
Tag: mary poppins
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Mary Poppins Fights the Brexit Apocalypse in ‘Late Show’ Spoof

CBS It’s gonna take a lot more than a spoonful of sugar to make Brexit to go down.
In a spoof on “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert,” Mary Poppins takes on the zombie apocalypse triggered by the U.K.’s successful exit from the European Union. But this version of the nanny isn’t as charming as Emily Blunt’s version in “Mary Poppins Returns.”
“It’s every nanny for herself,” the battle-ready Mary says as she reveals her magical umbrella is actually a machine gun. “Now let’s go fly a kite … in Hell!”
There’s even a new song: “Supercalifragilisticexpiali … Oh sh–!”
The Poppins spoof comes just a couple days after British Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit deal was voted down by Parliament in a historic defeat.
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2019 Costume Designers Guild Awards Led by ‘Black Panther,’ ‘Mary Poppins’

Marvel Studios The clothes make the movie, and this year’s nominees for the Costume Designers Guild Awards prove it.
The year’s biggest films received nominations. Ruth E. Carter, who designed the costumes for “Black Panther,” received a nomination and will also be honored with the Career Achievement Award at next month’s ceremony.
Costume designer Sandy Powell is a double nominee for the 18th century period dramedy “The Favourite” and for the 1930s-era “Mary Poppin Returns.”
On the television side, “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel,” “Westworld,” and “This Is Us” all earned nominations.
The awards will be handed out at a ceremony on February 19.
Here’s the full list of nominees for the 2019 Costume Designers Guild Awards:
Excellence in Contemporary Film
A Star Is Born – Erin Benach
Crazy Rich Asians – Mary E. Vogt
Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again – Michele Clapton
Ocean’s 8 – Sarah Edwards
Widows – Jenny EaganExcellence in Period Film
BlacKkKlansman – Marci Rodgers
Bohemian Rhapsody – Julian Day
The Favourite – Sandy Powell
Mary Poppins Returns – Sandy Powell
Mary Queen of Scots – Alexandra ByrneExcellence in Sci-Fi / Fantasy Film
A Wrinkle in Time – Paco Delgado
Aquaman – Kym Barrett
The Avengers: Infinity War – Judianna Makovsky
Black Panther – Ruth E. Carter
The Nutcracker and the Four Realms – Jenny BeavanExcellence in Contemporary Television
The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story – Lou Eyrich & Allison Leach
Grace and Frankie – Allyson B. Fanger
The Romanoffs – Janie Bryant & Wendy Chuck
Sharp Objects – Alix Friedberg
This Is Us – Hala BahmetExcellence in Period Television
The Alienist – Michael Kaplan
Glow – Beth Morgan
The Man in the High Castle – Catherine Adair
The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel – Donna Zakowska
Outlander – Nina Ayres & Terry DresbachExcellence in Sci-Fi / Fantasy Television
American Horror Story: Apocalypse – Paula Bradley & Lou Eyrich
The Handmaid’s Tale – Ane Crabtree
Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events – Cynthia Summers
Star Trek: Discovery – Gersha Phillips
Westworld – Sharen DavisExcellence in Short Form Design
Adidas: “See My Creativity,” commercial – Bonnie Stauch
Childish Gambino: “This is America,” music video – Natasha Newman-Thomas
Elton John – Farewell Yellow Brick Road: The Legacy, short film – Charlie Altuna
Justin Timberlake: “Supplies,” Directed by Dave Myers, music video – Ami Goodhart
Nespresso: “The Quest,” commercial – Jenny Eagan -

‘Mary Poppins Returns’ Director Rob Marshall on Embracing the Disney Classic’s Legacy

