Sean Bean
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Age | 65 |
Date of birth | April 17,1959 |
Zodiac sign | Aries |
Born | Handsworth |
Sheffield | |
United Kingdom | |
Height | 179 (cm) |
Spouse | Ashley Moore |
Children | Molly Bean |
Lorna Bean | |
Evie Natasha Bean | |
Job | Voice acting |
Television producer | |
Education | Royal Academy of Dramatic Art |
Rotherham College | |
Awards | Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture |
International Emmy Award for Best Performance by an Actor | |
British Academy Television Award for Best Actor | |
Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Acting Ensemble | |
Parents | Brian Bean |
Rita Bean | |
Siblings | Lorraine Bean |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 422117 |
GoldenEye
Patriot Games
Equilibrium
The Island
National Treasure
The Martian
Jupiter Ascending
Flightplan
Silent Hill
The Frankenstein Chronicles
The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
Broken
Black Death
Mirror Mirror
Essex Boys
Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief
Don't Say a Word
Ronin
The Oath
The Field
Sharpe's Peril
The Hitcher
Kingsglaive: Final Fantasy XV
Legends
North Country
Lady Chatterley
The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
Death Race 2
Sharpe's Rifles
Silent Hill: Revelation
Caravaggio
Medici: Masters of Florence
Cleanskin
The Dark
Black Beauty
Anna Karenina
Soldiers of Fortune
Age of Heroes
The Lost Future
Sharpe's Eagle
When Saturday Comes
Bravo Two Zero
The Catherine Cookson Collection: The Fifteen Streets
Far North
Sharpe's Sword
Cash
Sharpe's Company
Snowpiercer
Troy
Game of Thrones
Sharpe
Sean Bean Life story
Sean Bean is an English actor. After graduating from the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, Bean made his professional debut in a theatre production of Romeo and Juliet in 1983.
Time: Short prison sentence 'derailed' woman's life
... " A punishment which bites deep The first series of Time, starring Sean Bean and Stephen Graham, won multiple Bafta awards with its portrayal of men navigating the penal system and their consciences...
Studio Electrophonique: The council house that launched top British bands
... He approached people like Cocker, Ware and actor Sean Bean - who grew up on the same Ballifield estate as Ken - with little expectation that they would agree to take part...
Highlights from the Bafta TV Awards 2022
... The Bafta TV Awards took place in London on Sunday evening, with big acting prizes going to Jodie Comer for her performance in the ITV drama Help and Sean Bean for his role in Time on the BBC...
Bafta TV Awards 2022: The winners and nominees
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Bafta TV Awards: Stars prepare for Royal Festival Hall ceremony
... Stars including Jodie Comer (for Help), Kate Winslet (Mare of Easttown), Sean Bean (Time), Matthew Macfadyen (Succession) and Emily Mortimer (The Pursuit of Love) are among the big names competing for acting prizes...
Bafta TV Awards: Aids drama It's A Sin leads nominations
... Also in the running are Hugh Quarshie for ITV s Stephen, Samuel Adewunmi for BBC s You Don t Know Me, Sean Bean for BBC One s Time and Stephen Graham for Channel 4 s Help...
Sienna Miller settles phone hacking claim with News Group Newspapers
... Statements were read on behalf of 15 celebrities and other figures, including actor Sean Bean, Texas lead singer Sharleen Spiteri and ex-cricketer and commentator Shane Warne...
Studio Electrophonique: The council house that launched top British bands
In the 1970s and 80s, a Sheffield car mechanic's Council House doubled as Studio Electrophonique , a recording studio That was the launchpad for seminal British pop bands like Pulp, The Human League and ABC. A new film has uncovered its story.
From The Street , Ken Patten's unassuming semi-detached home looked much like any other house on his estate, or indeed on any post-war estate in Britain.
But inside, musicians forged The Future sound of British pop on synthesisers in the Living Room , an Electronic Drum kit in The Master bedroom, and even a DIY Vocoder - That produces a robot-type singing effect - Made out of old RAF microphones and toilet rolls in the downstairs extension.
" It was totally chintz and had enormous sofas with flower Patterns - a typical middle-class Sheffield suburban house with a big thick pile carpet, " Martyn Ware recalls of The House . " Really comfy and lovely, with a little conservatory at one end. "
Ware would Go On to form The Human League and Heaven 17 . But he Made The Journey to Ken's house on The Outskirts of Sheffield with his first band, The Future , in 1977 after they put an ad in a local paper seeking somewhere to record.
