Monday, November 25, 2019

The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon (2019)


November 25, 2019: 


A television appearance almost six years in the making! There was even a petition

The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon premiered in February 2014. Since then Tom Hiddleston has appeared in 10 movies, starred in a Golden Globe winning television series, and made his Broadway debut 3 months ago but somehow today was his first time on the show.


Tom's appearance comes a day after the Evening Standard Theatre Awards where he was nominated for his role in Betrayal (West End). Tom lost out on the Best Actor award to Andrew Scott. 

Prior to the episode airing, Fallon Tonight shared a short clip. The clip shows previously unseen footage from Tom Hiddleston's original audition for Thor. 


We had seen a little bit from this same scene in the Thor: The Dark World bonus features but this is the first time we've heard it with sound. 



Back in 2013, Tom mentioned that he had auditioned in an American accent: "I was only ever Thor for a very short period of time and that was even before the character was clearly written on the page. I auditioned for Thor in an American accent.". Tbh he could've played Loki, Odin, Thor, and Sif all at the same time and it still would have been amazing but I think we're all happy Tom ended up as Loki.

Tom also took to Instagram to share his excitement about being on Fallon Tonight. 

twhiddleston
Verified

My first time on @fallontonight! Thank you so much @jimmyfallon and the team for the laughs.
#BetrayalBroadway
#Loki


You can watch the full interview below. Jimmy asked Tom about running into his Avengers co-stars in Centtal Park (not really) and they cry over Baby Yoda (really). 




Fashion: 



I apologize for really failing fashion-wise. The search for items is seriously hindered by the fact that I can not longer see in any kind of detail. I'll be retiring the fashion from my Hiddles as soon as I finish out my Costume Design series. 


But what I can see? Yes, please. This is peak Professor Hiddles! I feel like staying after class and doing some extra credit. There are so many elements to this outfit that are a completely new style for Tom. I'm here for turtleneck Tom! The sportscoat is also really interesting. It has patch pockets and a collar tab which is rare combination. 


T

Ralph Lauren confirmed on twitter that Tom was wearing their pre-Spring 2020 collection. 





Thursday, November 7, 2019

Betrayal Broadway Chats (2019)


November 7, 2019: 

The cast of Betrayal Broadway made a previously unannounced appearance at AOL Build. 


You can watch the video now on the Build Series Facebook page or on their Youtube channel




Here are some of the highlights: (PS: I feel like what they talk about here is exactly the same way I interpreted the play in my Betrayal Broadway review.)

(7:45) Tom is asked about the minimal production. "There's a profundity and a simplicity to Pinter's writing which we feel we have to meet. That's - for me - when acting's most exciting. The play deals with some very deep pain. The experience of human pain. And Pinter's able to make you feel that pain - to feel it's sadness, to feel the loss, to feel the grief, to feel the cruelty but also in moments to find it absurd and funny. There's humor in it too. And he's so economical with language. It seems naturalistic, it seems every day but it's almost poetry. And so the challenge for us as actors is to match with the same level of simplicity. Trying to excavate something deep and something profound about the experience of being alive. And to do it in a very clean, economical way. We've loved it. It's been one of the most rewarding experiences of my life." 


(9:15) Charlie is asked about the meaning behind Pause and piece of writing. "You have make decisions about what the Pauses and Silences mean in the same way you have to make decisions about what you mean when you say the actual words. That's also very exciting. We had lots of conversations about about the differences between Pauses and Silences... The boring answer is the Silence is longer. One thing I read in Michael Billington's biography of Harold Pinter was that Harold had told him once that 'when you Pause it's either because you were going to say something and you decided not to or you thought the other character was going to say something and they didn't. The difference between a Silence is at the end of the Silence one or both of you are changed forever.' I guess there's a death to a Silence or there's an underlying revelation or pain to a Silence that a Pause doesn't quite have." 


(15:53) Tom talking about Pinter's portrayal of women. "It's a curious thing I think Pinter is genuinely interested in is how power is negotiated between men and women. And who survives. Of course on the surface it seems like my character Robert and Charlie's character Jerry are competing for power but actually it's Emma who I think survives. He has a rift in the middle of the play about the vulnerability of boy babies versus girl babies, and Robert and Jerry are debating boy babies cry more than girl babies. Don't they? And why do they? In fact it's a theme through many of Pinter's plays that there is a hidden fragility and vulnerability in men which is unique to them. A woman will prevail and succeed where a man will invariably fail... Emma has got some strength that Robert and Jerry don't possess... There is a kind of tension between the external and the internal. Robert is a successful publisher, he presents himself as charismatic and confident and in control. He's shattered by the loss of his marriage. Shattered by the loss of his friendship with his oldest friend. You see the cost of having to shut all that pain away. I think he becomes kind of cynical and shut down. He seems alright on the surface but I don't think he is ultimately. That's one of the many betrayals is the betrayal of himself. I think having to keep a lid on his vulnerability only renders him more alone in the end."

(19:11) Charlie on how Betrayal is a play about an affair that's not really about an affair. "I think it's about the end of an affair. I think it's also about the end of a friendship as well. What I've personally enjoyed the most about the dynamic that we found, us three, is that we feel like the end of the friendship is as painful as the end of the affair. And that these three characters kind of love each other equally. Tom, in rehearsals, would talk a lot about the co-dependencies of these relationships. Meaning that the marriage can really only survive when the friendship is in place and equally the affair can only survive when the marriage is in place etc etc. The first week and a half we rehearsed the play chronologically, in time order... it was revealing' to see how you transition from each moment and think about how much time has passed between scenes."