Disney “Mary Poppins Returns” is a movie heavily indebted to what came before.
Not only is it a sequel (of sorts) to 1964’s Oscar-winning “Mary Poppins,” which Walt Disney himself believed to be his greatest accomplishment in the (mostly) live-action arena, but it’s also a wondrous ode to the work of author P.L. Travers, whose books both films mine. Quite frankly, just the weight of that legacy would seem crippling to some, but not to director and choreographer Rob Marshall, who absolutely reveled in the chance to update, expand and pay homage to the wonderful world of Disney’s “Mary Poppins.”
This reverence is notable from the very first moments of “Mary Poppins Returns,” as the titles cascade over painterly images by Peter Ellenshaw. Ellenshaw, a Disney Legend who contributed special effects to many of the studio’s most iconic live action films (and whose matte paintings of London open the original “Mary Poppins”), is credited, even though the images that open “Mary Poppins Returns” are rougher and more impressionistic. (Ellenshaw famously came out of retirement to do the matte paintings for Disney’s underrated “Dick Tracy” in 1990.)
“I was excited to discover these concept paintings and concept art in the Disney Archives. They’re so beautiful,” Marshall explained. “So what we did was used about a third of them and then created ones in his style, so it’s a combination of real ones and ones we did, to reflect our film.” It’s an apt metaphor for the techniques and storytelling for the movie that follows; some from what came before and some brand-new.
But the sequence that most clearly encapsulates this ideology is the Royal Doulton Music Hall sequence. In the scene Mary (a peerless Emily Blunt), her lamplighter chum Jack (Lin-Manuel Miranda) and the next generation of the Banks children (Pixie Davies, Nathanael Saleh and Joel Dawson) jump into a Royal Doulton china bowl that the children have cracked. Once inside the bowl they enter a world of lushly two-dimensional animation and, during the course of the sequence they encounter anthropomorphic animals (including penguins that look very familiar) and stage one of the movie’s most show-stopping numbers, “A Cover is Not the Book” (aka the one where they let Lin-Manuel rap).
Marshall said that doing a sequence that combined live-action with traditional animation was part of the draw of doing “Mary Poppins Returns.” “I used myself as a barometer, because I loved the original film so much,” Marshall said. “I thought, If I were just coming to this movie, what would I want to see?” Well, it turns out, he would want to see “an animation/live-action sequence, no question.”
And what’s more, Marshall said, “I would want it to be hand-drawn.”
He then told a story about the sequence’s infancy that seemed to take on an almost mythical grandeur while he was telling it: “We met at the Hyperion bungalow, which was a bungalow from the original studio that they brought over. We gathered artists from Pixar and Walt Disney Animation Studios for a workshop to work through what this could be. We had our writer, David Magee, as well as John DeLuca — who worked on the story with me and David — we had our composers there and we just started to work together on this animation sequence and develop it. They pulled out pen and ink and they were drawing the whole thing.”
Among those animators in those early meetings was Glen Keane, a famed Disney animator whose career blossomed during the so-called Disney Renaissance, as he animated Ariel in “The Little Mermaid,” the Beast in “Beauty and the Beast,” and the title characters in “Aladdin,” “Pocahontas,” and “Tarzan.” (He recently won an Oscar for his Kobe Bryant short film “Dear Basketball.”)
“He started with us,” Marshall said, noting that Jim Capobianco, an animation veteran of both Disney and Pixar, “really ran it.” “We had an amazing group of artists,” Marshall said. “It was extraordinary — and we built it together.”

Disney Interesting, it wasn’t Disney or Pixar that actually produced the animation; it was a small outfit out of Pasadena, California, called Duncan Studio. Started by Disney vet Ken Duncan, who worked alongside Keane on “Tarzan,” the studio has contributed to several big projects and provided all of the animation in both the pre-show and ride for Universal Studios’ Minion Mayhem simulator attraction.
“Some of the artists were in their 70’s and had been so influenced and inspired by the classic hand-drawn animation that they couldn’t pass up this kind of opportunity,” said Capobianco in the official press notes, “but then we also had these young kids who were relatively new to the industry, so it was this wonderful pool of animators working together to create this throwback to old-school animation.”
The process of working with the animation studio was “complicated,” according to Marshall, “Because they were fitting into a live-action film.” He recounts a meeting with one of the animators, in which the animator suggested Lin-Manuel “just jump over there.”
“Well, Lin-Manuel is a person,” Marshall reminded the animator. “So it’s going to take him a little longer to get there.” The complexity was amplified by the fact that it’s a fully choreographed (by Marshall and De Luca) dance number. “Like the flamingos, for instance, in that sequence, was something that we choreographed with female dancers,” Marshall said. “And then they took it and drew it. But we controlled all of it.”
Also adding to the chaos: that human actors had to be interacting with the animated animals (you’ve undoubtedly seen that charming moment in the trailer when Blunt honks the beak of one of the penguins). “It took a lot, especially with the kids, but we had to do crazy things like put a giraffe’s head on a pole so they could point and have the same eye-line,” Marshall said. “We did a lot of makeshift things.” Even, it turns out, when Poppins was dancing with the penguins, “there were real actors.” “They were the smallest dancers we could find and they were incredible!” Marshall said. “But that was the only way we could frame it and choreograph the sequence.”
Marshall admitted that his team “had much more sophisticated equipment” than the team that put the original “Mary Poppins” sequence together (which included staggering work from, amongst other people, some of Walt’s Nine Old Men — Ollie Johnston, Milt Kahl, Ward Kimball, Eric Larson, Frank Thomas, and John Lounsbery). But they did share a key similarity. “It was the first thing they shot and it was the first thing we shot,” Marshall explained. “We had to. We had to get it to the animators. It extended our post-production schedule for a long amount of time because it’s all hand drawn.”
According to Marshall, they were in post-production for over a year, with over 70 animators working on the sequence for 16 months solid. “The animators used every single second of it,” Marshall said.
Still, it shows. The movie is a breathtaking pop culture confection, charming and delightful at every turn, and the true centerpiece of the movie, visually and thematically, is the animated stuff. It allowed the children to really embrace their imagination (hard to do during the 1930’s “slump” setting of the film) and for Poppins to show them what, exactly, she’s made of. It’s the rare sequence that’s a technical showstopper and an emotional one too. And you can tell that Marshall is proud of what they accomplished. “Everything that I wanted to do is on that screen,” Marshall said.
To borrow another Poppins phrase from a different musical number: Can you imagine that?
“Mary Poppins Returns” opens everywhere December 21.
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‘Mary Poppins Returns’ Unveils New Character Posters, Teaser

