Actors Archives — Post-Punk.com https://post-punk.com/category/actors/ Your online source of music news and more about Post-Punk, Goth, Industrial, Synth, Shoegaze, and more! Thu, 28 Jan 2021 16:52:13 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 https://post-punk.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/cropped-postpunkincon-2-32x32.png Actors Archives — Post-Punk.com https://post-punk.com/category/actors/ 32 32 Cast Announced For Netflix’s The Sandman https://post-punk.com/cast-announced-for-netflixs-the-sandman/ Thu, 28 Jan 2021 16:52:13 +0000 https://post-punk.com/?p=35893 At last! Neil Gaiman’s dreams have come true and the long patient wait has finally come to a head. After a few false starts and bumps in the road, Netflix…

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At last! Neil Gaiman’s dreams have come true and the long patient wait has finally come to a head. After a few false starts and bumps in the road, Netflix is finally releasing the popular DC Comics dark fantasy comic series The Sandman, some thirty-three years after first appearing in Gaiman’s rich imagination.

The Sandman follows the people and places affected by the Dream King, Morpheus, as he tries to remedy all the mistakes he’s made during his virtually endless existence, on both cosmic and human levels. Netflix describes the series as “a rich blend of modern myth and dark fantasy in which contemporary fiction, historical drama and legend are seamlessly interwoven.”

Gaiman will serve as executive producer and co-writer for the adaptation, alongside David S. Goyer (Batman Begins, The Dark Knight, Terminator: Dark Fate, Foundation) and showrunner Allan Heinberg (Wonder Woman, Grey’s Anatomy). The Sandman has had a long, arduous road to the big screen, including a failed 2013 movie adaptation with Joseph Gordon-Levitt, so Gaiman is extremely pleased to explore the blank canvas offered in this incarnation.

“I can’t wait until the people out there get to see what we’ve been seeing as Dream and the rest of them take flesh, and the flesh belongs to some of the finest actors out there,” Gaiman proclaimed in a statement. The stellar cast stars the brilliant Charles Dance and Gwendoline Christie; supporting roles will be played by Tom Sturridge, Vivienne Acheampong, Boyd Holbrook, Asim Chaudhry, and Sanjeem Bhaskar. Here is the full cast list released by Netflix:

  • TOM STURRIDGE: DREAM, Lord of the Dreaming
  • GWENDOLINE CHRISTIE: LUCIFER, Ruler of Hell
  • VIVIENNE ACHEAMPONG: LUCIENNE, chief librarian and trusted guardian of Dream’s realm
  • BOYD HOLBROOK: THE CORINTHIAN, an escaped nightmare who wishes to taste all that the world has in store
  • CHARLES DANCE: RODERICK BURGESS, Charlatan, blackmailer and magician
  • ASIM CHAUDHRY: ABEL
  • SANJEEV BHASKAR: CAIN, the first victim and the first predator, residents and loyal subjects of the Dream Realm.

Gaiman added, “This is astonishing, and I’m so grateful to the actors and to all of The Sandman collaborators — Netflix, Warner Bros., DC, to Allan Heinberg and David Goyer, and the legions of crafters and geniuses on the show — for making the wildest of all my dreams into reality.”

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Grace Jones was the first artist to cover Joy Division | ‘Warm Leatherette’ and ‘Nightclubbing’ https://post-punk.com/grace-jones-was-the-first-artist-to-cover-joy-division-warm-leatherette-and-nightclubbing/ Sat, 09 Dec 2017 05:52:33 +0000 http://www.post-punk.com/?p=15053 Sorry Goths and Hipsters—Jamaican singer Grace Jones was the first artist to cover Joy Division. In fact, the fashion icon, dance music pioneer, and music legend— whose androgyny can only…

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Sorry Goths and Hipsters—Jamaican singer Grace Jones was the first artist to cover Joy Division.

In fact, the fashion icon, dance music pioneer, and music legend— whose androgyny can only be compared to the likes of David Bowie, Annie Lennox, and Tilda Swinton— covered Joy Division’s She’s Lost Control for the b-side of her June 27th , 1980 release of her single “Private Life”, which was a cover of Chrissie Hynde penned song by The Pretender’s released earlier that year.

