Pemberley state of mind
I'm so glad I came across this blog! I only wish I'd found it earlier, I LOVE pride and prejudice!
Looking forward to your posts:)

Thank you :) ! I´m glad that you found me.

Dance scene, different angle.

“We shot this scene for probably five hours, with many different camera angles and frame sizes and following him and following her”.
(Joe Wright, Director)

Dance scene, different angle.

“We shot this scene for probably five hours, with many different camera angles and frame sizes and following him and following her”.

(Joe Wright, Director)

 Are you having a pleasant trip?

 Are you having a pleasant trip?


Joe Wright, the director, got the Bennet family together a few weeks before filming and began to create a family atmosphere among the actors playing members of the Bennet household. “There was a wood burning fire, candle lit and dusty, and we played hide and seek in that big house. We bought big bags of cherries from a roadside vendor and hung them over our ears and put cherry juice on our cheeks as blush, like children. We just gravitated together. It was just all really lovely”.
(Brenda Blethyn)

Joe Wright, the director, got the Bennet family together a few weeks before filming and began to create a family atmosphere among the actors playing members of the Bennet household.

“There was a wood burning fire, candle lit and dusty, and we played hide and seek in that big house. We bought big bags of cherries from a roadside vendor and hung them over our ears and put cherry juice on our cheeks as blush, like children. We just gravitated together. It was just all really lovely”.

(Brenda Blethyn)

See some Darcy&co on my dashboard is always a way to make my day better :) Now, I really NEED to see that movie AGAIN!
Damn, your tumblr is GREAT :)

Thank you very much ! You´re very kind :).

Oh my god! I HAD to show you that http://etsy.me/9o5pU1

Thank you :) ! That´s just lovely, WANT !


Working Title auditioned more than 100 twentysomething actors before casting Macfadyen. 
“They saw a bunch. Then I met Joe [Wright, the director]. And read. Then I was told it was all off. With me. I think they wanted names. And I thought, `That’s fine´. Then it was on again. Because they had Keira. So I went and read with her. And screen-tested. And waited a long time!”
(Matthew Macfadyen)

Working Title auditioned more than 100 twentysomething actors before casting Macfadyen.

“They saw a bunch. Then I met Joe [Wright, the director]. And read. Then I was told it was all off. With me. I think they wanted names. And I thought, `That’s fine´. Then it was on again. Because they had Keira. So I went and read with her. And screen-tested. And waited a long time!”

(Matthew Macfadyen)

 Lizzy´s dreamy eyes.

 Lizzy´s dreamy eyes.

Just married.

“There is a reference to domestic violence there from Mr. Wickham to Lydia”.
(Joe Wright, Director)

Just married.

“There is a reference to domestic violence there from Mr. Wickham to Lydia”.

(Joe Wright, Director)

One last look.

One last look.

Morning coffee.

They didn’t have jolly nights in country pubs while on location. ‘Because I wasn’t there very much. I felt a bit po-faced sometimes, because I’d turn up and do a scene and go back to London. And Keeley, my wife, was pregnant at the time, so I sort of dropped in. He’s not in it that much, Darcy, actually. And they gave me a personal trainer. So he’d turn up at my house and I’d have to go running. So it was vodka slimline in bed watching f—ing Newsnight worrying about Keeley and whatever was in her tummy.’
(Matthew Macfadyen)

Morning coffee.

They didn’t have jolly nights in country pubs while on location. ‘Because I wasn’t there very much. I felt a bit po-faced sometimes, because I’d turn up and do a scene and go back to London. And Keeley, my wife, was pregnant at the time, so I sort of dropped in. He’s not in it that much, Darcy, actually. And they gave me a personal trainer. So he’d turn up at my house and I’d have to go running. So it was vodka slimline in bed watching f—ing Newsnight worrying about Keeley and whatever was in her tummy.’

(Matthew Macfadyen)