General News
TriStar Productions And BBC Films Greenlight THE LADY IN THE VAN Starring Maggie Smith
Tom Rothman’s TriStar Productions has joined with BBC Films to greenlight THE LADY IN THE VAN, Alan Bennett’s adaptation of his commercial and critical West End hit, based on his own bestselling memoir.
Dame Maggie Smith, the star of the Downton Abbey phenomenon, will reprise one of her most-loved stage roles for the big screen, under the direction of Nicholas Hytner.
The film tells the true story of Miss Shepherd, an eccentric woman of uncertain origins, who “temporarily” parked her broken down van in Bennett’s London driveway… and proceeded to live there for the next fifteen years. Smith, who will play the singular Miss Shepherd, will be joined by Alex Jennings (The Queen), who will play both Bennett and, with some movie magic, his alter ego, AB.
The film will be Hytner’s first directorial outing after ending his massively successful decade at the head of the British National Theatre. He and Bennett previously collaborated on the films of Bennett’s The Madness of King George and The History Boys. Damian Jones (The Iron Lady, Belle) and Kevin Loader (Venus, In the Loop) will produce, along with Hytner. Miles Ketley and Charles Moore will serve as executive producers.
Principal photography begins in October in London, with release anticipated for the second half of 2015.
Smith is a two-time Academy Award winner and has been nominated an additional four times. A longtime superstar in the UK, she is enjoying a popularity surge in America due to the success of Downton Abbey and The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel.
Bennett, a celebrated playwright, screenwriter, actor and author, is considered a national literary treasure in England. Over the course of his more than 50-year career, he has won, or been nominated for, every major writing award that exists in film, television and theatre, including an Academy Award, multiple BAFTAs, Tonys, and Oliviers.
Hytner, who has made four previous films with Rothman, is among the preeminent theatrical creators of his generation, having directed such standouts as Miss Saigon, Stuff Happened, and One Man, Two Guvnors. At the National, he commissioned the breakout hits Warhorse, The Curious Case of the Dog in the Night, Jerry Springer, The Opera and Danny Boyle’s Frankenstein. In addition to Madness and History Boys, his filmography also includes Wendy Wasserstein’s The Object of My Affection and Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, starring Daniel Day-Lewis. He has won multiple Olivier and Tony Awards, and a BAFTA.
TriStar won the film rights in a competitive situation and will distribute worldwide, with the BBC taking the first television window in its territory, and making an additional investment in the negative. Peter Taylor, Managing Director, Sony Pictures Releasing International (UK), met with the filmmakers and outlined plans for the UK market, where the property is iconic.
THE LADY IN THE VAN is the third film greenlit by Rothman’s TriStar Productions since the beginning of the year, following RICKI AND THE FLASH, directed by Jonathan Demme, written by Diablo Cody, and starring Meryl Streep, and Robert Zemeckis’ untitled film based on Philippe Petit’s memoirs To Reach the Clouds, starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Ben Kingsley, Charlotte LeBon and James Badge Dale.
0 comments