Disney Everything is possible with Mary Poppins.
Disney continues the publicity roll-out for “Mary Poppins Returns,” the upcoming sequel to the 1964 classic. The studio released five new character posters featuring Emily Blunt as the titular nanny, Lin-Manuel Miranda as lamplighter Jack, Meryl Streep as Mary’s cousin Topsy, Colin Firth as bank president William Weatherall Wilkins, and Julie Walters as housekeeper Ellen.
There’s also a new sneak peek teaser video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8YQgxe4hs4M&feature=youtu.be
The sequel checks in on Michael Banks (Ben Whishaw) and sister Jane (Emily Mortimer), who are now grown up. Michael now has three children of his own, and after he suffers a personal loss, Mary returns to the Banks’ lives.
“Mary Poppins Returns” opens in theaters December 19.
Check out the posters below:

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‘Mary Poppins Returns’ Featurette Offers Glimpse Into Film’s Complex Dance Numbers

It goes without saying that one expectation of the upcoming sequel to “Mary Poppins” is the inclusion of incredible dance numbers. At first glance “Mary Poppins Returns” achieves those same trappings, but on closer inspection Gary Marshall‘s interpretation of P. L. Travers’ books takes things a step further.
Moviefone was fortunate enough to be on set at Pinewood Studios in London, England during the filming of the musical number for “Trip A Little Light Fantastic,” one of the songs in the film which happens to include an ensemble, live action, choreographed dance number.
Disney recently released a special featurette which includes brief moments from “Trip A Little Light Fantastic” which only further outlines the sequel’s desire to take the storied character and her tale to new heights.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mLXBXtWdlBw
At 0:51, 1:08, 1:18, 1:26, 1:31, and 1:36, we see glimpses of this performance. The foggy London streets act as the backdrop for the segment, utilizing the light emanating from the lamplighter (also called “leeries”) tools both with physical movement and aesthetic illumination. And that’s only one element of the action. Overall the dance includes bicycles, ladders, and enough street light swinging to both bring you back to your youth and make you a touch nauseous. After all…it’s swinging from a streetlight…one of life’s simple joys.

Jack (Lin-Manuel Miranda) Mary Poppins (Emily Blunt) and the Banks children with a crew of street lamplighters at 17 Cherry Tree Lane Lin Manuel Miranda does a lot of heavy lifting in the scene, with Emily Blunt‘s elegant charm being apparent throughout. If “Trip A Little Light Fantastic” is any hint into the types of musical acts we’ll see throughout the film, we’ll be first in line when “Mary Poppins Returns” comes to the screen.
Be sure to check out the film when it hits theaters December 19th.
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New ‘Mary Poppins Returns’ Sneak Peek Teases New Song ‘Can You Imagine That?’