“Private Life” was featured on Jones’ fourth studio LP Warm Leatherette, named after Mute Records debut single also covered on the LP that was originally released by founder Daniel Miller under his alias The Normal.

Given that the Warm Leatherette LP was released on May 9th, 1980, and that Private Life is an album track, it is as far as we know recorded before Joy Division singer Ian Curtis had taken his own life, unless Jones had quickly returned to the studio in tribute, but that is not likely given that the track is a b-side.

Not only that, but all songs featured on Warm Leatherette were recorded at Compass Point Studios in the Bahamas.

Listen to Grace Jones’ reggae-infused version of She’s Lost Control:


Additionally, there is another link to Joy Division as well in the subject matter of “Warm Leatherette”, as it was a song inspired by Crash, the post-modernist novel about fetishizing the experience of a car crash by author J.G. Ballard, where the story was also featured in the preceding work The Atrocity Exhibition.

The book, The Atrocity Exhibition also naturally inspired the track of the same name on Joy Division’s Closer LP, which was released a few months after Jones’ cover, being issued on July 18th, 1980, exactly 2 months after the death of Ian Curtis.

More from Warm Leatherette:

Pivoting from her disco trilogy that finished with 1979’s Muse, Jones stepped right into the avant-garde, by embracing the emerging post-punk through a series of covers on the Warm Leatherette LP, all while the genre was still finding its voice.

The first single from the LP Rolling Stone had a quirky new-wave sound reminiscent of early Nina Hagen and Klaus Nomi, yet still retaining a slight disco vocal.

The second single off of the album, was a vibrant and stunning cover of Roxy Music’s classic anthem Love is The Drug from their fifth studio album Siren. that Grace Jones certainly makes her own.

The cover has a fantastic animated music video that was produced for the 1986 remix of the track that was directed by Matt Forrest and Bruno Tille.

“Breakdown” is a song by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers’ that was also later covered by The Replacements, and recently Lydia LunchTom Petty specially wrote a third verse for the song for Jones.

Watch Grace Jones perform the track on Solid Gold.

The remaining two singles on Warm Leatherette are the Smokey Robinson cover of  “The Hunter Gets Captured by the Game”, and a French-language track “Pars”.

Grace Jones and A Certain Ratio


As the Rock Nerd UK blog points out, After the release of her cover of Joy Division She’s Lost Control, Grace Jones took an interest in working with Factory Records band a A Certain Ratio, through a connection with  Island Records A&R Nick Stewart, who had been scouting Factory bands at the time.

From Shadowplayers: The Rise and Fall of Factory Records by James Nice (chapter 1980 Part 2, p130 and p135):

“Indeed even before Shack Up appeared, co-manager Wilson found himself invited to New York to discuss signing Ratio to artsy Island sub-label Antilles for America. Through Nick Stewart, operating from Island’s London office, Factory also caught the attention of achingly fashionable disco diva Grace Jones, who recorded a singular cover of She’s Lost Control by Joy Division, and would toy with the idea of employing Ratio as her backing band.”

The book then goes on to elaborate on the collaboration, which didn’t pan out due to a few conflicts. Apparently, there were three days worth of backing tracks from the sessions, from recording some Talking Heads covers that have yet to surface:

“With Shack Up and Flight both released inside four short months, Ratio now found themselves courted by Grace Jones, whose cover of She’s Lost Control had appeared in August. ‘She went up to Manchester to do some television promotion,’ recalls Island A&R man Nick Stewart, ‘so I took her to Strawberry when ACR and Martin were mixing their album. We talked about a collaboration, and there was an attempt to record a version of And Then Again, and Houses In Motion by Talking Heads. But it never quite came off.’ In fact it was even suggested that Ratio record an album with Jones at Compass Point in Nassau, but according to guitarist Pete Terrell: ‘Chris Blackwell at Island didn’t know anything about the project until after we’d met Grace Jones, done some recordings, and some PR shots appeared in the press. He wasn’t happy about it because he was her producer, not Martin Hannett. This guy at Island was really keen but he got overruled. Anyway Donald didn’t think the deal was very good, and I was told that Tony didn’t get on with Chris Blackwell.”

