters’ friends.

He said: ‘I could see a silhouette of someone through the glass – it’s pretty badly lit out in the hall – and it looked just like the height and haircut of one of the girls’ mates. So I opened the door and this guy appeared to fall through the door.

‘Before I even thought what’s happening I had blows raining down on me. They hit me before they said anything. Then the one at the front started saying, “Where’s the money?” It was a dark hallway, but from what I could see of them they had covered their faces.

Then they pushed me away from the door so I wasn’t making sound out into the street.’

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The bloody and relentless assault continued as the men punched and kicked Mr Kohler almost 20ft along the hallway until he was at the door of his dining room. ‘They were pushing me to the dining room and I was trying to defend the stairs a bit because I knew my family were up there,’ he said.

‘I was punching away and thrashing away. I couldn’t punch like them, but I was doing my best and shouting and they were trying to shut me up.’

He recalled: ‘I shouted out “Sam, ring the police!” – a move he said he instantly regretted because it alerted the burglars to Sam’s whereabouts. In response, one of the four thugs ran upstairs, forced Sam to lie on the floor and stood over her for the duration of the burglary.

After that Mr Kohler was careful to not reveal that Eloise was in her bedroom at the top of the house.

His quick-thinking daughter, hearing the commotion, was able to lock her bedroom door and call 999. She then turned off the light before crawling under the bed with her boyfriend and speaking to the police in hushed tones.

Speaking for the first time, the Edinburgh University graduate said: ‘I honestly thought my parents had been stabbed. I thought we were going to die.

‘That’s all I kept thinking, “We’re going to die.” I was so scared. The policewoman was trying to calm me down, but I was just sobbing.’

Meanwhile, Mr Kohler had been ‘blinded’ in his left eye by the force of the blows.

In the dining room, where he was surrounded by his familiar furniture including a piano and cocktail cabinet, the attack took an even more menacing turn. He said: ‘One of the men pushed me back so I was lying in the doorway of the dining room and jumped on top of me and was just beating me remorselessly with his fists.

‘Another one was behind me kicking me in the head, and another held my legs down.

‘One of the first punches I received in the hallway had caused me to lose all sight in my left eye, so it meant I was blindsided on one side and couldn’t see anything coming.

A copper flew through the door like the cavalry -

Paul Kohler

‘One of them was kicking me from the side and I couldn’t see them coming. He was just smashing at my face and the power of the blows was just phenomenal.

‘The guy who came in first was grabbing at my groin and trying to grab my testicles, but it was impossible in that position while I was kicking.’

However, the moment that really terrified Mr Kohler was when one of his tormentors pulled out a roll of gaffer tape and attempted to gag him.

He said: ‘I was biting at it because there’s something about if you’ve lost all your physical freedom and then they try to take your voice as well, which is your only defence mechanism – you panic.

‘So I bit at the tape and bit at it every time he tried to put it on and it stuck together. So he gave up doing that.’

At this point, Sam tried to escape from the man who was standing over her upstairs, causing two of Mr Kohler’s attackers to run upstairs to his aid.

Mr Kohler’s remaining assailant then attempted to put his hands over the academic’s mouth and nostrils, prompting Mr Kohler to try to break free, but then the two other men came back down.

‘Then I was facing all three and one of them hit me again on my blind side, so I was down again,’ he said. ‘Then the ringleader picked up the heavy, wooden door of the cocktail cabinet, which is loose and has come off. And he knelt above me, holding the door above his head, saying, “Tell me where the money is” – and threatening to bring it down on my head, and I’m bracing myself thinking he’s about to hit me with the door.

At that point a copper just flew through the door like the cavalry. He grabbed at the guy who was kneeling on my shoulders and pinned him down.’

When his wife and daughter emerged unhurt, he said there were ‘tears of emotion’ but also bewilderment over what had happened.

The devastating assault on Mr Kohler lasted only eight minutes, but it left the house covered in blood and was described by the detective inspector investigating the case as the ‘most brutal’ he has seen in 20 years.

Mr Kohler said he was ‘unrecognisable’ with swelling on the side of his head the size of a football, while blood flowed from his mouth and eyes. He was unable to open his eyes for two days.

Doctors at the hospital to which he was taken had to carry out an emergency transfusion because he had lost so much blood because of internal bleeding, putting a strain on his heart. He now faces reconstructive surgery on a cracked eye socket that could still could leave permanent damage to his sight.

Mr Kohler said they were still bemused about the motive for the attack, especially as little was taken and their house is close to a police station.

He said: ‘There are only two possibilities. It’s either a mistaken address or someone has made the stupid assumption because we own a small bar in Covent Garden, the Cellar Door, that we have a large amount of money in the house.

‘But most people buy their drinks with credit cards. We have a few hundred pounds at most that comes into the house and goes straight to the bank.’

Two Polish men have appeared in court and were remanded in custody but police are seeking the other two suspects. Both are believed to be aged between 20 and 30 and from Eastern Europe.

Detectives have released CCTV images of one of the suspects running through Wimbledon Theatre car park. He can be seen removing the surgical gloves which he wore during the attack.

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