(21:25) Tom added:  "...The plot is revealed within the first ten minutes. There's very little that's revealed in terms of story so he lines up the dominoes for the audience very quickly. It's not knowing that they're going to fall - the audience knows that as the clock goes backwards - the excitement or the interest is watching how they fall... The situation is almost unthinkable in terms of it's painfulness. A man and a woman are married, and she has been having an affair with his best friend, who was best man at their wedding, for seven years. The man he most trusted, the man who carries the rings at the wedding, is the man who has betrayed him." 


(24:02) Tom on why Robert allows the affair to continue. "It's a way of managing his pain... The reason people don't speak in some of these scenes is because the next thing they say might save or destroy the relationship. And these relationships really matter because there are children involved, there are homes involved, and there are careers involved. Robert and Jerry are in the same business. They're both in publishing. Robert's a publisher. Jerry's a literary agent. And they have the same client. The same very, very successful novelist and writers that they represent. Who pay the bills. So if Robert and Jerry have a huge falling out then it means a lot for their lives, it means a lot for their homes, it means a lot for their ability to pay for their families. I think that their whole lives are intertwined in a very complex way. So Robert not revealing that he knows about the affair is somehow able to swallow it. I think it's difficult. But then knows he can punish Jerry with it later." 

(27:25) Talking about the Waiter scene. Charlie: "It's funny because it's painful. That's what I think is brilliant about (Pinter) is that he recognizes that in great tragedy is comes great humor."  Tom: "It comes from his construction which is that the audience at that point know that Robert knows about the affair. So the expectations of the audience are they're having that and that Robert will confront Jerry. 'I know that you've been having an affair with my wife'. And he doesn't. So he has to sublimate all that anger and all that sense of retaliatory vengeance. And he doesn't say it. So it takes it out on the poor waiter who's just trying to serve them lunch. He gets angry at the waiter for being slow, for not bringing the wine the right way, for not bringing lunch fast enough. He gets angry with food itself... but doesn't name the elephant in the room. So, the dramatic irony of the audience knowing this truth is not being spoken and it's being redirected at other targets I think is what makes it funny. 


(34:45) Charlie talking about the lack of set or props. "Paradoxically the lack of furniture feels very claustrophobic. I think it's because if you're in an uncomfortable conversation, if you're feeling uncomfortable feelings it's very human to enter avoidance of them by moving insignificantly. By moving from a couch to a coffee table, by picking up a magazine, pour yourself a drink. There's many things you can do to display or avoid really uncomfortable feelings and appear to be fine about it. We don't have that. So when these moments rise in our play, these avoidance that we have is so transparent and that's what I think makes the production so uncomfortable at times for people is because it's so evident."


This is Tom Hiddleston's fourth appearance on AOL Build. He previously was on the web series in 2015 with the cast of Crimson Peak, in 2016 with the cast of High-Rise and in 2017 with the cast of Kong: Skull Island


After the Build Series, the cast sat down with Alex Berg on Buzzfeed's AM2DM. I will post more from this interview when it is available. 


They finished off their press day at SiriusXM radio. 


 

White at SiriusXM, Tom caught up with his old friend DJ Whoo Kid. 





Both interviews mention the Betrayal Broadway 200th show on November 6th. They shared some pictures from the celebration on their Instagram page.  








Credits: 


Build Series

Getty Images
Betrayal Broadway
Zimbio
DJ Whoo Kid

Friday, November 1, 2019

Bosideng x Tom Hiddleston (2019)


November 1, 2019: 


Tom Hiddleston aka Dousen is back to shake some forests with his new ad campaign for Bosideng's winter collection. 




 A few hours later, Bosideng dropped a second series of more candid-style photographs. 


Bosideng, along with the other brands under Bosideng International Holdings Limited, is the largest down clothing company in China. They announced the new partnership with Tom on their Weibo page. I don't know how much was lost in the translation but these pictures alone will definitely warm you in the cold wind. 


Tom is increasingly becoming more and more active in the Chinese markets. In June, he helped launch the BAFTA Breakthrough China Initiative



...and who could ever forget Tom's Centrum China commercial? I predict Bosideng will see a similar boost in sales. 



Bosideng also represents another high-profile collaboration in Tom's career - Marvel. They announced their new Marvel inspired coats two weeks ago. 




Previously, Tom's Avengers co-star Chris Evans, served as an Ambassador for the brand. 





This is Tom's first fashion pair up since Gucci in 2016. Fear not - Bosideng is much easier on the wallet. 


Tom's photoshoot took place late October in New York City. The photoshoot was coordinated by Evan Xiong and Connection Studio. He shared some photos on his Instagram account. 




______________________

On Saturday, November 9th, Bosideng released a behind-the-scenes look at the making of the campaign. Seriously how did none of the scarf pictures get released? Scarf Tom is the One Tom to Rule Them All. 



*I'm in the US and Bosideng is only available through AliExpress here. I will update this post with direct links to each outfit once I have catalogued all the items.