The infamous slap

On November 18th, 1980 Grace Jones repeatedly slaps talk show host Russell Harty on live television for being rude and repeatedly turning his back on her. This certainly an iconic moment on television let alone being an interesting moment for an icon such as Jones.

Watch the full interview here.

Nightclubbing


The follow-up to Warm Leatherette, named after another cover of an essential post-punk track culled from Iggy Pop’s The Idiot LP, a record named the novel from Fyodor Dostoyevsky, and companion album to David Bowie’s Heroes.

The track is question Night Clubbing, which was famously sampled for Nine Inch Nails 1992 single Closer’s trademark piston sound.

It is worth noting, coincidence or not that The Idiot was the last thing Joy Division singer Ian Curtis listened to before hanging himself.

Listen to Grace Jones cover of Nightclubbing below:

Nightclubbing is Grace Jones’s fifth studio album, and although the title track is fantastic, it’s is hardly what this highly influential album is best known for regarding its impact on fashion and music.

The first single on the LP was a song written by Sting during his tenure with his band The Police.

The next single I’ve Seen That Face Before (Libertango), is a reggae reworking of Argentine bandoneonist Astor Piazzolla’s original.

Watch the infamous  Jean-Paul Goude directed music video below, where Jones’ play the accordion. The video closes the 1982  long-form music video collection/documentary A One Man Show on Jones that features many of the videos that are featured in this article.

The next track on Nightclubbing is perhaps the best-known song of Jones’ entire career. The sexually suggestive dance club hit” Pull Up To The Bumper”.

1985 re-release cover

The music video for the song is a combination of live footage from A One Man Show with excerpts from Godfrey Reggio’s 1982 experimental documentary film Koyaanisqatsi.

The next singles were “Use Me”, a cover of a Bill Withers song, and “Feel Up”.

The final single on Nightclubbing was “Walking In the Rain”, a cover of the 1978 song by Australian band Flash and the Pan.

Legacy

After the release of Warm Leatherette and Nightclubbing, Grace Jones concluded her trilogy of Compass Point Studios records with her 1982 new-wave inspired sixth studio album Living My Life, which was followed by the release of A One Man Show.

Jones’ two post-punk LP’s were perhaps the most memorable part of her iconic career, cementing her image into the annals of music, style, fashion, and art history.  Her work on both records would later comprise half of her 1985 greatest hits LP Island Life, which probably has one of the most recognized album covers of all time, along with Joy Division’s Unknown Pleasures.

 

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Actor Bill Paxton has passed away | Watch videos from his new wave act Martini Ranch https://post-punk.com/actor-bill-paxton-has-passed-away-watch-videos-from-his-new-wave-act-martini-ranch/ Mon, 27 Feb 2017 00:12:49 +0000 http://www.post-punk.com/?p=12111 Game over man! We have just lost Bill Paxton, the show stealing actor from iconic 80s films such as Weird Science and Aliens, Near Dark, and a brief appearance in The…

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Game over man! We have just lost Bill Paxton, the show stealing actor from iconic 80s films such as Weird Science and Aliens, Near Dark, and a brief appearance in The Terminator. Paxton would go on to star in the 90’s blockbusters Twister and Apollo 13, with an integral appearance in Titanic. The 61-year-old father of 2 died Saturday due to complications from surgery, his family announced today.

Paxton also made an appearance (alongside Rae Dawn Chong) in New Order’s video for “Touched By the Hand of God,”  which was directed by Kathryn Bigelow, who was James Cameron’s wife at the time. Footage from this video was also used in the infamous New Order Sunkist Ad.

Paxton was also one half of 80s new wave act Martini Ranch—formed in 1984, releasing two EPs and an album between 1986 and 1988.

Below, watch the “How Can the Labouring Man Find Time for Self-Culture?”, which was was produced by DEVO’s Bob Casale—also featuring fellow DEVO members Alan Myers on drums and Mark Mothersbaugh on keyboards.  Additionally there are cameos by Anthony Michael Hall, Rick Rossovich and Judge Reinhold. Also check out the James Cameron directed clip for “Reach.”

Also, let#s not forget Fish Heads…https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cn73Wtem0No
h/t Slicing Up Eyeballs

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