Here are some pictures of Claire Danes attending the opening of Broadway’s Venus in Fur which stars her husband Hugh Dancy.
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- VENUS IN FUR BROADWAY OPENING – NOVEMBER
New York Women in Film & Television (NYWIFT), which has supported the advancement of women in the entertainment industry for more than 30 years, will present their 31th annual Muse Awards at a gala luncheon to be held Wednesday, December 7th at the New York Hilton. The Muse Awards honor the outstanding vision and achievement of women in the film, television and digital media industries.
Claire Danes-one of Hollywood’s leading actresses, Danes is acclaimed for her work in film, television and theatre. An Emmy and Golden Globe winner, Danes has appeared in diverse roles including Angela Chase in MY SO CALLED LIFE, as Juliet in Baz Luhrmann’s ROMEO + JULIET and as TEMPLE GRANDIN in the HBO biopic. Danes currently stars as CIA agent Carrie Matheson on the Showtime series HOMELAND opposite Mandy Patinkin.
Showtime has ordered a second season of the Claire Danes espionage thriller “Homeland,” which the network says has been its “highest rated freshman drama ever.”
Currently in the middle of its first season, “Homeland” has drawn 4-5 million viewers a week.
Production on the second season will begin next spring, according to Showtime, which suggests the second season will again have a late summer or early fall starting date.
Danes stars in “Homeland” as a CIA agent who is convinced that a rescued American POW from Iraq was “turned” during his captivity and is now part of a terrorist plot to unleash an attack on U.S. soil.
Damian Lewis plays the soldier, who has other problems as well. While he was in captivity, his wife took up with his best friend.
Mandy Patinkin also stars as Danes’s boss at the agency, putting up with her sometimes self-destructive behavior because he knows she’s a good agent.
Claire Danes says she has started speaking like a Brit thanks to her husband. The actress has been married to actor Hugh Dancy for the past two years and she says the relationship has affected the way she talks. Danes, 31, said: ‘I feel deeply secure. My trust in Hugh continues to grow and that’s a wonderful thing.’
She told US magazine Ladies’ Home Journal: ‘British-speak has definitely infiltrated my language, too. ’I say ‘loo’ and ‘bloody’. I even say ‘car park’ instead of ‘parking lot’, which is horrifying to admit. The American actress - who starred opposite Leonardo DiCaprio in the 1996 film Romeo + Juliet – also said she loves dancing. ’I have private dance parties with myself,’ she said. ‘Very frequently actually. I love me some Kanye West. Love me some Beyoncé. But I can dance with no music. I’m good to go.’
When you star in a political drama on television, it can be challenging keeping things light behind the scenes. But Homelandstars Claire Danes and Morena Baccarin have found something adorable they can chitchat about on the set of their intense thriller: dogs.
“She has a dog that’s kind of similar in scale to mine,” Danes tells PEOPLE. “And so we kind of have a little dog commune and that’s fun.”
When Danes decided to take the role as a CIA analyst, she and her husband, Hugh Dancy, agreed that it would be best if she took their schnoodle, Weegee, down south to Charlotte, N.C., for the long shoot. “He does miss him,” she says of Dancy – and Weegee seems to miss the idyllic life at their country home in upstate New York.
“He gets really freaked out whenever there are rainstorms, which there have been many in Charlotte,” she says. “It’s not been the best location.”
Come mid-November, Danes and Weegee will head back up north to Dad, who’s starring in the Broadway playVenus in Fur, and she’ll have plenty of downtime until filming starts up again in January.
“I love all the fresh produce and the simple sort of lifestyle it affords,” she says of the country. “It’s kind of great because it’s the best pressure valve. It’s so nice to go to a place where I can be and look however I want with a cow as my witness.”
Showtime has released a couple clips from this Sunday’s episode called “Clean Skin” and they look as intense as ever. In the first, we see Brody being interviewed (you know, out there playing the hero card) while also experiencing those telling (?) and visceral flashbacks. In the second clip, Carrie’s asset Lynne has to go on a surprise meet-up with only Carrie and Virgil for back-up. She’ll be okay, right?
Meet the Characters: Carrie Anderson
Homeland – Scars
Homeland – Welcoming Gift
Here is a pretty good review of Claire’s new show Homeland on Showtime. There have been a ton of review going around about the pilot of Showtime. They roughly all say the same thing give or take a point or two.
Of all the pilots this fall, Homeland is the most solid and well-rounded. That may be understating it a bit. Every aspect of the show is not only solid but also strong. Starting with the acting by Claire Danes as Carrie Mathison and Damian Lewis as Nicholas Brody, there are hardly any weaknesses to the pilot. Danes and Lewis are both superb in the numerous silent scenes, saying nothing but expressing plenty.
This idea of silence works brilliantly with the show’s premise. People can say things, tell everyone how they are fine, but it may all be lies. In the silent moments, however, when no one is there, something comes out that cannot be obscured. Carrie bugs Brody’s house and proceeds to examine what he says and does. Later, she interrogates him but gets nothing useful. After, she catches him in a series of lies only to realize he isn’t up to anything–yet. What ultimately tips her off is what he’s doing with his hands while on television, signaling something to the world. One need not express their intent to commit terrorism for terrorism to occur.
And as Carrie looks at Brody through hazy, illegal cameras, the audience sees Carrie in all her weaknesses through the lens of the television. Carrie is not the typical protagonist. She has many problems and she comes off a little devious as we see her jump to sex both with her boss (through his suggestion she broke his marriage) and with Saul. While Carrie is aware of her problems, her mood swings can quickly override her better judgment. Danes shines in these moments, and we immediately see Carrie on the edge, not quite right, but also trying to hang on.
The other side of Homeland is Brody’s family, and while it’s nowhere near exciting as Carrie digging into Brody’s activities, Morena Baccarin plays her role as Brody’s wife well. Love triangles are a well-worn television trope, but in the context of a soldier returning home after 8 years, it fits perfectly.
Built into Homeland’s premise is an exploration into the post-9/11 intelligence world. There is overstep of civil liberties, of course, but also more ambiguous questions throughout the episode. This paranoia taken on by Carrie reflects the haziness of identity in this age. She questions who Brody is–whether he is still the same person he is–and at the same time, the viewer has to question who Carrie is–whether her psychological condition has thrown her off the edge and whether we can trust her judgment. These two different people–the man imprisoned for years and woman who missed the signs of 9/11–share the same murkiness that drives the show ahead.
Score: 9.4/10
Just watched the first episode for Showtime’s Homeland with Claire Danes. I thought it was very good. Here are the screen captures from the first episode. As previously mentioned you can watch the first episode before it airs on Showtime in October – here.
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- 01.01 – Pilot (Homeland)
Here are some lovely images of Claire Danes at the Emmy Awards. Included are from the red carpet, presenting an award and HBO After Party. Enjoy!
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- Emmys 2011 – September




















