The 39-year-old actor will star as a British man who finds himself in the glowing red heart of the Australian outback, being pursued by a vast tank truck trying to drive him off the road.
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Jamie Dornan runs into Ann Skelly in the Irish countryside in the dramatic trailer for their new mini-series, Death and Nightingales.
The three part limited series, based on the novel from Eugene McCabe, is a “riveting story of love, betrayal, deception and revenge, set in the haunting countryside of 1885 Fermanagh, Northern Ireland.”
Death and Nightingales takes place over a desperately tense 24-hour period, it’s Beth Winters’ (Skelly) 23rd birthday – the day she has decided to join the charming Liam Ward (Dornan) and escape from her limited life and difficult Protestant landowner stepfather Billy (Matthew Rhys).
As decades of pain and betrayal build to a devastating climax, Death and Nightingales is a powerful and gripping drama that follows a woman struggling to control her own destiny and will illuminate tensions that tear both families and nations apart.
Death and Nightingales is expected to debut on May 16.
The 38-year-old actor supplied a thoroughly silly music video for an equally silly song from Barb & Star Go to Vista Del Mar called “Edgar’s Prayer,” which premiered over the weekend.
In the video, Jamie dramatically climbs a palm tree, performing ballet and singing to the sky shirtless at the beach.
“Seagulls in the sand can you hear my prayer? I keep trying but I’m getting nowhere,” he dramatically sings.
Jamie Dornan‘s father Jim Dornan, a renowned obstetrician and professor, has reportedly died from Coronavirus at the age of 73.
A fellow professor, Nichola Rooney, confirmed the sad news on Twitter and the news was then re-posted by Northern Ireland’s Leukaemia & Lymphoma society.
“Very sad news this morning on the passing of Professor Jim Dornan, a passionate patron, advocate and friend to all at @LAL_NI. Jim was champion for so many small charities and causes in NI and that legacy will live on. Condolences to family and friends at this sad time,” Leukaemia & Lymphoma tweeted.
Very sad news this morning on the passing of Professor Jim Dornan, a passionate patron, advocate and friend to all at @LAL_NI. Jim was champion for so many small charities and causes in NI and that legacy will live on. Condolences to family and friends at this sad time https://t.co/KBFN1TXCGX
Jamie Dornan is opening up about his go-to song to sing in the shower and it’s not what you’d expect.
The 38-year-old actor appeared on The Drew Barrymore Show with his Barb & Star co-stars Kristin Wiig and Annie Mumolo, when during the break, Drew asked him about the songs he sings in the shower.
“Oh God, oh, no, no, no, don’t say it,” Jamie tried to deflect, but admitted that he gets “very musical.”
He then revealed that his is “Sand, Stephen Sondheim…It’s sad, I like to start my day with total sadness and build from there.”
In an interview with Slate, director Karen Han opened up about being really impressed with Jamie‘s singing voice and confirmed that yes, it is him singing in the movie.
“He’s got a pretty incredible voice, which I think, when we wrote it and cast it, I didn’t even know. I figured, ‘Oh, we’ll probably have someone else sing,’” she shared. “I didn’t know he had a wonderful voice.”
“But we started talking more and more, and he was in a band in high school, and it was like, ‘Oh, he can really pull this off.’”
Jamie Dornan is opening up about that shirt ripping scene in his new movie, Barb & Star Go To Vista Del Mar, and revealed that it wasn’t as easy as it looked.
The 38-year-old actor told Vulture that “the embarrassing thing was half the time I couldn’t even rip it!”
Jamie added that he had “asked the costumer to cut it at the top so it would be easier to rip it, but I guess they didn’t cut the bottom, so for the first take I was really confident at the beginning, and then I got like a second in and got stuck at the bottom, so I was sort trying to hop out of it in a pathetic way.”
“But then we did two or three more takes where they cut the bottom so I could actually make it work.”