logo
Look: Bertie Carvel, Katherine Parkinson join 'Harry Potter' series cast

Look: Bertie Carvel, Katherine Parkinson join 'Harry Potter' series cast

UPI3 hours ago

1 of 3 | Bertie Carvel has joined the cast of the upcoming "Harry Potter" series. The actor will play Cornelius Fudge. File Photo by John Angelillo/UPI | License Photo
June 9 (UPI) -- The Crown actor Bertie Carvel and The IT Crowd alum Katherine Parkinson have joined the cast of HBO's Harry Potter series.
Carvel will play Cornelius Fudge from the Ministry of Magic and Parkinson will portray Weasley family matriarch Molly in what is being billed as "a faithful adaptation of the beloved Harry Potter books by author and executive producer J.K. Rowling."
The network also announced the casting of several other key roles.
Newcomer Lox Pratt has been cast as Draco Malfoy and Johnny Flynn as Draco's father Lucius, while Bel Powley will play Petunia Dursley and Daniel Rigby will take over the role of Vernon Dursley.
They join an ensemble that already includes Dominic McLaughlin as Harry Potter, Arabella Stanton as Hermione Granger and Alastair Stout as Ron Weasley.
John Lithgow will play Albus Dumbledore, Paapa Essiedu will play Severus Snape, Janet McTeer will play Minerva McGonagall and Nick Frost will play Rubius Hagrid.
Rowling's seven fantasy novels were previously adapted as eight movies released in theaters from 2001 through 2011. The film series starred Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint.
'Harry Potter' stars welcome new studio tour to Tokyo
Left to right, "Harry Potter" stars Matthew Lewis, Evanna Lynch, Tom Felton and voice Mamoru Miyano attend the pre-opening event for the Warner Bros. Studio Tour Tokyo - The Making of Harry Potter entertainment facility in Tokyo, Japan, on June 15, 2023. Photo by Keizo Mori/UPI | License Photo

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'Harry Potter' star Tom Felton's pathetic take on JK Rowling's transphobia is peak cis privilege
'Harry Potter' star Tom Felton's pathetic take on JK Rowling's transphobia is peak cis privilege

Yahoo

time14 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

'Harry Potter' star Tom Felton's pathetic take on JK Rowling's transphobia is peak cis privilege

Tom Felton, who rose to fame playing Draco Malfoy in the Harry Potter films, says he JK Rowling's openly transphobic views don't impact him. Must be nice. While attending the Tony Awards — possibly the gayest event of the year — ahead of reprising his role in Harry Potter and the Cursed Child on Broadway, Felton was asked questions on the red carpet that led to him admitting he wasn't 'attuned' to the controversy surrounding the Harry Potter author. When asked directly by Variety on Sunday about whether he was impacted by Rowling's controversial viewpoint on trans rights, the 37-year-old star answered, 'No, I can't say it does. I'm not really that attuned to it.' How very Draco of him. — (@) Instead of being critical of Rowling's vocal anti-trans stance or the money she's funneling into the UK's war on trans people (money that has come directly from the success of Harry Potter), Felton expressed gratitude for how being a part of the franchise has changed his life. 'The only thing I always remind myself is that I have been lucky enough to travel the world. Here I am in New York, and I have not seen anything bring the world together more than Potter,' he said. 'She's responsible for that, so I'm incredibly grateful.' While Felton isn't alone in his unwillingness to criticize Rowling — Helena Bonham Carter, John Cleese, and Ralph Fiennes have defended her — there are plenty of Harry Potter stars willing to call out the author for being a very vocal TERF (trans-exclusionary radical feminist). — (@) Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Rupert Grint, and David Tennant have all spoken out publicly against Rowling, and earlier this year eight more stars, including Fantastic Beasts star Eddie Redmayne, Katie Leung, Paapa Essiedu (who will play Snape in the upcoming Harry Potter TV series) signed a open letter expressing their solidarity with the trans community after the UK Supreme Court's April 17 ruling that defined women based on biological sex, excluding trans women, which Rowling supported. Felton may say that he isn't 'attuned' to the controversy or Rowling's transphobic statements, but back in 2022, he told The Independent that he didn't 'know enough about the specifics of what anyone said. My dog takes up far too much time for me to go into such matters.' And went on to say that he and his friends 'don't take any pleasure in putting crosshairs on people that may have said things that we disagree with.' The internet did not mince words and was quick to call out Felton for not standing up for the trans community, and for continuing to benefit from his continued association with Rowling. People pointed out his obvious 'privilege' while someone else called him 'spineless,' while other people dunked on Felton for being the child actor equivalent of a jock who can't let go of his high school football career. Keep scrolling to see more reactions. — (@) "this is what privilege looks like, and we shouldn't ignore how much harm looking the other way because things don't affect us directly does. don't be Tom Felton" — (@) "Fuck Tom Felton for his spinelessness, but also fuck that journalist for calling JK Rowling's transphobia a 'Twitterverse controversy.' What a disgusting way to refer to the violent hatred that she's spewing towards the trans community, who she wants to eliminate from this earth." — (@) "Imagine your career highlight being the role you played when you were 12. Congrats Tom Felton you made it into the list of top 10 bums of all time" — (@) "Are we really surprised at Tom Felton's comments, though? Look at that man. He looks exactly like someone who would live his best white life, and not give a damn about anything happening outside of his experience. Come on now." — (@) "love how every actor distanced themselves from jkr for being a disgusting terf… and then there's unemployed tom felton" — (@) "he's such a fucking loser fuck tom felton, fuck jkr and fuck transphobes" — (@) "Lmao TERFs predictably saying Tom Felton is good for 'not biting the hand that feeds him' yeah bcos she's the only hand that fucking feeds him, he can't get any other jobs and is clinging to relevancy via Draco Malfoy" — (@) "Has the ever been a figure as loathsome and detestable as Tom Felton? And ageing, former child "star" who, unlike his co-stars has developed zero talents or interests, has tried his hand at everything and now relies on tactical blindness to bigotry to live off of JKRs scraps." — (@) "literally every harry potter actor from the original series has moved on with their lives and starred in new things yet tom felton is reprising his role as draco malfoy and is putting more money into jkr's pockets" — (@) "fuck tom felton and jk rowling. live laugh love daniel radcliffe"