When they arrived, they expected Ken to take them into a studio, perhaps in his garage. Instead, he told them they would be recording in the lounge.
" I said, 'Where do we put the synths and stuff?' He Said , 'Oh, just put them on the coffee table'. He brought out his four-track recorder and, as I recall, a tiny mixing desk. We were half sat on the chintzy sofa, half sat on the floor.
" It was The Most unlikely genesis of something really pretty avant garde That I can imagine. It's much more weird than being in a fancy studio. This Was like Coronation Street , you know? "
Ware's forthcoming autobiography has a section dedicated to Ken's improbably-named Studio Electrophonique , while Pulp's Jarvis Cocker fondly remembered it in his recent book Good Pop Bad Pop.
Meanwhile, a documentary titled A Film About Studio Electrophonique had its premiere at the Sheffield Doc/Fest last week.
The Film 's director Jamie Taylor says the home studio had " a very Heath Robinson home-Made ethos to it" with most of the recording taking place in Ken's home-built extension.
" He did have some very good cutting-edge equipment at The Time , " Taylor explains. " He also had some very strange contraptions That he Made himself. It [the studio] was very small, and some of it extended into other rooms. "
In Taylor's documentary, Cocker recalls marvelling at a CCTV system That Patten had rigged up to allow them to watch their drummer in The Bedroom while they were downstairs. That was in 1981, and Cocker later thrust the resulting Demo Tape into The Hands of BBC Radio 1 DJ John Peel , leading to their first radio session before they had signed a record deal.
Ware says his band's recording was " massively important" for their progression. They took The Tape of what he describes as " soundscapes with vocals on" to record labels in London. Most showed them The Door after Five Minutes - But some saw their potential.
" They said, 'You need to go away and write some structured songs, But this is very interesting and please come back to us when you've got more stuff'. " They did, and eventually signed a contract with one of the labels That showed an interest in the Studio Electrophonique demo, Virgin Records .
Another band to make early recordings in Ken's house was Vice Versa , who would later morph into ABC. As well as the budding pop groups, Ken catered for Hawaiian guitar groups, folk acts, ranting political singers - and anyone else who was prepared to pay £15 to record there.
'Don't soil the eiderdown'" I think his wife tolerated his hobby, " Taylor explains. " But there were certain rules about, if the bands came in, they had to take their shoes off. They weren't allowed to use the toilet upstairs. I think Jarvis said there was polythene across The Bed so they couldn't soil the eiderdown.
" It was a bizarre mix of a cutting-edge studio and a suburban house. One of the bands said That at four o'clock every afternoon, whatever stage of recording they were at, it stopped when his wife came in with a cup of tea for Ken and his heart pills. "
Ware, too, discovered That domestic routines took priority.
" We got to The End of The First day and we were really hitting our stride, " he says. " It got to about six o'clock and Mrs Patten came in and said, 'Ken, your dinner's on The Table '. He Said , 'Oh, I'm sorry lads, we're going to have to stop now'.
" We were in The Middle of something really profound and heavy, " he says with a laugh. " But , 'Your dinner's on The Table , it won't wait'. "
Eccentric characterBehind the ordinary façade of an RAF veteran and panel beater, Ken was an eccentric British technological tinkerer, The Documentary shows.
He went water-skiing with a speedboat he built himself (and which exploded, injuring his daughter). He recorded his own radio-style sci-fi sketches, and Made Silent Comedy routines with a cine film club.
" The things That we found out, it did seem like he was a kind of Wallace and Gromit or Caractacus Potts type, " says Taylor.
" He had this outwardly quite normal and dull existence, a quite suburban existence, yet he had these bizarre hobbies. The Music was just one of them. "
Taylor himself is following Ken's DIY ethos. He is an English Teacher and filmed The Documentary with an iPad and cheap plug-in mic, before getting some funding to edit it professionally.
He approached people like Cocker, Ware and actor Sean Bean - who grew up on the same Ballifield estate as Ken - with little expectation That they would agree to take part. They all said yes.
Taylor had Made one film before, about a Working Men 's club football team, also on his iPad and without funding or much idea of whether anyone would want to watch it.
" No-one's going to come and commission you to make a film in Sheffield if you're an unknown film-maker, " he says. " So we just got on with it, really. We took Ken's lead. "
Source of news: bbc.com