SuperSuper Magazine Scans

September 10th, 2008

Hayley from Skins Online has scanned in the pictures from SuperSuper Magazine. She says she’ll scan the interviews when she gets back off holiday.

  

  
  

 

Skins Cast at RTSPA

March 21st, 2008

Here’s Picture’s of some of the Skins Cast that were at The Royal Television Society Programme Awards.

Dev Petal, Hannah Murray & Joe Dempsie

Dev Petal, Hannah Murray & Joe Dempsie

Hannah Murray

Hannah Murray

Hannah Murray

Joe Dempsie

Peter Capaldi (Mark Jenkins/Sid’s Dad)

Peter Capaldi (Mark Jenkins/Sid’s Dad)

SOURCE

Hannah Murray to join West End cast for That Face

March 4th, 2008

Hannah Murray, star of Channel 4’s teen television drama Skins, is to join the cast of Polly Stenham’s multi-award winning play That Face, when it transfers to the West End on May 1.

Hannah Murray as Cassie in Skins on E4 and Channel 4 Photo: Channel 4 / Jack Barnes

Murray will take on the role of Mia and will appear alongside Lindsay Duncan, Matt Smith, Catherine Steadman and Julian Wadham. Directed by Jeremy Herrin, That Face is designed by Mike Britton, with lighting by Natasha Chivers and sound by Emma Laxton.

Stenham’s debut work opened in April last year at the Jerwood Theatre Upstairs to great critical acclaim, having been developed through the Royal Court’s Young Writer’s Programme.

The 19-year-old writer went on to receive both the Evening Standard’s Charles Wintour Award and the Critics’ Circle Award for Most Promising Playwright, as well as the Theatrical Management Association award for Best Play. The cast of That Face are nominated for this year’s Laurence Olivier Award for Outstanding Achievement in Affiliate Theatre.

Meanwhile, Stenham has received a grant from the UK Film Council to adapt her play for the big screen.

 

Hannah Murray as Cassie in Skins on E4 and Channel 4

 

SOURCE: http://www.thestage.co.uk/news/newsstory.php/20039/skins-murray-to-join-west-end-cast-for-that

Hannah Murray (Cassie) Nominated For Glamour Award

February 27th, 2008

She faces competition from the likes of Ashley Jensen (Extras), Catherine Tate (Doctor Who), Billie Piper (Secret Diary of a Call Girl) and Emma Watson (Harry Potter).

 

SOURCE: http://www.snitchseeker.com/harry-potter-news/jk-rowling-emma-watson-jany-temime-nominated-glamour-awards-54119/

OmGzzZ G055ip!

February 25th, 2008

Gawd I feel like a fucking moron quoting anything from the Daily Star but apparently Hannah Murray (Cassie) and Rupert Grint’s (Ron in Harry Potter) relationship hasn’t really gone anywhere and they aren’t together anymore.

If you can bear to take a look:  http://www.dailystar.co.uk/goss/view/30535/Hogwart-s-Ron-comforts-Allen/

Crew Blog: Hannah Murray (Cassie)

January 27th, 2008

This weekend, instead of filming the main series, we have been shooting some of the platforms – the mini Unseen Skins episodes (or Epidermisodes as Ben Schiffer very cleverly termed them) that appear on the internet in accompaniment to the series itself.

These can be a lot of fun to film, as they are often quite independent from the storylines of the series itself, and feel a bit like doing a short film. Also we quite often get to explore characters or relationships that aren’t touched on in the actual episodes – for example last year I really loved getting to work more closely with April and to look at the friendship between Cassie and Michelle more closely in the first Unseen Skins “I Mostly Do”, as I felt it was a very interesting and realistic relationship that hadn’t been dealt with in Series 1 in that much detail.

We tend to shoot platforms with a reduced crew, which can be quite nice as you feel less aware of there being something of a circus going on around you and you can focus more on your performance. Speaking of crew, there have also been a couple of cameos made by them in the platforms, which make them all the more enjoyable to shoot. If you watch the ninth one “Bye” (which I think may only appear on the DVD) you’ll be able to see Edward K. Gibbon, our costume designer, as a hotel doorman, and Ben Childs, floor runner, as a hot dog seller.

The only slight downside of the platforms is that they tend to be shot at a very frantic pace, which can be quite a shock in comparison to the main unit where you have a lot more time. When I got home today I found myself running around the house in order to do anything, even though I really didn’t need to, just because I’d been used to such a sense of urgency all day. But in reality this is the smallest of downsides, and certainly makes you feel more productive, and eliminates almost all waiting around. So despite my last three days shooting platforms being slightly mad and very cold, they were nonetheless a marvellous time.

Source: www.e4.com/skins

Hannah Murray Interview

January 20th, 2008

Have you always wanted to act?
I suppose from about 11 or so it was something that I really wanted to do. But this is the first thing I’ve ever done that’s at all successful really. I’ve done sort of youth theatre at the Bristol Old Vic. I’d done some plays with that and I’d done some stuff for school and that was about it really. But I think doing Skins has made me feel certain that it is something that I really want to do and really go for it.