Disney Everything is possible when “Mary Poppins Returns.”
A new sneak peek video provides another glimpse at the highly anticipated sequel to the 1964 classic — and an exciting tease of the brand-new song “Can You Imagine That?”
Of course, the original film’s soundtrack is truly iconic, but the new music sounds delightful as sung by Emily Blunt as the titular nanny. We also get to see some of the animation and special effects that accompany the song, very much in keeping with the “Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious” scene in the original.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q72igEUBLjY&feature=youtu.be
The sequel seems to carry on the same tone of whimsy and wonder as the original — dolphins in the bath! As Mary sings, “Stuff and nonsense could be fun.” And who can disagree with that?
“Mary Poppins Returns” also stars Lin-Manuel Miranda, Ben Whishaw, Emily Mortimer, Julie Walters, Dick Van Dyke, Colin Firth, and Meryl Streep. The film opens in theaters December 19.
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Official ‘Mary Poppins Returns’ Trailer Is Practically Perfect in Every Way

Disney Are you ready for several spoonfuls of nostalgia?
Disney just released the full official trailer for “Mary Poppins Returns,” which arrives in theaters December 19.
It’s pure magic.
This new original musical/sequel stars Emily Blunt as Mary Poppins, as she returns to the now-grown Banks children in their time of need.
The trailer starts with a memory of kite flying, leading to the return of Mary Poppins herself. “As I live and breathe,” says her old friend Jack, played by Lin-Manuel Miranda.
The style and tone of the film seem like a perfect match for Julie Andrews‘ classic musical, even if no one could ever replace Julie.
We do get a glimpse of a new song, along with Mary’s no-nonsense-cheekiness and some truly magical old school animation.
Here’s the full synopsis from Disney:
In Disney’s “Mary Poppins Returns,” an all new original musical and sequel, Mary Poppins is back to help the next generation of the Banks family find the joy and wonder missing in their lives following a personal loss. Emily Blunt stars as the practically-perfect nanny with unique magical skills who can turn any ordinary task into an unforgettable, fantastic adventure and Lin-Manuel Miranda plays her friend Jack, an optimistic street lamplighter who helps bring light—and life—to the streets of London.
“Mary Poppins Returns” is directed by Rob Marshall. The screenplay is by David Magee and the screen story is by Magee & Rob Marshall & John DeLuca based upon the Mary Poppins Stories by PL Travers. The producers are John DeLuca, p.g.a., Rob Marshall, p.g.a. and Marc Platt, p.g.a. with Callum McDougall serving as executive producer.
The music score is by Marc Shaiman and the film features all new original songs with music by Shaiman and lyrics by Scott Wittman and Shaiman.
The film also stars Ben Whishaw as Michael Banks; Emily Mortimer as Jane Banks; Julie Walters as the Banks’ housekeeper Ellen; Pixie Davies, Nathanael Saleh and introducing Joel Dawson as the Banks’ children, with Colin Firth as Fidelity Fiduciary Bank’s William Weatherall Wilkins; and Meryl Streep as Mary’s eccentric cousin, Topsy. Angela Lansbury appears as the Balloon Lady, a treasured character from the PL Travers books and Dick Van Dyke is Mr. Dawes, Jr., the retired chairman of the bank now run by Firth’s character.
Yes, a dancing Dick Van Dyke cameo! “Mary Poppins Returns” to theaters December 19.
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Director Wolfgang Peterson’s ‘The Neverending Story.’ -
This Is Why Julie Andrews Won’t Be in ‘Mary Poppins’ Returns
Julie Andrews isn’t appearing in the sequel to her 1964 classic movie “Mary Poppins.” But it isn’t because she disapproves of the project or the actress who’s stepping into her shoes, Emily Blunt. In fact, she refused to make a cameo for the exact opposite reason.As director Rob Marshall told Entertainment Weekly, Andrews turned down an appearance in “Mary Poppins Returns” so she wouldn’t overshadow Blunt.
“Julie was incredibly gracious, and we talked about it in a very general way but she made it clear right up front,” he explained. “She said, ‘This is Emily’s show, and I really want it to be Emily’s show. I don’t want it to be, ‘Oh, here comes that Mary Poppins.’ I don’t want that. I really want her to take this and run with it, because she will be brilliant.’”
Andrews sounds almost like a fangirl, from Marshall’s telling.
“Julie will always be, for me and for everybody, the most astonishing performance as Mary Poppins, winning the Oscar and bursting onto the scene so brilliantly,” he says. “But Emily is the perfect person to carry the torch, and I know Julie feels the exact same way. She loves her.”
“Mary Poppins Returns” opens Christmas Day 2018.