Tom Felton Addresses J.K. Rowling Controversy Amid Harry Potter Return
Tom Felton Addresses J.K. Rowling Controversy Amid Harry Potter Return

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Tom Felton Addresses J.K. Rowling Controversy Amid Harry Potter Return

Originally appeared on E! Online Tom Felton isn't tuned into the noise. Just days after the Harry Potter alum announced he'll be returning to the franchise as Draco Malfoy in Harry Potter And The Cursed Child on Broadway, Tom was asked whether some of the controversy around author J.K. Rowling's anti-trans statements affected his decision to return. "No, I can't say it does," Tom told Variety on the red carpet of the Tony Awards June 8. "I'm not really that attuned to it." The 37-year-old—who starred alongside Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint in the films— continued, "The only thing I always remind myself is that I've been lucky enough to travel the world. Here I am in New York. And I have not seen anything bring the world together more than Potter, and she's responsible for that. So, I'm incredibly grateful." In fact, Tom spoke to how the existence of the Broadway production—which follows the unlikely friendship between the sons of Harry and Draco after they both get sorted into Slytherin house—speaks to the longevity of Harry Potter. More from E! Online Ryan Lochte and Estranged Wife Kayla Reid's Debt Revealed Amid Divorce Justin Baldoni's $400 Million Countersuit Against Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds Dismissed by Judge Dakota Johnson Reveals Dating Non-Negotiable After Chris Martin Breakup As he explained E! News' Keltie Knight at the Tonys, 'I was waiting for someone to jump out and say this is a spoof or some sort of elaborate Punk'd joke. But it's happening. I did not take much convincing!' And for the Rise of the Planet of the Apes actor, his nerves about taking on the project are a good thing. 'Anything that's really, truly worth doing, you should be a little bit nervous about,' he continued. 'It's an old role, so it's familiar shoes, but also a brand new slice of Draco's life. Now, he's a parent, so I'm excited to explore that.' As he explained E! News' Keltie Knight at the Tonys, 'I was waiting for someone to jump out and say this is a spoof or some sort of elaborate Punk'd joke. But it's happening. I did not take much convincing!' And for the Rise of the Planet of the Apes actor, his nerves about taking on the project are a good thing. 'Anything that's really, truly worth doing, you should be a little bit nervous about,' he continued. 'It's an old role, so it's familiar shoes, but also a brand new slice of Draco's life. Now, he's a parent, so I'm excited to explore that.' This time around, Tom will be taking a page out of his costar Jason Isaacs' playbook, the actor who portrayed Draco's father Lucius in the film series. Thankfully, their offscreen relationship will continue to serve Tom well in this next chapter. 'I still call him dad and he still calls me son,' he revealed of the White Lotus star. 'He is superb. Everything he does, I've learned so much from him, just as much offscreen as I have onscreen.' For more from the Tonys, read on. Julianne HoughSarah SnookKatie HolmesAlex Winter and Keanu ReevesDaveed DiggsMegan HiltyAnna WintourRosie PerezJustina MachadoRachel SussmanAudra McDonaldDarren CrissJonathan GroffJean SmartNicole ScherzingerSarah PaulsonDanielle BrooksLaufeyPhillipa SooCynthia ErivoCole EscolaBryan CranstonKristin ChenowethGeorge Clooney and Amal Clooney For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News App

Vincent D'Onofrio teases ‘Daredevil: Born Again' Season 2 is ‘even more complex and more dangerous'
Vincent D'Onofrio teases ‘Daredevil: Born Again' Season 2 is ‘even more complex and more dangerous'

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Vincent D'Onofrio teases ‘Daredevil: Born Again' Season 2 is ‘even more complex and more dangerous'