And how did you hear about Skins?
That was through my youth theatre that I go to. Basically we were given little bits of paper with the casting directors email address on and I got in touch with her and then she said to come down for an audition and I did, and got a call back and then another call back and then I got the part.

What is it about Skins that makes it different from other teen dramas? Why is Skins something that is going to stand out?
I think that Skins is more truthful and I think that it’s more exciting. And I also think that it looks like nothing else on TV. I think it’s a lot more artistically done really. It’s really beautifully shot and I think the characters are incredibly well crafted. I also think that the fact that we are all so young is important, because if you watch a lot of, especially American, dramas - they’re all 20-year-olds playing teenagers, but we’re all pretty much the age of the characters, which I think is a big part of it.

How closely did you work with the writers on creating the character of Cassie? Did you have some input?
Obviously she was already written. She was very clear and well-drawn. As soon as I read the script for the character she was just kind of there. All the writers were really great about talking to us about things, and if we wanted to have any suggestions or help to talk about how we felt about how our character would behave, they were really good and they were really open to ideas.

Tell me a bit about Cassie. She’s quite a complex character…
Yes, she is. Well basically the main thing about Cassie, especially in her own episode, programme two, is the fact that she’s got an eating disorder. When the series starts she’s just come out of hospital and she’s basically got a fairly horrible family life, with parents who don’t pay any attention to her and just focus on her baby brother. She’s a bit of an outsider as well. She’s not involved in the main events like the rest of the gang. But at the same time, as being very troubled she’s very clever and she’s also kind of weird and wonderful and she’s fun and magical at the same time.

Is there much of you in her?
I don’t know. I don’t think that we’re the same on a basic circumstantial level, I don’t have anorexia and I’m not suicidal or anything like that, but I think there are some things like, I think that everyone knows what it’s like to feel lonely or a bit depressed and feel like that on an emotional level. And I love how dreamy she is as well, and the things she thinks about, I really like that. I think I can relate to her emotionally but not circumstantially.

Do you feel some what kind of a responsibility playing a character who is so vulnerable in terms of the fact that there are a lot of teenage girls out there who have issues to do with eating? Do feel that there is a responsibility that goes with playing a character like that?
I don’t know if it is a responsibility. I think obviously it is a sensitive issue and I think it has been handled very well in this show, but I don’t think the aim with this is to make kind of preachy drama about how we should all behave in a certain way. Obviously this is something that does exist for teenagers today and I think it’s just a way of exploring that. I don’t feel a sort of responsibility to behave in a certain way or portray her in a certain way because I just want to play the character how the writers see it.

You’ve referred to her home life, and Neil Morrissey plays your dad. That must have been really fun?
Yeah, he was really funny. I was a bit nervous because he was the first sort of ‘big name’ I’d ever met. But he was so nice and so friendly and great to work with. He’s got a nice energy in all the scenes that I did with him. He was really, really great.

And how realistic do you think the drama is, how true to life is it? Does it reflect the reality of being a teenager today?
I think it’s obviously exaggerated and heightened and there are certain characters that exist in the show that are clearly not realistic depictions of things. So, yeah there is a lot of exaggeration, but I think on an emotional level the way the teenagers are portrayed and how they are trying to work things out and everything is very true, and the characters are very realistic.

What was the experience of filming like? Was it everything that you’d hoped?
It was more than that. It was so much more than that. I’ve had the most amazing job of my life. It was so good. It was just so wonderful to…it’s just the best job you could ever imagine and it’s so exciting and it’s challenging and it’s fun. It’s the best thing.

Did they have to fit it into the academic calendar? Was it all done during the summer?
No it was not all done during the summer holidays. When we filmed my episode I missed two weeks of school but that was after my exams so it wasn’t very serious. And then there was a month in the summer but then we were filming throughout the first term of school but some of us missed more than others.

So you better make the most of the acting because your academic record is going to be shot to pieces?
No it’s alright. I had good grades last year and I had some work to catch up.

What’s the best thing that someone could say about the drama when it comes out?
That they like it. I don’t know, that they’ve enjoyed watching it. I think that the main thing obviously about television is that somebody can sit down and have a really nice hour and it makes them laugh and it makes them feel things. I think that’s the most important thing because it’s entertainment.

It discusses quite frankly issues about sex and drugs will you be able to sit down with family members and watch it or will you be too embarrassed?
Well partly I’ll be too embarrassed for the fact that I’m in it. I mean I hate watching myself. I really hate it. I don’t feel uncomfortable watching it with these guys because they are kind of in the same boat. But, yeah it is the kind of show that I wouldn’t particularly want to watch with my mum in the room. But I think it is good that it’s not, because teenagers like to watch stuff that they wouldn’t want their parents to know they were watching.

Yeah, if you could watch it with your parents then it wouldn’t be worth making…
Yeah exactly.

 

 

SOURCE: http://www.lastbroadcast.co.uk/tv/v/1449-hannah-murray-skins-cassie-interview.html

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