Eddie Marsan
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Age | 56 |
Date of birth | June 9,1968 |
Zodiac sign | Gemini |
Born | Stepney |
London | |
United Kingdom | |
Height | 174 (cm) |
Spouse | Janine Schneider-Marsan |
Job | Actor |
Education | Academy of the Science of Acting & Directing |
Mountview | |
Raine’s Foundation School | |
Awards | British Independent Film Award for Best Supporting Actor |
National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actor | |
British Independent Film Award for Best Supporting Actor / Actress | |
Official site | twitter.com |
Alma mater | Mountview Academy of Theatre Arts |
Children | 4 |
Nationality | British |
English | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 404200 |
Happy-Go- Lucky
Hancock
The World's End
Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows
Deadpool 2
Vice
Mowgli: Legend of the Jungle
Jack the Giant Slayer
Filth
The Disappearance of Alice Creed
Snow White and the Huntsman
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell
Atomic Blonde
Entebbe
The Illusionist
Vera Drake
The Limehouse Golem
21 Grams
Mission: Impossible III
Miami Vice
X+Y
V for Vendetta
War Horse
Tyrannosaur
Gangster No. 1
Sixty Six
Pierrepoint
Gangs of New York
The Exception
Little Dorrit
The Man Who Knew Too Little
Concussion
Beowulf & Grendel
A Kind of Murder
The 39 Steps
The Monkey King
God's Pocket
Southcliffe
Junkhearts
Faintheart
The Emperor's New Clothes
The New World
Me and Orson Welles
The Secret Life of Words
London Boulevard
Mark Felt: The Man Who Brought Down the White House
Their Finest
Grow Your Own
Janice Beard
Ridley Road
Choose or Die
Ray Donovan
The Gentlemen
Eddie Marsan Life story
Edward Maurice Charles Marsan is an English actor. He won the London Film Critics Circle Award and the National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actor for the film Happy-Go-Lucky.
Thousands march against antisemitism in London
... " Actor Eddie Marsan gave a speech urging " moderate people in this country to stand up and face down extremism and bigotry and antisemitism and Islamophobia and all forms of racism"...
'My muscle condition won't stop me playing Glastonbury'
... " But the band have already got the support of one famous fan, actor Eddie Marsan, who implored festivalgoers to catch their set...
Concert For Ukraine: Refugee stories centre stage as show raises £12m
... And the stories of two Ukrainians were put centre stage when they were read by actors Tamsin Greig and Eddie Marsan...
How socially distant stars are still in the process of TV drama in a crisis
... In a further Tranche, Eddie Marsan appears, with the sons Blu and Bodhi...
'My muscle condition won't stop me playing Glastonbury'
By Mark SavageBBC Music Correspondent
Last week, he was sitting his GCSEs. This Week , he'll make his debut at Glastonbury.
Eli Crossley, who's just 16, will be one of the youngest performers ever to play The Festival when he takes to The Stage with his band, Askew.
And he's doing so in spite of the muscle wasting disease that's confined him to a wheelchair for the Last Year .
If the magnitude of The Event is playing on his mind, it doesn't show.
" I've got three exams left, And Then we've got this small concert, " he laughs over The Phone from his home in London, a week before The Festival .
Eli has Duchenne muscular dystrophy, a progressive and life-limiting condition that gradually makes his muscles become weaker.
His Big Break came about almost By Accident when, earlier this year, he appeared on Bbc Breakfast to discuss his condition.
The teenager was Showing Off a new piece of technology called the Smart Suit that, it is hoped, will help him continue to move his upper body when he grows older.
Asked how comfortable The Device was to wear, he replied: " It's very comfortable and I hope it will Help Me in fulfilling my dream of playing Glastonbury. "
His mum, Emily Reuben, joins us on The Call . " I don't think anyone thought you were going to mention Glastonbury, " she laughs.
" It just sort of came out and the whole thing went viral. I was impressed. You put your dreams Out There . "
It didn't take long for Social Media to take up The Cause , petitioning festival organiser Emily Eavis to give Eli and his band a slot.
After an initial flurry of activity, however, the requests died down. Then, a parent at Eli's school saw Askew performing in an end-of-term Talent Show .
That parent just happened to be Jon Turner of Island Records . The Following morning, calls were placed to Eavis and her husband Nick Dewey , and the cogs turned.
" They saw the video of Eli and said, 'Yes, we'd absolutely love to have him', " Ms Reuben recalls.
That evening she posted a cryptic message on WhatsApp to The Group 's parents: " Major news incoming. " Soon afterwards, Eli started making calls to his bandmates Alfie, 15, and Freddie, Jay and Will, all 16.
" I didn't believe him at all, " says Will, who plays guitar. " I thought it was a little joke. "
Then The News sank in. .
" Will is fairly new to The Band and He Said , 'But I've never played a gig before', " Eli recalls.
" And I was like, 'Yeah, well you're playing Glastonbury now, mate. '"
" We've never played anything this big, " says second guitarist Jay, admitting to a degree of nervousness.
" We've only really played in front of our parents and in small bars and stuff. We never thought we'd be here. "
Asked how he feels about The Show , even Eli's bravado falters temporarily.
" I'm terrified about it, but really excited at the same time. "
But The Band have already got the support of one famous fan, actor Eddie Marsan , who implored festivalgoers to catch their set.
" Eli is not only a remarkable young man, he's a phenomenal musician, " he wrote on Twitter.
" I saw his band Askew play In Paris and their set was incredible. They're going to blow Glastonbury away. "
The Group will play at 17:30 BST on Friday on the small and secretive Rabbit Hole Stage - an underground venue where punters have to answer a riddle before they can enter.
Their half-hour set will mix originals like Rosemary and Last with covers of Queen's Crazy Little Thing Called Love and Supersonic by Oasis - " a few crowd pleasers to make sure everybody stays put" as Eli puts it - before they're set free for the rest of the weekend.
Eli is determined to see Royal Blood on The Pyramid Stage , while his mum has made it clear she'll be watching Sir Elton John on Sunday Night .
After that, she will go back to The Day job of running Duchenne UK, The Charity she Set Up after Eli was diagnosed with muscular dystrophy 13 years ago. At The Time , she was told her three-year-old might not live to see 20.
Along with co-founder Alex Johnson , she has raised More Than £17m, which has been used to fund clinical trials across the UK, as well as partially funding 34 posts for doctors and nurses, creating guidelines for care for Duchenne patients and research into how technology can help them. Both women received OBEs from King Charles Last Weekend .
It was part of their research that led to Eli's initial appearance on Bbc Breakfast , discussing the motor-assisted suit that will help him continue playing guitar when his arm muscles begin to waste away.
She says The Suit will mean " being able to brush your teeth, give your mum a hug [or] put your arm up in class. All the Little Things that are actually the really big things".
With help from the Postcode Lottery, they have 10 prototypes in development, and hope to make The Suit widely available within three years - helping not just children with muscular dystrophy, but other conditions including Spinal Injuries .
" She's an inspiration not just to me, but to many people around The World , " says Eli.
Clearly, his mum feels the same way about her son.
" I just can't believe it. We never in our Wildest Dreams thought that dream of his would ever come true, " she says.
" These boys work really hard and they rehearse a lot. I know they're going to smash it. "
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com