It took time for Daredevil: Born Again to figure out what kind of show it wanted to be. Stars Charlie Cox and Vincent D'Onofrio started reprising their roles as Matt Murdock/Daredevil and Wilson Fisk/Kingpin in 2021, with respective cameos in other Marvel Cinematic Universe projects like Spider-Man: No Way Home and Hawkeye. That meant working within the tones of those stories, but when the two characters finally reunited, their actors knew they needed to return to the flavor of the previous Daredevil series (which originally streamed on Netflix before moving to Disney+). 'Our jobs as actors are to service the story,' D'Onofrio tells Gold Derby during a brief break from filming Season 2 of Daredevil: Born Again. 'It's my job to match the tone of whatever they're doing, because otherwise it'll look odd. So each time I played him, we got closer to the darker aspect, which I think really suits him — like, Echo got a little more gritty [than Hawkeye]. And so then we were going to do a show that was even less dark, but we realized early on that this wasn't working, that it had to be more like the original show.' More from GoldDerby Everything to know about HBO's 'Harry Potter' TV series - including the cast and controversy Grammys EP Ben Winston on the risks of producing live TV: 'I always never know quite why we do it' 'Ballerina' stumbles at the box office while 'Lilo & Stitch' surfs to another $32.5M D'Onofrio continues, 'so about six episodes in of the first season, we stopped and rethought things, and so now we're doing the show that we always wanted to do. We kept the idea that it was a shared show with two leads, which is different than the Netflix show, but I think it's interesting.' D'Onofrio is right that both Fisk and Murdock each feel like protagonists of their own story in Daredevil: Born Again, and one of the show's most interesting elements is that they hardly ever interact. Cox and D'Onofrio only shared the screen a couple times in Season 1, and each time they did (such as their Heat-worthy diner conversation in the premiere episode, or the climactic moment when Murdock unexpectedly took a bullet for Fisk) there were explosive consequences. According to D'Onofrio, viewers should expect that trend to continue into Season 2. Disney/Marvel 'We're sticking to the plan where the more you put these guys together, the less interesting it is,' D'Onofrio says, echoing what Cox has also told us. 'But there are a couple of, to say the least, very intense moments between the two of them in the second season.' D'Onofrio continues, 'It's sparse, but it's intense as hell. And there's a lot for fans to look forward to in the second season because it's, how can I put this? What we're doing in the second season, when we pair up Daredevil and Fisk in scenes, is even more complex and more dangerous than they've seen before. Some of the scenes that we're having in the second season, there's been nothing like them before.' Season 1 of Daredevil: Born Again ended with both Murdock and Fisk reclaiming their roles (and signature costumes) as Daredevil and Kingpin, despite what they told each other in that diner. They've each got supporters, in the form of Daredevil's ragtag group of righteous prosecutors, fugitive vigilantes, and fearless reporters lining up against Mayor Fisk's anti-vigilante task force. This is a change from the original Daredevil series, which reset its plotlines every season. Though D'Onofrio is wary about letting spoilers out of the bag too soon, he confirms that Season 2 will build from there. 'We pick up where we left off, and things are just getting increasingly intense,' D'Onofrio says. 'At the end of the first season, he's declared martial law, and that doesn't go away. That gets even more intense, and there's a feeling of a resistance being formed with Charlie's side of the show. Aspects of that continue through the second season in very intense ways. So I really can't say much more than that, but the story continues to move forward.' The prospect of a supervillain like Kingpin successfully becoming mayor of New York City is frankly believable at a time when Donald Trump can get re-elected president after being impeached twice and Eric Adams, the real-life mayor of New York, can retain his office after being indicted by the FBI. But Fisk's power doesn't just come from his office. Why do the violent cops on his task force follow him so loyally? 'It's very clear that it's harder to be good than it is to be bad, and that makes us who we are as people,' D'Onofrio says. 'Are we willing to struggle to keep our morality? I think a lot of us are, but unfortunately, there are people that don't want to work so hard. They just want what they want, and they don't want to work for it. They just want to steal it. So I think that's what's happening. I think that his henchmen on the task force are following suit. Fisk wants to stretch his reach and they want to follow because it's easy.' But if the characters want things the easy way, the actors don't. After the creative reboot on Daredevil: Born Again got everyone in the cast and crew on the same page, they've all gone full steam ahead. 'It is a very hard show to do because you've got two very interesting main characters that live in the light and in the dark, and that's a tough script to write,' D'Onofrio says. 'So we're doing everything we need to do to struggle through them, get them right, and keep trying to do the best we can do. We're all working our butts off, the whole crew and all the actors.' D'Onofrio continues, 'We're also super lucky. We have such an amazing cast of supporting actors. I've made a career out of being a supporting actor, and it's so nice to see these young people who are supporting in our cast be such good actors and really brave and trying to do all kinds of things to make our stories more interesting. It just seems to be gelling out really well. It's quite a crew.' Season 1 of Daredevil: Born Again is streaming now on Disney+. Best of GoldDerby Marlon Wayans on laughing through tragedy in 'Good Grief' and why social media has made comedy 'toxic' Minha Kim 'confronted all new emotions that I had never anticipated' in Season 2 of 'Pachinko' 'Étoile': Exclusive 4-part conversation with creators, star Luke Kirby, cinematographer, and choreographer Click here to read the full article.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store